Audio Recording
This Amendment is published and established by News Release 046/06
Following discussion on the WRTC2006 Reflector and inline with the WRTC2006 principle of transparency it has been decided to remove the requirement for the Teams to provide the facility for Recording all received and transmitted audio.
Instead, some of the Referees will be equipped to carry out this function. These Referees will be allocated to the Teams randomly.
This is issued as an Appendix to the WRTC2006 Rules.
WRTC 2006 Contest Rules
Only the 3.5, 7, 14, 21 and 28 MHz bands will be used during the contest. For CW, it is highly recommended and for SSB you must operate within the following ranges:
| CW (Recommended) | SSB (Obligatory) |
| 3500 - 3600 kHz | 3700 – 3800 kHz |
| 7000 - 7050 kHz | 7050 – 7300 kHz |
| 14000 - 14095 kHz | 14105 - 14350 kHz |
| 21000 - 21145 kHz | 21155 - 21450 kHz |
| 28000 - 28195 kHz | 28205 - 29700 kHz |
Both CW and SSB modes.
Only English language and common international abbreviations can be used, when operating either SSB or CW.
WRTC stations send signal report plus ITU zone. (Southern Brazil is ITU Zone 15). A complete exchange must be logged for each valid QSO.
The same station can be worked once on CW and once on SSB on each band. Cross-band or cross-mode QSOs are not allowed.
Requesting QSOs, e.g. setting schedules, in any way, before the contest period is strictly forbidden. The Team contest stations must be QRT for the last 10 minutes prior to the contest start. This means that no operator may be on the air from the contest site during this 10-minute period, under any callsign whatsoever. The radios need not to be switched off, but the volume must be turned fully down, and no monitoring is allowed. Note, the 10 min. rule refers to Team contest stations only and not to the MN MS stations.
The operators are not allowed either to identify themselves, or the teams they belong to.
Use of non-amateur radio media (e.g. telephone, Internet, smoke signal or drums) for the purpose of identification or requesting a contact (or contacts) before or during the contest period is strictly forbidden.
Use of packet cluster or any other spotting network is not allowed. For the MN MS stations the use of Cluster is permitted, but self spotting is clearly not allowed.
The WRTC Contest is the Ham Radio Olympic Games and to maintain the spirits and rulings that this name carries, the Judging Committee will disqualify a team that violates the rules of the contest; shows unsportsmanlike conduct; takes credit for excessive unverifiable QSOs or unverifiable multipliers.
In line with this philosophy the WRTC 2006 Honorary board, together with previous WRTC events organizers and some international contest organizers are elaborating a WRTC CODE OF ETHICS containing the basic ethic principles and rules for the WRTC competition. Some of those principles and rules should be applied already in WRTC 2006. We intend to announce this document in due time before the WRTC 2006.
Computer logging is required.
Each WRTC 2006 team must submit their Cabrillo file to their Referee within fifteen (15) minutes after the contest has ended (see further paragraph 18).
We highly recommend all competitors to use Writelogâ. The WRTC 2006 committee has decided to use the standard IARU contest scoring and multipliers, therefore no special version of the logging programs will be required or provided. Other Logging software, capable to handle the IARU contest can also be used. In all cases, the competitors must satisfy themselves with its IARU contest and Cabrillo capabilities, the Committee does not assume any responsibility on the conversion into Cabrillo.
The 10-minute band and mode rules do not apply in the WRTC contest, but it applies to the MN MS stations.
The use of the 'Super Check Partial' tool is not allowed. If the logging software incorporates this kind of feature, it must be disabled. Use of any callsign database during the contest period is not allowed as well.
On the other hand, the computer may display a 'Check Partial' list based solely upon the callsigns already worked during the contest.
ANATEL, the Brazilian Entity responsible for the telecommunications in the country, will provide a special callsign for each team. The callsign assigned to the competitors will be the special prefix plus one single letter. i.e. PT5A, ZW5B.The process to assign the stations will be a lottery Friday prior the contest. The calls will be given to the teams, at the station before the contest.
Each correct two-way CW or SSB QSO with stations located:
- In ITU Zone 15 counts 1 point.
- Outside ITU Zone 15 and within South America counts 3 points.
- Other continents count 5 points.
The total number of ITU Zones plus IARU member society HQ stations on each band will count as multiplier, once per band regardless of the mode. IARU officials represent a maximum of four multipliers per band (AC, R1, R2 and R3).
IARU member society HQ stations and officials do not count for zone multipliers.
A one-QSO penalty will be assessed for a miscopied callsign.
The final score will be the total number of multipliers multiplied by the sum of QSO points.
The WRTC 2006 winner will be the team with the highest score.
The WRTC 2006 SSB Winner will be the team with the highest SSB score.
The WRTC 2006 CW Winner will be the team with the highest CW score.
The WRTC 2006 Young Team Winner will be the team with the highest score.
The WRTC 2006 M/S Winner will be the Multi National (MN MS) team with the highest score.
As WRTC is a mixed mode contest, it is required that; to qualify as a winner in SSB or CW a minimum of 35% of the total number of QSOs must be made on the other mode.
A new special category is created, inviting foreigners and Brazilians to form Multi National Multi Single (MN MS) teams to operate from selected (10 to 15) Contest Stations placed in Southern Brazil.
The MN MS stations will be equipped with rigs, linear amplifiers and antennas of the owner’s station plus equipment brought by the participants. Since the MN MS stations are not equal (location and equipment), the WRTC 2006 Committee will make a lottery for assignment of the foreign operators to the stations. The lottery will be made and the assignments will be published no later than 3 months before the WRTC contest. The station can be upgraded with equipment and peripheral devices brought by the foreign operators, we highly encourage such upgrades. We emphasize the objective to really have an integration of different nationalities and a spread of contest experience at each station to facilitate international understanding and share experience.
The teams should have no more than five (5) operators composed of at least one foreign operator and at least two Brazilians operators. This means that a team will have no less than three and no more than five operators.
The rules for this category are the IARU contest rules and not the ones for WRTC, so there are no limitations on antennas and the maximum legal power is permitted. The logs must be sent as Cabrillo files to the WRTC Committee within 2 hours after the contest to logs [at] wrtc2006 [dot] com and according to the IARU contest rules to IARUHF [at] iaru [dot] org.
Through generous financial support and important cooperation, the WRTC 2006 Committee has been able to invite two special teams, the YL Team and the Special Young Team.
To promote the desire to enlarge the participation of Ham Ladies in international contest activity, as suggested by the sponsor 4L5A, we opened a slot for a Young Lady (YL) Team.
The Special Young, team (sponsored by the YASME Foundation) is to further promote the younger generation’s contesting involvement, this in addition to the already established three Bi-National Young Teams.
All decisions of the WRTC 2006 Judging Committee are final.
The WRTC competition is a very peculiar contest, and the present and previous organizers have tried to elaborate the rules to accommodate a 48 hours result announcement with the traditional long-term announcement procedures.
All the log checking systems developed till now, requires the majority of the logs to be inserted in a data base for further checking. In the WRTC competition the available logs are very limited, and we must mitigate the chances to have unfair results. For this particular reason we intend to improve the system by providing:
To elaborate these rules, The WRTC 2006 Committee is getting total support from the previous WRTCs committees and also from participants from previous competitions. With this support we shall introduce new rules for this and future WRTC events to make contesting more fair to everyone. The Committee has always been open to adjust and improve the rules if so required and is to benefit of the contest.
The WRTC 2006 organizers provide:
Each participating WRTC team must bring everything else needed for the station.
Each WRTC 2006 station will have two radios (A and B). The radios must be named as radio A and radio B before the contest begins. All QSOs must be made on radio A. The operation rules for radio A and B are detailed in item 18. Radio B can be changed to become radio A only in case of malfunction and as approved by the referee.
Due to the distance from the Ham population and the propagation situation, the WRTC 2006 will provide a Linear Amplifier for each station. ACOM International Inc. has supplied the amplifier ACOM 1010 with a specified power output of 700 W PEP or 500 W continuous carrier. The functionality of the amplifier will be verified before the contest and changed if necessary but can not be changed during the contest.
Band-pass filters are allowed for both radio A and radio B.
Two networked PC's are allowed. (PC-A at Radio A, PC-B at Radio B). The PC's must be named as PC-A and PC-B before the contest begins.
The teams must provide equipment and recording of the all the WRTC contest operation. Both received and transmitted audio of Radio A (any VFO used). During the whole contest operation, the Referee must be able to monitor this traffic through Radio A, in real time.
Other related equipment for automation is allowed. The final station design and auxiliary configuration shall be presented to the WRTC Technical Committee no later than 06-May-2006 for final review and acceptance.
Teams may reorient and adjust the wire antenna at any time, as long as the feed line is not extended.
The WRTC Committee will arrange permits for temporary import of radios, PC’s and auxiliary equipment.
Before the competition the Teams are allowed to use third party technical support to organize and install the station, as well to install and test software or other permitted devices and peripherals.
During the Contest the Referee is entitled to permit repair of equipment eventually damaged during the operation. This actuation must be done outside of the operation room and can be done by third party.
The chart below defines the rules for RADIO, COMPUTER and OPERATOR A and B.
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OPERATIONAL RULES
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A
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B
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R
|
Allowed to transmit Full Reception Allowed to use band-decoder Allowed to use audio and RF filters Can share audio with Radio B Must share audio with Referee, any VFO used Can be replaced by Radio B (In case of Radio A failure) |
Not allowed to transmit Full reception Allowed to use band-decoder Allowed to use audio and RF filters Can share audio with Radio A Can replace Radio A (In case of Radio A failure) |
C |
Computer must have minimum spec. as required Fully interconnected with Computer B Key Radio A (CW and SSB) Can exchange messages with Computer B Must record whole contest on Computer A or B Voice and CW Keyers are allowed. Super Check Partial is not allowed Log must be converted to Cabrillo format after the contest |
Computer must have minimum spec. as required Fully interconnected with Computer A Allowed to key Radio A (CW and SSB) Can exchange messages with Computer A Must record whole contest on Computer A or B Voice and CW Keyer are allowed. Super Check Partial is not allowed |
|
O
P E R A T O R |
The main operator of Radio A Operators can change position (chair) at any time Allowed to populate the band-map Can exchange messages with operator B Must share audio with the Referee throughout the contest. Can share audio at any time with Operator B |
Can control and operate Radio A. and log the QSO. Operators can change position (chair) at any time Allowed to populate the band-map Can exchange messages with Operator A Must share audio of Radio A with the Referee. Does not share audio of Radio B with the Referee Can help Operator A to copy callsigns Can share audio at any time with Operator A Is not allowed to key Radio B Can operate any of the allowed devices |
Note: The competitors can use other device than the computer A or B to make the recording of radio A audio in the contest (transmit and receive).
The competitors must submit to the Referee at the end of the contest, the Cabrillo file with the log and the audio recording on a Disk and/or CD and/or USB Memory stick. The USB memory stick password (if used) must be disabled and the file names clearly indicated. Return of media shall be coordinated with the Referee. If other media shall be used, it must be described in the station configuration design (see paragraph 18).
Station Connections
All participants will be provided a detailed diagram for the setup, at least 4 months before the event.
In case of malfunction, the faulty equipment can be replaced with spare equipment, except the Linear Amplifier. If such spare equipment deviates from equipment in the standard configuration to be presented to the WRTC 2006 Technical Committee (see paragraph 18), then the spare equipment and its configuration must also be specifically described.
The participants are encouraged to bring their family members, i.e. spouses and young children.
Florianopolis is a very beautiful city with a fantastic nature with plenty of nice beaches and the WRTC 2006 organization committee, will provide special entertainment for them while you are contesting. For those who want to stay longer in the region we will be pleased to provide help and support for additional programs.