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#2
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![]() wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message oups.com... an_old_friend wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Dee Flint wrote: "Chris" wrote in message Already tried it. And dismissed it. esp dimissing the abilty of the human operator of the machine to fill in the problems and correct the process As I said while it is the best that is available, it is still far below the capabilities of a human operator. Correction. ...a few human operators. indeed the PC alone far exceeds the abilties of many licensed ham operators but hat doesn't count I've tried it under a wide range of conditions and CWGet still needs a pretty good signal to function. Dee, N8UZE Morse Myth #119: All CW signals are good signals (Its the corollary of Morse Myth #1: CW always gets through). Unrelated to my comments. You would like to think that, but without efforts from folks like Carl, Bill, Len, hans, myself and others, you would still be repeating such myths, and would never make statements such as "Not all CW signals are good." You can thank us, but that's probably not very likely. No one has said all CW signals are good. And they aren't. If they were always good, CWGet would always work, which it doesn't. The ones who tout the software solution are those who wish that it would always work. And those who dismiss the software solution think all amateur operators are superb morsemen. In addition, I have repeatedly stated that each and every mode has its advantages and disadvantages. If you were to compare and contrast all existing modes, it think it is likely that you would claim that CW is the best mode. The extremists on each side don't want to hear that. Dee, N8UZE Because of the efforts made to dismiss countless Morse Myths over the years, you were just now able to state that not all CW signals are good without 1x2 PCTAs pooh poohing such talk. well it is a thankless job Dees coming around in her own way, but the brainwashing that she's undergone is strong. Perhaps in another decade... if there's still an amateur radio. If only she had been able to think spontaneously and resist, the brainwashing wouldn't have been so well received. You are mistaken. I've always been one to think spontaneously. Since I have personally experienced conditions where it had to be CW or turn off the radio, I advocate all hams knowing code at a basic level. To insure that they do learn it at a basic level, testing at some point in the licensing is appropriate. Before entering these news I'd never heard much discussion either way on code. My opinions on its usefulness and desireability were formed based entirely on actual operating experience. I was surprised to learn that there was a big discussion on it in the amateur community. Dee, place all presently licensed USA amateurs in front of stations equipped with a manual key AND CWGET. Have them operate operate any CW Only Contest with whichever is more comfortable for them to use. Total the scores... I think you get the point. What point? Try thinking about it just a wee little bit. I did. It's not clear. Spell it out for us, please. I'll spell it out for you, Jim. Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. Probably most of the coded licensees never looked back when they learned the code to get past a licensing hurdle, don't use code, and couldn't if their lives depended on it. So put all USA licensed amateurs in fron of a station equipped with a morse code key and with CWGet and total their scores. I do NOT and never have believed in the arguments about "keeping out the riffraff", maintaining tradition, or the "I had to so you should to". The "dumbing down" argument is just an extension of the "keeping out the riff-raff" argument. No, it isn't. Yes, it is. Nope. The requirements for US amateur radio license have been slowly but steadily reduced for more than 25 years now. Just 25 years? I wrote "more than 25 years". I guess you forgot about the "Conditional" license where hams get an upgrade from their buddy. What does that mean? Besides, the Conditional stopped being issued about 30 years ago. Yep, but nobody ever claimed that amateur radio was being dumbed down. The USA amateur service has a proud history of it. Not just the code tests but also the writtens. That's not the fault of those taking the tests. No, of course not. It's not anyones fault except the FCC that they put offices so far away from ham's residences. ?? The reason FCC stopped doing testing was to save money. It doesn't cost the FCC anything for an amateur to show up for testing, unless you want to claim that the examinees got to file a voucher for their travel. They replaced their paid examiners with unpaid volunteers. Good thing there wasn't a union. It's basic knowledge, pure and simple. Most of the people I know don't use any of the theory either but it is part of the basic knowledge set. I've used ohm's law only a couple of times in the 14 years I've been licensed. I've used the dipole equation half a dozen times. I've never used smith charts. One could get by without the theory but having learned it, I can choose where I want to focus my attention in amateur ration. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Dee, you have a Ham Husband to take care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of your station, so it's no wonder you have no real use for it.. Brian, do you think that using a false sexist claim is somehow going to cause you to win the debate? No false sexist claim. It's a sexist claim to assume that Dee's husband takes care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of her station Why? She said she hardly, if ever, used it. Somebody's got to be doing it? W3RV uses his sister to put up antennas for him these days. Where do you get that idea? Fair is fair, yes? You're not fair at all. Since you have a corner on the fairness market, do you plan to be the RRAP Moderator? |
#3
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wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message oups.com... an_old_friend wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Dee Flint wrote: "Chris" wrote in message Already tried it. And dismissed it. esp dimissing the abilty of the human operator of the machine to fill in the problems and correct the process As I said while it is the best that is available, it is still far below the capabilities of a human operator. Correction. ...a few human operators. indeed the PC alone far exceeds the abilties of many licensed ham operators but hat doesn't count I've tried it under a wide range of conditions and CWGet still needs a pretty good signal to function. Dee, N8UZE Morse Myth #119: All CW signals are good signals (Its the corollary of Morse Myth #1: CW always gets through). Unrelated to my comments. You would like to think that, but without efforts from folks like Carl, Bill, Len, hans, myself and others, you would still be repeating such myths, and would never make statements such as "Not all CW signals are good." You can thank us, but that's probably not very likely. No one has said all CW signals are good. And they aren't. If they were always good, CWGet would always work, which it doesn't. The ones who tout the software solution are those who wish that it would always work. And those who dismiss the software solution think all amateur operators are superb morsemen. In addition, I have repeatedly stated that each and every mode has its advantages and disadvantages. If you were to compare and contrast all existing modes, it think it is likely that you would claim that CW is the best mode. The extremists on each side don't want to hear that. Dee, N8UZE Because of the efforts made to dismiss countless Morse Myths over the years, you were just now able to state that not all CW signals are good without 1x2 PCTAs pooh poohing such talk. well it is a thankless job Dees coming around in her own way, but the brainwashing that she's undergone is strong. Perhaps in another decade... if there's still an amateur radio. If only she had been able to think spontaneously and resist, the brainwashing wouldn't have been so well received. You are mistaken. I've always been one to think spontaneously. Since I have personally experienced conditions where it had to be CW or turn off the radio, I advocate all hams knowing code at a basic level. To insure that they do learn it at a basic level, testing at some point in the licensing is appropriate. Before entering these news I'd never heard much discussion either way on code. My opinions on its usefulness and desireability were formed based entirely on actual operating experience. I was surprised to learn that there was a big discussion on it in the amateur community. Dee, place all presently licensed USA amateurs in front of stations equipped with a manual key AND CWGET. Have them operate operate any CW Only Contest with whichever is more comfortable for them to use. Total the scores... I think you get the point. What point? Try thinking about it just a wee little bit. I did. It's not clear. Spell it out for us, please. I'll spell it out for you, Jim. Thank you, Brian! Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. You mean the Technician? If so, they are a considerable amount less than half. 40% is more like it. Probably most of the coded licensees never looked back when they learned the code to get past a licensing hurdle, don't use code, and couldn't if their lives depended on it. That's not a given at all. Remember the ARRL survey that was debated so much here? It showed that less than 40% of those hams who were asked never used Morse Code. And it included licensees from all license classes, not just those who had passed code tests. Sure there are those who learned just enough to pass the Morse Code test and then never used it - just as there are those who just enough to pass the *written* tests and then never used it Heck, your buddy Len couldn't even get the length of a 73 MHz quarter-wave whip antenna right, and he's a "PROFESSIONAL"! So put all USA licensed amateurs in fron of a station equipped with a morse code key and with CWGet and total their scores. I presume you mean "contest scores" Why? Who is going to set up and pay for all those stations? What sort of stations would they be - HF, VHF, UHF? What sort of antennas, rigs, computers? Any ham who wants to operate Morse Code using CWGet or some other software can do so right now - if they have a station that includes rig, antenna, and computer. Yet I don't know of any amateur radio contesters who operate that way. Do you? Your "thought experiment" doesn't seem to be thought out very well. Now here's a *real* challenge: The ARRL November CW Sweepstakes is this coming weekend. I'm going to operate in it, using my homebrew 100 watt station and antenna. No CWGet here. How about we compare your score with mine a week from now? Or how about this one: Field Day 2007 Entry class 1B-1 (one transmitter, one operator). The challenge is to assemble, transport, set up, operate, and take down a complete FD station - singlehanded, no outside help - and make the highest score. Field Day location must not be owned by the participant and must not be a licensed amateur station location. Field Day location must be located in a place under FCC jurisdiction. All equipment used must be legitimately owned by the operator. All FCC regulations and ARRL rules that apply to Field Day must be complied with by all involved. Results report must be submitted to ARRL before the deadline. Highest official score wins. I've done better than 3000 points under such conditions. Can you? The requirements for US amateur radio license have been slowly but steadily reduced for more than 25 years now. Just 25 years? I wrote "more than 25 years". I guess you forgot about the "Conditional" license where hams get an upgrade from their buddy. What does that mean? Besides, the Conditional stopped being issued about 30 years ago. Yep, but nobody ever claimed that amateur radio was being dumbed down. The USA amateur service has a proud history of it. How was it "dumbing down" to eliminate the Conditional? Not just the code tests but also the writtens. That's not the fault of those taking the tests. No, of course not. It's not anyones fault except the FCC that they put offices so far away from ham's residences. ?? The reason FCC stopped doing testing was to save money. It doesn't cost the FCC anything for an amateur to show up for testing, unless you want to claim that the examinees got to file a voucher for their travel. Actually it cost FCC a lot of money to do testing. First off, they had to have offices with test facilities. The office they had in Philadelphia back when I took my exams was on the 10th floor of the Custom House at 2nd and Chestnut. Lots of square feet of prime real estate just for the exam room. Then there was the time of the examiners, all of whom worked for FCC. Pay and benefits. At least two people per office, three days a week. Times the number of offices all over the country. Then add the FCC folks who revised the exams, duplicated them, and distributed them to the various offices all over the country. And the cost of doing all that. The VE system eliminated all that expense. All FCC has to do now wrt amateur license testing is to look over the QPC submissions and approve them. And occasionally retest somebody. Eliminating Element 1 will not save the FCC any expense. Keeping it will not cost them anything, either. Maybe that's why it's taking them so long. They replaced their paid examiners with unpaid volunteers. Good thing there wasn't a union. Why? It's basic knowledge, pure and simple. Most of the people I know don't use any of the theory either but it is part of the basic knowledge set. I've used ohm's law only a couple of times in the 14 years I've been licensed. I've used the dipole equation half a dozen times. I've never used smith charts. One could get by without the theory but having learned it, I can choose where I want to focus my attention in amateur ration. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Dee, you have a Ham Husband to take care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of your station, so it's no wonder you have no real use for it.. Brian, do you think that using a false sexist claim is somehow going to cause you to win the debate? No false sexist claim. It's a sexist claim to assume that Dee's husband takes care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of her station Why? She said she hardly, if ever, used it. Somebody's got to be doing it? You're presuming she's not doing what needs to be done, and is dependent on someone else to deal with the theory. I don't think that's the case at all. W3RV uses his sister to put up antennas for him these days. Where do you get that idea? Hmmm? I've put up antennas with W3RV. Or rather, I helped out a little, since he had it all worked out on his own. No sisters involved. He does know quite a lot about antennas, particularly the practical side. He even knows that a quarter wave at 73 MHz is a lot longer than three and one quarter inches.... Fair is fair, yes? You're not fair at all. Since you have a corner on the fairness market, do you plan to be the RRAP Moderator? Wait and see. ARRL November CW Sweepstakes starts Saturday afternoon and ends Sunday night. I'll be there - will you? |
#4
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![]() wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message oups.com... an_old_friend wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Dee Flint wrote: "Chris" wrote in message Already tried it. And dismissed it. esp dimissing the abilty of the human operator of the machine to fill in the problems and correct the process As I said while it is the best that is available, it is still far below the capabilities of a human operator. Correction. ...a few human operators. indeed the PC alone far exceeds the abilties of many licensed ham operators but hat doesn't count I've tried it under a wide range of conditions and CWGet still needs a pretty good signal to function. Dee, N8UZE Morse Myth #119: All CW signals are good signals (Its the corollary of Morse Myth #1: CW always gets through). Unrelated to my comments. You would like to think that, but without efforts from folks like Carl, Bill, Len, hans, myself and others, you would still be repeating such myths, and would never make statements such as "Not all CW signals are good." You can thank us, but that's probably not very likely. No one has said all CW signals are good. And they aren't. If they were always good, CWGet would always work, which it doesn't. The ones who tout the software solution are those who wish that it would always work. And those who dismiss the software solution think all amateur operators are superb morsemen. In addition, I have repeatedly stated that each and every mode has its advantages and disadvantages. If you were to compare and contrast all existing modes, it think it is likely that you would claim that CW is the best mode. The extremists on each side don't want to hear that. Dee, N8UZE Because of the efforts made to dismiss countless Morse Myths over the years, you were just now able to state that not all CW signals are good without 1x2 PCTAs pooh poohing such talk. well it is a thankless job Dees coming around in her own way, but the brainwashing that she's undergone is strong. Perhaps in another decade... if there's still an amateur radio. If only she had been able to think spontaneously and resist, the brainwashing wouldn't have been so well received. You are mistaken. I've always been one to think spontaneously. Since I have personally experienced conditions where it had to be CW or turn off the radio, I advocate all hams knowing code at a basic level. To insure that they do learn it at a basic level, testing at some point in the licensing is appropriate. Before entering these news I'd never heard much discussion either way on code. My opinions on its usefulness and desireability were formed based entirely on actual operating experience. I was surprised to learn that there was a big discussion on it in the amateur community. Dee, place all presently licensed USA amateurs in front of stations equipped with a manual key AND CWGET. Have them operate operate any CW Only Contest with whichever is more comfortable for them to use. Total the scores... I think you get the point. What point? Try thinking about it just a wee little bit. I did. It's not clear. Spell it out for us, please. I'll spell it out for you, Jim. Thank you, Brian! Any time. Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. You mean the Technician? If so, they are a considerable amount less than half. 40% is more like it. 49.5% according to your very own postings. Probably most of the coded licensees never looked back when they learned the code to get past a licensing hurdle, don't use code, and couldn't if their lives depended on it. That's not a given at all. I would expect you to say something like that. Remember the ARRL survey that was debated so much here? The one where as a member, I did not receive a ballot? The one that Mike Deignan characterized as "substantive?" Yes, I recall the survey. Looked as if it had been developed by a bunch of dems hoping to influence the outcome of an election. It showed that less than 40% of those hams who were asked never used Morse Code. And it included licensees from all license classes, not just those who had passed code tests. Add to that those who rarely used code. Sure there are those who learned just enough to pass the Morse Code test and then never used it - just as there are those who just enough to pass the *written* tests and then never used it Heck, your buddy Len couldn't even get the length of a 73 MHz quarter-wave whip antenna right, and he's a "PROFESSIONAL"! And you couldn't even get the distance to the moon, and you're a "professional." So put all USA licensed amateurs in fron of a station equipped with a morse code key and with CWGet and total their scores. I presume you mean "contest scores" Why? Why not? They're operating in a CW Contest. Why wouldn't you total their scores? Who is going to set up and pay for all those stations? What sort of stations would they be - HF, VHF, UHF? What sort of antennas, rigs, computers? Think about it. The Morsemen can bandy about the CQ WW and Field Day CW vs SSB contest scores all they want without having to standardize station equipment. I bring up a scenario and NOW station equipment must be standardized. There's some bias in your approach. Any ham who wants to operate Morse Code using CWGet or some other software can do so right now - if they have a station that includes rig, antenna, and computer. Yep. I can finally agree with something you said. Yet I don't know of any amateur radio contesters who operate that way. Do you? Nobody knew of anyone who operated amateur radio as in Larry Rolls "Only CW can save the situation" but I NEVER ONCE saw your objection to it. I bring up a scenario and NOW you have a problems with how contestors operate. There's some bias in your approach. Your "thought experiment" doesn't seem to be thought out very well. Sure it was. Alternative scenario snipped. The requirements for US amateur radio license have been slowly but steadily reduced for more than 25 years now. Just 25 years? I wrote "more than 25 years". I guess you forgot about the "Conditional" license where hams get an upgrade from their buddy. What does that mean? Besides, the Conditional stopped being issued about 30 years ago. Yep, but nobody ever claimed that amateur radio was being dumbed down. The USA amateur service has a proud history of it. How was it "dumbing down" to eliminate the Conditional? Jeez you're thick. It was dumbing down to create such a license class. Not just the code tests but also the writtens. That's not the fault of those taking the tests. No, of course not. It's not anyones fault except the FCC that they put offices so far away from ham's residences. ?? The reason FCC stopped doing testing was to save money. It doesn't cost the FCC anything for an amateur to show up for testing, unless you want to claim that the examinees got to file a voucher for their travel. Actually it cost FCC a lot of money to do testing. It was the travel distance that was key in the creation of the Conditional license, not the desire for the FCC to save money. Try to stay on the subject. First off, they had to have offices with test facilities. The office they had in Philadelphia back when I took my exams was on the 10th floor of the Custom House at 2nd and Chestnut. Lots of square feet of prime real estate just for the exam room. Then there was the time of the examiners, all of whom worked for FCC. Pay and benefits. At least two people per office, three days a week. Times the number of offices all over the country. Then add the FCC folks who revised the exams, duplicated them, and distributed them to the various offices all over the country. And the cost of doing all that. The VE system eliminated all that expense. All FCC has to do now wrt amateur license testing is to look over the QPC submissions and approve them. And occasionally retest somebody. That's all wunnerful, but you vectored off of the subject. Maybe next time you'll be able to cut and paste something germane to the subject. Eliminating Element 1 will not save the FCC any expense. Keeping it will not cost them anything, either. Maybe that's why it's taking them so long. Maybe. But they didn't even make the effort to define Morse Code in the rules for the last 3 R&Os. Yet they tell you that the exam myst be 5WPM, and you've got all these VEs getting to define what that means. They replaced their paid examiners with unpaid volunteers. Good thing there wasn't a union. Why? Are you anti-union? Do you favor scabs? It's basic knowledge, pure and simple. Most of the people I know don't use any of the theory either but it is part of the basic knowledge set. I've used ohm's law only a couple of times in the 14 years I've been licensed. I've used the dipole equation half a dozen times. I've never used smith charts. One could get by without the theory but having learned it, I can choose where I want to focus my attention in amateur ration. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Dee, you have a Ham Husband to take care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of your station, so it's no wonder you have no real use for it.. Brian, do you think that using a false sexist claim is somehow going to cause you to win the debate? No false sexist claim. It's a sexist claim to assume that Dee's husband takes care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of her station Why? She said she hardly, if ever, used it. Somebody's got to be doing it? You're presuming she's not doing what needs to be done, and is dependent on someone else to deal with the theory. I don't think that's the case at all. If I considered your opinion to be wrong, do I get to call you a liar? W3RV uses his sister to put up antennas for him these days. Where do you get that idea? Hmmm? I've put up antennas with W3RV. Or rather, I helped out a little, since he had it all worked out on his own. No sisters involved. He does know quite a lot about antennas, particularly the practical side. He even knows that a quarter wave at 73 MHz is a lot longer than three and one quarter inches.... Prolly for illegal operation. He has no authorization in that area. Fair is fair, yes? You're not fair at all. Since you have a corner on the fairness market, do you plan to be the RRAP Moderator? Wait and see. ARRL November CW Sweepstakes starts Saturday afternoon and ends Sunday night. I'll be there - will you? Nope, but knock yourself out. |
#5
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wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message oups.com... an_old_friend wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Dee Flint wrote: "Chris" wrote in message Already tried it. And dismissed it. esp dimissing the abilty of the human operator of the machine to fill in the problems and correct the process As I said while it is the best that is available, it is still far below the capabilities of a human operator. Correction. ...a few human operators. indeed the PC alone far exceeds the abilties of many licensed ham operators but hat doesn't count I've tried it under a wide range of conditions and CWGet still needs a pretty good signal to function. Dee, N8UZE Morse Myth #119: All CW signals are good signals (Its the corollary of Morse Myth #1: CW always gets through). Unrelated to my comments. You would like to think that, but without efforts from folks like Carl, Bill, Len, hans, myself and others, you would still be repeating such myths, and would never make statements such as "Not all CW signals are good." You can thank us, but that's probably not very likely. No one has said all CW signals are good. And they aren't. If they were always good, CWGet would always work, which it doesn't. The ones who tout the software solution are those who wish that it would always work. And those who dismiss the software solution think all amateur operators are superb morsemen. In addition, I have repeatedly stated that each and every mode has its advantages and disadvantages. If you were to compare and contrast all existing modes, it think it is likely that you would claim that CW is the best mode. The extremists on each side don't want to hear that. Dee, N8UZE Because of the efforts made to dismiss countless Morse Myths over the years, you were just now able to state that not all CW signals are good without 1x2 PCTAs pooh poohing such talk. well it is a thankless job Dees coming around in her own way, but the brainwashing that she's undergone is strong. Perhaps in another decade... if there's still an amateur radio. If only she had been able to think spontaneously and resist, the brainwashing wouldn't have been so well received. You are mistaken. I've always been one to think spontaneously. Since I have personally experienced conditions where it had to be CW or turn off the radio, I advocate all hams knowing code at a basic level. To insure that they do learn it at a basic level, testing at some point in the licensing is appropriate. Before entering these news I'd never heard much discussion either way on code. My opinions on its usefulness and desireability were formed based entirely on actual operating experience. I was surprised to learn that there was a big discussion on it in the amateur community. Dee, place all presently licensed USA amateurs in front of stations equipped with a manual key AND CWGET. Have them operate operate any CW Only Contest with whichever is more comfortable for them to use. Total the scores... I think you get the point. What point? Try thinking about it just a wee little bit. I did. It's not clear. Spell it out for us, please. I'll spell it out for you, Jim. Thank you, Brian! Any time. Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. You mean the Technician? If so, they are a considerable amount less than half. 40% is more like it. 49.5% according to your very own postings. You are mistaken, Brian. The Technician license does not make up 49.5% of US hams. The total of Technicians and Technician Pluses reaches about that level. (All Technician Pluses are Morse Code tested). In addition, many hams whose licenses say "Technician" are code tested and have some HF privileges. These include: - all Tech Pluses who have renewed since April 15, 2000 - all Novices who have upgraded to Technician - all Technicians who have passed Element 1, but not the written exam for General btw, no US amateur radio license is "code-free". All of them can use Morse Code. Probably most of the coded licensees never looked back when they learned the code to get past a licensing hurdle, don't use code, and couldn't if their lives depended on it. That's not a given at all. I would expect you to say something like that. Remember the ARRL survey that was debated so much here? The one where as a member, I did not receive a ballot? The one that Mike Deignan characterized as "substantive?" Yes, I recall the survey. Looked as if it had been developed by a bunch of dems hoping to influence the outcome of an election. You mean like this: http://www.rawstory.com/showoutartic...s/15869924.htm btw, next Tuesday I get to choose between Curt Weldon and Joe Sestak. Which do you think I should vote for? It showed that less than 40% of those hams who were asked never used Morse Code. And it included licensees from all license classes, not just those who had passed code tests. Add to that those who rarely used code. Why? Even if someone rarely uses it, that means they still remember it and can use it at some level. Sure there are those who learned just enough to pass the Morse Code test and then never used it - just as there are those who just enough to pass the *written* tests and then never used it Heck, your buddy Len couldn't even get the length of a 73 MHz quarter-wave whip antenna right, and he's a "PROFESSIONAL"! And you couldn't even get the distance to the moon, You are mistaken. You've repeatedly claimed that I mis-stated the distance from Earth to the moon on rrap. Show us where I did that - if you can. I don't think you can, because it did not happen. If I did it, show us. Otherwise you're just making things up. and you're a "professional." I've never claimed to be a professional astronomer. Len claims to be a "PROFESSIONAL in radio-electronics" (whatever that is) but he messes up on the length of an antenna for a radio service he has claimed to use. So put all USA licensed amateurs in fron of a station equipped with a morse code key and with CWGet and total their scores. I presume you mean "contest scores" Why? Why not? They're operating in a CW Contest. Why wouldn't you total their scores? What's the point? Who is going to set up and pay for all those stations? What sort of stations would they be - HF, VHF, UHF? What sort of antennas, rigs, computers? Think about it. I did. That's why I'm asking the question. Do you think the taxpayers should subsidize amateur radio stations? The Morsemen Who are they? can bandy about the CQ WW and Field Day CW vs SSB contest scores all they want without having to standardize station equipment. I bring up a scenario and NOW station equipment must be standardized. Who said anything about standardizing station equipment? Not me. I simply want to know where all those stations are supposed to come from. There's some bias in your approach. None at all. Any ham who wants to operate Morse Code using CWGet or some other software can do so right now - if they have a station that includes rig, antenna, and computer. Yep. I can finally agree with something you said. So a version of the experiment you describe can happen in every contest. But it doesn't. Yet I don't know of any amateur radio contesters who operate that way. Do you? Nobody knew of anyone who operated amateur radio as in Larry Rolls "Only CW can save the situation" but I NEVER ONCE saw your objection to it. So what? I don't read everything written to rrap. Larry hasn't posted here in *years*. I bring up a scenario and NOW you have a problems with how contestors operate. Not at all. I just don't see anyone using CWGet to operate a contest - even though they could. Heck *you* could. Why don't you? There's some bias in your approach. None at all. Your "thought experiment" doesn't seem to be thought out very well. Sure it was. Alternative scenario snipped. Why? Aren't you up to such a simple challenge? Here it is again: Field Day 2007. Entry class 1B-1 (one transmitter, one operator). The challenge is to assemble, transport, set up, operate, and take down a complete FD station - singlehanded, no outside help - and make the highest score. Field Day location must not be owned by the participant and must not be a licensed amateur station location. Station location must be under FCC jurisdiction. All equipment used must be legitimately owned by the operator. All FCC regulations and ARRL rules that apply to Field Day must be complied with by all involved. Results report must be submitted to ARRL before the deadline. Highest official score wins. A simple, real-world challenge. What's the problem? The requirements for US amateur radio license have been slowly but steadily reduced for more than 25 years now. Just 25 years? I wrote "more than 25 years". I guess you forgot about the "Conditional" license where hams get an upgrade from their buddy. What does that mean? Besides, the Conditional stopped being issued about 30 years ago. Yep, but nobody ever claimed that amateur radio was being dumbed down. The USA amateur service has a proud history of it. How was it "dumbing down" to eliminate the Conditional? Jeez you're thick. No, Brian, I'm not "thick". You just did a poor job of explaining. It was dumbing down to create such a license class. Why? The Conditional and its predecessor Class C go back to before the FCC. Not just the code tests but also the writtens. That's not the fault of those taking the tests. No, of course not. It's not anyones fault except the FCC that they put offices so far away from ham's residences. ?? The reason FCC stopped doing testing was to save money. It doesn't cost the FCC anything for an amateur to show up for testing, unless you want to claim that the examinees got to file a voucher for their travel. Actually it cost FCC a lot of money to do testing. It was the travel distance that was key in the creation of the Conditional license, not the desire for the FCC to save money. I was writing about the reason the FCC stopped doing license testing for *all* license classes. That's part of the reduction in requirements. Try to stay on the subject. I am on the subject. You're trying to change it. First off, they had to have offices with test facilities. The office they had in Philadelphia back when I took my exams was on the 10th floor of the Custom House at 2nd and Chestnut. Lots of square feet of prime real estate just for the exam room. Then there was the time of the examiners, all of whom worked for FCC. Pay and benefits. At least two people per office, three days a week. Times the number of offices all over the country. Then add the FCC folks who revised the exams, duplicated them, and distributed them to the various offices all over the country. And the cost of doing all that. The VE system eliminated all that expense. All FCC has to do now wrt amateur license testing is to look over the QPC submissions and approve them. And occasionally retest somebody. That's all wunnerful, but you vectored off of the subject. Nope. Maybe next time you'll be able to cut and paste something germane to the subject. The subject was the reduction in license requirements by FCC giving over the testing to VEs. Eliminating Element 1 will not save the FCC any expense. Keeping it will not cost them anything, either. Maybe that's why it's taking them so long. Maybe. But they didn't even make the effort to define Morse Code in the rules for the last 3 R&Os. Why should they? Is there any doubt? Yet they tell you that the exam myst be 5WPM, and you've got all these VEs getting to define what that means. It's not a problem to anyone with common sense. They replaced their paid examiners with unpaid volunteers. Good thing there wasn't a union. Why? Are you anti-union? No. Are you? Do you favor scabs? Bandages are better. It's basic knowledge, pure and simple. Most of the people I know don't use any of the theory either but it is part of the basic knowledge set. I've used ohm's law only a couple of times in the 14 years I've been licensed. I've used the dipole equation half a dozen times. I've never used smith charts. One could get by without the theory but having learned it, I can choose where I want to focus my attention in amateur ration. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Dee, you have a Ham Husband to take care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of your station, so it's no wonder you have no real use for it.. Brian, do you think that using a false sexist claim is somehow going to cause you to win the debate? No false sexist claim. It's a sexist claim to assume that Dee's husband takes care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of her station Why? She said she hardly, if ever, used it. Somebody's got to be doing it? You're presuming she's not doing what needs to be done, and is dependent on someone else to deal with the theory. I don't think that's the case at all. If I considered your opinion to be wrong, do I get to call you a liar? Why would you do that? Have I ever called *anyone* here a liar? W3RV uses his sister to put up antennas for him these days. Where do you get that idea? Hmmm? I've put up antennas with W3RV. Or rather, I helped out a little, since he had it all worked out on his own. No sisters involved. He does know quite a lot about antennas, particularly the practical side. He even knows that a quarter wave at 73 MHz is a lot longer than three and one quarter inches.... Prolly for illegal operation. He has no authorization in that area. Actually, he does. Part 95 remote control, same as your buddy Len. And everybody else. Fair is fair, yes? You're not fair at all. Since you have a corner on the fairness market, do you plan to be the RRAP Moderator? Wait and see. ARRL November CW Sweepstakes starts Saturday afternoon and ends Sunday night. I'll be there - will you? Nope, but knock yourself out. I'll be awake and operating. CWGet won't be part of it. |
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![]() wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message oups.com... an_old_friend wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Dee Flint wrote: "Chris" wrote in message Already tried it. And dismissed it. esp dimissing the abilty of the human operator of the machine to fill in the problems and correct the process As I said while it is the best that is available, it is still far below the capabilities of a human operator. Correction. ...a few human operators. indeed the PC alone far exceeds the abilties of many licensed ham operators but hat doesn't count I've tried it under a wide range of conditions and CWGet still needs a pretty good signal to function. Dee, N8UZE Morse Myth #119: All CW signals are good signals (Its the corollary of Morse Myth #1: CW always gets through). Unrelated to my comments. You would like to think that, but without efforts from folks like Carl, Bill, Len, hans, myself and others, you would still be repeating such myths, and would never make statements such as "Not all CW signals are good." You can thank us, but that's probably not very likely. No one has said all CW signals are good. And they aren't. If they were always good, CWGet would always work, which it doesn't. The ones who tout the software solution are those who wish that it would always work. And those who dismiss the software solution think all amateur operators are superb morsemen. In addition, I have repeatedly stated that each and every mode has its advantages and disadvantages. If you were to compare and contrast all existing modes, it think it is likely that you would claim that CW is the best mode. The extremists on each side don't want to hear that. Dee, N8UZE Because of the efforts made to dismiss countless Morse Myths over the years, you were just now able to state that not all CW signals are good without 1x2 PCTAs pooh poohing such talk. well it is a thankless job Dees coming around in her own way, but the brainwashing that she's undergone is strong. Perhaps in another decade... if there's still an amateur radio. If only she had been able to think spontaneously and resist, the brainwashing wouldn't have been so well received. You are mistaken. I've always been one to think spontaneously. Since I have personally experienced conditions where it had to be CW or turn off the radio, I advocate all hams knowing code at a basic level. To insure that they do learn it at a basic level, testing at some point in the licensing is appropriate. Before entering these news I'd never heard much discussion either way on code. My opinions on its usefulness and desireability were formed based entirely on actual operating experience. I was surprised to learn that there was a big discussion on it in the amateur community. Dee, place all presently licensed USA amateurs in front of stations equipped with a manual key AND CWGET. Have them operate operate any CW Only Contest with whichever is more comfortable for them to use. Total the scores... I think you get the point. What point? Try thinking about it just a wee little bit. I did. It's not clear. Spell it out for us, please. I'll spell it out for you, Jim. Thank you, Brian! Any time. Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. You mean the Technician? If so, they are a considerable amount less than half. 40% is more like it. 49.5% according to your very own postings. You are mistaken, Brian. No, I'm not. The Technician license does not make up 49.5% of US hams. The total of Technicians and Technician Pluses reaches about that level. (All Technician Pluses are Morse Code tested). The FCC did away with the Technician Plus class of license. They are all Technicians now. The Technician license has no requirement for a code exam. Should a Technician wish to use what were once Technician Plus priveleges, they're on their own to show eligibility. In addition, many hams whose licenses say "Technician" are code tested and have some HF privileges. These include: - all Tech Pluses who have renewed since April 15, 2000 - all Novices who have upgraded to Technician - all Technicians who have passed Element 1, but not the written exam for General Welp, that's something we'll just have to live with. It's also the reason I upgraded to General. btw, no US amateur radio license is "code-free". All of them can use Morse Code. And they can all use CWGet. Probably most of the coded licensees never looked back when they learned the code to get past a licensing hurdle, don't use code, and couldn't if their lives depended on it. That's not a given at all. I would expect you to say something like that. Remember the ARRL survey that was debated so much here? The one where as a member, I did not receive a ballot? The one that Mike Deignan characterized as "substantive?" Yes, I recall the survey. Looked as if it had been developed by a bunch of dems hoping to influence the outcome of an election. You mean like this: http://www.rawstory.com/showoutartic...s/15869924.htm btw, next Tuesday I get to choose between Curt Weldon and Joe Sestak. Which do you think I should vote for? Who did you vote for last time? It showed that less than 40% of those hams who were asked never used Morse Code. And it included licensees from all license classes, not just those who had passed code tests. Add to that those who rarely used code. Why? Even if someone rarely uses it, that means they still remember it and can use it at some level. It means they don't like it and they have to struggle through it. It means they are perfect candidates for CWGet. Sure there are those who learned just enough to pass the Morse Code test and then never used it - just as there are those who just enough to pass the *written* tests and then never used it Heck, your buddy Len couldn't even get the length of a 73 MHz quarter-wave whip antenna right, and he's a "PROFESSIONAL"! And you couldn't even get the distance to the moon, You are mistaken. Right. You've repeatedly claimed that I mis-stated the distance from Earth to the moon on rrap. Show us where I did that - if you can. I don't think you can, because it did not happen. If I did it, show us. Otherwise you're just making things up. You're making that up. and you're a "professional." I've never claimed to be a professional astronomer. What? Only astronomers get to calculate path loss in space? Len claims to be a "PROFESSIONAL in radio-electronics" (whatever that is) but he messes up on the length of an antenna for a radio service he has claimed to use. How can you be sure? So put all USA licensed amateurs in fron of a station equipped with a morse code key and with CWGet and total their scores. I presume you mean "contest scores" Why? Why not? They're operating in a CW Contest. Why wouldn't you total their scores? What's the point? The same point that you and W3RV are making when you kick around SSB vs CW in your field day and other scores. Why is it that comparing scores is only something that you can do? Who is going to set up and pay for all those stations? What sort of stations would they be - HF, VHF, UHF? What sort of antennas, rigs, computers? Think about it. I did. That's why I'm asking the question. Do you think the taxpayers should subsidize amateur radio stations? Who sets up your field day station? Who pays for it? The Morsemen Who are they? There used to be four of them... can bandy about the CQ WW and Field Day CW vs SSB contest scores all they want without having to standardize station equipment. I bring up a scenario and NOW station equipment must be standardized. Who said anything about standardizing station equipment? Not me. Yes, you. You! I simply want to know where all those stations are supposed to come from. Where do stations come from now? There's some bias in your approach. None at all. Hi, hi, hi! You're just making that up. Any ham who wants to operate Morse Code using CWGet or some other software can do so right now - if they have a station that includes rig, antenna, and computer. Yep. I can finally agree with something you said. So a version of the experiment you describe can happen in every contest. But it doesn't. Many, many, many amateur just aren't interested in morse code, and many, many, many amateurs just aren't interested in contests. But if we were able to have have 100% participation and every amateur were offered a manual morse code key and a downloaded copy of CWGet.... Yet I don't know of any amateur radio contesters who operate that way. Do you? Nobody knew of anyone who operated amateur radio as in Larry Rolls "Only CW can save the situation" but I NEVER ONCE saw your objection to it. So what? I don't read everything written to rrap. Larry hasn't posted here in *years*. Sure he has. He's posted as himself and he's probably posting as someone else. I bring up a scenario and NOW you have a problems with how contestors operate. Not at all. I just don't see anyone using CWGet to operate a contest - even though they could. Heck *you* could. Why don't you? I don't enjoy morse code. There's some bias in your approach. None at all. I think you're making that up. Your "thought experiment" doesn't seem to be thought out very well. Sure it was. Alternative scenario snipped. Alternative scenario snipped. A simple, real-world challenge. What's the problem? The problem is that there isn't 100% participation in field day. It fails to meet the requirements of my scenario. The requirements for US amateur radio license have been slowly but steadily reduced for more than 25 years now. Just 25 years? I wrote "more than 25 years". I guess you forgot about the "Conditional" license where hams get an upgrade from their buddy. What does that mean? Besides, the Conditional stopped being issued about 30 years ago. Yep, but nobody ever claimed that amateur radio was being dumbed down. The USA amateur service has a proud history of it. How was it "dumbing down" to eliminate the Conditional? Jeez you're thick. No, Brian, I'm not "thick". You just did a poor job of explaining. No, you vectored off when it was clear that the creation of the Conditional Class license using the "buddy-system" of testing was the original dumbing down of the ARS. It was dumbing down to create such a license class. Why? The Conditional and its predecessor Class C go back to before the FCC. So there's a long, long tradition in the dumbing down of the amateur radio service. Not just the code tests but also the writtens. That's not the fault of those taking the tests. No, of course not. It's not anyones fault except the FCC that they put offices so far away from ham's residences. ?? The reason FCC stopped doing testing was to save money. It doesn't cost the FCC anything for an amateur to show up for testing, unless you want to claim that the examinees got to file a voucher for their travel. Actually it cost FCC a lot of money to do testing. It was the travel distance that was key in the creation of the Conditional license, not the desire for the FCC to save money. I was writing about the reason the FCC stopped doing license testing for *all* license classes. That's part of the reduction in requirements. Then you strayed off the subject. Try to stay on the subject. I am on the subject. You're trying to change it. If you choose to comment on somthing I say, then confine it to what I said. If you stick with that simple concept, you'll do OK. First off, they had to have offices with test facilities. The office they had in Philadelphia back when I took my exams was on the 10th floor of the Custom House at 2nd and Chestnut. Lots of square feet of prime real estate just for the exam room. Then there was the time of the examiners, all of whom worked for FCC. Pay and benefits. At least two people per office, three days a week. Times the number of offices all over the country. Then add the FCC folks who revised the exams, duplicated them, and distributed them to the various offices all over the country. And the cost of doing all that. The VE system eliminated all that expense. All FCC has to do now wrt amateur license testing is to look over the QPC submissions and approve them. And occasionally retest somebody. That's all wunnerful, but you vectored off of the subject. Nope. Maybe next time you'll be able to cut and paste something germane to the subject. The subject was the reduction in license requirements by FCC giving over the testing to VEs. Nope. I twas the creation of the Conditional License. Eliminating Element 1 will not save the FCC any expense. Keeping it will not cost them anything, either. Maybe that's why it's taking them so long. Maybe. But they didn't even make the effort to define Morse Code in the rules for the last 3 R&Os. Why should they? Is there any doubt? There appears to be. The ARRL VEC and other VECs are giving el 1 exams at 13-15WPM when Part 97 says 5WPM. Yet they tell you that the exam myst be 5WPM, and you've got all these VEs getting to define what that means. It's not a problem to anyone with common sense. It appears to be a violation of Part 97. They replaced their paid examiners with unpaid volunteers. Good thing there wasn't a union. Why? Are you anti-union? No. Are you? Do you favor scabs? Bandages are better. It's basic knowledge, pure and simple. Most of the people I know don't use any of the theory either but it is part of the basic knowledge set. I've used ohm's law only a couple of times in the 14 years I've been licensed. I've used the dipole equation half a dozen times. I've never used smith charts. One could get by without the theory but having learned it, I can choose where I want to focus my attention in amateur ration. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Dee, you have a Ham Husband to take care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of your station, so it's no wonder you have no real use for it.. Brian, do you think that using a false sexist claim is somehow going to cause you to win the debate? No false sexist claim. It's a sexist claim to assume that Dee's husband takes care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of her station Why? She said she hardly, if ever, used it. Somebody's got to be doing it? You're presuming she's not doing what needs to be done, and is dependent on someone else to deal with the theory. I don't think that's the case at all. If I considered your opinion to be wrong, do I get to call you a liar? Why would you do that? Have I ever called *anyone* here a liar? You're making that up, right? W3RV uses his sister to put up antennas for him these days. Where do you get that idea? Hmmm? I've put up antennas with W3RV. Or rather, I helped out a little, since he had it all worked out on his own. No sisters involved. He does know quite a lot about antennas, particularly the practical side. He even knows that a quarter wave at 73 MHz is a lot longer than three and one quarter inches.... Prolly for illegal operation. He has no authorization in that area. Actually, he does. Part 95 remote control, same as your buddy Len. And everybody else. Part 95 requires no authorization, so he doesn't. And knowing his background, he'd probably violate the Part 95 rules. Fair is fair, yes? You're not fair at all. Since you have a corner on the fairness market, do you plan to be the RRAP Moderator? Wait and see. ARRL November CW Sweepstakes starts Saturday afternoon and ends Sunday night. I'll be there - will you? Nope, but knock yourself out. I'll be awake and operating. CWGet won't be part of it. Bless you. |
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wrote:
wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. You mean the Technician? If so, they are a considerable amount less than half. 40% is more like it. 49.5% according to your very own postings. You are mistaken, Brian. No, I'm not. Yes, you are, Brian. You just won't admit it. The Technician license does not make up 49.5% of US hams. The total of Technicians and Technician Pluses reaches about that level. (All Technician Pluses are Morse Code tested). The FCC did away with the Technician Plus class of license. When? As of October 30, the number of current, unexpired FCC issued amateur radio licenses was: Novice: 24,155 Technician: 287,293 Technician Plus: 34,851 General: 131,966 Advanced: 70,602 Extra: 108,545 Total 657,412. FCC still counts Technician Plus separately from Technician. The current number of Technicians amounts to 43.7006017...% of the total. That's not half. Some of them are code-tested, too. They are all Technicians now. That is an untruth. FCC still counts Technician Plus separately from Technician. The number of Technician Plus licenses is shrinking as Technician Pluses are renewed as Technician, expire, or upgrade. The Technician license has no requirement for a code exam. Yet some Technicians have passed a Morse Code test, and have some HF privileges. Should a Technician wish to use what were once Technician Plus priveleges, they're on their own to show eligibility. Which requires that they retain a document showing their qualification. Like keeping a copy of their old Technician Plus license. However, that's not the point. FCC still counts Technician Plus separately from Technician. The number of Technician Plus licenses is shrinking as Technician Pluses are renewed as Technician, expire, or upgrade. In addition, many hams whose licenses say "Technician" are code tested and have some HF privileges. These include: - all Tech Pluses who have renewed since April 15, 2000 - all Novices who have upgraded to Technician - all Technicians who have passed Element 1, but not the written exam for General Welp, that's something we'll just have to live with. It's also the reason I upgraded to General. Bully for you. btw, no US amateur radio license is "code-free". All of them can use Morse Code. And they can all use CWGet. But they don't. Probably most of the coded licensees never looked back when they learned the code to get past a licensing hurdle, don't use code, and couldn't if their lives depended on it. That's not a given at all. I would expect you to say something like that. Remember the ARRL survey that was debated so much here? The one where as a member, I did not receive a ballot? The one that Mike Deignan characterized as "substantive?" Yes, I recall the survey. Looked as if it had been developed by a bunch of dems hoping to influence the outcome of an election. You mean like this: http://www.rawstory.com/showoutartic...s/15869924.htm btw, next Tuesday I get to choose between Curt Weldon and Joe Sestak. Which do you think I should vote for? Who did you vote for last time? Doesn't matter. The choice last time wasn't the same, anyway. Which candidate do you think I should vote for? It showed that less than 40% of those hams who were asked never used Morse Code. And it included licensees from all license classes, not just those who had passed code tests. Add to that those who rarely used code. Why? Even if someone rarely uses it, that means they still remember it and can use it at some level. It means they don't like it and they have to struggle through it. Not necessarily. An amateur could "rarely" use Morse Code because they "rarely" get on the air. Or because they use some other mode a lot more. It means they are perfect candidates for CWGet. So? Sure there are those who learned just enough to pass the Morse Code test and then never used it - just as there are those who just enough to pass the *written* tests and then never used it Heck, your buddy Len couldn't even get the length of a 73 MHz quarter-wave whip antenna right, and he's a "PROFESSIONAL"! And you couldn't even get the distance to the moon, You are mistaken. Right. Glad to see you admit your mistake. So put all USA licensed amateurs in fron of a station equipped with a morse code key and with CWGet and total their scores. I presume you mean "contest scores" Why? Why not? They're operating in a CW Contest. Why wouldn't you total their scores? What's the point? The same point that you and W3RV are making when you kick around SSB vs CW in your field day and other scores. What point is that? W3RV and I actually participate in Field Day, and actually make the scores we claim. The QSOs are real. Why is it that comparing scores is only something that you can do? You can compare scores all you want. How many points did you make in last year's Field Day? Who is going to set up and pay for all those stations? What sort of stations would they be - HF, VHF, UHF? What sort of antennas, rigs, computers? Think about it. I did. That's why I'm asking the question. Do you think the taxpayers should subsidize amateur radio stations? Who sets up your field day station? Who pays for it? Depends on whether I'm operating solo, or as part of a group. The Morsemen Who are they? There used to be four of them... can bandy about the CQ WW and Field Day CW vs SSB contest scores all they want without having to standardize station equipment. I bring up a scenario and NOW station equipment must be standardized. Who said anything about standardizing station equipment? Not me. Yes, you. You! That's another untruth. Show where I said that - I don't think you can. I simply want to know where all those stations are supposed to come from. Where do stations come from now? Don't you know? Any ham who wants to operate Morse Code using CWGet or some other software can do so right now - if they have a station that includes rig, antenna, and computer. Yep. I can finally agree with something you said. So a version of the experiment you describe can happen in every contest. But it doesn't. Many, many, many amateur just aren't interested in morse code, and many, many, many amateurs just aren't interested in contests. Then your experiment won't happen. But if we were able to have have 100% participation and every amateur were offered a manual morse code key and a downloaded copy of CWGet.... Offered by whom? Who would pay for those things and set them up? How would you get 100% participation? Yet I don't know of any amateur radio contesters who operate that way. Do you? Nobody knew of anyone who operated amateur radio as in Larry Rolls "Only CW can save the situation" but I NEVER ONCE saw your objection to it. So what? I don't read everything written to rrap. Larry hasn't posted here in *years*. Sure he has. He's posted as himself and he's probably posting as someone else. You mean "Slow Code"? That's probably WA8ULX. I bring up a scenario and NOW you have a problems with how contestors operate. Not at all. I just don't see anyone using CWGet to operate a contest - even though they could. Heck *you* could. Why don't you? I don't enjoy morse code. Then what is your point? A simple, real-world challenge. What's the problem? The problem is that there isn't 100% participation in field day. So? It fails to meet the requirements of my scenario. It's not about *your* impossible scenario. The requirements for US amateur radio license have been slowly but steadily reduced for more than 25 years now. Just 25 years? I wrote "more than 25 years". I guess you forgot about the "Conditional" license where hams get an upgrade from their buddy. What does that mean? Besides, the Conditional stopped being issued about 30 years ago. Yep, but nobody ever claimed that amateur radio was being dumbed down. The USA amateur service has a proud history of it. How was it "dumbing down" to eliminate the Conditional? Jeez you're thick. No, Brian, I'm not "thick". You just did a poor job of explaining. No, you vectored off when it was clear that the creation of the Conditional Class license using the "buddy-system" of testing was the original dumbing down of the ARS. Another untruth by you. Why was the creation of the Conditional a "dumbing down"? It had the same test requirements as General. It was dumbing down to create such a license class. Why? The Conditional and its predecessor Class C go back to before the FCC. So there's a long, long tradition in the dumbing down of the amateur radio service. Why was it a "dumbing down"? Not just the code tests but also the writtens. That's not the fault of those taking the tests. No, of course not. It's not anyones fault except the FCC that they put offices so far away from ham's residences. ?? The reason FCC stopped doing testing was to save money. It doesn't cost the FCC anything for an amateur to show up for testing, unless you want to claim that the examinees got to file a voucher for their travel. Actually it cost FCC a lot of money to do testing. It was the travel distance that was key in the creation of the Conditional license, not the desire for the FCC to save money. I was writing about the reason the FCC stopped doing license testing for *all* license classes. That's part of the reduction in requirements. Then you strayed off the subject. Another untruth. Try to stay on the subject. I am on the subject. You're trying to change it. If you choose to comment on somthing I say, then confine it to what I said. Why? You're not the moderator. Besides, you don't confine your comments to what someone else said. Why should others confine their comments to what you said? If you stick with that simple concept, you'll do OK. First off, they had to have offices with test facilities. The office they had in Philadelphia back when I took my exams was on the 10th floor of the Custom House at 2nd and Chestnut. Lots of square feet of prime real estate just for the exam room. Then there was the time of the examiners, all of whom worked for FCC. Pay and benefits. At least two people per office, three days a week. Times the number of offices all over the country. Then add the FCC folks who revised the exams, duplicated them, and distributed them to the various offices all over the country. And the cost of doing all that. The VE system eliminated all that expense. All FCC has to do now wrt amateur license testing is to look over the QPC submissions and approve them. And occasionally retest somebody. That's all wunnerful, but you vectored off of the subject. Nope. Maybe next time you'll be able to cut and paste something germane to the subject. The subject was the reduction in license requirements by FCC giving over the testing to VEs. Nope. I twas the creation of the Conditional License. Why was that a "dumbing down"? Eliminating Element 1 will not save the FCC any expense. Keeping it will not cost them anything, either. Maybe that's why it's taking them so long. Maybe. But they didn't even make the effort to define Morse Code in the rules for the last 3 R&Os. Why should they? Is there any doubt? There appears to be. The ARRL VEC and other VECs are giving el 1 exams at 13-15WPM when Part 97 says 5WPM. The Morse Code test consists of 5 minutes of Morse Code. How many words are in those tests? At 5 wpm, there would be 25 At 13 wpm, there would be 65 At 15 wpm, there would be 75 (A word is 5 characters) Yet they tell you that the exam myst be 5WPM, and you've got all these VEs getting to define what that means. It's not a problem to anyone with common sense. It appears to be a violation of Part 97. Only to someone without common sense. They replaced their paid examiners with unpaid volunteers. Good thing there wasn't a union. Why? Are you anti-union? No. Are you? Do you favor scabs? Bandages are better. It's basic knowledge, pure and simple. Most of the people I know don't use any of the theory either but it is part of the basic knowledge set. I've used ohm's law only a couple of times in the 14 years I've been licensed. I've used the dipole equation half a dozen times. I've never used smith charts. One could get by without the theory but having learned it, I can choose where I want to focus my attention in amateur ration. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Dee, you have a Ham Husband to take care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of your station, so it's no wonder you have no real use for it.. Brian, do you think that using a false sexist claim is somehow going to cause you to win the debate? No false sexist claim. It's a sexist claim to assume that Dee's husband takes care of the Ohm's Law and Theory end of her station Why? She said she hardly, if ever, used it. Somebody's got to be doing it? You're presuming she's not doing what needs to be done, and is dependent on someone else to deal with the theory. I don't think that's the case at all. If I considered your opinion to be wrong, do I get to call you a liar? Why would you do that? Have I ever called *anyone* here a liar? You're making that up, right? I'm asking a question. Have I ever called *anyone* here a liar? W3RV uses his sister to put up antennas for him these days. That's an untruth. Where do you get that idea? Hmmm? I've put up antennas with W3RV. Or rather, I helped out a little, since he had it all worked out on his own. No sisters involved. He does know quite a lot about antennas, particularly the practical side. He even knows that a quarter wave at 73 MHz is a lot longer than three and one quarter inches.... Prolly for illegal operation. He has no authorization in that area. Actually, he does. Part 95 remote control, same as your buddy Len. And everybody else. Part 95 requires no authorization, so he doesn't. Incorrect. Part 95 authorizes everyone, as long as they meet the requirements. And knowing his background, he'd probably violate the Part 95 rules. Why? |
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From: on Tues, Oct 31 2006 5:52 pm
wrote: From: on Tues, Oct 31 2006 4:17 am wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: [ etc., etc., etc.... :-) ] Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. You mean the Technician? If so, they are a considerable amount less than half. 40% is more like it. 49.5% according to your very own postings. You are mistaken, Brian. No, I'm not. Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free License. Ooops. Without inserting the word "TEST" in "Code-free" will automatically alert Mighty Macho Morseman Miccolis to run off again with his "helpful correction of mistakes." :-) The Technician license does not make up 49.5% of US hams. The total of Technicians and Technician Pluses reaches about that level. (All Technician Pluses are Morse Code tested). The FCC did away with the Technician Plus class of license. They are all Technicians now. The Technician license has no requirement for a code exam. Should a Technician wish to use what were once Technician Plus priveleges, they're on their own to show eligibility. Miccolis can't seem to understand the LAW. No matter how often it is explained to him, he falls back on the Speroni 'definition' of 'What Technicians Are.' Of course, AH0A is a PCTA morseman of unchangeable ideas. Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free License. Tsk, Mighty Macho Morseman Miccolis will HAVE to "reply" with his "helpful correction of mistakes" a la the mighty macho morseman style of "knowing what is best for amateur radio" (as He sees it...). Miccolis also insisted that ENIAC was "the first electronic computer" because he got brainwashed by Moore School PR, being in eastern PA. Funny thing, but the LAW was decided in the early 1970s by a Federal Court trial and the Atanasof- Berry Computer of 1939-1942 was declared "first." btw, no US amateur radio license is "code-free". All of them can use Morse Code. And they can all use CWGet. ...and they can all toss their morse keys into the dumpster. :-) Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free License. True enough...and the OTHER half had to take a morse code TEST to get that AMATEUR license. btw, next Tuesday I get to choose between Curt Weldon and Joe Sestak. Which do you think I should vote for? Who did you vote for last time? ...and why in hell should WE care? I just don't get it. Miccolis must think the rest of us live in HIS reality (or rather ego-geographic-center-of-the-universe). In another week we Californians (about 30 million of us) will be voting on a number of state and local issues. "Weldon and Sestak" don't seem to be on that ballot. And you couldn't even get the distance to the moon, You are mistaken. Right. If'n Jimmie he say "mistaken" he be da Judge! He be da Law! :-) I'm not buying it. Neither am I. Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free License A mere 17 years ago there was no such thing as a "code-free" (meaning No Morse Code TEST) amateur radio license. You've repeatedly claimed that I mis-stated the distance from Earth to the moon on rrap. Show us where I did that - if you can. I don't think you can, because it did not happen. If I did it, show us. Otherwise you're just making things up. You're making that up. Miccolis ought to move to L.A. and get in the make-up biz. Lotsa money to be made here in the entertainment capitol of show business. Especially around Halloween time...:-) God knows the "Professional" PCTAs can't Kiss and Make-Up. It must be a violation of their "professional" code of ethics? :-) Usually to those kind of folks I just tell them to Kiss my ass. I've given that up on my MD's advice, he say I might catch something dangerous... :-) and you're a "professional." I've never claimed to be a professional astronomer. What? Only astronomers get to calculate path loss in space? A quarter-million-mile distance was in all the newspapers since the Apollo Program began. Perhaps he thinks only astronomers read newspapers? :-) Only "Professional" Astronomers can write space articles in teh newspapers. Riiiight. :-) Len claims to be a "PROFESSIONAL in radio-electronics" (whatever that is) but he messes up on the length of an antenna for a radio service he has claimed to use. How can you be sure? Tsk. Miccolis is hell-bent on character-assassination lately. I make a typo in a message and he makes it into a HEADLINE STORY charging some kind of ineptitude! :-) It was obviously a typo. But Jim and Dave put on their stupid face allatime. True enough. They don't have ONE consideration that I saw my error and posted my own correction of it. On every 'QWERTY' keyboard there is one key with an (unshifted) apostrophe and a (shifted) double-quote. In the shorthand version of dimensioning, a foot is denoted by the suffix of an apostrophe while an inch is denoted by the suffix of double quote. As an example, my height can be written 5' 10" or, in longer form, five feet ten inches. In rapid typing (I learned touch-typing in middle school) it is possible to make a mistake in too much pressure on the Shift key and inadvertently type in the double-quote. But...in the Grand Inquisitor manner of the might macho morsemen, a type by an NCTA is a CAPITAL OFFENSE, punishable by a lifetime of message comments about that typo...and NEVER acknowledging that it was corrected! Not only that, his Waffen SS buddie has to chime in like it is a capital offense! :-) Tsk, Miccolis is now under Typo Alert Status, condition Red. Each and every typo HE makes will be FEATURED INEPTITUDES of his own! Regardless of his 'explanations' of his typos, he will be charged with violations of all mankind! :-) Chimes against humanity! HAR!!! :-) [Heil went to 'Ding Dong School'? :-)] That's all in the sense of "justice, fair play, common sense, (etc.)" to "HELP" others. :-) Jim is so helpful. I recall asking for the formula to calculate a coil to match an end-fed half-wave antenna to 50 ohm coax. Then I got told right off that I should have a different kind of antenna and then the stomp fest began. I remember. Somewhere along that line, Reg Edwards' ready-to- go small computer program was mentioned. Reg is a UK ham of long time and has a bunch of small programs made just for many particular amateur radio applications. If you still have a need, I'll dig out his URL and post it here. Reg appears in rec.radio.amateur.homebrew once in a while. The Morsemen Who are they? There used to be four of them... The "Four Morsemen of the Apocalypse." :-) There's only two now. A sign of the times. They can't see the signs! Many, many, many amateur just aren't interested in morse code, and many, many, many amateurs just aren't interested in contests. Blasphemy! Heresy! The Church of St. Hiram may begin the Inquisition with you tied on the stake, Brian! Are they getting bored with Copernicus? Could be...all the NCTA must appear as Galileo to them... I don't enjoy morse code. We can only, repeat ONLY, "see" what Miccolis sees. All else is a 'mistake.' But I really don't enjoy morse code. According to Mighty Macho Morseman Miccolis, anyone trying morse code "WILL" like it! :-) [at least he didn't go balls-out and say what he must have meant..."anyone trying morse code SHALL like it" :-) ] Why? The Conditional and its predecessor Class C go back to before the FCC. So there's a long, long tradition in the dumbing down of the amateur radio service. By all those olde-tyme morsemen REFUSING to allow modernization of the US amateur radio service in going to, and trying out NEW modes, methods, and lobbying for UPDATING the ARS regulations. BTW, Miccolis hasn't existed since AFTER the end of WW II, let alone the creation of the FCC in 1934...but he is "knowledgeable" by "experience" of all those old pioneers (in his heart he knows he is 'right'). He feels a special kinship with them, and through that kinship he has served in other ways. I get the impression he really, Really, REALLY want to BE THERE doing that "pioneering." But, he really, Really, REALLY wasn't there doing that... Miccolis hadn't learned to read yet when the amateur SSB boom began...over two decades AFTER the commercial and military radio world had begun using SSB for long-haul HF comms. An OSU Alum put SSB radios in airplanes. Oh, what was his name? Art Collins? :-) Hmmm...I thought he went to ISU, not OSU. USAF SAC was the igniter of the single-channel SSB use and Collins Radio of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, got the contracts. Never mind that RCA Corporation ALSO got the contracts and supplied single-channel SSB on HF to the USAF. Collins had the more-savvy-PR and started selling to the commercial world and to amateurs. Collins Radio got started with Art making transmitters to-order before WW II. RCA didn't go the full- on route of marketing, probably too busy doing the bigger thing with television. He has NO direct experience to the radio world of the 1950s except in some juvenile way. He wasn't working for a living among amateurs who were divided about the SSB issues nor was he party to some of those amateurs' (of long standing then) rather abject ignorance of basic modulation concepts. [John Carson of AT&T had published the mathematical proof in 1915, the basis of the 'phasing' concept...the rest of the radio world accepted Carson's proof and those specializing in FM adopted "Carson's Rule" on FM modulation index] He sure was a funny guy. I used to stay up late to watch him. Ahem. John Carson of AT&T wasn't the same as Johnny Carson of NBC Tonight Show fame. :-) But I am a fan of both... Miccolis never tuned up any SSB transmitter in the early 1950s as I had to do, never QSYed one. Not on HF and sure as hell not IN the military (he never served). Neither did he tune up or QSY any RTTY of MUX TTY transmitter on HF in that time frame. But...he "knows" all about it by reading about it in QST and the ARRL Handbook. He can tell you all about the contributions that the ARS made during WW II, except that the ARS wasn't authorized during WW II. ...not to mention that Miccolis never ever served in any military. :-( "CW gets through when nothing else will." One of the 1930s era MYTHS, born when hams were trying out DSB AM in days before WW II. "CW" does NOT 'get through' better than PM or some of the other modes, but the DUMBED-DOWN morsemen just can't understand that. They think that OOK CW is "smart!" 1906 thinking in the year 2006. Ptui. Sam Morse desinged his code to be marked on a tape with a pen. True enough and recorded history of 1844. On some history website there is a digitized image of the famous "What hath God wrought" message marked on tape. Smithsonian? Alfred Vail, benefactor of Morse, came up with a CHANGE of "morse code" from the original all-numbers scheme to the representation of each English letter to a dot-dash combo. About the same time Morse and the Vail railroad works just couldn't make a reliable pen mechanism. Radio was tried in 1895 by Marconi in Switzerland, using only the presence of a radio signal. In 1896 Marconi sent simple character groups in morse code for a public demonstration in Italy. In the same year Aleksandr Popov in Russia. 1896 is FIFTY-TWO YEARS AFTER the first Morse-Vail Telegraph System debuted in Baltimore, MD. This 'morse code' thing was rather mature by 1896. The point about 'morse code' is that it was technologically SIMPLE. An electrical circuit is either on or off. Early radio was technologically SIMPLE. Transmitters' "RF output" was either on or off. Morse code was used because the two SIMPLE things were compatible. It is total bull**** to imagine that morse code had some kind of "state-of-the-art" magic at the beginning. It was technologically CONVENIENT, established (in wireline comms), and mature (lots of morse code operators after 52 years of use worldwide). I've never met anyone from tha FCC. I saw Riley at Dayton. Ed Hare, too, but I don't confuse the ARRL for the FCC like lotsa hams do. You must mean the 'Dayton Hamvention?' :-) Gotta be EXACT in everything in here lest the mighty macho morsemen try to be "helpful" with their "mistake corrections"! Sometimes I think the ARRL confuses itself with all those "official" things it has. It's a clever descriptor for whatever they are describing, gives it some glow of 'authority.' [Apparently Miccolis thinks ALL the FCC does is to regulate amateur radio?!? He is blissfully UNaware of the fantastic growth of ALL radio services in the last half century. He still won't acknowledge the COLEM There's a famous ARS VEC who is also COLEM. They had me take sumptin that looked surprisingly like an Amateur Advanced exam, then I got a GROL in the mail. You mean the 'W5YI Group?' :-) Mighty macho morseman Miccolis probably thinks Fred is a Golem, not a COLEM. :-) (who do privatized testing of non- amateur radio operator licenses) nor of the privatized PLMRS frequency coordinators nor of the fact of reduced paperwork and licensing of the private maritime radio users (Long Beach is at the heart of the maritime import-export top harbor and in the center of dozens of large marinas). The FCC is concerned with regulation of ALL US civil radio services, not just amateur.] I don't think they realize that. ...or they don't care to acknowledge it. Then he gets caught and he bleats, "Show me where? Provide the posting!" He has been "hurt" or maybe "insulted" when folks disagree with him, poor guy. Only Jim can feel strongly about the ARS. Miccolis belongs to another ARS: Archaic Radiotelegraphy Society. There appears to be. The ARRL VEC and other VECs are giving el 1 exams at 13-15WPM when Part 97 says 5WPM. "It's for newcomers' own good" is probably the morsemen's only good-enough answer. That's exactly what they say. "Thank you sir, may I have another?" [ "What? You want 'more!?!" :-) ] Ultimately, they've confused a "Learning Method" with a REGULATORY requirement. Sigh...ain't it da troot? REAL attorneys can comment on whether or not I am "mistaken." Miccolis hasn't been admitted to a Legal Bar Association yet and is unqualified to comment on law. But, he WILL comment on that AS IF he IS the law...("truth, justice, and the American way" spoken by SuperHam) Booo. It's important to deny access to prospective amateurs based upon something so ill defined. "Keeps the riff-raff out." Yes, all must do as the Morsemen do, marching in ranks to the morse drum-beat! All not with the Hive Mind are "riff-raff," bottom-river-scum...etc., etc. All must do 1906 thinking in the year 2006! :-( |
#9
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... [snip] But if we were able to have have 100% participation and every amateur were offered a manual morse code key and a downloaded copy of CWGet.... The people who know Morse code would probably turn it down as they would not want to operate a contest handicapped by using CWGet. Dee, N8UZE |
#10
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From: on Tues, Oct 31 2006 4:17 am
wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: wrote: Dee Flint wrote: [ etc., etc., etc.... :-) ] Half of all USA licensed amateurs are licensed under a Code-Free license. You mean the Technician? If so, they are a considerable amount less than half. 40% is more like it. 49.5% according to your very own postings. You are mistaken, Brian. No, I'm not. The Technician license does not make up 49.5% of US hams. The total of Technicians and Technician Pluses reaches about that level. (All Technician Pluses are Morse Code tested). The FCC did away with the Technician Plus class of license. They are all Technicians now. The Technician license has no requirement for a code exam. Should a Technician wish to use what were once Technician Plus priveleges, they're on their own to show eligibility. Miccolis can't seem to understand the LAW. No matter how often it is explained to him, he falls back on the Speroni 'definition' of 'What Technicians Are.' Of course, AH0A is a PCTA morseman of unchangeable ideas. Miccolis also insisted that ENIAC was "the first electronic computer" because he got brainwashed by Moore School PR, being in eastern PA. Funny thing, but the LAW was decided in the early 1970s by a Federal Court trial and the Atanasof- Berry Computer of 1939-1942 was declared "first." btw, no US amateur radio license is "code-free". All of them can use Morse Code. And they can all use CWGet. ...and they can all toss their morse keys into the dumpster. :-) btw, next Tuesday I get to choose between Curt Weldon and Joe Sestak. Which do you think I should vote for? Who did you vote for last time? ...and why in hell should WE care? And you couldn't even get the distance to the moon, You are mistaken. Right. If'n Jimmie he say "mistaken" he be da Judge! He be da Law! :-) You've repeatedly claimed that I mis-stated the distance from Earth to the moon on rrap. Show us where I did that - if you can. I don't think you can, because it did not happen. If I did it, show us. Otherwise you're just making things up. You're making that up. Miccolis ought to move to L.A. and get in the make-up biz. Lotsa money to be made here in the entertainment capitol of show business. Especially around Halloween time...:-) and you're a "professional." I've never claimed to be a professional astronomer. What? Only astronomers get to calculate path loss in space? A quarter-million-mile distance was in all the newspapers since the Apollo Program began. Perhaps he thinks only astronomers read newspapers? :-) Len claims to be a "PROFESSIONAL in radio-electronics" (whatever that is) but he messes up on the length of an antenna for a radio service he has claimed to use. How can you be sure? Tsk. Miccolis is hell-bent on character-assassination lately. I make a typo in a message and he makes it into a HEADLINE STORY charging some kind of ineptitude! :-) Not only that, his Waffen SS buddie has to chime in like it is a capital offense! :-) Tsk, Miccolis is now under Typo Alert Status, condition Red. Each and every typo HE makes will be FEATURED INEPTITUDES of his own! Regardless of his 'explanations' of his typos, he will be charged with violations of all mankind! :-) That's all in the sense of "justice, fair play, common sense, (etc.)" to "HELP" others. :-) The same point that you and W3RV are making when you kick around SSB vs CW in your field day and other scores. Why is it that comparing scores is only something that you can do? He has declared himself Ultimate Authority, therefore 'judge.' The Morsemen Who are they? There used to be four of them... The "Four Morsemen of the Apocalypse." :-) I simply want to know where all those stations are supposed to come from. Where do stations come from now? The stork brings them from Japan? :-) Many, many, many amateur just aren't interested in morse code, and many, many, many amateurs just aren't interested in contests. Blasphemy! Heresy! The Church of St. Hiram may begin the Inquisition with you tied on the stake, Brian! But if we were able to have have 100% participation and every amateur were offered a manual morse code key and a downloaded copy of CWGet.... Hmmm...interesting mental picture...350 thousand radio amateurs on the few HF ham bands ALL busy 'contesting' in relatively the same time period. That would result in the Ultimate QRM that would cause meltdown of all the scores checkers... :-) So what? I don't read everything written to rrap. Larry hasn't posted here in *years*. Sure he has. He's posted as himself and he's probably posting as someone else. Las Vegas odds-makers are with your assessment... :-) I just don't see anyone using CWGet to operate a contest - even though they could. Heck *you* could. Why don't you? I don't enjoy morse code. We can only, repeat ONLY, "see" what Miccolis sees. All else is a 'mistake.' Why? The Conditional and its predecessor Class C go back to before the FCC. So there's a long, long tradition in the dumbing down of the amateur radio service. By all those olde-tyme morsemen REFUSING to allow modernization of the US amateur radio service in going to, and trying out NEW modes, methods, and lobbying for UPDATING the ARS regulations. BTW, Miccolis hasn't existed since AFTER the end of WW II, let alone the creation of the FCC in 1934...but he is "knowledgeable" by "experience" of all those old pioneers (in his heart he knows he is 'right'). Miccolis hadn't learned to read yet when the amateur SSB boom began...over two decades AFTER the commercial and military radio world had begun using SSB for long-haul HF comms. He has NO direct experience to the radio world of the 1950s except in some juvenile way. He wasn't working for a living among amateurs who were divided about the SSB issues nor was he party to some of those amateurs' (of long standing then) rather abject ignorance of basic modulation concepts. [John Carson of AT&T had published the mathematical proof in 1915, the basis of the 'phasing' concept...the rest of the radio world accepted Carson's proof and those specializing in FM adopted "Carson's Rule" on FM modulation index] Miccolis never tuned up any SSB transmitter in the early 1950s as I had to do, never QSYed one. Not on HF and sure as hell not IN the military (he never served). Neither did he tune up or QSY any RTTY of MUX TTY transmitter on HF in that time frame. But...he "knows" all about it by reading about it in QST and the ARRL Handbook. Miccolis is a MORSEMAN. Those of the "CW gets through when nothing else will" DUMBED-DOWN amateur persuasion. All they can conceive is switching RF off and on using morse code. Methods that were used in the very first 'radios' of the Spark Tx and 'crystal detector' era. On-off keying of a CW carrier. Wow, real "technical" and full of smarts to bang- bang switch a carrier! Did the ARRL *ever* lobby to improve regulations for the 'new' modes in the ARS? Hell, the DSSS and FHSS modes were kept hamstrung by ARS regulations into the 1990s...when the commercial and military radio services were already using DSSS and FHSS...DSSS being the major player in the commercial WLAN and 'wireless' market. RTTY is still struggling along with OLD speed limits. PSK31 was innovated by a Brit (Peter Martinez) and was trial-tested in Europe for five years before it got any publicity in US ham magazines. Non-US hams have been using PM for extremely-weak radio comms for years, on bands below the lowest allocated US ham bands; the ARRL is finally getting around to 'requesting help' for frequencies as 'low' as a small sliver just above 500 KHz, helped get an 'experimental net' going there in this new millennium. Wow, really 'advanced technology' there, "exploring 'long wave' comms" with "CW." "CW gets through when nothing else will." One of the 1930s era MYTHS, born when hams were trying out DSB AM in days before WW II. "CW" does NOT 'get through' better than PM or some of the other modes, but the DUMBED-DOWN morsemen just can't understand that. They think that OOK CW is "smart!" 1906 thinking in the year 2006. Ptui. Try to stay on the subject. I am on the subject. You're trying to change it. If you choose to comment on somthing I say, then confine it to what I said. If you stick with that simple concept, you'll do OK. Brian, you KNOW Miccolis will NEVER do that. He runs off at the keyboard into dozens of wild trips off the thread. Mainly it is an attempt at MISDIRECTION so he won't have to explain his own errors, mistakes, false assumptions, and general ignorance of ALL radio, not the kind of radio that was spoon-fed to him by ARRL publications. First off, they had to have offices with test facilities. The office they had in Philadelphia back when I took my exams was on the 10th floor of the Custom House at 2nd and Chestnut. Lots of square feet of prime real estate just for the exam room. Then there was the time of the examiners, all of whom worked for FCC. Pay and benefits. At least two people per office, three days a week. Times the number of offices all over the country. [Yawn...like Philly is the Center of the USA? I can't remember the floor of the FCC Field Office in the Federal Building in Chicago, IL, as it was located in 1956...other than it was upstairs...might have been the 3rd floor, but the location wasn't important. Several being examined for Radiotelegraph licenses were audible QRM in the same room when I took my Radiotelephone written test (lots of Great Lakes shipping used "CW" then) The Chicago FCC office didn't need "lots of room for equipment"...one paper-tape code reproducer was good enough and the jacks for various keys didn't take up much space. Tables and chairs for examinees was standard government-issue stuff, tables too high and chairs uncushioned to make all uncomfortable] [The Long Beach, CA, FCC Field Office of today is only slightly better. Was never there for any test (didn't need to), only to get a pile of paper for own business radio (non-amateur) cleared away. By that time the FCC was busy, busy, busy with lots of commercial radio and the new radio services and the rather explosive growth of PLMRS that was opening the "high band"] Then add the FCC folks who revised the exams, duplicated them, and distributed them to the various offices all over the country. And the cost of doing all that. [Apparently Miccolis thinks ALL the FCC does is to regulate amateur radio?!? He is blissfully UNaware of the fantastic growth of ALL radio services in the last half century. He still won't acknowledge the COLEM (who do privatized testing of non- amateur radio operator licenses) nor of the privatized PLMRS frequency coordinators nor of the fact of reduced paperwork and licensing of the private maritime radio users (Long Beach is at the heart of the maritime import-export top harbor and in the center of dozens of large marinas). The FCC is concerned with regulation of ALL US civil radio services, not just amateur.] Maybe next time you'll be able to cut and paste something germane to the subject. The subject was the reduction in license requirements by FCC giving over the testing to VEs. Nope. I twas the creation of the Conditional License. Miccolis did his misdirection thing, then attempted to impose 'lawn order' by saying HE was 'judge' over what was being discussed. Gotta love it. He's been doing that for years... and manages to get away with it. :-) Then he gets caught and he bleats, "Show me where? Provide the posting!" He has been "hurt" or maybe "insulted" when folks disagree with him, poor guy. Eliminating Element 1 will not save the FCC any expense. Keeping it will not cost them anything, either. Maybe that's why it's taking them so long. Maybe. But they didn't even make the effort to define Morse Code in the rules for the last 3 R&Os. Why should they? Is there any doubt? There appears to be. The ARRL VEC and other VECs are giving el 1 exams at 13-15WPM when Part 97 says 5WPM. "It's for newcomers' own good" is probably the morsemen's only good-enough answer. Yawn...keep on with 1906 thinking in 2006, morse code uber alles...blah, blah, blah... Yet they tell you that the exam myst be 5WPM, and you've got all these VEs getting to define what that means. It's not a problem to anyone with common sense. It appears to be a violation of Part 97. It's a grey area in LEGAL terms. The WORD RATE is not specifically defined in Part 97, Title 47 C.F.R., and only "assumed." FCC's Definitions cite the old CCITT-ITU Telegram regulation as to coding and bit and length spacings. That referenced International Telegram Standard doesn't specifically define WORD RATE either. Apparently the FCC gave the VEC Council written permission to do characters at the higher rate, keeping the 'word rate' at 5 words per minute. A problem is that this specific "permission" has NOT made it into the (radio regulation) LAW document yet. That makes it the "grey area" in legal terms since it can be argued both ways. REAL attorneys can comment on whether or not I am "mistaken." Miccolis hasn't been admitted to a Legal Bar Association yet and is unqualified to comment on law. But, he WILL comment on that AS IF he IS the law...("truth, justice, and the American way" spoken by SuperHam) Happy Halloween, Brian. |
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hey BB did steve do somethign specail toy uo laely? | Policy | |||
More News of Radio Amateurs' Work in the Andamans | Shortwave | |||
Amateurs Handle Emergency Comms in Wake of Hurricane Ivan | Broadcasting | |||
Amateurs Handle Emergency Comms in Wake of Hurricane Ivan | Shortwave | |||
Response to "21st Century" Part One (Code Test) | Policy |