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Old August 14th 04, 02:12 PM
Steve Robeson K4CAP
 
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Subject: Another D-H* NCVEC proposal
From: PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 8/13/2004 6:41 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article ,

(Steve Robeson, K4CAP) writes:

Subject: Another D-H* NCVEC proposal
From:
(N2EY)
Date: 8/11/2004 11:06 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

(Steve Robeson K4CAP) wrote in message
...
Subject: Another D-H* NCVEC proposal
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 8/11/2004 5:08 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:


Why not do like the Germans and create an "operator only"

license?

Because it goes against the Basis and Purpose of the amateur radio
service as defined in Part 97.


OK, Jim...Please explain to me how having a "student operator"
license would violate ANY of the spirit of the Basis and Purpose of
Part 97...I've read it several times over in preparation of responding
to this post, and I can't find a single thing that would violate
either the spirit of the letter of the law...


One theme of the B&P is that hams are skilled operators. Another is that they
are technically knowledgeable.


Uh huh...

By reducing the license tests to the point that there would be a class of
license which did not allow unsupervised operation works against those goals.


WHO SAID "unsupervised"...?!?!..The "operator only" license idea is the
very epitome of "supervised" licenses, and would probably provide that
""skilled operator" a heck of a lot faster than the present "here's your
license now go learn" situation we have now!

So does a license which disallows homebrewing or requires some sort of Big
Brother protection against the horrific dangers of 32 volt power supplies.


The
purpose of which is to allow a person to operate a radio, but under
the supervison of an experienced operator.

We have that now. A licensed ham is the control operator, and someone
else actually turns the knobs, pushes, the buttons, talks into the
mike, taps on the keyboard.


Sure, you can do it that way, but that's not the point now, is it?


Actually, yes it is.

There's no present need for a "student license" because someone who wants to
learn amateur radio operating techniques "by doing" can do so without any
license at all - *as long as there is a control op*.


OK, Jim.

We're (supposedly) talking about a new entry license to promote
the service.


Right. Something like the old Novice, which got me and hundreds of thousands
of
others started in amateur radio.


And now the Technician Class does that. And......?!?!

A "student operator" would not only be cumulative
towards a higher grade license, it would encourge mentorship.


But why is it necessary or even beneficial? If the "student operator" cannot
use the rig unless a mentor is present, why have a student operator license
at
all?


Details, Jim...It assigns a trail of responsibility in the training of the
new ops.

Student operators could be given a certain amount of independence
even, by allowing approved mentors to "sign off" thier card and
operate under the mentor's call, ie: KN/K4YZ.


That's somewhat different. How is the mentor ham supposed to judge when the
student is ready to solo?


When the student has met the criteria for a "solo", whatever those final
criteria may be later determined to be...Just like a CFI allowing a Student
Pilot to take it around the patch with the right seat empty.

The precedent is already
federal practice for student pilots. Can't solo until the IP signs
you off!


Sure - but is that what's really best for amateur radio?


I don't know...Do you?

The FCC get's a dozen petitions a year suggesting new license proposals
that will immeidately and undoubtedly save Amateur Radio from certain impending
failure.

Do YOU have THE one failure-proof idea? I Sure don't.

The words "operate an amateur radio station" have an exact definition
under FCC rules. It means to be in charge of the station, even is
someone else does the actual knob turning, etc.


Words written by people can be changed by people, Jim.

Even the Constitution has ammendments.


Point is, right now the term has a precise meaning.


Uh huh.

And tomorrow it may have ANOTHER "precise meaning".

I am not talking about TODAY'S Amateur Radio, Jim...

Then after some period of time or
minimum operating hours, the "student" is eligible for an upgrade?

Based on what other requirements?


Take a shot, Jim...This was a general discussion...Not definitive
proposals.


I say it unnecessarily hampers the new ham.


OK...Your opinion noted. 674,999 others to go.

What if somebody wants to bypass the whole student operator thing and go
straight for a higher-class license? Would that be forbidden?


If I was clairvoyant I'd be buying Lottery tickets.

And in my opinon, no...If someone wants to just dive right in, let'em.

Today, and for more than a quarter century, a person who can go for Extra
"right out of the box". Would you change that?


Only that I would like to see a return to the "time-in-service"
requirement that used to be part of the Extra. The Extra SHOULD represent
evidence of more than have=ing taken a written test. I should say "I
accomplished this and have PROVED it through accomplishments noted".

Let's rehash the previous "Novice license", as it seemed to
work, update the technical standards, and determine where we would
like new operators to be in terms of skill level, then set up the new
license from there...(We are only using the "old" Novice as a
guideline...NOT the standard to set)


OK, fine. How about this:

3) "Basic" license test is simple 20-25 question exam on regs, procedures,
and safety. Very little technical and RF exposure stuff. Main objective
is to keep Basics out of trouble. Basics get 100-150 watts on HF/MF and
25 watts or so on VHF/UHF (power level determined by RF exposure
limits).

Modes are CW, analog voice, PSK31 and many of the other common data
modes
like packet. Basics cannot be VEs, control ops for repeaters, or club
trustees. Basics get most VHF/UHF and about half of HF/MF spectrum.
Basic

is meant as the entry level. Easy to get, lots of privs, yet there's
still
a reason to upgrade.


Why not digital voice?

And I wouldn't be so quick to dole out that much sprectum. Otherwise, why
not?

What's wrong with that concept for an entry-level ham license?

Such a system would essentially require that a prospective ham would
have to know a more-experienced ham in order to operate. Why do we
need such complications?


Would it hurt?


Yes.


No...It wouldn't.

Local ARRL Special Service Clubs could sponsor Mentorship training and
pair up volunteers and students.

Students would get immediate exposure from working directly with a
mentor...Not a video tape.

What if a prospective ham doesn't know any other hams who are willing to be
mentors and who are interested in the same things the student is interested
in?


What if a prospective Ham just woke up from a 25 year coma, doesn't know
about the Internet or search engines. What if...

My point here Jim is that the programs will eventually become self
sustaining with word of thier existence speading.

What if the student and mentor cannot match schedules? What about kids who
don't drive yet? Who checks out the mentors' backgrounds?


If the student and mentor can't match schedules, they change mentors. And
kids can get around. And local clubs can screen mentors.

nd you're at least tentatively supporting the
idea of yet another license class...


No, I'm not. My discussion proposes three classes, like today.

so if you're going to go that far,
go a bit farther and consider ALL possibilities.


I have. The requirement for a mentor is unnecessary and hinders the process.


OK...If you say so. I say that mentors will put out more responsible and
well trained "new licensees"...

The biggest "drawback" to my idea as I see it is that a lot of
folks who are TALKING about Elmering and mentoring would actually have
to do it, and may even have to take a bit of responsibility for it.
Heaven forbid!


If I'd had to search for a mentor and wait around until both of us had
available free time, just to operate, I'd might never have gotten past that
stage. Instead, I was able to get a Novice license, build a station, and go
on
the air unsupervised. I don't see anything wrong with keeping that concept.


Were you the exception or the rule?

Shall we base ALL future expectations on how well you did...???

And who said this would be the ONLY way to enter Amateur Radio?
There's a lot of folks out there who never operated a day with a
Novice, Tech, General or Advanced licenses...


So you would allow the student license to be bypassed? Someone could get an
Extra "right out of the box"?

Or why don't we quit wallowing in all this administrative
quagmire and just "get on with it"...???

What "quagmire"? The FCC amateur radio license system today is far
simpler and more accessible than at any time in the past 35 years.


The "quagmire" of proposals that continue to arrive the FCC,
including the present NCVEC "plan"...

The NCVEC plan isn't new; it got an RM number quite a while ago. We're just
taking another look at it. Still looks as bad as it did before. Worse, even.

That's how the democratic process works.


And it's not the only "license restrcturing" plan to cross thier paths,
Jim.

As you and I have both pointed out on numerous
occasisons, Jim, Gradeschoolers are passing the EXTRA, ergo there's
little validation for a new "entry class" license...

That doesn't mean things can't be improved. Do you *really* think the
current Tech is the best we can do for an entry-level license? I
don't.


Why not?


Because:

- The Tech is VHF-UHF centric. It pushes new hams into one type of amateur
radio operation, and isolates them from HF.


It also put's them in the MAINSTREAM of Amateur Radio by virtue of
exposure to 2 meters...The Amateurs Campfire, if you will.

I'll get the rest later...It was a loooooooong night.

73

Steve, K4YZ