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#1
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On Wed, 27 Sep 2006 12:32:22 -0700, bob_deep wrote:
Slow Code wrote: Dumbing it down cheapened the license, making being a radio amateur nothing special. No wonder they leaving. I'll bet that most of the folks "leaving" are simply not renewing being SK. Code is in a way a dying art quite literally. Which is a shame. We have to face it, this hobby doesn't attract a lot of new blood and the existing stock is rapidly growing older. The advantage to me is that I can find old ham equipment at estate sales for next to nothing but that's not what I'm posting about.. ![]() I don't think things are all that "unfair" with the maximum code speed we currently test being 5 WPM. Of course that's what I got tested at so you can charge bias if you want. I currently don't operate CW (heck, I don't operate at all right now) but all that spectrum space in the lower part of the bands is starting to beckon. I've got a code practice program and I work on my code from time to time so maybe someday... So where do I fall in this debate? I certainly don't favor the removal of the code requirement for all license classes. Extra's surely need to be tested at the current 5 WPM. But the fact remains that the interest in this hobby as shown by the decline in the number of licenses needs some attention. We don't need to "dumb" down the hobby to get more folks in it, but we do need to bring the requirements into the current age. Before the advent of the personal computer 20 years ago, it would have been very expensive to set up an automated CW send and receive station, but now you can do it for next to nothing. One can actually send and receive CW without ever learning it and get transmission rates much faster than just about anybody can copy by ear, just hook up your PC to the rig load the software and voila, the no code licensee is sending and receiving at 25 WPM the day after he failed the 5 WPM test. On the other hand, you guys that struggled to get their code speed up to 20 WPM so they could get their Extra have my respect. I understand that lowering that requirement seems like we are dumbing down the hobby, but I hope you can understand that like AM, CW is being replaced by other modes that you and your generation have pioneered. My greatest fear is that the FCC will totally do away with code in it's testing requirements, which will logically lead to a mass spectrum reassignment to make more room for voice and we will likely loose our valuable spectrum space in the process. But once the last license goes to SK what's to stop the FCC from giving it all away? May code never die, there are times it's the only option, but we have to keep the hobby relevant or it will all go away when the hobby dies. -= Bob =- KC4UAI I was under the impression that CW would get through under worse conditions and/or with lower power requirements than other modes. Does no one run "flea power" anymore? I sometimes listen in on 10 meters but don't hear much there. A bit of CW every now and then, but not much of anything, usually. Maybe I'm listening at the wrong times? Or is it mostly vacant and just freebanders buying the 10 meter rigs? |
#2
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![]() "Leroy" wrote in message news ![]() On Wed, 27 Sep 2006 12:32:22 -0700, bob_deep wrote: I sometimes listen in on 10 meters but don't hear much there. A bit of CW every now and then, but not much of anything, usually. Maybe I'm listening at the wrong times? Or is it mostly vacant and just freebanders buying the 10 meter rigs? Has much to do with where we are in the sunspot cycle. A couple or three years from now 10 meters will start to be much busier. It's my misfortune I got my upgrade to General a year before the dead bottom of the cycle. At the age of 74 I'm just hoping to be around long enough to see what the high point in the cycle sounds like.(G) Harold KD5SAK |
#3
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kd5sak wrote:
Has much to do with where we are in the sunspot cycle. A couple or three years from now 10 meters will start to be much busier. It's my misfortune I got my upgrade to General a year before the dead bottom of the cycle. At the age of 74 I'm just hoping to be around long enough to see what the high point in the cycle sounds like.(G) Man, do anything you can to stick around. It's going to be good, and 10M FM is just more fun than anything. Get a PRC-8 and take lots of vitamin C. I predict that this next peak is going to be a really good one, at least as good as '78 was. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
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![]() "Leroy" wrote in message news ![]() On Wed, 27 Sep 2006 12:32:22 -0700, bob_deep wrote: [SNIP] I was under the impression that CW would get through under worse conditions and/or with lower power requirements than other modes. Yes that can be true. They speak of PSK as being low power but that is only low transmit power. It takes more power to generate a 25w PSK signal than a 100watt CW signal. Computers draw a lot of power. Does no one run "flea power" anymore? There are a lot of QRP (low power) hobbyists. I sometimes listen in on 10 meters but don't hear much there. A bit of CW every now and then, but not much of anything, usually. Maybe I'm listening at the wrong times? Or is it mostly vacant and just freebanders buying the 10 meter rigs? Bad point in the sunspot cycle for 10 meters. It does open occasionally but not like it does at the peak of the sunspot cycle. Right now it is not open every day (although it may be open for a while each week). And the time of day it is open tends to be when people are working, doing errands after work, etc. Dee, N8UZE |
#5
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"Leroy" wrote in message
news ![]() I was under the impression that CW would get through under worse conditions and/or with lower power requirements than other modes. Various digital modes do better under low SNR conditions than CW, but they do require a computer at both ends to perform the encoding and decoding -- some people don't like that fact, that you seemingly need "more equipment" to work such modes than you do with CW. It's a bit of a red herring, however, in that these days pretty much every single amateur radio being sold commercially has a processor (computer) in it anyway, and while some are strictly for "control" (not modulation/demodulation), the percentage that does have raw number crunching power increases every day, and within a decade it's a fair bet that over 90% of all commerical amateur radios will use DSP techniques for modulation and demodulation. (Cell phone went to DSPs somewhere between 5-10 years ago now...) Does no one run "flea power" anymore? Absolutely they do, and it's a really cool part of the hobby... but for every 100 amateurs, I would guess that the number running QRP on a regular basis is about 1. ---Joel |
#6
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![]() "Joel Kolstad" wrote in message ... "Leroy" wrote in message news ![]() every 100 amateurs, I would guess that the number running QRP on a regular basis is about 1. ---Joel My sole experience with QRP was accidental. I had reduced power to 5 watts to tune to a different band (17 meters) and forgot to turn the power back up. As a result I found myself speaking to a Swiss ham form my southern Oklahoma shack with 5 watts and getting a reasonably good signal report. I realize that for real QRPers 5 watts is high power, but for me it was an unusual pleasure. Moreso because bad weather had me using an indoor dipole mounted on the wifes sewing room ceiling (about nine feet above the earth). Harold KD5SAK |
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