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CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
There has always been some cheating on tests.
Maybe you hung out with a different crowd than I did. All my study was out of Engineering classes and ARRL Handbook and License manual for the regs. I was taught the code from a CW op who officiated my Novice exam. We didn't proceed until I could do on the air QSOs in front of him on the club station. And by the way, everyone that I studied and did code practice with, got ham tickets. Even a Mexican kid who barely spoke English. Those that bitched and moaned and threw tantrums over it, didn't want to after all. Glad not to have them. You are correct that "weeder" tests can't be 100% effective. But if you think that they don't have an impact, then why test at all? If nothing is 100% effective then game is up? No more testing then? They went that route with CB and they couldn't even give people a litteracy test. I.E. getting them to sign a paper stating they would abide by the rules. FCC gave up on it and let it go fallow. The result was dealing dope and scoring hookers in between hetrodynes, pornographic tirades and general orgies of funny noises, wailing and knashing of teeth of the damned. The rest were chased from the band. Maybe you can think of some test or hoop besides CW to discourage the people that act out like morons because they lack self-control. Sure. A psychology test... So, essentially a pseudoscientific approach? Ridiculous. Lets keep it all above board. Although Psychology is a fascinating study, there are aspects that can lead one astray. If my previous post was a psychology test, I might have failed you. The whole Psychology idea reminds me of the Russian fake spyware scanner that pops up and tells you that you're infected and you will have to send $50 and download the cleaner to fix you up. You the pay the money, install the program and you're hooked up with endless spyware and adware until you can't boot up anymore and wipe your hard drive and reinstall Windows. No Thanks. You should know that answer cuts both ways senior. Even if you're buying the Psych. All you have to do is make it difficult for those with short attention spans and little patience. Then follow up with peer pressure. But you have to ignore the tantrums and crying jags and reinforce good behavior. Until parents and governments realize that fact, society will continue to go fallow. Peer pressure is what happens when people begin imitating one another. That is how whole groups go nuts. It is how great teams succeed. It doesn't happen overnight. It is the result of people pushing the envelope and others tolerating or encouraging it to the point where the behavior becomes commonplace and acceptable and encouraged. I never spent any time on Westcars. Glad I never spent time in Nazi Germany either. We don't have a code test anymore so it is a moot point. It is left to peer pressure and the skills tests. I will still use Morse Code because it is useful. It won't be useful if no one knows how to do it. It is even more useful because other people who use it aren't anything like your 75m phone Westcars people. This is all the proof I need that it works. But I guess you don't have that proof, do you? |
CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
Scott wrote:
Except the Russians. They were still using tube gear in their military back in the mid 80s. Not susecptible to EMP (electromagnetic pulse) from a nuke going off. I forgot about EMP. And I guess that is a quite valid reason for using tubes in emergency gear. I do remember that EMP was one of the things discussed for ham emergency gear. I'm sure that our (US) military protects for EMP, but I doubt it is by using tube equipment. Likely something more modern. Fancy Shielding? Perhaps you know the technology currently used? |
CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
Bob wrote:
I also find that it's much easier and cheaper to go QRO with valves than it is with semiconductors. Yes tubes are still quite valid in ham amps. TV sweep tubes powered many of my HF amplifiers over the years! Remember those sweep tube KW amps? What was it, 6 tubes in parallel? I think my old Swan 350 (nicknamed Swan 3-drifty for good reason) used sweep tubes. Kept within specs they lasted a long time but they didn't seem to take much out of resonance abuse. And my Heath mono-banders, wasn't that a sweep compactron? Yes I was a sweep tube fan also... Believe me, I've tried most of them, [Rice Boxes] You've tried *most* of hundreds of models and brands? That seems to be another unsupportable exaggeration. We also have a lot of QRP operators (mostly under 1 Watt) that simply won't be heard by those equipped with the Asian black boxes! Now you're being funny. Cause you can't be serious, can you... |
CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
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CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
"AJ Lake" wrote in message ... Scott wrote: Except the Russians. They were still using tube gear in their military back in the mid 80s. Not susecptible to EMP (electromagnetic pulse) from a nuke going off. I forgot about EMP. And I guess that is a quite valid reason for using tubes in emergency gear. I do remember that EMP was one of the things discussed for ham emergency gear. I'm sure that our (US) military protects for EMP, but I doubt it is by using tube equipment. Likely something more modern. Fancy Shielding? Perhaps you know the technology currently used? In Desert Storm they were breaking out KWM-2a to replace radios that were getting nailed from static in the blowing sand. |
CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
"JB" wrote:
There has always been some cheating on tests. Maybe you hung out with a different crowd than I did. I hang out in the real world. Some people do cheat. You are correct that "weeder" tests can't be 100% effective. But if you think that they don't have an impact, then why test at all? Weeder tests keep failures out for *no reason*. Relevant tests keep failures out for a *good reason*. Although Psychology is a fascinating study, there are aspects... I was being funny with the psychology testing thing. I didn't think you'd really take me seriously. We don't have a code test anymore so it is a moot point. I still have a code test: If you don't know CW we don't QSO. It won't be useful if no one knows how to do it. Making people learn code just so you will have someone to talk to is a bad reason. |
CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
"AJ Lake" wrote in message ... Bob wrote: I also find that it's much easier and cheaper to go QRO with valves than it is with semiconductors. Yes tubes are still quite valid in ham amps. TV sweep tubes powered many of my HF amplifiers over the years! Remember those sweep tube KW amps? What was it, 6 tubes in parallel? I think my old Swan 350 (nicknamed Swan 3-drifty for good reason) used sweep tubes. Kept within specs they lasted a long time but they didn't seem to take much out of resonance abuse. And my Heath mono-banders, wasn't that a sweep compactron? Yup Yes I was a sweep tube fan also... At one point, sweep tubes were available cheaply at TV shops so the designs were at the edge of meltdown. It was neat to have a 350w pep radio, but that was asking way too much. I saw a lot of Swans and others that would break into oscillation with the least provocation. I knew one guy who was a regular customer of the Radio Shack Lifetime tubes. Give me a set of 6146s any day. Conservative designs yet economical. I can always follow up with 811s for more power. Those guys are still cheap and seem to last forever. If you have to plug it in the wall anyway, might just as well be tubes. |
CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
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CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
"JB" wrote:
At one point, sweep tubes were available cheaply at TV shops so the designs were at the edge of meltdown. I worked in a TV shop after high school for gas money. Sweep tubes were very expensive as tubes went in those days. But I got mine and most of the rest of my ham parts from old discarded TV sets. Swans and others that would break into oscillation My Swan was drifty as I said. It was a heat problem with the VFO coil compartment. The osc was solid state, the only transistor in the whole rig. I solved it by building an external VFO. I knew one guy who was a regular customer of the Radio Shack Lifetime tubes. In the 50s there was a tube company called Major Brand Tubes. They were mail order and had a lifetime tube guarantee. Their tubes seldom lasted more than a month in a TV, and they were good to their word. Send them the old tube and they sent you a new one free, you paid postage of course. Well after 5 or so replacements most people finally gave up. A real racket. Give me a set of 6146s any day. I built a single tube 6146 transmitter. I used a voltage quadrupler direct from the 110V for the high voltage (no HV transformer needed). It was a simple high powered xtal controlled oscillator. I used it as a Novice. I don't remember the exact power input now, but it was probably around 50 watts. I just had to be careful which way I plugged it in the wall socket. Wrong way and fireworks... |
CW is a hobby (off topic BWTH)
AJ Lake wrote:
I'm sure that our (US) military protects for EMP No it doesn't and never has. The Russian plans for preemptive strikes included high air bursts over major centres of population to cripple communications. The Soviets /knew/ that the USA was entirely vulnerable to EMP, and still is. Perhaps you know the technology currently used? Yes. We Brits have military communications equipment to deal with EMP - it's /all/ valve based. Trying to protect semiconductor gear against EMP is like trying to protect telephone equipment against lightning - entirely futile! Bob |
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