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#1
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![]() My group is already working to make sure that the new folks don't feel shunned, and in recognition that many of the new folks will be inexperienced as compared to years past, we plan on some pretty extensive Elmering. It should be great fun. A similar situation happened back in the Spring of 2000, when 5WPM coders could become generals and extras. Lots of new hams on the HF phone bands. I was one of 'em. Aside from a few various newbie errors, we learned pretty quickly. I would expect the same to be true of the no code hams who become generals and extras in the spring of 2007. |
#3
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#4
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On Feb 2, 7:10?am, Cecil Moore wrote:
wrote: But what if it doesn't? Ham radio still has a lot to offer but not nearly as much as it once did. What can we do to make it more attractive? -- 73, Cecil,http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp Sell diet plans and make-up kits at hamfests? :-) Get Jenny Craig to sponsor a ham gathering? LA |
#5
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![]() "Cecil Moore" wrote in message .. . wrote: But what if it doesn't? Ham radio still has a lot to offer but not nearly as much as it once did. What can we do to make it more attractive? Very good question. In future centuries it may become very popular again in some form if we ever colonize planets or moons in our solar system. However, not being there yet, I sure would like to improve our situation on this planet, especially during sunspot minima. It would REALLY be helpful if we could have a full 40m band that is free of commerical broadcasting interference...that would be a significant improvement. Also, the ability to communicate on a full 60 m band at full power would help. A decent chunk of 30m with voice would be very helpful. Much of the segments I mentioned are not used that much anymore by the commericals and it is going to waste. 75-80m and 160m are great at certain times except that, although they tend to favor the rural demographic, they are uselss to the younger people who tend to live in the cities and suburbs. I think the spectrum provided to us is basically unusable much of the time (with the exception of 20m). We are told to use the bands or lose them but much of what we have cannot be used, reliably, much of the time. |
#6
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On Feb 2, 10:10?am, Cecil Moore wrote:
wrote: But what if it doesn't? Ham radio still has a lot to offer but not nearly as much as it once did. What does amateur radio not offer now that it once did? It seems to me that amateur radio today offers even more than it did when I first got started 40 years ago. For example, in 1967: - Almost all HF/MF amateur operation was CW, SSB voice, or AM voice. There was some SSTV and 45.45 baud Baudot RTTY, but those modes required a considerable amount of additional equipment that was bulky, complex, and expensive. - Almost all VHF/UHF amateur operation was AM voice or CW. There was some SSB voice, some FM voice, some RC, some RTTY and some ATV. RTTY and ATV required a considerable amount of additional equipment that was bulky, complex, and expensive. There were only a few repeaters on the amateur bands, and amateur satellite communications was only a few years old (OSCAR 1 was launched in 1961). - 30, 17 and 12 meters weren't ham bands. 160 was full of LORAN, and amateur use of 160 was severely restricted. - Adjusted for inflation, most new ham gear was much more expensive then than it is now. Look up the price of, say, a Swan 350 and power supply, or a Drake 4 line, and then adjust the prices for inflation. - Computers had almost no presence in amateur radio. A few people with connections, usually at universities, did neat things like very early forms of computer logging and circuit simulation, but that was the exception. - Most not-in-person communication between amateurs was by the ham bands, the telephone, the US mail and publications. There were no websites full of free-for-the-download information, no eBay or online sellers, no email, etc. Elmering was limited to the hams in your area, the ones you could find on the air, and possibly a few by-mail. - The only permitted digital mode was 45.45 baud RTTY using the 5 level Baudot code. It would be a decade more before any other digital modes were allowed for US hams. The list goes on and on. Many of the things that are commonplace in amateur radio today were far in the future back then. Many other things in amateur radio were far more expensive and difficult in those days than they are today. It seems to me that a ham today can do almost everything that a ham could do in 1967. What can we do to make it more attractive? I think the major thing to do is to simply portray all the things amateurs are doing - today, in 2007 - to as wide an audience as possible. Then let people decide what they are interested in. For example, don't assume that today's young people will only be interested in how to use a computer with a radio, or that older folks aren't going to be interested in new technology. Just show the "Ham's Wide World" of 2007, and let the folks who are interested decide what they like about it. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#7
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![]() "Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ... Information from within ARRL indicates that last year the ARRL VECs, whose teams handle over 70% ov al VE sessions, per their claim (which I am not confirming nor disputing), performed over 5,000 VE sessions (with each session handling multiple applicants/testees). According to the report, the average session was 5-10 applicants/testees ... (25-50k testees) "Reservations" have now jumped to 50-75/session!!! Is that NEW applicants or merely upgraders. I've had no increase in new applicants making reservations but a significant increase in upgraders. Also it is too soon to determine if this is simply a short term phenomenon or will it sustain itself. By the way would you care to enter a guess in my pool as to the percent increase in amateur numbers in one year beginning from the date of the implementation? Here are the rules and the current pool of guesses. Rules: 1) Predict amount of change in ARS numbers between the IMPLEMENTATION date of the R&O for elimination of code testing and one year from that date. 2) Calculation of the number of licenses will be done by N2EY under the same principals that he uses now to calculate the number of licenses. 3) You must select whole numbers for your percentage. 4) You may select positive or negative percentages. 5) You may select a range but that range may not exceed a total of 4%. Note that your average will be used to determine who is closest. If the actual change is outside the range of everyone's guesses then the person whose limit is closest will be the winner. 6) You must submit your guess no later than six months after the IMPLEMENTATION date of the R&O. Anyone else? Note if your guess doesn't show up on the list within a week, it may mean that my ISP is blocking it or that you are on my blocked senders list. You may still participate but you will have to have your guess submitted by someone who is not blocked. Guesses submitted: N8UZE: 1% less to 1% more N2EY: 1% more to 2% more KH6HZ: 1% less to 0% change N3KIP: 2% more to 6% more KH6O: 6% more to 10% more KK6J: 12% more to 14% more KC2HMZ: 5% more --- Added 12/31/06 Dee, N8UZE |
#8
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![]() "Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ... Information from within ARRL indicates that last year the ARRL VECs, whose teams handle over 70% ov al VE sessions, per their claim (which I am not confirming nor disputing), performed over 5,000 VE sessions (with each session handling multiple applicants/testees). According to the report, the average session was 5-10 applicants/testees ... (25-50k testees) "Reservations" have now jumped to 50-75/session!!! It appears that no-code WILL result in significant growth. (as I predicted) While some who want to keep our bands "to themselves" (at least until they're reallocated for lack of/diminishing use) will bemoan this, I am elated! From what I've seen, the ARRL BoD is "Getting It" about the need to welcome new hams and strongly discourage any berating/insulting/bad treatment of them just because they didn't have to take a Morse test. BRAVO! I hope that ALL hams will "get with the program" and act like decent human beings/Elmers towards the impending, apparently significant influx of newcomers. Treat them right and they will assimilate - treat the crappy and you'll regret it in the long run. 73, Carl - wk3c comittee dear me does he wish his efforts to fail -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#9
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On Jan 31, 11:03 pm, "Carl R. Stevenson" wrote:
Information from within ARRL indicates that last year the ARRL VECs, whose teams handle over 70% ov al VE sessions, per their claim (which I am not confirming nor disputing), performed over 5,000 VE sessions (with each session handling multiple applicants/testees). According to the report, the average session was 5-10 applicants/testees ... (25-50k testees) "Reservations" have now jumped to 50-75/session!!! It appears that no-code WILL result in significant growth. (as I predicted) Carl 'ole bean you're making some some very dicey assumptions and extrapolations here. What evidence do you have which indicates that this latest lurch will result in anything beyond just another bubble of upgrades a la 1991 and 2000? The simple fact of the matter is that we're into a very mature avocation based on an ancient basic technology which lost it's sex appeal in the general population years ago. I agree with others in this thread, we'll be lucky to regain the 18,000 the hobby has already lost since the head count peaked. I do hope you're prepared to eat some crow if your predictions don't come true. While some who want to keep our bands "to themselves" (at least until they're reallocated for lack of/diminishing use) As you well know the HF ham bands are not under any threats, they're not going anywhere for a very long time. It'll be interesting to see if the upgraders actually generate a noticeable increase in HF band activity levels. Techs have been able to become licensed without a code test for 15 years, they spend say spend $175 for a 2M FM rig and a few bucks for a little easy-up 2M antenna and they're on the air. Which is good and now they can upgrade to nocode Generals and Extras. And oops, they run into the much higher costs of HF equipment and all the hassles related to putting up HF antennas. If they weren't previously interested enough in ham radio to do the work required to pass the 5WPM code test will they now be interested enough in ham radio to spend the bigger bucks and get HF antennas up in the new regime? will bemoan this, I am elated! From what I've seen, the ARRL BoD is "Getting It" about the need to welcome new hams and strongly discourage any berating/insulting/bad treatment of them just because they didn't have to take a Morse test. BRAVO! When was the last time anybody paid any attention to the ARRL's unending stream of admonitions about playing nice? 1928? I hope that ALL hams will "get with the program" and act like decent human beings/Elmers towards the impending, apparently significant influx of newcomers. Treat them right and they will assimilate - treat the crappy and you'll regret it in the long run. This whole topic area is worn out overblown nonsense. There are 600,000 licensed hams in the U.S. with maybe 150,000-200,000 actually active. Of this group there are some misfits, maladroits and nutcases whose influence on the welfare of the hobby has been hugely overrated. This BS is nothing more than an excuse, a copout, a handy rationale of covenience which blames the lack of growth of the hobby on these anti- social types. I don't believe for one minute that their behavior has any really measurable impact on the growth - or lack of growth of the total head count. Bits and pieces of anti-social behavior are everywhere we go, out on the streets, at meetings, in this NG, on the job and yes on the ham bands too. That's life and we deal with it in other sectors without whining about it like too many do when ham radio is involved. Adapt or find another hobby because thee, the ARRL and I are not going to "fix" them. As far as elmering and "assimilation" of newbies is concerned one of the first points I'd make to a newbie is to simply spin the big knob in the panel and go somewhere else when they run into a jerk. How difficult is that?? And by the way Carl the volume of misbehavior in the hobby today is no worse than it was a half century ago. Back when ham radio grew every year . . . 73, Carl - wk3c w3rv |
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