Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#20
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Jeff,
On 28/07/2020 11:07, Jeff wrote: The problem is that radio-technology nowadays is nowhere near the technology when the exams where conceived. However, that does not apply to antennas, the current topic. For antennas, their matching, and the losses, the theory that you (should have) learned for your amateur radio exam still applies today. Euh .. why would this not apply to antennas? I think what the OP is trying to say is that antenna theory has not changed over the years, and Maxwell's equations, transmission line theory etc. still apply and have not been superseded. There has been no great leap in antenna technology compared to other branches of radio communications. What was good 50 years ago is still good today. Well, I did use the term antenna *systems* with a reason :-) But in essence, that's not the point. This message-thread is actually a reply to a message saying that the exam has become to easy. The way I see it, it is not the 90 % "operator" hams that will determine the future of amateur-radio. Operators follow the technology as it become available (DIY, commercial) and, in that sense, how easy or difficult the exam is not that relevant. What is important are the 5 to 10 % technically-minded part of the amateur-radio community, the people who are busy building and designing things, either creating new devices or combining devices to build infrastructure in a novel way. (and, to be honest, I consider this NG part of that). For me, that is the group of people that will make amateur-radio survive in the 21st century. 20 to 30 years ago, most devices consisted of one type of technology, and that was either "analog" or "digital". (with some exceptions, like using a PC to do RTTY) But in 2020, almost all devices are now a mix of analog, digital-control and digital-processing technologies, that might even use a LAN or PAN network to connect to a backend-infrastructure and do data-processing or even ML. (See the examples of the combination of antenna-technology with fields of technology like like digital-control and digital-processing in the previous message.) And that aspect makes things now completely different from technology 20 years ago: as devices have become a mix of different technologies, so has become the requirements for people interesting in developing new things. So, yes, I agree. Antenna-technology by itself is one of the fields that has changed less then other technologies; but antennas + digital-control + digital-processing + simulations + "data" + whatever is nowhere what was possible 20 years ago. Anycase, let's hope that we can find a way to get sufficient technically-minded people from ham-community interested in taking the next step so the hobby can survive in the 21st century. (but as we have now gone quite off-topic here, I propose to close this discussion) Jeff 73 kristoff - ON1ARF |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
WTB: Tokyo Hy-Power Labs Antenna Tuner | Swap | |||
FA/FS: High Power Antenna Tuner | Equipment | |||
FA/FS: High Power Antenna Tuner | Equipment | |||
FA: MFJ-949D HF antenna tuner/SWR/power meter | Swap | |||
FA: MFJ-949D HF antenna tuner/swr/power meter | Swap |