Adjudication Principles - 80m and DX Contests
All UKEICC contests use automated (computer-based) adjudication which is based
on the following guiding principles:
·
A contact is deemed to be good when all of the required data (see below) in its
Cabrillo file matches the data in the worked station’s Cabrillo file.
·
When a Cabrillo file is submitted by only one of the participants in a contact,
the contact is assumed to be good, subject to it not falling foul of the bust
call sign checking described below.
·
Claimed contacts that can be shown to contain incorrect data or do not have an
entry in the second station’s Cabrillo file are awarded penalties.
·
Claimed contacts that do not fall within one of the above classifications are
awarded zero points.
Adjudication based on the above principles assumes that the information
exchanged during the contact is accurately recorded in the Cabrillo file and
that what was entered at the keyboard or automatically recorded by the computer
logging software was accurately represented in the Cabrillo file. Unfortunately
errors occur in both processes. The adjudication software scores the contest
based on the information in the Cabrillo file - it has no other knowledge about
the contact. Very occasionally, this will result in points not being awarded for
contacts that were in fact good.
A more detailed set of adjudication rules follows:
·
In the descriptions below, a QSO record is the information extracted for a
single QSO from the Cabrillo
file submitted by an
entrant.
·
In a QSO between two stations which have both submitted a Cabrillo file, station
A is awarded points if the sent information as recorded in station B’s QSO
record is correctly logged in station A’s QSO record. In addition, the band and
time (within 5 minutes) in both QSO records must match.
Exchanged information is:
o
Call sign of station B
o
Serial number recorded as sent in station B’s QSO record
o
District recorded as sent in station B’s QSO record if that station is UK or EI
based
o
RS/RST reports are ignored.
·
In the above example, station B is awarded points for correctly logging the
information in stations A’s QSO record. However station B could be awarded
penalty points for incorrectly logged information.
·
If a contact is claimed with a station which has submitted a Cabrillo file but
the entrant’s call sign cannot be found in that file, the contact is marked as
‘Not in Log’ (NIL) and awarded a NIL penalty unless one of the following two
‘bust’ criteria is shown to exist, in which case a ‘bust’ penalty applies:
o
A close match to the entrant’s call sign is found in the worked station’s
Cabrillo file, and in addition:
§
Both QSO records show the same band
§
The entrant’s sent serial number is the same as the worked station’s received
serial number
§
The entrant’s received serial number is the same as the worked station’s sent
serial number
§
Levenshtein distance (See note 1) of call signs equals 1
§
QSO time is within the specified time window
§
If the contact was with a UK/EI station, the logged district must match the sent
district in the worked station’s QSO record
o
An exact match to the entrant’s call sign and QSO record is found in a Cabrillo
file submitted by a station whose call sign differs by a Levenshtein distance of
1 or 2 from the entrant’s call sign. The following criteria must also be met:
§
Both QSO records show the same band
§
The entrant’s sent serial number is the same as the worked station’s received
serial number
§
The entrant’s received serial number is the same as the worked station’s sent
serial number
§
The entrant’s call sign matches exactly the call sign recorded in the second
station’s QSO record
§
QSO time is within the specified time window
§
If the contact was with a UK/EI station then the logged district must match the
sent district in the worked station’s QSO record.
·
If a contact is claimed with a station which has submitted a Cabrillo file but
the serial number logged differs from the sent serial number as recorded in the
worked station’s QSO record, the contact is marked as ‘bust’ for the entrant and
awarded a ‘bust’ penalty. The following criteria must be met:
o
Call signs in both QSO records match
o
Same band
o
Received serial different to worked station’s sent serial
o
QSO time within the specified time window
o
Note – district codes are not checked.
·
If a contact is claimed with an EI/UK station which has submitted a Cabrillo
file but the district recorded differs from the sent district as recorded in the
worked station’s QSO record, the contact is marked as ‘bust’ for the entrant and
awarded a ‘bust’ penalty. The following criteria must be met:
o
Call signs in both QSO records match
o
Same band
o
Received district is different from the worked station’s sent district as
recorded in the worked station’s QSO record
o
QSO time within the specified time window.
·
For a contact where the amateur band (derived from the frequency in the QSO
record) differs in the two submitted QSO records, both stations are awarded zero
points for the QSO. No penalties are awarded. There is currently no checking of
frequency within a band.
·
A QSO record where the worked station’s call sign is the same as the entrant’s
is awarded zero points and no penalty. Entering your own call sign is a valid
technique for correcting a logging mistake quickly.
·
There are no penalties for duplicate (dupe) QSOs (same call and band) as long as
one of the QSO records is good (point scoring). If none of the dupe QSOs are
good, a single penalty is awarded based on the error incurred in the first of
the duplicate QSO records.
·
If a duplicate QSO records exists with a station which hasn't submitted a
Cabrillo file, the first QSO is assumed valid.
·
A NIL that is also a dupe of a valid QSO is classed as a dupe, not a NIL.
·
When both the entrant and the worked station submit Cabrillo files, the time in
both QSO records must match to within plus or minus 5 minutes. If not, both
entrants get zero points for the QSO.
·
An entrant claiming a contact before the start of or after the end of the
contest receives zero points for the contact. The other station is awarded
normal QSO points as long as the contact is within the 5 minute time window and
is otherwise good.
·
A QSO record with an incorrect mode is awarded zero points for the contact. The
other station is awarded normal QSO points as long as the contact is otherwise
good.
·
The QSO record of a UK/EI entrant must contain a valid sent district in order to
be credited with points for a contact. If not, the contact is awarded zero
points unless it is shown to be bust or NIL.
·
A QSO record for a contact with a UK/EI station where no received district is
recorded is awarded zero points unless it is shown to be a bust or NIL.
·
A UK/EI station whose QSO record shows an invalid sent district is awarded zero
points for the QSO. But if the worked station’s QSO record shows a received
district matching the entrant’s invalid district, the worked station is awarded
QSO points if the contact is otherwise good.
·
A 12-hour entry which exceeds the 12-hour operating period has all subsequent
QSO points and multipliers disallowed. The entrant suffers no further penalties.
Credits and penalties are given for all good QSOs up to the 12-hour limit.
·
Virtual logs are created for all non entrants and used for checking the validity
of any QSOs with the non entrant.
o
Entrants logging a receiver serial number that is unrealistic considering the
trend of serial numbers being reported from the non entrant at that time are
awarded zero points.
o
Entrants logging an unrealistic districts code from UK/EI non entrants stations
are awarded zero points.
·
Adjudication uses the most up-to-date (at start of contest) Amateur Radio
Country Files available at
http://www.country-files.com/
for mapping call signs to country and continent.
·
Adjudication uses the list of UK/EI district codes published in the rules to map
call signs to district.
·
QSO records that do not conform to the Cabrillo file template specified in the
rules are awarded zero points. The adjudication software attempts to extract
useful data from a broken QSO record to enable contacts to be cross checked, but
broken records may result in penalties being awarded to other stations.
·
Scoring
o
A QSO record awarded zero points or penalty points dfoes not qualify for DXCC or
District multipliers.
o
When a QSO record contains multiple verifiable errors, penalty points are
awarded at a level consistent with the most severe error
o
Penalty points are removed from the QSO points total before the DXCC/district
multiplier is applied.
o
No entrant is given a negative score - minimum is zero.
Note 1. The Levenshtein distance between two words is the minimum number of
single-character edits (i.e. insertions, deletions or substitutions) required to
change one word into the other. It is named after Vladimir Levenshtein, who
studied this distance in 1965.
Version 1.0.5
20/01/2020