WRTC was created to remove the biggest variable in contesting: the station. What happens when the world's best operators compete with equal stations, equal power, and equal opportunities?
I'm joined by Randy Thompson K5ZD, Chris Hurlbut KL9A, Dan Craig N6MJ, Bill Fehring W9KKN, and special guest Tim Duffy K3LR, for a deep look at the World Radiosport Team Championship just weeks before competition begins.
We explore the history of WRTC from Seattle and San Francisco to Finland, Brazil, Moscow, Boston, Germany, Italy, and now the United Kingdom. Along the way, the group explains how the event evolved from borrowed stations with wildly different conditions into one of the most sophisticated operating competitions in amateur radio.
The conversation also pulls back the curtain on the qualification process. Earning a seat at WRTC can require years of contesting, travel, station access, planning, and sacrifice. For many operators, qualifying may be harder than the event itself.
Finally, we discuss what actually separates the top teams once the contest starts. Is it preparation? CW speed? Strategy? Accuracy? Propagation knowledge? Or something else entirely? Past champions and competitors share what they believe determines who stands on the podium when the weekend is over.
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