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In article , Leo
writes: Hans, I believe that you have missed my point a little bit (!) - it wasn't to start up a redefinition of the entire hobby all over again, but to stimulate an introspective look at the validity of the various arguements ongoing in this group (code / no code, more testing / less testing, etc.) based on the world as it stands in 2003. Things that made perfect sense in 1919, or 1941, or 1963 may well be seriously outdated today, based on the current state of our hobby. Sounds reasonable, Leo. Different from the "created today" idea but worth a look. Devil's Advocate mode = ON Example - In 1930, hams had to build just about all of their own equipment, so testing them on their ability to hand-draw and analyse radio schematics made good sense. Otherwise, the bands would be full of splatter and heterodynes from poorly-crafted transmitters. That's one way to look at it. OTOH, in 1930 there *were* problems with transmitters splattering, chirping, clicking and buzzing all over the bands, and getting outside the band as well. So it could be argued that the tests were there to try to cure a problem as well. Now, where just about everyone is using commercially built transmitting equipment, that level of detail is no longer of critical importance, and is no longer tested. Drawing schematics as part of the test (in the USA) was removed at least 40 years ago, when FCC went to 100% multiple choice. (1960 or 1961, for amateur tests up to at least General, which had all privileges at the time.) To propose that today would be quite difficult to justify - most folks never even take the cover off their radios anymore, let alone design one from scratch..... But some of us (ahem) *do* design them and build them from scratch. Amateur radio is probably the only radio service where a licensee can simply assemble a transmitter and put it on the air without any formal type-acceptance, approval or certification - at least here in the lower 50 provinces. My point is, if we argue from preference or personal bias, we tend to hold on to things because they are familiar, or comfortable, or just "the way it's always been". At the same time, it's important to note that things which survive the test of time often do so for very good reasons. To review using an analytical mindset might just bring out the true value of some aspects of the hobby - sure, there are traditions that should be kept (everyone on SSB uses Q-signals in comon speech, I don't! ;-) even though they were only designed for brevity when using Morse code) - it is a quaint link to the past. Others, like mandatory CW testing, should be able to stand on their own merit based on solid reasoning - after all, we are forcing people to learn it to get in to the hobby (me included - the current price of admission to HF...) - so there should be a good technical or procedural reason to do so. This ain't the Masons....:0) Sure - but what constitutes solid reasoning varies from person to person. I think that the simple fact that hundreds of thousands of hams all over the world use Morse on the HF ham bands is a solid reason to require at least a test for skill in the mode at a very basic level - say, 5 wpm. Others disagree. Your rule set is actually a good one - simple, and to the point. If only people could work within straightforward frameworks like this - the regulators would be out of business..... Agreed! But experience has shown otherwise. 73 de Jim, N2EY |