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![]() "N2EY" wrote in message om... "Bill Sohl" wrote in message link.net... "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , Mike Coslo writes: Yep - with reduced privileges. Not necessarily a bad idea. All they're really doing is reinventing the Novice. I'm still not so hot on the idea. All depends on what the balance of requirements vs. privileges is. As it stands right now, our "entry level" license is heavily weighted to VHF/UHF. I agree and of all the licensing decisions made under 98-143, the ending of Novice was, IMHO, not a good idea. But...but...Bill, the FCC thought it was a good idea! Are you saying FCC made a mistake? ;-) Please point to any statement I have made that indicates I agree with every FCC decision. :-) :-) That said, I think once the dust settles from the code "test" issue, then perhaps ARRL may wish to take a top down look at licensing, licensing requirements and the concurrent privileges associated with each. KL7CC & Co. have already done so. Have you read their paper? No, is it on a web site?. Especially charming is the idea that people with a 6th grade education are going to supply us with fresh ideas. I got started in ham radio between 6th and 7th grades..... Were you "average" Jim? In some things yes, in others no. I was involved in electronics when I was in 5th grade, but no one else around me was. I'm not at all against kids of any particular age being involved in Ham radio, but that "average 6th grader thing is bothersome. Heck, the "average" sixth grader in some American neighborhoods is quite different from his/her "average" counterpart elsewhere. Perhaps a better way to word that idea is "the entry level syllabus and test should not require a knowledge of math, science or English above the sixth-grade level in order to understand the material". Next: Whatever we come up with, it will have to fit within the FCC budget. This probably means that in all likelihood what will happen, assuming that the idea of a beginner's class license is even accepted at all, is that they (the FCC) will juggle the existing 3 classes to accommodate the new structure. Technician will change from what it is now to the basic license. It may be named "Communicator" or simply left as Technician. Let's assume it gets the name "Communicator". All existing Techs will be upgraded to General. Assuming that the Morse requirement is removed first, our opinion is that most of the Techs will take (and hopefully pass) the element 3 exam as soon as they can, thus becoming General class licensees. Assuming indeed! They figure that people are going to study and pay for a test in order to get priveleges they will get anyhow? If a Technician flunks the test, all he or she has to do is wait a while, than he/she will get the priveleges anyhow. Exactly! That sounds a LOT like simplification to me. Sounds like a giveaway to me. And it sets a very bad precedent: If it's OK to give all Techs a free upgrade to General, why not throw away most of the General question pool and use the Tech one instead? Remember, that before the changes that created the present no-code tech, the General and Tech exams were identical. Only the code separated them, and even there it was only the difference between 5 and 13 WPM. But its not that way now. And it wasn't that way back when the Tech code test changes were made! hehe, things aren't like they used to be, and they never were! 8^) "They remember a past that never was" What are they remembering that wasn't? The tech written was the same as the General as someone wrote above up to 1987 as you note below. Direct quote: "Remember, that before the changes that created the present no-code tech, the General and Tech exams were identical. Only the code separated them, and even there it was only the difference between 5 and 13 WPM." That sentence, and the lack of other clarification, says that the General and Tech writtens were the same right up to when the Tech lost its code test in 1991. That's simply not the case - the written was split almost 4 years earlier. OK and understood. Note that the paper wants to give *all* Techs a free upgrade to General! It also ignores the fact that any Tech who got that license before March 1987 is already able to upgrade to General with no additional testing. And it's been that way since April 15, 2000. And that's not a giveaway because those folks *did* pass the same written as Generals. IF (and it is a big IF) the FCC ever entertains some type of license changes of the type being discussed there will be two choices as to the affected hams already licensed. You can repeat the 1968 approach and take away privileges or you can give some people a "pass" while still impacting all new hams or hams not already licensed at a particular level. Time will tell. Quick history: From 1951 to March 1987, the General and Tech had the same written. In March of 1987 the General was split into two elements, 3A for Tech and 3B for General. Almost four years later (February 1991), the Tech lost its code test. This isn't ancient history, and anybody writing a policy paper should know how the previous system came to be. And it's not the only factual mistake in the paper. And finally, before I forget about how I was charmed about the glasses reference, I have to congratulate the authors on their humorous treatment of Pro coders: (more from the KL7CC paper) So, there are no "Morse code haters" on the committee. There is no conspiracy, no secret agenda, no kickback from the manufacturers, no "black plan" from the ARRL, no anything. Just some guys that want nothing more than to see our great hobby prosper for the next hundred years, or longer. and (I had to put this in again): You know, fresh ideas, new blood, people that can actually see their radios without having to put on glasses - what a concept! and: A few final words: There are no black helicopters. I guess those who believe in the Morse code test believe there are? See what I mean about undertone? I bet they love their families more than PCTA's too! I recycle. Do you suppose the committee members just want to see our wonderful hobby prosper? Wouldn't that be an odd reason for doing what they are doing? Apparently those of us who believe in a Morse code test *don't* want to see our wonderful hobby prosper! If the ideas are good ideas, they will stand on their merit. The person histories of the committee members is not the issue. If they're such great folks, why don't they let the merits of their ideas convicne us? Quick aside: I first became aware of W5YI about ten years ago when my license needed to be renewed. I got this official looking letter saying that for just $5 they'd help me renew my license. All I had to do was fill in the form, sign it, write a check for $5 and send it to them. Never mind that I'd been dealing with the FCC since I was 13 and had renewed and modified my license at least 9 times before with no problems at all. They thought I needed "help". Perhaps their target audience needs the help? 8^) Maybe? snippage And the answer to the question of who I'm going to talk to if there are no manufacturers...... Well you know , don't ya Jim? Who, me? Yeah, you!! More folks like me? Who don't "take the practical approach"? more snippage I'm not talking about Carl either. I know that neither he nor Bill Sohl are in favor of reductions in the qualifications to get a license (save removal of the Morse code test) And they've been very clear about that. That's really nice. It also *may* mean that they will someday be considered the Luddites along with us troglodyte Pro code testers as the requirements to get a license are relaxed more and more. You got my point exactly. I may have proposed this once (quite tongue in cheek) but one of the proposals was that the prospective amateur sign a paper stating how he or she had read and understood part 97. I had to read that part of the KL7CC paper twice because I didn't believe it the first time! And they're talking about the *rules and regs*!! Once upon a time, FCC tried that approach with another radio service. Didn't work very well. The real problem with CB at the time and to this day was the "buy it anywhere" ability at prices net to nothing. Even in the early 70s CBs were less than $50. I never saw them that cheap, but then again, I wasn't looking. But what you are effectively saying, Bill, is that the real problem with cb was "lack of investment" by many who used it. They did not take it seriously because they had invested only a few dollars and practically no time or effort into getting set up. Does that mean if cb sets had cost, say, $500 back then instead of $50, that service would not have become such a mess? Probably because the sets wouldn't have found such a wide market of accepatance for that price. Clearly the other factor was the "no license" other than send in the application approach. Almost sounds like a new version of "what isn't worked for isn't valued" Cute, but no cigar. Same is true today for FRS...but the good thing about FRS is the lack of any real DX ability. Why not extrapolate that to the whole test? Just think how easy the testing process would be! By gosh, we could get [people to sign that they had the equivalent knowlege of anything. The ARS could be populated by geniuses! Exactly! No more need for VEC sessions and all that paperwork. If that approach is valid for the rules, why not the whole test? But the part of that paper I found most "amusing" was where the prime author admitted that he could not pass the current written test for the license he holds. It is written in such a way that he almost sounds proud of that fact. As dear departed N0BK would say: Surreal. One problem we have discused before is the stupid focus on some testing on elements of the rules that very few hams ever engage in...space communications for example. Better to test on what we really want most hams to be knowledgeable on that VEC qualifications, etc. It used to seem to me that the one thing we could all agree on was that the basic regulations (not talking about the fine-print stuff, just the basics) were one subject that absolutely had to be tested for. But the KL7CC paper suggests doing away with most of that! Surreal... I'll have to find that paper and read it. Cheers, Bill K2UNK |
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