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"KØHB" wrote in message thlink.net...
-- ô¿ô 73, de Hans, K0HB -- Help support youth involved in Amateur Radio. http://www.mnyarc.org http://www.k0bsa.org "N2EY" wrote In the early-to-mid 1970s, the Novice went through a period of quick changes. First, the FCC allowed folks who had been unlicensed for at least a year to get a Novice, regardless of prior licensure. This meant a ham could be a Novice forever - two years on, one year off, new callsign and license each time. Again the reason given was "too many dropouts". See my other post about "too many dropouts". Will do. Then the one-year-unlicensed requirement was dropped. And the reason given was... Finally the Novice was made 5 years renewable, like all the other license classes of the time. That was more than a quarter century ago. You're right, Jim, it was more than a quarter century ago. And over a quarter century ago FCC thought that 13 and 20 WPM code tests were a good idea, and a no-code license was a bad idea. And a lot of other things, like secret tests given by FCC examiners, extreme limits on vanity calls and repeaters, yada yada yada. Seems FCC no longer holds those views, so I think we can safely ignore your argument about what they thought back then on this matter also. That's one way to look at it. Another way to look at it is to note that since that time, FCC has consistently made it *easier* and *more convenient* to get and keep an amateur radio license - of *any* class. As long as said changes mean less work for FCC, that is. That's been a consistent policy from then to now. Forced upgrading would go against that tide. One thing I'm not clear on, though. If an LP reached the end of the 10 years but couldn't pass the upgrade test, could they take the LP test and get another 10 years (as with driver's license LPs) or is it one-LP-to-a-customer, as the old Novice was? Do YOU think learners permits ought to be renewable beyond 10 years? I think *all* amateur licenses are essentially "permits to learn". And I think *all* classes of amateur license should be renewable. Just my opinion. If your proposed LP is going to allow all authorized modes on all authorized freqs from 1.8 MHz on up, it's going to need a rather considerable written test, doncha think? The power limit removes the need for lots of RF exposure and other safety questions, and the VE stuff, but what about almost all the rest? 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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