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Old September 17th 06, 03:30 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.swap
L. L. is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 165
Default Ham radio can help President Bush and America's war on terror.

"Sparky" wrote in message
...

"L." wrote in message
...
"Cecil Moore" wrote in message
. ..
Slow Code wrote:
Step 2: The passing score for written exams needs to be raised to 85%.

If 85% is good, wouldn't 100% be better?

Step 3: Code elements should be 13 wpm for General, and 20 wpm for
Extra.

If 13/20 is good, wouldn't 30 wpm be better?
--
73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com


I had quit following this mundane thread for a while, looking in only on
occasion. I must wonder - it is being "recommended" "apparently" by "slow
code" to raise the CW rates to 13wpm General and 20wpm Extra.
DUH - we "were" there already.

I've said before and I'll say it again. I'm not a "code" lover, but I've
learned it and used it and sometimes listen to it. Will it save a life?
Probably not - but still - the chance is there just the same as for any
other mode. You use what you have available. CODE did NOT keep the crap
off the ham bands, so to put it back in or KEEP it in, is sort of useless
to argue about. While "I" think 5 wpm is about as easy as you're going to
get - it seems far too many still cry about it. Yes, you could make the
written tests tougher - but that sucks too - because in a sense - they're
"not" any tougher when you're being given the answers in a book. And most
of those books cover "just" enough to pass the exams - they by no means
"teach" you electronics. In days gone by - you had to have at least a
basic grasp of electronics to be able to pass the exams. I'm not saying
you had to be a "Technician" with years of experience - I'm saying you
had to know more than these books teach. At that time - you had NO clue
what the FCC would ask. I've still got sample study guides sent by the
FCC if asked - and they were "vague".

CODE, EXAMS - nothing will keep the riffraff off the bands. This is a
lawless society anymore - people do as they damned well please. CB got
quiet in many areas not due to Cell Phones - it happened long before. It
happened in many places based on what I've learned - because of the
garbage. Ham will be the same way if it isn't respected. We're in a NO
WIN situation.

I find it amazing, people with illegal amps and radios will defend them
to the hilt - like a murderer caught with a smoking gun - claiming
his/her innocence. If the government agency deems them illegal - then
they are - no excuses. Just like the speed laws - if the road is marked
25, that is what it is - plain and simple. If we all took responsbility
for our actions - maybe things wouldn't be so damned bad. I know lots of
cbers who got out of cb BECAUSE those with the illegal amps and radios
"splashed" so bad, they couldn't even talk on the radio. So, tell me
again - how those illegal radios and amps are helping? Hams have a rule
of using the minimum necessary to carry out the communications. IT DOES
WORK! QRP (Low Power) is part of the challenge! 500- 1000 watts or more -
any dummy can do. If you want to be known as an "Alligator" station - ALL
mouth and NO ears.... keep using that garbage. Who wants to talk to them?
That is as irritating as static on an AM radio station. Listen to
Channel 6 on the CB - there is a guy who constantly talks - HOW he hears
anyone is beside me. I think he talks just to hear himself talk. AND
being he is in the south, he has to be running some power. If everyone
operated like that, the bands would be total chaos, no one talking to
anyone - only to themselves. How the FCC hasn't busted him yet - is
amazing.

Just my 2 cents.

L.


Remember the "No child left behind" policy of our educators of some years
ago? What you are seeing today is largely a result of that philosophy. No
responsibility, accountability or respect for others or oneself.

I worked as a radio dispatcher in the Air Force during my Sixties tour.
That was the foundation of my radio experience. I owned a CB set for a
year before I actually transmitted. The style was so alien and "cutesy" it
made me want to barf. Then the syntheisized 40 channel rigs came out and
everyone could afford one. End of CB for me.

I then went on to get my commercial ticket with radar endorsement. A year
later I got a ham ticket and two years later I got my Extra. Code does not
come easy for me. It was a constant uphill battle to pass the 20 wpm code
test. But eventually I passed it.

Turning on the radio today, there are still some good folks on ham radio
and not all of them are old timers. But a lot of the same types that
ruined CB and now ruining ham radio. I can't remember the last time that I
actually transmitted with my station. I'm about ready to sell it off and
chalk it up to history.

Amplifiers are not intrinsically bad. Abusing amplifiers is bad. If you
work 75 or 80 meter telephony, an amp is an absolute must have, especially
if you have a less than full size dipole at a decent height.

I enjoyed ham radio more when folks knew a bit about electronics. It gave
us something to talk about that we all hand in common. Ditto CW. No one
had more trouble learning CW than me, believe me. It still gives me a
headache to operate CW for more than a few minutes, but I wanted that
Extra Class ticket and that was the only way to get it back then.


Believe me, I'm not "knocking" amps, just the "evidenced" misuse (abuse) of
them. Yes, they "do" have their use and place. But most of those using them
"THINK" they have to "rule the airwaves" to converse. Their splattering
ruins it for ALL.

L.