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On Feb 27, 9:00 am, Michael Coslo wrote:
What attracted you, and can we get some ideas from that to attract or identify and attract new blood? From as far back as I can remember, I was interested in technology - how things worked and what they could do. The kind of kid who's always asking questions, taking things apart and putting them together, etc. I found electricity particularly interesting. This interest was aided and abetted by reading everything I could get my hands on. Libraries and bookstores were special places to me. I did the usual Erector-set and battery/flashlight bulb stuff at a very young age. Then at about age 10 I found a book called "All About Radio and Television" which explained the basics of radio and how to build a simple radio using a razor-blade-and-pencil-graphite detector. I built one, strung a wire out to the crabapple tree in the back yard, and heard WPEN. I was hooked. The book also mentioned various kinds of radio besides broadcast radio and TV. Of greatest interest to me was something called "amateur radio", where ordinary people of all ages and all walks of life had their own radio stations that they used to communicate with each other over great distances. Also of interest was "shortwave broadcasting" which came from other countries. Nobody in my family was a ham, nor were any of my neighbors. None of them knew any hams, either. Not much detail on amateur radio was given in "All About Radio and Television", but I knew where to look for more info - other books. Soon I had a much clearer picture of what amateur radio and shortwave radio were all about. First order of business was to get a receiver in order to listen to "hams" and shortwave stations, so I built one based on information in the various books. It was a simple two-tube regenerative set, made mostly from salvaged parts. It wasn't the best receiver in the world but it worked well enough for me to hear BBC, Radio Moscow, the Voice of America - and "hams"! I wanted to talk to those folks! The books explained that being a ham required earning an FCC license, so I set about doing that. I learned Morse Code by listening to hams use it on the air, and theory from the books and by building and improving the receiver. By the time I was 12 I figured I knew enough to pass the Novice test, so I set out to find a local ham who would be a volunteer examiner for me. I located one by the antenna in his yard, and he referred me to another amateur who did the tests. I passed on the first go and built a simple transmitter while waiting for the license to arrive from FCC. Which it did on October 14, 1967. I went on the air and began making contacts. It wasn't easy with the equipment I had and my basic skills, so I learned to be a better operator and how to build better equipment. Now it's more than 40 years later and it's as much fun to me as ever. What attracted me was the idea of building my own radio station and using it to communicate with like-minded folks all over the world. That the results were random and unpredictable only added to the attraction. I didn't think radio was "magic" or "mysterious", just a lot of fun. A big factor in the attraction was the attitude expressed in the books. None of them said learning radio, getting a license or building equipment was difficult. None said a ham had to be older than a certain age, have a certain income, education or IQ level, be of a certain gender or ethnicity, etc. The required math, physics, chemistry and electricity, and Morse code, weren't presented as obstacles; just stuff that anybody could learn. The whole process was and is a lot of fun. A challenge, not a "hoop" or a "barrier". None touted amateur radio as a replacement for other communication methods or as a social community, though they did mention the public- service aspect. Sure, there was no internet back then in the 1960s, no iPods, cell phones or video games, etc. But we had radio and TV, long distance telephones, music, movies, etc. Amateur radio wasn't a replacement for those things, it was fun in itself. IMHO the way to "sell" amateur radio isn't to present it as a replacement for something else, but as a unique activity with many facets. Some will get it, others won't, no big deal. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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