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In article , " Stephen Cowell"
writes: If you ever had to struggle through the period of no-voice novice, you might never wish that particular chore on anyone. I had a no-voice, nonrenewable, nonretakeable Novice back in 1967. Had a great time with it. I got my first Novice in '75, and let it lapse due primarily to the lack of voice priviliges (and no manuals for the boatanchors I'd been given). CB was just a lot more fun. I've never been on cb. Ham radio seemed like way more fun. I got my second novice in '89, man, what a difference! Sunspots were coming on, 10M was hopping, and I worked for a commercial radio shop. That's what Ham Radio is all about, for me.... not hazing, but graduated challenges. Hazing? The greatest concern, and one which I don't think has been addressed in this thread yet, is the fact that our spectrum is in danger. It's always been in danger. Other services have always looked at our allocations and asked why they couldn't have some. We need more occupants to help occupy it... and HF voice priviliges are the only carrot left to put on the stick. We have 683,000 US hams today. That's about 2-1/2 times what there were back when I got started in 1967. If the bands aren't crowded, it's because existing hams aren't on the air, not because there aren't enough hams. This is a graying hobby. Think about why. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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