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Old August 3rd 03, 02:04 AM
WA8ULX
 
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Default Do Hams get 11 Meters Back

Do Hams get 11 Meters Back, as soon as all the CBers upgrade to there Free
Handout Ham Licenses?
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Old August 3rd 03, 02:56 AM
Jim Hampton
 
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Not likely. What fee handout licenses? There still are a couple of written
exams (not that they are overly difficult, mind you).

73 from Rochester, NY
Jim AA2QA



"WA8ULX" wrote in message
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Do Hams get 11 Meters Back, as soon as all the CBers upgrade to there Free
Handout Ham Licenses?



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Old August 3rd 03, 07:37 AM
Jim Hampton
 
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Multiple guess.

73 from Rochester, NY
Jim AA2QA


"WA8ULX" wrote in message
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There still are a couple of written
exams


Is that what there called?



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Old August 3rd 03, 09:37 AM
Dwight Stewart
 
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"WA8ULX" wrote:

(snip) ...to there Free... (snip)



Try "...to their free..." instead. The rest deserves no real response.


Dwight Stewart (W5NET)

http://www.qsl.net/w5net/

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Old August 3rd 03, 01:06 PM
shephed
 
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No, CB'ers are getting the Ham Bands.

"WA8ULX" wrote in message
...
Do Hams get 11 Meters Back, as soon as all the CBers upgrade to there Free
Handout Ham Licenses?





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Old August 3rd 03, 02:20 PM
WA8ULX
 
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Try "...to their free..." instead.

No I like" there" better, besides it ****es you Knuckle draggers off.
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Old August 3rd 03, 02:22 PM
WA8ULX
 
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No, CB'ers are getting the Ham Bands.

Yes your right, what I meant to say was CBplussers.
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Old August 3rd 03, 11:04 PM
Scott Unit 69
 
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This is actually not such a bad idea. I've always supported dropping the
155.3 mi. limit on CB and the idea of allowing hams to reduce their power
and elmer CBers on channels 36 through 40 USB on the finer point of DXing. I
think it'd be a great recruitment tool, just MHO.



I once tried to "school" a guy on DXing. He's a little too slow
for help. I have even made DX contacts and passed 'em on to him.
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Old August 4th 03, 02:09 AM
Floyd Davidson
 
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"Phil Kane" wrote:
On Sun, 03 Aug 2003 21:29:30 GMT, Bert Craig wrote:

This is actually not such a bad idea. I've always supported dropping the
155.3 mi. limit on CB and the idea of allowing hams to reduce their power
and elmer CBers on channels 36 through 40 USB on the finer point of DXing. I
think it'd be a great recruitment tool, just MHO.


If you espouse the above, it is evidence that you have no
understanding about what CB is supposed to be for and you cannot
keep ham radio and CB separate as they should be.

What you are describing is hamming, not proper (some call it "legal") CB
operating.


One of the odd things about the animosity between CB and ARS
users, is that here in Alaska CB was a *very* beneficial service
used pretty much as intended in most Alaskan locations.

Because I worked in the (long distance) telecom business, the
places where I've lived were always communications centers, and
CB was never popular in those areas. But I also spent a lot of
years traveling to nearly half of the villages in Alaska... and
in many villages for many years CB was the way people kept in
touch with their neighbors until roughly 1980 or so, by which
time telephones had been installed in almost all villages. But
even after that happened CB remained very popular in many
coastal areas with perhaps the single exception of here in
Barrow (larger boats, mostly used for whaling, were and still
are commonly equipped with VHF marine radios here).

During years of higher sunspot activity the skip that was
experienced on CB was a general nuisense to most Alaskan users
because it generated an unnecessary racket where the radio was,
and interfered with monitoring for significant (perhaps
emergency) traffic from neighbors.

Between cell phones and VHF radios, I don't think anyone on
Alaska much cares anymore what they do with CB regulations.

--
Floyd L. Davidson http://web.newsguy.com/floyd_davidson
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska)
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