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As a result of the restructuring, there are several different versions
of Technician license: 1. The old Tech Plus licensees: Unlike the No-Code Technicians, they have limited operating privileges on HF and do not need to take the 5 wpm exam again to upgrade to General. 2. Old No-Code Techs: They have no HF privileges and must take the 5 wpm exam to upgrade to General. 3. New No-Code Techs: See above. 4. New Technicians with the 5 wpm CSCE within the past year: They are treated the same as the old Tech Plus licensees. 5. New Technicians with the 5 wpm CSCE more than a year old: They have Tech Plus Operating privileges but must pass the 5 wpm exam again to upgrade to General due to the expired CSCE. Why did the FCC do this? It's a cause for confusion for VEs and prospective upgraders, and it makes it needlessly more difficult to enforce the rules when some Technicians have HF operating privileges and some do not and when some Technicians need to take the 5 wpm exam again to upgrade while some do not. Although I think the restructuring of 2000 was long overdue, I think merging the No-Code Tech and Tech Plus licenses was a boneheaded move. Either the distinction should have continued, or all Technicians should have been given an automatic upgrade to Tech Plus. The only explanation I can think of is that the FCC intended to completely eliminate the 5 wpm exam requirement and thus make the distinctions between each of the 5 versions of Technician license a moot point. Jason Hsu, AG4DG usenet AAAATTTT jasonhsu.com |
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