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321:. Once five contacts have been made, the operator packs up the station and moves it at least 1 km on foot or 6 km by car. Other modes of transport are also used, each with its own minimal distance. The operator then deploys their station at the new location, makes five more contacts, packs up and moves again, until the four hours are up. The operator with the highest contact count at the end of the day, for their chosen four hour period of operation, wins.
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certain summits during pre-defined Winter periods. Certificates are issued at point intervals. Other variants of this radio-sport along the same lines exist, for example WWFF (World Wide Flora and Fauna in
Amateur Radio) where activators set up a station in a nature area and chasers contact an operator who is in the nature area.
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at high speed for a specified period of time, and generates a score for the competitor based on errors in copying. Another event is the "pileup" competition, where competitors must copy as many individual call signs as possible while many are being sent simultaneously over a defined period of time.
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Originally called SIAS (Shack in a sack), this radio-sport combines speed, a portable station and efficient communications. The operator picks a four hour time-frame within which to operate and deploy their portable station as quickly as possible. Once deployed, the operator makes a maximum of five
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is as a synonym for amateur radio contesting (ham radio contesting). Contesting is an activity where amateur radio stations attempt to make as many two-way contacts with other stations as possible, following certain defined parameters of the competition, to maximize a score. At least two specific
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it. There are two ways to score SOTA points; a) as an activator, meaning the operator climbs the summit and makes at least 4 contacts from it or b) as a chaser, that is, an operator who makes contact with an operator on a summit. Summit to summit contacts attract bonus points, as does operating
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sent at very high speeds. International competitions typically involve several events, some of which are based on simulations of amateur radio activity. One event in the
Radioamateur Practicing Tests (RPT) uses a
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Summits or peaks are allocated unique identifiers if the mountain summit meets certain criteria (i.e. height, distance from other peaks) and is allocated potential points to be scored by
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218:, was known as the IARU Radiosport Championship from its inception in 1977 until the name of the contest changed in 1986. The term
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were originally formed for the promotion and organization of the sport of ARDF and continue to use the term
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has sponsored the IARU HF World
Championship (originally named the IARU Radiosport Championship). The
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in their event names; the IARU HF World
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All-Russian public radiosport and radioamateur organization «Soyuz
Radiolyubiteley Rossii»
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High Speed
Telegraphy competitions challenge individuals to correctly receive and copy
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370:"World Radiosport Team Championship Sanctioning Committee Looking Ahead to WRTC 2022"
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in their society name. These include the Radio Sport
Federation of Armenia, the
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Complete name of
Russian Amateur Radio Union – SRR, following official charter
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Bibliography of IARU contest results and related articles in
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that includes all three types of radiosport. Since 1977, the
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The
Victorian ARDF Group, a regional ARDF organization in
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Belarusian
Federation of Radioamateurs and Radiosportsmen
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Kazakhstan Federation of Radiosport and Radio Amateur
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For the broadcast radio station in New Zealand, see
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461:Radiosport site of Amateur Radio Union of Serbia
16:Formal competition among amateur radio operators
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312:RaDAR (Rapid Deployment of Amateur Radio)
109:Learn how and when to remove this message
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191:is another international competition.
632:International Telecommunication Union
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47:adding citations to reliable sources
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287:Radio Sport Federation of the USSR
224:World Radiosport Team Championship
189:World Radiosport Team Championship
134:World Radiosport Team Championship
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259:International Amateur Radio Union
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185:International Amateur Radio Union
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279:Mongolian Radio Sport Federation
271:Chinese Radio Sports Association
222:also appears in the name of the
205:The most common use of the term
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255:amateur radio direction finding
253:also can refer to the sport of
230:Amateur radio direction finding
34:needs additional citations for
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177:Friendship Radiosport Games
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415:. Retrieved Dec. 5, 2005.
347:that sends amateur radio
293:SOTA (Summits On The Air)
521:Emergency communications
195:Amateur radio contesting
591:International operation
157:amateur radio operators
913:Amateur radio in India
857:Amateur radio software
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637:Frequency allocations
611:Vintage amateur radio
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325:High Speed Telegraphy
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179:is an international
43:improve this article
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99:December 2022
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54:Find sources:
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32:This article
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887:Transceivers
845:Technologies
792:Packet radio
735:Data/Digital
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448:Sport portal
434:Radio portal
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377:. Retrieved
374:www.arrl.org
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246:in its logo.
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163:activities:
151:) is formal
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58:"Radiosport"
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41:Please help
36:verification
33:
581:DX-pedition
541:Homebrewing
244:radio sport
153:competition
149:radio sport
123:Radio Sport
934:Radiosport
714:Television
620:Governance
606:Radiosport
526:Contesting
509:Activities
379:2023-01-31
356:References
349:call signs
337:Morse code
305:activating
263:radiosport
251:Radiosport
220:radiosport
212:radiosport
207:radiosport
201:Contesting
173:contesting
145:Radiosport
69:newspapers
877:Satellite
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240:Australia
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586:Hamfest
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559:Culture
83:scholar
908:Q code
802:PACTOR
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680:DSB-SC
601:Q code
576:Awards
277:, the
273:, the
269:, the
175:. The
171:, and
155:among
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752:AMTOR
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169:DXing
90:JSTOR
76:books
862:IRLP
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412:QST
45:by
930::
742:CW
705:PM
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