"Dee Flint" wrote in message
...
"James King" wrote in message
news
psl8nwpaa2sj4v0@dad...
On Tue, 25 Jan 2005 22:34:32 -0500, Dee Flint
wrote:
I've never operated satellite and never intend to and have no interest
in
ever doing so. Yet I had to answer questions on it. Do I think it
should
be taken out of the test? No, because it is something allowed by my
privileges.
Dee D. Flint, N8UZE
Please demonstrate your knowledge of Sat - data - sctv abilities. For
your license that is. not just a passing knowledge in the topic but send
and receive a 1 minute transmission of each.
CW has its place in amateur radio... in history.
When code was the primary means of transmitting a message, demonstrating
your skill prior to getting your lic. was a great idea.
That time has passed.
As far as I know, no bandwidth has been off-limits to CW. Makes me wonder
at what your rail about.
I wasn't railing at anything. I was merely commenting that not wanting to
take a test element is not a justification for eliminating it. The
argument that you won't use it is also invalid as one cannot predict the
future or changes in interest. There are far better reasons to eliminate
it than those two arguments. Though I readily admit that I am a proponent
of keeping the test there are reasons that should at least be evaluated
and those that are pure hogwash (i.e. not wanting to or not thinking they
will use it).
Demonstrating satellite, data, or sctv abilities is not practical in a
testing environment. The test teams can't afford to have those facilities
and even in the days of the FCC testing, they did not have such
facilities.
By the way, I've already operated data modes and found them utterly boring
and gave them up. Satellite and SCTV are not attractive enough to me to
invest money in them.
The question should be: is CW one of the fundamentals of amateur radio?
If so, it should be a requirement somewhere along the line. Age of the
mode is irrelevant.
Dee D. Flint, N8UZE
My humble opinion is "It would be better to drop code and up the technical".
There are more than enough amateurs who know little about radio as it is...