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Contest Group du Quebec  


Pileup Management at P49X - 2012/02/08 11:38 Un texte intéressant qui peut nous servir à notre bout aussi...
Avec la permission de plublier de W0YK/Ed
---------------------------------------------------------------
I am often asked how I handle the horrendous RTTY pileups that develop here
in Aruba in and out of contests.  Here is my response:



1.  I use very narrow filtering in my receiver so that I only see the
smallest part of the pileup.  I use 250 Hz and sometimes even 200 Hz.  I use
dual-tone filtering although I can't prove that it helps a lot.

2.  I stay zero-beat with my TX frequency and only use the RIT to pick up
off-frequency callers when no one is calling inside my narrow passband.

3.  I back off the RF gain so that I work the strongest stations first, then
increase the RF Gain a bit as I work down into the weaker signals.

4.  I use two directional antennas, one on EU and one on NA and can
instantly switch between either or phase both.  On the high bands, these are
Yagis and on the low bands these are Beverages.  This way I can cut out part
of the pile-up.

5.  I use multiple parallel decoders such as several MMTTY decoders, each
with a different profile, as well as the Hal DXP38 hardware decoder.

6.  I exercise painful patience by waiting until I get a call sign.  That
is, when the pileup finally stands by, if I don't yet have a call, I DO NOT
send "AGN" or "QRZ".

7.  Even after I get a call sign, I wait a half second and try to get
another one or two.  I stack the second, third, etc. calls in my call queue
and work them all in succession without calling CQ.  Instead of TU CQ, I
send CALL 1 TU, NOW C2 599 1234.

8.  I am prepared to grab a tail-ender who drops his call sign in at the end
of the prior station's exchange to me.  Then I stack the tail-ender call
sign and work it immediately without a CQ, like 3. above.

9.  I keep my messages as short as possible to maximize rate.  The faster
you work stations, the smaller you make the pileup.

10.  I insist on completing a QSO once I get a call or partial call, so as
not to reward rude callers that don't standby.

11.  If the pileup escalates faster than I can work it down for an extended
period, I QSY and start a new run.  I've only done this once in 7 years when
a EU pileup got excessively unruly.  I didn't announce anything or admonish
the rude callers, but simply went to a new frequency.



Ed - P49X

Post edited by: ve2fk, at: 2012/02/08 16:09
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Re:Pileup Management at P49X - 2012/02/08 22:28 Très bonne idée de publier ça ici Claude. Je trouve l'info que Ed donne très pertinante comme d'habitude. Toute ces pratiques sont en effet efficaces et s'appliquent pour nous tous à l'exception bien sûr du volet 'antennes'.

Si on regarde attentivement ces conseils on peut voir pourquoi, mis à part la situation géographique pour laquelle on ne peut rien y faire, certaines stations ont de si bons resultats en contest.
- Plus gros le pileup = plus petit le filtre , logique non!
- 6 stations nous appellent en même temps = ça ne sert à rien d'envoyer AGN, on ne fait que couvrir les appelants. Laissez-les rappeler par eux mêmes, le plus wise passera le premier et ainsi de suite.
- zero beat en freq d'appel, toujours utiliser le RIT, bien plus rapide que le logiciel

et ainsi de suite.
Facile...là on n'a qu'à faire 3500Qs en 30hres et on est correct, pareil comme P49X...

73, Fabi
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