Thanks John,

  I understand about the program decoding anywhere on the waterfall. I have
just found in practice that if I move away from my original frequency the
other station can not hear me unless I go back to the original transmission
slot. I attribute this to QRM on his side that I can not see on mine. Often
when I go back to where he originally heard me the QSO can be completed
with no problem. As far as scenario 2, I usually never call someone on
their own frequency except in that particular circumstance. It seems easier
to quickly move off of the original station's frequency and go to the
caller's then find another empty frequency and start the response (and risk
the issue of landing on another "clear on my side, QRM on his frequency". I
usually assume that the other station is on a QRM free frequency on his
side or he won't be using it.

Anyway, just minor issues that I've been working around. This program is
AMAZING!!!

Thanks!

Bill - AK6A

On Thu, Oct 25, 2018 at 5:09 AM John <j...@rmnjmn.co.uk> wrote:

> Bill,
>
> WSJT-X does not require you to transmit on the sender’s frequency, or to
> set your frequency precisely.  In fact it is often the case that it is best
> to select your transmit frequency where there is a clear region and then
> click “Hold Tx Freq”.   Your signal will be decoded by the sender - and, in
> particular, if many people are transmitting on his/her frequency you will
> have a better chance of getting a reply.
>
> — John G4KLA_______________________________________________
> wsjt-devel mailing list
> wsjt-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wsjt-devel
>
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