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In article , "Carl R. Stevenson"
writes: "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , "Carl R. Stevenson" writes: and a "reward" for learning. I fail to understand why removing Morse testing is any different from removing all aspects of RTTY knowledge from the written test, e.g. "T8A10. What would you connect to a transceiver for RTTY operation?". Clearly AH0A can't understand (or accept) that the RTTY example is "theoretical knowledge" and the Morse test is a test of a mechanical skill ... You mean "a practical skill". No, I meant "mechanical skill." (touch typing would be in the same category ...) Both are also practical skills, are they not? Practical as opposed to theoretical. Both are valuable to the radio amateur. Whether either should be tested is a matter of opinion, nothing more. But if a person has no interest in RTTY, why should that person be subjected to questions on the subject? Why can't a ham be trusted to learn about RTTY if/when the desire to use that mode arises? RTTY is "just another mode", is it not? There's no requirement for any ham to ever use it. There is an ITU-R Recommendation that deals with the sorts of THEORETICAL knowledge that hams should possess ... IIRC, it's ITU-R Recommendation M.1544 ... It's just a recommendation, though - not a requirement. That recommendation is consistent with the basis and purpose of the ARS, both as defined by the FCC and the ITU. So is touch typing, knowing Morse code, knowing how to solder, and a whole bunch of other things. While not strictly mandatory, it is provided as "good advice to administrations" on what sorts of theoretical knowledge hams should possess. Sure - but it's just a recommendation. Can we really say that the questions on RTTY in the current written tests really assure that hams have theoretical knowledge of RTTY at the level recommended by M-1544? And note this: When I took my most recent ham exam that counted for a license, the only TOR mode authorized for hams was 60 wpm Baudot code RTTY using FSK or OOK. (Shift had to be less than 900 Hz, as I recall. No PSK-31, no packet, no PACTOR or even AMTOR. Not even ASCII! Back then the power limit was different, repeater rules were very different, and the 30, 17 or 12 meter bands weren't even a distant dream. The technology used in most ham rigs was also very different. And the tests we took back then had lots of things in them that are no longer in the current tests. Neutralization of triode RF power amplifiers, for example..... In the intervening years, FCC has trusted me (and almost every other ham from those days who hasn't lost interest) to keep current with amateur radio. FCC has renewed almost all of our licenses without question, and we're allowed to use those new modes and technologies even though we've never passed any tests on them. If FCC trusts us OTs to learn as we go, why not the new folks? 73 de Jim, N2EY |