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![]() "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , "Dee D. Flint" writes: I said they elected to use the no-code Technician as their entry to ham radio rather than the Novice license. Yes they took the Novice written but not the code. Thus they "bypassed" the Novice license in the sense that they never held a Novice license. They had basically two choices to enter ham radio (unless of course they chose to do additional study and sit for higher class tests at the same time). 1) They could take (and pass) the Novice written plus 5wpm and get a Novice license. 2) They could take (and pass) the Novice written and Tech written and get a no-code Tech license. The prospective ham generally took the route 2 to enter ham radio rather than route 1. Thus by that choice, the people themselves made the Tech no-code the entry level license despite the fact that it was more difficult than earning the Novice license. The restructuring in 2000 merely formalized what had already occurred. I agree except for one point: The decision was made by different people for a number of factors, such as the *perceived* difficulty and the *perceived* rewards. Actually that was what I was trying to point out and you've clarified it quite nicely. Having earned my initial license in 1992 (Tech with HF), I'm quite familiar with what was going on. The majority of people sitting for their first license took the Tech no-code route to put off learning the code not because of its two meter and VHF access. Prior to on-air experience, they simply were not personally familiar enough with various ham activities to select their entry route on the basis of the desireability of having 2m access. Here in EPA, after about 1980 the predominant entry license was the Tech. This was true even before it lost its code test. The reason was 2 meter/440 access, which Novices didn't have. A prospective ham would see almost every ham with a 2 meter HT or mobile, ask "what license do I need to talk to you guys" and wind up with a Tech. Code or no code. 73 de Jim, N2EY I can see where that could easily be a dominant factor if the prospective ham had some exposure to that. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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