Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#52
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Dave Heil
writes: Entertain us with your credentials once again, won't you, Len. How can I do it "again" when you didn't like it the first time? Tell the stage manager to change the lights or maybe change the flats. Do something about the floor, please. It's all messy after you've been amazing yourself sitting with your orion. Then tell us about that "Extra right out of the box". Extras don't come in a box. They do it in front of orions. After more than seven years of posting your diatribes in an amateur radio newsgroup, you're no closer to obtaining even the most basic no-code amateur radio license. Was never my intent to GET a ham license any class. After seven years you are no closer to understanding that. You desperately need to UPGRADE your neuron count! Download some more from Ten-Tec. You can do it. LHA / WMD |
#53
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Dave Heil
writes: Len Over 21 wrote: In article , Robert Casey writes: At which age did you pass an amateur radio license exam, Leonard? Never tried, snarly dave. I passed my First Phone exam on the first try in Chicago at an FCC field office in March 1956. Never looked back. Then learning the 5 wpm and getting the extra should be a walk in the park then. It took me about a month to learn 5 wpm and I'm no good at such motor skills. Gosh, olde-tymer, I've walked in many fine parks in my time but not a single one of them required any morse code proficiency to walk. That "Extra right out of the box" park requires it at the breakneck pace of f i v e w o r d s p e r m i n u t e. Y o u t y p e f u n n y . Y o u r o r i o n t u n e s to V O A s l o w E n g l i s h ? Psycho-motor skill I learned in middle school (we called it "junior high school" back then before educational PC) was typing at tested maximum of 60 WPM. On typewriters that had no key markings. :-) There's no typing test involved in the Amateur Extra. Just a morse test of f i v e w o r d s p e r m i n u t e. T h a n k y o u f o r h e a d s u p. Now, let's concentrate on WHY there's still a morse code test for an AMATEUR radio license...and WHY it must remain law forever and ever. Or, at least until the last PCTA has their code key forcibly removed from their cold, dead fingers. At the rate you're progressing toward that Extra Class ticket, there won't be any amateur radio license at all to pry from your cold, dead fingers. So goes the glory of the world. [sic transit gloria mundi] You seem to be in sick transit. Get well fast. Is morse code not so wonderful that the feds have to keep the morse test in law so that cute little seven-year-olds can have radio playmates? Or forty-seven-year-olds and older? It still gets you that mere children can obtain that which you covet, doesn't it? Covet? C o v e t ? ! ? BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAEEHEEHEE HEEHEEHEEHEEHAWHAWHAWHAW - gasp - snickersnicker Y o u a r e f u n n e e ! Ever wonder why morse code is the SECOND most used mode on HF, a distant second behind voice? All the HF hams had to test for code but so few continued to use it. Let's see.....hmmm....It is probably because the overwhelming majority can already talk? Operating on SSB would seem to be as easy as...talking. It is, Ding Dong Schoolmaster. I did just that in 1954. On SSB. Very easy. Had to use English, though, language of the Waffen SS wasn't allowed. I guess it must not be so wonderful, so popular after all. ...but you'll have to continue to rely upon second-hand information. No, the CIA. According to the gunnery nurse, amateur radio is a super-secret organization that ABSOLUTELY no one can know about until they get their very own license and certificate (suitable for framing). Send me a free copy of "Now You're Talking" and I'll study up on the matter. Do I need a DoD or Q Clearance to read that? LHA / WMD |
#54
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "Dee D. Flint"
writes: Len has made no effort that anyone can see to get an amateur license. Len does not want an amateur radio license. He appears to want to make changes without being a member of the affected group. He wants amateur radio as we know it to disappear. What he wants is a multiband high power version of cb. Or nothing at all. He also appears to enjoy insulting and berating anyone who is not in complete agree with his opinions. There's a complete description of his behavior around someplace - he proves its correctness with each of his posts... It's rather like complaining about your congressman when you don't bother to vote. His hobby is wasting time. Your time. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#56
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , "Dee D. Flint" writes: Len has made no effort that anyone can see to get an amateur license. Len does not want an amateur radio license. He appears to want to make changes without being a member of the affected group. He wants amateur radio as we know it to disappear. What he wants is a multiband high power version of cb. Or nothing at all. He also appears to enjoy insulting and berating anyone who is not in complete agree with his opinions. There's a complete description of his behavior around someplace - he proves its correctness with each of his posts... It's rather like complaining about your congressman when you don't bother to vote. His hobby is wasting time. Your time. Exactly. Which is why I killfiled him and so see only what others may choose to quote from him. Thank goodness!! Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
#57
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
(N2EY) wrote in message ...
In article , ospam (Larry Roll K3LT) writes: I was born Oct 31, 1952. I got my Novice ticket July 21, 1981. I passed Extra Feb, 7, 1983. I reckon that made me 30 years, 4 months, 7 days old at the time. What a great new game! I'll play: I was born April 24, 1954. I got my Novice ticket October 14, 1967. I got my Extra September 26, 1970. (Dates are when the actual license arrived - passed the tests about six weeks earlier). I reckon that made me 16 years, 5 months, 2 days old when the Extra came in the mail. That 2 year experience requirement held me up at least a year). Anybody else? 73 de Jim, N2EY . Born 1958, passed Novice exam in November 1986. bb |
#58
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "Dee D. Flint"
writes: "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , "Dee D. Flint" writes: Len has made no effort that anyone can see to get an amateur license. Len does not want an amateur radio license. He appears to want to make changes without being a member of the affected group. He wants amateur radio as we know it to disappear. What he wants is a multiband high power version of cb. Or nothing at all. He also appears to enjoy insulting and berating anyone who is not in complete agree with his opinions. There's a complete description of his behavior around someplace - he proves its correctness with each of his posts... It's rather like complaining about your congressman when you don't bother to vote. His hobby is wasting time. Your time. Exactly. Which is why I killfiled him and so see only what others may choose to quote from him. Me too. And one other. The antics of "the organ grinder and his red-hatted monkey" (as Hans so perfectly described them) become repetitive and tiresome very quickly. Thank goodness!! Yep! 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#59
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Leo wrote:
On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 05:34:03 GMT, Dave Heil wrote: Len Five Decades Over 21 but not acting a day over eleven wrote: If you're waiting for radio amateurs to be impressed by your professional credentials, you're likely going to be disappointed. I must admit, I've taken a shot or three at Len over exactly the same issue - no Amateur callsign = no valid opinion on Amateur issues. However, a little research reveals that this distinction would be irrelevant in Canada, as we grant full Amateur license privileges upon request to persons with appropriate Professional license qualifications. So all our Leonard needs do is move to Canada and see if professional credentials are recognized there. Then he can apply for an amateur radio license. It does not work that way here nor should it. With Len's professional credentials, it should be a snap for him to obtain an amateur radio license in his own country. The fact is, Len doesn't care about obtaining an amateur radio license. He is only a self-appointed advocate for change in an endeavor in which he is not a participant. It would seem to me that this makes perfect sense - radio operation is radio operation, and the Pros have made a career of it - and invested considerably more education, time, effort and ongoing training than would be possible for most hobbyists. After all, it would be pretty silly for the folks at the local photo club to argue that Yosuf Karsh's pictures were pretty good, but not up to "Amateur" standards! I'm not so sure about that. I've had communications professionals try to have me QSY an RTTY circuit from a 9 MHz frequency in late afternoon to a 24 MHz frequency for a path which was only several hundred miles. Most hams with any experience can tell you that such a path regulary requires lower frequencies, not higher ones. After all, the testing done for Amateur licences today is pretty easy to pass, even without a formal education in electronics. Too easy, I'd say, but that is another issue......(when 7 year olds can pass exams with questions requiring calculation of squares, logs and complex numbers - which sure as heck weren't part of my kids Grade 2 syllabus - I start thinking rote memorization of question pools....) If it is so easy, a (and let me use Len's term) RADIO PROFESSIONAL should have no trouble at all passing it. What would be the motivation for a licensing "gimme"? A question - was a similar arrangement for the recognition of professional credentials in the Amateur service ever in place in the US? With the reciprocity agreement between Canada and the US, someone who has obtained their Amateur licence based on their Professional qualifications automatically gains full Amateur operating privileges when travelling in the US. One would think it logical for this arrangement to be bidirectional, n'est pas? There is no such mechanism available in the United States. A U.S. citizen licensed in Canada may not use his Canadian license when operating from the U.S. Dave K8MN |
#60
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Brian Kelly wrote:
Dave Heil wrote in message ... Brian Kelly wrote: (N2EY) wrote in message . com... During the same year I built an AM BC rcvr which used five of the tiny AG-1 flashbulb envelope subminiature tubes and stuffed the whole thing into a small Band-Aid can which I carried in my shirt pocket. Walkman Numero Uno. I went into biology class one day and strung the wire antenna to an overhead lamp fixture, put on the earplug "speaker" and started tuning around. The teacher, good 'ole Floyd Neff finally noticed the antenna and stormed to the back of the room, "What are you doing, what is that thing?" I cupped my ear, "Uh, it's my hearing aid, could you speak up a bit please?" Tossed outta class again. Young Don Newell was the crucifer one Sunday at St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Oak Hill. After the processional and after my father had begun the service, Don fished a tiny crystal radio from his cassock, stuffed the earphone into his ear and attached a wire with an alligator clip to the cross. As the service ended, my dad whispered to him, "I'd like a word after church". You brought back a lot of hilarious memories of "electronerd educations" gone awry David. Gawd we had fun . . ! The best I've ever heard was deliverd at the Dayton banquet one year by Jean Shepherd. For the first few weeks of my interest, my dad actively discouraged me with talk of amateur radio being a passing fad for me. He had visions of mounds of equipment gathering dust in a closet. He was right, I've seen it happen . . ! I can still get a laugh from him these days whenever I ask if he thinks I'll tire of the stuff and let it sit in the closet. My mother encouraged me and was able to convince my father that some of the meager family income should be spent on a transmitter for me if I earned the money for the receiver from my paper route. You got lucky, I got NOTTING in the way of economic support for diddling with radios despite the volume of coin my parents had. Their policy was that if some pursuit or another was important enough to their kids we could bloody well work out how to pay for it on our own or drop it. With the notable exception of cheerfully paying the expenses related to Boy Scouting. I *really* needed radio gear so I had a couple paper routes, peddled magazine subsciptions, painted house numbers on curbs in December, etc. Got the equipment and some early lessons on how much work hot buttons can actually cost. Well, in my case it was a one-time Christmas deal--the one BIG present and that was second-hand from Allied's big, used equipment list. The receiver I saved for was also from the same list. More newspaper deliveries, an after-school job at the local hobby shop several days each week and the writing of a sports column for the local newspaper provided coaxial cable and connectors, a key, antenna wire and the like. Some of that money was also spent on a big U.S. call area map and some (sorry, no choice of color) QSL cards from WRL. I know Janie. Her father was Jesse Bieberman W3KT who is still a legend. Honer Roll top-ender for decades, phone and cw dx contester, 25wpm with a straight key for 48 straight. Vice Director of the Atlantic Division for decades and one of the most powerful voices in Newington in those days. Ran the W3 buro single-handed also for decades. ...and ran the W3KT outgoing QSL forwarding service for a number of years. I forgot all about that, tnx. I used Jesse's outgoing card forwarding service in the days preceeding the ARRL's outgoing bureau. Speaking of QSL card handling Joe Arcure W3HNK is in this neighborhood, I gotta look him up. Joe used to be a regular at the DX hospitality suites at Dayton. I haven't seen him in a number of years. All of this nostalgia has me fired up to grab my collection of the West Coast DX Bulletin to re-read some of Cass's gems. Dave K8MN |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Extra class - question about the test | General | |||
From the Extra question pool: The dipole | General | |||
From the Extra question pool: The dipole | Policy | |||
Low reenlistment rate | Policy | |||
1x2 Calls--automatic when upgrading to Extra? | Policy |