Emails are pouring in here. People are upset.

First regarding field day as a contest - it is in fact a contest. QST in 1933 announcing the first field day called it a contest. In 1934 it was proudly proclaimed to be a contest. I see no shame in it being treated as one. Submitting a log is irrelevant. You have scores, points, categories, it’s a contest. 

And it’s great because clubs can engage in friendly competition and be proud of their standings. 

I see this whole issue as one of attempting to please everyone. The anti FT8 rhetoric is loud but in reality ft8 doesn’t make that big of a dent in overall field day participation. And it may even be beneficial because FT8 brings hams out of the woodwork - new hams, young hams, apartment restricted hams, everyone. 

CW has been a staple for many clubs here. They recruit top operators to work their cw positions because it’s extra points. Clubs like WECA and Sussex county ARC recruit top CW ops. Other clubs have been following along. But the casual SSB and digi ops really don’t care much about points. So essentially CW has been a driver to more “serious” field day ops. Those ops push clubs to enact more elaborate stations which garner more public attention and good publicity. They also provide a tremendous opportunity for newer ops to come along for the ride with a “winning” team. 

I would have liked to see a points structure that still rewarded CW more but also fewer points for FT8. The FT8 ops largely wouldn’t care. But the CW ops would still feel valued for their contributions. Something like 3 points for CW, 2 for phone and keyboard digi/RTTY and 1 for weak signal digi. Bonus points for emcomm activities like message traffic, winlink and situation reports. 

As Mickey said - I can’t defend this new points structure either. And I agree with members that this was too much change all at once.

Ria
N2RJ

From: arrl-odv <arrl-odv-bounces@reflector.arrl.org> on behalf of Michael Ritz <w7vo@comcast.net>
Sent: Monday, February 27, 2023 1:54:46 PM
To: arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org <arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org>
Subject: [arrl-odv:34618] Field Day Point Value Changes
 
I'm sure many have seen the rants from the guys on MyARRLVoice, and have received letters from the CW Ops guys about the recent PSC recommendation to level the score playing field for all modes in FD. Below is my comment to one such complaint, and provides some background on the issue.

These are my opinions, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of ARRL staff or the the PSC.

"First of all, know that I'm pretty much ambivalent in this, and don't really have a dog in the fight. I operate SSB, CW and RTTY pretty much equally, but am not on FT-8 at all. I'm too busy tending to e-mails and my other Board work to even get on the air except the big contest weekends! I've received a few e-mails that are saying what the PSC are doing here is OK and maybe even needed action, and a few that are espousing that equalizing mode scores in ARRL FD is going to destroy amateur radio as we know it.  

This question was hotly debated in the PSC meeting over the last few months. We received a lot of complaints last year about the intrusion of FT-8 and FT-4 into Field Day, to the detriment of the other modes, just as is happening with just about the entire rest of amateur radio. That is borne out somewhat with in the attached graph. You will also notice in the graph that CW contacts in FD now outnumber SSB contacts. Why is that? It's probably because CW has had a recent resurgence because of groups like CW ops, and that's a good thing.

Has the elimination of CW as a license requirement in 2004 killed off CW as an amateur mode and destroyed amateur radio, as predicted? No. Again, refer to the graph. Will CW die in FD because the points are now the same for all modes? I don't know, but I would bet against it.

Now a question: Is the main reason new hams are learning CW is that they know that CW operators are able to get twice the points of the phone guys for the same number of Qs in FD? FD is technically not a contest, and in fact, no logs are even submitted. I don't think that's the reason at all. It's because they want to learn something new, and find they enjoy it.  

The hardcore CW guys love CW, and for the most part, despise phone. I know quite a few elite contesting hams that refuse to even own microphone, and I'm sure you know some too. It's somewhat an elitist attitude, and I'm sure that's one of the reasons the CW guys want their point advantage. They believe they are better than everybody else because they "know code", and I don't think they would deny that thought. "I learned CW, so I'm smarter than you"! The opening remark about the "ARRL dumbing down amateur radio" by leveling the FD playing field on the recent MyARRLVoice Facebook topic on the subject pretty much says it all.  

One of the arguments I've seen also is that FD is supposed to be an Emcomm event, and "when all else fails, CW gets through in an emergency." That said, the newer digital modes are actually better than CW for this, and there is no CW mode that I know of used within Winlink, something very often used in EmComm activity.

We, (the PSC),thought of reducing the points for digital to match SSB as an incentive to get off FT-8, leaving CW alone at the top, but that would end up reducing points for those attempting to use traditional digital modes, such as RTTY, or the other non-FT-x modes in FD. So, we decided that maybe just letting market forces take over and equalize the points between all three modes was the best strategy. People will use then mode they are most comfortable with, and everybody has fun. No advantage for anybody.

OK, now the question: Why should CW Qs have a 2:1 point advantage over other modes in FD? Is it because one can make more Qs per hour with phone over CW? No, that's not the case. If one researches the CQWW contest rates over the last few years, one will see that they are pretty much equal now, with the edge now to CW ops.

I haven't heard a real and valid reason yet provided by the CW guys for the point advantage not being eliminated in FD, other than what I've heard above, and the fact that the incentive "has been in place since 1974, so why change it"? 

That said, the CW guys are all crying foul loudly, and we will listen to them. I plan on holding a special PSC meeting to discuss the change, and may propose that we change it back to what it was before, then have ARRL Staff set up a survey of ALL ARRL members, and get everybody's input on this, not just hearing from the loud and proud CW guys."

I hope this helps the discussion. I don't appreciate the bullying attitude being taken by some on social media, and the PSC is just trying to make sure that FD stays a "fun factor" operating event/contest for all. Field Day is what you want to make it.  

Thanks for listening.

73;
Mike
W7VO