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-   -   New ARRL Proposal (https://www.radiobanter.com/policy/27225-new-arrl-proposal.html)

Mike Coslo February 12th 04 03:04 AM

Alun wrote:

Mike, how is it anti-US to point that the world doesn't revolve around
America? Of course, if you think it does, then you're probably beyond help.


Do you know how all Americans think or feel about whatever issues? I
wouldn't presume to assume what "every Canadian thinks"

When I've been in Canada, I've met lots of nice folk with lots of
differing opinions - Just like us. My boy went to Hockey school there
every summer, and we often tagged along for vacation.

BTW, speaking of mistaken impressions, every time we went there, the
darn temperature was in the 90's. Canada is sure one HOT country!! 8^)

- Mike KB3EIA -


Mike Coslo February 12th 04 03:07 AM



Leo wrote:

On 12 Feb 2004 00:00:02 GMT, (N2EY) wrote:


In article , Leo
writes:


As of our last restructuring,Canadian licences (actually,
"Certificates of Proficiency") are also valid for life - no renewal
required.


If there are no renewals, how does IC know when a ham dies? Or is the
situation like Japan, where the license is only cancelled if someone makes
the effort to tell the govt. (with proper documentation) that the ham in
question
is, indeed, dead, and to cancel the license?



Three ways:

- the family notifies IC that their beloved ham relative is no longer
a user of oxygen.


Well, technically not quite correct. Oxygen just used in a different
way - ick.

Perhaps that the ham has assumed room temperature? 8^)\


- Mike KB3EIA -


Dee D. Flint February 12th 04 03:20 AM


"Leo" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 03:30:43 GMT, "Dee D. Flint"
wrote:

Agreed that the US is obviously a major player - but I'm sure that
even if they had gone their own way, the rest of the world would not
necessarily follow. The role of agencies like the ITU is to
coordinate global resources so as to prevent chaos on the bands - not
to act as an agent of US policy.


If your strongest player is sitting on the sidelines or playing for the
other team (i.e. government & commercial interests in the case of ham
radio), it's still possible to win the game but it is much harder.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


Dee D. Flint February 12th 04 03:26 AM


"Leo" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 14:43:25 -0500, Mike Coslo wrote:

Alun wrote:

Mike, how is it anti-US to point that the world doesn't revolve around
America? Of course, if you think it does, then you're probably beyond

help.


It's a troll, Alun. Go post the same message anywhere on netnews and
watch the reaction.


Mike, I didn't take Alun's message as a troll - just a response in
context to the thread to a rather lofty assertion that without the
ARRL (and by definition, the US Amateur Radio Service, since that is
all the ARRL influences), the world would never have known the joys of
Amateur Radio.

Which is just a tad jingoistic, I'd say - and nigh-on impossible to
substantiate without resorting to theory, opinion and conjecture.


If you don't believe it, then you're probably beyond help.

Of course the world doesn't revolve around the US. The world revolves
around it's axis.

How is the ARRL proposal going to affect the rest of the world's
amateurs anyway?


It won't.

Yet, according to the comments earlier in the thread, historically,
without the ARRL there would be no amateur radio anywhere in the
world.

Really? I don't think so.


- Mike KB3EIA -


We are not saying that the ARRL was the only thing that made this happen.
Simply that they were a significant player in the US and that the US was a
significant player in the world. Without the ARRL, US amateurs would have
had a much tougher time. If the US amateur community had been seriously
weakened, it would have affect to some degree the amateur community in the
rest of the world.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


N2EY February 12th 04 05:00 AM

In article , Alun
writes:

They


[the ARRL]

even claim they were responsible for the no-code licence,


Where, Alun? Can you show where ARRL claims credit for the Tech losing its code
test?

when the
truth is the FCC would have introduced one 20 years earlier but for the
league's opposition!


Not true!

The Tech lost its code test in early 1991. 20 years earlier was 1971. The first
FCC attempt at a nocodetest amateur license was in 1975, and if enacted would
have not taken effect sooner than 1976. That's 15 years, not 20.

And in 1975, ARRL polled its entire membership with a detailed questionnaire. A
large and pervasive majority opposed a nocodetest ham license of any kind.

73 de Jim, N2EY




N2EY February 12th 04 05:00 AM

In article ,
(Tony Pelliccio) writes:

(N2EY) wrote in message
. com...
http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2004/01/19/1/?nc=1

Summary:

3 classes of license: Novice, General, Extra


Can we water it down any more?


There are some folks (not me!) who only want one class of license.

5 wpm code test retained for Extra only


Why not just elminate the code requirement entirely. To me 5WPM code
is so awfully slow that it's painful.


5 wpm is a minimum speed. Someone can always ask for a faster test as an
accomodation.

Existing Advanceds get free upgrade to Extra, Techs
and Tech Pluses get free upgrade to General


This free ride stuff has got to stop.


When was the last one?

I agree that the proposed free upgrades are not a good idea.

I'm a 20WPM Extra damn it - now
I can bitch and moan like the old farts. My friend KH6HZ is probably
getting a good laugh out of this.


yep.

Novice test to be 25 questions on "basics", General to be
derived from Tech and General, Extra pretty much as-is.


I suppose I can't complain much on this.


That's about the same test I took 37 years ago for my Novice...

Most of us are pretty much
appliance operators -


Not me!

when is the last time you played around with
SMT inside your radio?

No SMT in any of my ham gear. It's not necessary. And I have quite a bit of
homebrew ham gear.

73 de Jim, N2EY



Dave Heil February 12th 04 05:06 AM

Alun wrote:

Trust me. All things pass. The Roman
empire, the British empire ... you get the idea.


Let's try an experiment. Swallow an avocado seed. Report back in a few
days and let us know the results.

Dave K8MN

Alun February 12th 04 05:19 AM

"garigue" wrote in news:UOBWb.11368$uV3.27753
@attbi_s51:



The price we paid. The @#%#&$& code test!


Alun .... We really don't have to tolerate that type of language on this
newsgroup ..... I wish more guys would use the above symbols than the
language ....then we could use our imagination. I translate the above
string as "necessary" give or take a few characters.

God Bless 73 Tom KI3R





If you think I meant necessary I might have to add a few real characters in
there to dispel that notion!

Alun February 12th 04 05:25 AM

(N2EY) wrote in
:

In article , Alun
writes:

They


[the ARRL]

even claim they were responsible for the no-code licence,


Where, Alun? Can you show where ARRL claims credit for the Tech losing
its code test?


They did at the time


when the
truth is the FCC would have introduced one 20 years earlier but for the
league's opposition!


Not true!

The Tech lost its code test in early 1991. 20 years earlier was 1971.
The first FCC attempt at a nocodetest amateur license was in 1975, and
if enacted would have not taken effect sooner than 1976. That's 15
years, not 20.


So it's not true because it was only 15 years not 20? That's only a matter
of degree, not substance.

So you admit they opposed it for 15 years, and I can assure you they tried
to claim credit when it happened.


And in 1975, ARRL polled its entire membership with a detailed
questionnaire. A large and pervasive majority opposed a nocodetest ham
license of any kind.

73 de Jim, N2EY




Exactly, the ARRL opposed it.

Leo February 12th 04 11:59 AM

On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 22:04:35 -0500, Mike Coslo
wrote:

Alun wrote:

Mike, how is it anti-US to point that the world doesn't revolve around
America? Of course, if you think it does, then you're probably beyond help.


Do you know how all Americans think or feel about whatever issues? I
wouldn't presume to assume what "every Canadian thinks"

When I've been in Canada, I've met lots of nice folk with lots of
differing opinions - Just like us. My boy went to Hockey school there
every summer, and we often tagged along for vacation.

BTW, speaking of mistaken impressions, every time we went there, the
darn temperature was in the 90's. Canada is sure one HOT country!! 8^)


Not right now! We're in the 20's at the moment..... Brrrrrrrrr.....!


- Mike KB3EIA -


73, Leo


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