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In article , "Carl R. Stevenson"
writes: I thought I'd forward the thoughtful comments below from e-ham.net ... they say a LOT. (name/callsign omitted to at least partially protect the innocent ...) Why? We can always go searching through eham Carl - wk3c ********* For the last 25 years I have been in the US Coast Guard serving as telecommunication technician. I am now a instructor at the same course. I started off as a Morse Code operator in New Jersey. I grant you I graduated at the near bottom of my Morse code class but still passed the 40 wpm requirement easily. I also was sent to 9 months of antenna and radio theory and fundamental classes. Upon graduation billions of years ago we all were required (simply because the instructor was a Ham Extra Class type) to take the Morse code and written tests. WHOA! "Required?" My class had 37 folks in it. On a windy Saturday in New Jersey in winter 1978 we all went and took the Ham radio test and all by simple virtue of having studied Morse and electronic theory and fundamentals for almost a year left with our Extra licenses. So it was a no-effort thing. These folks had all already learned both theory and code on the taxpayer's dime, to a level far beyond that required for the amateur license. So in 1978 37 of us got "forced" into Ham radio and to this date - 22 still are active (three of my class passed away, and I think one is in jail) but the point is that we are still active running MARS stations, teaching in service schools and running C2 systems for the DoD and doing so as Hams and Coast Guard Instructors. All good things. A few years ago the Coast Guard decided to do away with the Morse requirement for us to learn as newbies - and for good reason - No one ever used it for emergencies. Morse Code was phased out of the maritime services so that the shipping companies would not have to staff their ships with skilled radio operators whose sole duties would be radio communications. The maritime radio services exist only because ships need communications, not because the shipping companies or crews like to mess around with radios. Technology had developed a means to communicate request for assistance via HF voice, FM, AM, TacSat. And the trusty cellphone. I'd like to see how far from shore a cellphone works.... I mean - in my opinion only a fool would trust sending a morse code message that his ship was sinking - people wanted to call on a phone - ask for help - and hear a warm friendly voice on the other side saying help is on the way. Not exactly an unbiased opinion... IIRC, the last use of Morse for a maritime emergency was on December 31, 1997, involving MV Oak. It should be noted that the newer systems have a much higher false alarm rate than the old manual Morse system. Two weeks ago 28 Coasties graduated from the DoD Signal center at Ft Gordon - they had over a year of telecommunication training, satellite uplink/downlink, antenna theory, computer ops, you name it - but what they didn't have is any morse code. So how many of the last 3 classes that have graduated have became Hams - ZERO. The reason is simple - they simply don't see a need to study something that the US Govt (both the FCC and Coast Guard and DoD) themselves have stated was not necessary. Do they have an instructor *requiring* or *forcing* them to take the test? One of the seaman that was asking me about how to become a ham told me that to be forced to study the code to get a license was like a surgeon being told he had to learn about Ether because that's how they use to do it back in the civil war or a skipper having to learn how to pilot a steamboat because for the longest time that was the naval tradition - and he has a point - morse code was around and was an acceptable form of communication when Steamers and biplanes were the norm but technology has changed greatly. Sure. But modern MDs don't use ether, steam has been largely replaced by diesel and gas turbines. Hams, however, still use Morse code extensively. But here it is today - the 21st Century and we are judging folk on their capabilities of being good Hams based on a 19th century art form. Not true at all. Was there no use of Morse code in radio in the 20th century? Do I believe in tradition - of course -- but tradition shouldn't be the basis of restricting new technology or ideals. Do I still use morse - yep, do I scream and yell at my new students because even though they can design an antenna system with a coke can and chewing gum that can talk to someone 1000 miles away but must be inadequate because they don't know morse code - No. Bottom line is that there are a ton of great folks out there that would be a great benefit to Ham radio but just don't want to, or can't learn the code. Maybe. We've had a nocode ham license for 12+ years now - and yet none of the students wanted that license, huh? The satellite systems used for maritime distress, GPS, etc., aren't HF systems either. And just for the record - for the last two classes I asked "how many of you guys use CB radios" - to date the number is Zero. I had one girl in the telecommunication class raise her hand and ask "What's a CB?". so the argument that if we open the airwaves up to these fine Americans that have served for over a year learning the best in radio theory and fundamentals that they are suddenly going to invade your air space and start talking CB is just ridiculous. Sure - those folks. Anyway . my two cents worth. ************ END QUOTE FROM E-HAM.NET The writer ignores the biggest differences of those 25 years: 1) Back in '78, the students learned Morse Code as part of their CG training, so there was no other training needed for them to get Extra Class amateur licenses. Today, they would need to put in some of their own time, and a bit of effort, learning Morse at 5 wpm for that test. 2) There was no instructor today FORCING them to take the test. In fact, an instructor who tried to do that might be in trouble. An amateur license is not a license to engage in commercial, maritime, military, broadcast, public safety or other nonamateur radio communications. It's a license to engage in amateur radio, using the amateur radio frequency allocations. And radio amateurs do use Morse code extensively. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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