Re: [digitalradio] The Makrothen Contest RTTY Saturday 00:00-07:59 UTC and 16:00-23:59 UTC and Sunday

2008-10-11 Thread Steinar Aanesland



Another contest...

S




Andrew O'Brien wrote:
 The Makrothen Contest
 TMC - The Rules - 2008

 Last Update: 4-October-2008
   TMC logo

 Date and Time:

 The contest takes place on the second full weekend of October each
 year. The next contest dates are Saturday 11th and Sunday 12th October
 2008, with three separate periods: Saturday 00:00-07:59 UTC and
 16:00-23:59 UTC and Sunday 08:00-15:59 UTC.

 Objective:

 The object of the contest is for amateurs around the world using RTTY
 to contact as many amateurs in other parts of the world as possible
 during the three contest periods.

 Terms of Competition for all classes:

 All entrants must operate within the limits of their chosen class when
 performing any activity that could impact their submitted score. Only
 the entrant's call sign can be used to aid the entrant's score. A
 station operating from a DXCC Entity different from that indicated by
 its call sign is required to sign portable.

 All antennas must be physically connected by wires to the
 transceiver/s, transmitter/s and receiver/s used by the entrant. All
 used transceivers, transmitters and receivers must be located within a
 500 meter diameter area or within property limits of the station
 licensee, whichever is greater. All operation must take place from the
 same operating site.

 Any form of DX alerting assistance is permitted in all classes. Self
 spotting of any form on spotting nets is not permitted for any class.
 Self spotting is defined as generating packet radio or web site spots
 for your contest call sign, including - for example - this methods:
 using your own call sign; spotting your call sign while using another
 call sign; spotting of your call sign by other stations as a result of
 prearranged solicitation. To notify the locator of a station via any
 form of DX alerting assistance is unwanted and this unsportsmanlike
 behaviour can lead to a disqualification.

 Classes:

 Class 1: Single, All Band, Low Power

 * SO/Single Xcvr LP

 Class 2: Single, All Band, High Power

 * SO/Single Xcvr HP

 Class 3: Multi, All Band, Low Power

 * SO/Multi  Xcvr LP (S/M)
 * MO/Single Xcvr LP (M/S)
 * MO/Multi  Xcvr LP (M/M)

 Class 4: Multi, All Band, High Power

 * SO/Multi  Xcvr HP (S/M)
 * MO/Single Xcvr HP (M/S)
 * MO/Multi  Xcvr HP (M/M)

 Class 1 and 3: The output power shall not exceed 100 watts.

 Class 1 and 2: Single operator and single transceiver - or - single
 transmitter and single receiver.

 Class 3 and 4:

   S/M = Single operator and multiple transceivers, transmitters
 and receivers (see note).
   M/S = Multiple operator and single transceiver - or - single
 transmitter and single receiver.
   M/M = Multiple operator and multiple transceivers, transmitters
 and receivers (see note).

   Note: No limit to transceivers, transmitters and receivers, but
 only one signal and running station allowed per band.

 Bands:

 The 80, 40, 20, 15 and 10 meter bands may be used only.

 Exchange:

 No RST required. You have to send the first 4 characters of the
 Maidenhead Grid Square Locator (locator) at your QTH. (i.e.: FM19
 or: JO41). Your log must show the correct locator sent and received
 for each contact. You must send the same locator in each QSO. Only
 portable /p, mobile /m, maritime mobile /mm and marine stations
 (example: VEØ***, HC9***) may change their locator every 60
 minutes.

 QSO Points:

 A station may be worked once on each band for QSO points credit. The
 points for the QSO are equal to the distance in kilometer (rounded to
 an integer value) between the two stations exchanging their locator.
 IOW: one point is equal to one kilometer.

 Weighting of points on the lower bands: For a QSO on 40m you must
 multiply the points per kilometer with the factor 1.5 and for a QSO
 on 80m you must multiply the points per kilometer with the factor
 2.0. The result must be rounded to an integer value.

 Special case - Exception: If both stations are located in the same
 square, then both stations - regardless of the band - get 100 points
 for this QSO finally. Don't multiply this 100 points with any
 weighting factor!

 Distance:

 The calculation of the distance should assume the earth is a perfect
 sphere with a radius of 6378.16 km. The base point for the distance
 calculation is the center of the Maidenhead Grid Square.

 The formula:

 distance = acos(cos(a1) x cos(b1) x cos(a2) x cos(b2) + cos(a1) x
 sin(b1) x cos(a2) x sin(b2) + sin(a1) x sin(a2)) x radius

   a1 = latitude of station-1
   b1 = longitude of station-1
   a2 = latitude of station-2
   b2 = longitude of station-2
   a1, b1, a2, b2 in radians

   radians = degrees x PI / 180

   PI = 3.1415926535897932384626433832795

 The distance must be rounded to an integer value.

 Multipliers:

 No multipliers.

 Scoring:

 Your total score is the total sum of total points of each band. For
 each valid QSO the distance and the 

[digitalradio] The Makrothen Contest RTTY Saturday 00:00-07:59 UTC and 16:00-23:59 UTC and Sunday

2008-10-10 Thread Andrew O'Brien
The Makrothen Contest
TMC - The Rules - 2008

Last Update: 4-October-2008
TMC logo

Date and Time:

The contest takes place on the second full weekend of October each
year. The next contest dates are Saturday 11th and Sunday 12th October
2008, with three separate periods: Saturday 00:00-07:59 UTC and
16:00-23:59 UTC and Sunday 08:00-15:59 UTC.

Objective:

The object of the contest is for amateurs around the world using RTTY
to contact as many amateurs in other parts of the world as possible
during the three contest periods.

Terms of Competition for all classes:

All entrants must operate within the limits of their chosen class when
performing any activity that could impact their submitted score. Only
the entrant's call sign can be used to aid the entrant's score. A
station operating from a DXCC Entity different from that indicated by
its call sign is required to sign portable.

All antennas must be physically connected by wires to the
transceiver/s, transmitter/s and receiver/s used by the entrant. All
used transceivers, transmitters and receivers must be located within a
500 meter diameter area or within property limits of the station
licensee, whichever is greater. All operation must take place from the
same operating site.

Any form of DX alerting assistance is permitted in all classes. Self
spotting of any form on spotting nets is not permitted for any class.
Self spotting is defined as generating packet radio or web site spots
for your contest call sign, including - for example - this methods:
using your own call sign; spotting your call sign while using another
call sign; spotting of your call sign by other stations as a result of
prearranged solicitation. To notify the locator of a station via any
form of DX alerting assistance is unwanted and this unsportsmanlike
behaviour can lead to a disqualification.

Classes:

Class 1: Single, All Band, Low Power

* SO/Single Xcvr LP

Class 2: Single, All Band, High Power

* SO/Single Xcvr HP

Class 3: Multi, All Band, Low Power

* SO/Multi  Xcvr LP (S/M)
* MO/Single Xcvr LP (M/S)
* MO/Multi  Xcvr LP (M/M)

Class 4: Multi, All Band, High Power

* SO/Multi  Xcvr HP (S/M)
* MO/Single Xcvr HP (M/S)
* MO/Multi  Xcvr HP (M/M)

Class 1 and 3: The output power shall not exceed 100 watts.

Class 1 and 2: Single operator and single transceiver - or - single
transmitter and single receiver.

Class 3 and 4:

  S/M = Single operator and multiple transceivers, transmitters
and receivers (see note).
  M/S = Multiple operator and single transceiver - or - single
transmitter and single receiver.
  M/M = Multiple operator and multiple transceivers, transmitters
and receivers (see note).

  Note: No limit to transceivers, transmitters and receivers, but
only one signal and running station allowed per band.

Bands:

The 80, 40, 20, 15 and 10 meter bands may be used only.

Exchange:

No RST required. You have to send the first 4 characters of the
Maidenhead Grid Square Locator (locator) at your QTH. (i.e.: FM19
or: JO41). Your log must show the correct locator sent and received
for each contact. You must send the same locator in each QSO. Only
portable /p, mobile /m, maritime mobile /mm and marine stations
(example: VEØ***, HC9***) may change their locator every 60
minutes.

QSO Points:

A station may be worked once on each band for QSO points credit. The
points for the QSO are equal to the distance in kilometer (rounded to
an integer value) between the two stations exchanging their locator.
IOW: one point is equal to one kilometer.

Weighting of points on the lower bands: For a QSO on 40m you must
multiply the points per kilometer with the factor 1.5 and for a QSO
on 80m you must multiply the points per kilometer with the factor
2.0. The result must be rounded to an integer value.

Special case - Exception: If both stations are located in the same
square, then both stations - regardless of the band - get 100 points
for this QSO finally. Don't multiply this 100 points with any
weighting factor!

Distance:

The calculation of the distance should assume the earth is a perfect
sphere with a radius of 6378.16 km. The base point for the distance
calculation is the center of the Maidenhead Grid Square.

The formula:

distance = acos(cos(a1) x cos(b1) x cos(a2) x cos(b2) + cos(a1) x
sin(b1) x cos(a2) x sin(b2) + sin(a1) x sin(a2)) x radius

  a1 = latitude of station-1
  b1 = longitude of station-1
  a2 = latitude of station-2
  b2 = longitude of station-2
  a1, b1, a2, b2 in radians

  radians = degrees x PI / 180

  PI = 3.1415926535897932384626433832795

The distance must be rounded to an integer value.

Multipliers:

No multipliers.

Scoring:

Your total score is the total sum of total points of each band. For
each valid QSO the distance and the points and the final total score
will be calculated by the official log checker! You should have this
in your mind, if your logging software package does