DX spotting clusters have existed for decades. Originally they were isolated systems accessible via packet radio on VHF or UHF, and therefore limited to the local community. Unless you already had the equipment it required time and money to get connected. The value was dependent on the size of the local DX community and their willingness to connect and spot what they heard.
We built an AX.25 VHF cluster in Ottawa almost 40 years ago. It didn't go well. There were too few of us, the node was difficult to reach (too far out of town) and spots were infrequent, mostly just evenings and weekends. After about a year the node was decommissioned and we donated the equipment to other local VHF projects that had nothing to do with DXing.
Today it's easy. PCs, smart phones and internet connectivity are universal. Pick an app or an internet DX node and you're ready. You can spot at the click of a mouse or do it automatically. You can receive spots from hams across the globe or just your region. There's so much traffic that it must be filtered to avoid being overwhelmed. Then there are the perpetual incompetent spotters and also the limited utility in knowing what DX stations across the ocean might be hearing and working.
Do you want to work the latest rare DXpedition? Chances are that they have a live stream where they post each station worked, including mode and frequency. That's the ultimate in self spotting behaviour. You don't even need to check for spots of these stations. Filling band slots and reaching DXCC Challenge endorsement levels has never been easier. Some think it demeans the value of DX awards, but most hams love it.
Nobody listens anymore. It's time to revisit the topic of DX spotting.CW
When I tuned to 20 meter CW one afternoon this week there were no spots on the band map. Yet there were many signals visible on the transceiver's waterfall display. I enabled skimmer spots and within 10 minutes there were dozens of spots, only two of which weren't from a skimmer. I am careful to filter for skimmers located in northeast NA to reduce spots of stations I'm unlikely to hear.
CW skimmers work so well that most operators no longer bother with spotting. Whether that's good or bad is a matter of opinion. Skimmers make mistakes, including decoding errors and phantom signals. They may also have antennas too poor or too good to mimic a typical station.
An increasing number of nodes are installing filters to weed out the problematic spots, whether human or skimmer generated. They're becoming quite good at it, often better than proficient CW ops -- typos are common. Skimmer spots don't include splits (for rare DX), and human split comments are frequently unreliable.
Even on 160 meters where I have excellent Beverage receive antennas there is little need to tune the band. There are skimmers with dedicated receive antennas that perform admirably. It is also useful for any weak station (e.g. QRP) since skimmers pay more attention to the weak ones than humans do. Once your weak signal is picked up by the skimmer you will attract callers, be it for POTA, in a contest, or other operating activity.
The technology has progressed to the point that, like many others, I rarely spot stations on CW, and I can do it without feeling guilty. One exception is rare DX that may rarely identify or not follow standard CQ pattern that might not be picked up by skimmers.
SSB
There are no phone skimmers, at least not yet. They'll come eventually but until then we are reliant on human spots. For those that rely on spots to find stations, rare DX or not, be aware that most stations do not spot the phone stations they hear or work. If you dislike spots and prefer to find stations yourself, this may be seen as unimportant or perhaps a positive. That is not a common view.
There is a way to increase phone spots. It remains largely a feature of contest logging applications such as N1MM Logger+. It is a simple configuration change with which every station you work by S & P (they run and you find them) is spotted, if you are connected to a DX cluster.While not mandatory it is recommended by many contesters. The objective is to increase the number of phone stations that are spotted to a level comparable to that achieved by CW skimmers.
This is the best we can do until we have software that can reliably recover call signs and other critical spoken QSO data, whether in English or other languages. It's a challenging technical problem. My prediction is no less than 10 years until it is broadly available and sufficiently accurate. I could be wrong and we'll get there sooner, or much later! There is no financial incentive so we are dependent on technology developed in fields outside of amateur radio and, of course, dedicated and capable volunteers.
Digital
Digital modes are particularly amenable to automated spotting. It has been available for years through use of WSJT-X and similar apps in concert with services like PSK Reporter. One only needs to click a check box to report all that the software hears. The data can be retrieved and analyzed via online services, whether PSK Reporter itself or downstream services that utilize the data feed.
You can manually inspect what other reporting stations are hearing or use services that graphically present the data. Again, I am no expert on those services so I'll let you discover those on your own.
Even if you don't send your data to PSK Reporter, you will be found since most of the stations you work on digital modes upload their reception data.
Contests
Spotting in contests is different. The major difference is that, for a big station like mine, you run most of the time. When you run you have nothing to spot. Not only that, the spots that do appear are less appealing. Certainly you want to chase multipliers and other contacts, but if you're in an assisted class you click on spots and so you have little to contribute to the community. That is, you are not spinning the VFO and spotting stations that are not already spotted.
If you operate unassisted you do not spot. It is true that some contests allow you to spot others but not see others' spots. However that's rarely done even when permitted by the rules. Operators just don't connect to DX clusters when they're not in an assisted class.
For an increasing number of contests it may be that most of your spots will be for yourself: self spotting, where the rules permit it. When you're running there's little else for you to spot. This benefits you and nobody else, but that's the nature of the game: you want to be found and others want to find you.In CW contests the skimmers are so successful that I often turn skimmer spots off. The reason is that the flood of data is overwhelming and not necessarily useful. Early in a contest everyone is a new contact so the band map isn't needed. Later after many stations have been worked, I turn skimmer spots back on.
For the casual operator in a contest, you are more likely to be a consumer of spots rather than a producer. Considering the high activity level in contests that really isn't a problem -- you probably aren't adding anything that others, including skimmers, aren't already producing.
Tools
There are many tools to analyze spots in real time or near real time. Some are downloadable apps while others are web based. You can track DXpeditions, where and on which bands there are openings, get alerts for grids, countries and specific stations. Many are free. The data is also used for research, mostly amateur but some professional, to correlate with solar and geomagnetic data and refine prediction algorithms. With so many spot sources there is a lot of data available.
I've used a few of these tools though far less than many others. Since I am not in a position to make recommendations, I won't. You can find them and their champions through an internet search. I'll leave it to others to guide you if you want to pursue the topic.
Where we are
Like it or not, spotting is the way a large majority of hams find stations to work. Older hams may reminisce about the old days when we spent many evenings spinning the VFO looking for stations to work, or that elusive rare DX with an unpredictable operating pattern. Those days are gone and they are not going to return.
The truth is that all that VFO spinning was tedious and frequently fruitless. I recall the days when I left my 6 meter rig parked on 50.125 MHz during sporadic E season. The hiss of the receiver filled the house since squelch wouldn't trigger on weak signals. Don't try this if you're married or living with others! The discovery potential of FT8 and other digital modes is one reason it has large replaced CW and SSB as the mode of choice for the serious 6 meter DXer.
Skimmers do much the same for CW, discovering stations and rare openings that would otherwise be missed. Although there is less need to spin the dial, it is helpful to CQ into the aether from time to time for the skimmers to have something to copy. If nobody transmits the band is dead to humans and also to our automated listening devices. That at least hasn't changed.
































