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In article , "Clint"
rattlehead@computronDOTnet writes: sending and receiving CW isn't a building block to anything else..... Yes, it is. First, it's a building block to the use of the mode on the air. Although other services have pretty much stopped using Morse Code, hams use it extensivley, and an amateur license is permission to operate an amateur station, not a station in another service. Note that the Morse Code tests are at a very basic level. They're entry-level, nothing more. Second, if someone wants to actually design and build radio equipment, having skill in Morse Code permits them to use almost anything from very simple to very sophisticated equipment to good advantage. Would you expect a newcomer to radio to build an SSB transceiver as a first project? now, the electrical principals of what a CW transmission is, and a knowledge test of that is a good idea, but that's comparing apples and oranges. Why should there be *any* written test on theory if all a person wants to do is operate manufactured radios? If someone doesn't want to build a rig, why should they have to memorize all those symbols, diagrams and formulas? I think most of the PCTA is being disingenuous when they come up with "good reasons" to keep CW testing alive; Why? I think the true deeper reason lies somewhere in the "I had to do it so everybody should" relm, as i've stated before. You can think what you want, but you're mistaken on that account. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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