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oups.com: Barry OGrady wrote: On Thu, 28 Sep 2006 22:54:46 -0500, Nada Tapu wrote: On Sun, 10 Sep 2006 23:23:03 GMT, Slow Code wrote: Or just lazy people out? Sc It certainly didn't keep me out, and I wasn't all that crazy about learning it, either. More to the point, are there more licensed amateurs since the code requirement was removed years ago? Yes. In the USA at least. Since the inception of the no-code Technician class here in 1991, the growth of the Technician class license numbers in the USA has been continuous. Those now comprise about 49 % of ALL licensees. The Technician class license numbers are twice that of General class, the next-largest license class. Since the "reconstruction" in FCC amateur radio regulations of 2001, the number of licensees grew to peak in July, 2003. At that time the maximum code test rate was fixed at 5 WPM, all classes. A problem now is the attrition of the older licensees. More old- timers are leaving/expiring (their licenses) than are being replaced by new (never before licensed in amateur radio) licensees. Source: www.hamdata.com. That trend has persisted for three years. The code test is not THE factor causing it, just one of the major factors in slowing the increase of new licensees. Coupled with the stubborn resistance to change of ANY regulations by olde-tymers, there is little incentive to enter olde-tyme amateur radio. Ally that with the huge growth of the Internet in the 15 years it has been public - an Internet that has spread worldwide with near-instant communications over that world - and the traditional standards and practices of olde-tyme ham radio just don't have the appeal to newcomers they once had. Elimination of the code test for any license will cause a spurt in new licensees. While such elimination is not a guarantee to far-future growth, it will be the significant act to being CHANGING regulations to better fit the modern times. Keeping up with changing times is a NECESSITY in regulations, regardless of the personal desires of the minority of amateurs making up the olde-tyme group. You should market your posts to farmers Len. The fertilizer content in them could green the Sahara. SC |
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