 
			
				October 4th 05, 01:14 AM
			
			
			
	
		  
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Dan/W4NTI wrote:  
 "an_old_friend"  wrote in message 
   oups.com... 
  
   wrote: 
  LRod posted: 
  
  "K2, huh? New York City? That explains why you were able to work 
  "multiple states." You have, what, six of them within 100 miles? Try 
  that in any state west of the Appalachins." 
  
  No, central New Jersey.  Dhuh! 
  
  which is close for the point to be valid 
  
  "Whiny old timer, out of touch with reality, loss of memory of old time 
  
  ham radio, ****ed because of Incentive Licensing, lets other people 
  determine his enjoyment of a hobby, still hanging around the amateur 
  radio newsgroups despite being unlicensed for nearly a quarter 
  century." 
  
  No Mr. Dork, I simply lost interest in ham radio when it became 
  infested with clueless CB types who only hold ham tickets because they 
  crammed their way through the licensing exams. When store purchased 
  commercial rigs appeared, the ham bands became cluttered with these 
  types to the extent that one QSO after another led to nothing but 
  uninformed, mindless blathering as it remains today. 
  
  Hmm you lost interest but you are HERE engaging in debate over it 
  
  However, I am forever grateful to my ham radio experience because it 
  led the way for me to obtain my First Class Commercial ticket, my job 
  as chief engineer of a Trenton, NJ radio station, and ultimately paid 
  for my BS level college education at Drexel University. The knowledge 
  acquired though my ham activities also qualified me for a coop job as a 
  transmitter designer at Barker & Williamson (the B&W 5100 xmtr was one 
  of my projects and later the Army's T368 transmitter.)  My ham radio 
  and educational background ultimately led me to a 15+ year career with 
  Raytheon developing military electronics. 
  
  When active as a ham, the majority of my time was spent developing and 
  perfecting ham TV rigs and TTY systems that represented the cutting 
  edge technology of that time when the joy of building and operating a 
  conventional CW, AM, or SSB rig became old hat. 
  
  What saddens me most is the degree to which ham radio has become 
  emasculated and rendered devoid of almost all technical value.  Bitter, 
  no.  Saddened, yes! 
  
  looks like one the fellas still ****ed over Incentive licensing and 
  blaming those who just followed the rules laid down for getting their 
  licenses for the rulst of the ARRL's games back then, some several 
  decades ago 
  
  wlaks like a duck quacks like a duck, it likely is a duck, or in this 
  case an Bitter Old Timer 
  
  Harry C. 
  
 
 See what I mean Harry C.   This guy here is the resident antagonizer.  He 
 argues with everyone about everything.  And knows basically NOTHING.
realy I thought that was Stevie's job  and you claim anyone that 
disagrees with you knows nothing
 
BTW I don't argue with everyone, let alone about everything
 
You OTOH say you will agree to discuss something only after everyone 
agrees to agree with you, in advance  
 
 Dan/W4NTI
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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