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wrote on Sat, 5 May 2007 08:20:29 EDT:
On May 4, 7:22?am, "KH6HZ" wrote: And just what are "big numbers", anyway? Back in the late 1940s, all through the 1950s and into the early 1960s, the number of US hams grew from about 60,000 just after VJ-Day to about 250,000 in 1964, even though all hams back then had to pass Morse Code exams and "secret" written tests. Yes, there was certainly a growth, but a number of factors were not mentioned. Firstly, all amateur radio operation was forbidden during the duration of World War II. Secondly, the wide use of radio for communications by the military during that war was certainly one of exposure to many military members that might have been mildly interested in radio in general at the time. Third, the large numbers of "war surplus" radio equipment suitable for HF operation was a boon for all interested at the time to become radio active at low cost. I've witnessed all of that first-hand. Yet ham radio was far less popular back then than it is today, because the ratio of hams to total US population was much lower then than today. I have to disagree with that for several reasons. Independent amateur radio publications CQ and 73 began a many-decades publishing existance in that period. Several other radio-interest publications began and some pre-WWII publishers restarted in the late 1940s. Publishing of electronics subjects in all areas began in earnest during the late 1940s and into the 1950s and those have increased up to today. Electronics in many applications flourished after WWII, even before the invention of the transistor and first appearance of low-priced production devices almost a decade later. With that increase in general electronics production, not to mention the avalanche of TV receivers being made, came an increase in the availability of electronic components through distributors and dealers, most being suitable for "radio" applications. Thousands of small start-up businesses and proto-corporations involved in electronics began during that period; few were directly involved with amateur radio per se since all of the electronics industry was undergoing a rapid expansion...something that hasn't stopped. The immediate post-WWII period saw little change in amateur radio technology or operation, the vast majority concerned with HF bands as they were then, that mostly using radiotelegraphy mode. Voice on HF ham bands required double-sideband AM techniques which didn't begin to be replaced by new-fangled SSB until the late 1950s. Data (actually RTTY then) was rare and confined to those who could get surplus teleprinter terminals. Only a few knowledgeable amateur experimenters were engaged in radio above 30 MHz, a part of the spectrum considered almost "other-worldly" by so many HF hams and inhabited only by TV, FM, and radars. :-) The first significant change in worldwide amateur radio came about (in my observation) at WARC-79 and the creation of new HF bands for amateurs. In the USA there was little advancement in amateur radio regulations to keep pace with the growing influence of electronics in all consumer applications and radio for other purposes than broadcast or ham use. CB on the former 11m ham band slice of HF had a notable growth among U.S. radio producers after 1958. All of the bigger radio makers were involved plus several start-up companies. Less than a decade later came the off-shore produced CB sets at lower prices and the explosion in CB set use on highways began. While there are no easily-obtainable statistics now, estimates of CB set use today outnumbers amateur radio licensees by at least 7:1. With the off-shore production of CB transceivers came the off-shore produced amateur radios having competitive quality and cost. The 1970s and early 1980s were another period of fast growth, even though the license test requirements had been considerably increased by the "incentive licensing" changes of 1968 and 1969. Not having taken any "incentive licensing era" tests for amateur radio, I can't comment on "requirements being considerably increased." I do note that the time period was one in which the [Japanese] "Big3" of amateur radio designers-producers got started and firmly established their position in the ham market. Hallicrafters of Chicago dissolved their business, National Radio went to all- government contract work and morphed into other things, Collins Radio dropped out of the amateur market though it is still heavy into commercial and military radios as a division of Rockwell Intl. Heath Company of Benton Harbor, MI, quit most of its fabled kit business and changed owners. Yaesu, Kenwood, Icom rule in the HF-VHF-UHF ham radios off the shelf today. All three plus the smaller off-shore makers offer quality in production and design at competitive prices. I would think that such would have a direct bearing on whether any newcomers would be attracted to amateur radio of today or of the 1980s and 1990s. However, with such "fast growth" ('fast' being subjective) came the increased demand to eliminate the code test for amateur radio license exams. Several countries had established "T-hams" who did not test for morse code skill but were restricted to VHF and up. The USA lagged behind those other countries in finally establishing the Technician class (no-code-test) license in 1991. The rest of the radio world was giving up using any morse code modes...if it had ever established it from a radio service's beginning. In 1970 there was little competition for free time from the Internet (made public 1991), Bulletin Board Systems (as yet a decade away), personal computers (four years away for a beginning, a decade away for the "IBM PC"), less than half of all homes had color TV and most had screens smaller than 23 inches, nothing like the 100 channels for model radio control at 72-74 MHz, few amateur radios on the market for VHF and higher, cellular telephone service just starting (at lower frequencies than L-band), no standardization on Compact Disc recordings (magnetic recordings had begun to compete with vinyl discs), no standard magnetic tape recording system for television recordings, "Pong" was just taking hold as a novelty electronic game in restaurants and lounges (all-digital, first models did not use a microprocessor), TTL digital devices were becoming a market- demand leader for digital electronics, some specialty analog ICs were new and available although most would be out of production in three decades, "auto electronics" consisted of an in-dash AM/FM radio and an ignition system little changed from 1940 designs. Personal radio was limited to 11m CB that was undergoing an explosive growth from inexpensive foreign production and becoming popular with truckers. Electronic music augmentation was just beginning and the first music synthesizers had appeared. Three decades later there is considerable competition for free time and personal entertainment. One out of three Americans has a cell phone subscription. One out of five American house- holds has some form of Internet access. CDs have replaced all previous formats of music recording and DVDs have replaced former means television recordings. Retail dealers and renters of both have been created. We are in the transition phase of conversion to HDTV which has already shown a superior video and audio service. Most U.S. households have multi-channel television-music service by cable or satellite relay. We've had direct-dial telephone service for two decades to any other same-service telephone in the world. The Internet is firmly established as part of U.S. social fabric and is found on all continents of the world. We have license-free FRS HTs over the counter as pairs for under $100. 11m CB is still with us and still used on highways by the millions. Remote control of models by radio in the 100 channels of license-free bands at 72 and 74 MHz is the standard for modelers, wireless local area network equipment is off-the-shelf for businesses and residences. Cell phone service is available on all major U.S. highways, even in remote areas (excluding parts of Alaska). We have cordless telephones that operate at 5.6 MHz, using secure digital modulation as well as older 2.4 MHz units with the same features, both a practical impossibility in 1970. I've not included such things as voice-over-Internet protocol, the ability of modern PCs to typeset a printed page as good as any compositor plus include imagery as part of a finished document. I've not included the (literally) thousands of different games available for PCs. I've not even mentioned that the average under-$1500 over-the-counter PC suite of today having more processing power than any IBM-360 or RCA Spectra 70 mainframe computer of 1970. I've not mentioned that digital electronics and photosensing have changed personal photography from film to electronic form, capable of being "developed" at any PC or added-function stand-alone printer. I've not included the (license-free) radios that open car doors, open garage doors, sound various music when wireless door bells are pushed, activate electrical devices remotely, carry security TV camera signals, or identify products by RF, all using relatively-secure digital codings. The preceding has been just a summary of the kinds of things which can compete for free time for all Americans, whether they are licensed in the amateur radio service or not. It is that kind of competition that future amateur radio in the USA has to work amongst to attract newcomers. Amateur radio must attract newcomers or it won't survive as a radio service. Amateur radio must change with the times or just disappear as human attrition takes its toll on those who refuse to adapt. 73, Len AF6AY |
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