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On Oct 3, 10:38 am, Steve Stone wrote:
wrote: Consider that: I believe that some of the cyclic activity you note is related to folks being drafted into the military and coming out with radio skills that were almost directly transferable to personal use in amateur radio. Well, maybe, particularly after WW2. But note that after WW1 there was no great rise in the number of US hams, yet the Depression years and the 1970s saw amateur population explosions. (Indeed, the post-WW2 times were an actual population explosion now known as the baby boom...). Veterans who learned radio in the military during WW2 or Korea may have contributed to amateur growth, of course, but the post-WW2 growth went on for many years after those conflicts ended. More importantly, a lot of it was people too young to have served in the military when first licensed as amateurs. Another item could be the availability of surplus military gear or a technology shift that made it easier for people to get into amateur ra dio. Certainly a factor, as mentioned in my original post. In the 1930s, there was "surplus" in the form of inventory from failed radio manufacturers, while surplus from WW2 was still inexpensive and widely available 30+ years after the war ended. But the growth of the 1970s wasn't fueled by surplus radio gear, IMHO. It would seem that technology shifts would work against growth, because the new stuff would cost more and not be available used or surplus. It is possible that one major reason for the lack of growth in the 1960s was the popularity of SSB among hams, because SSB gear cost more and was generally more complex than AM. The 1970s-80s boom coincides with the rise of VHF-UHF FM and repeater use by hams, which started out with conversions of surplus land-mobile equipment and simple homebrew stuff. I'm sure hard times also has the effect you describe. Correlation isn't necessarily causation, but where can you get more fun-per-dollar than ham radio? 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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