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In article , "Dee D. Flint"
writes: "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article . net, "KØHB" writes: One of those petitions asked that they allow amateurs to retain their calls when moving because many hams had become 'connected' to their call signs, almost as a 'name', and did not wish to surrender the call when moving. Finding no regulatory, enforcement, nor "good operating practice" reason that a ham shouldn't keep their callsign, they ruled in favor of the petitioner. Yep. There's also another factor: availability of callsigns in the new area. This is a more restrictive issue than most realize. There are only 2028 possible 1x2 callsigns and only 2028 possible 2x1 callsigns in each district. As of this point in time, most districts have none available for sequential issue and only a few available for vanity calls. If hams were required to change callsigns when moving across district lines, It's highly probable that there would usually be *no* 1x2s or 2x1s available in most districts, because they'd all be tied up by current holders or in the 2 year period. Even the 1x3s, of which there are 52,728 possible combinations per district, are no longer available for sequential issue. The "no longer available for sequential issue" thing is, I think, due solely to an FCC decision. IIRC, their computers are not set up to do it. Yet. Besides, it generates vanity revenue. Actually the number of callsigns is slightly smaller since there are certain suffixes that for various reasons are not made available for the general ham population. Exactly. There was a time, back when the ARS was much smaller, that FCC would try to give "corresponding" calls when someone moved. W1ICP was W0ICP, for example. But that became "impractical". I got N2EY (sequentially issued) when I moved from EPA to WNY in 1977. By the time I moved back (1979), the FCC was not reissuing "abandoned" 1x2 calls. Something about their computer system. What it meant in my case was that if I'd asked for a 3-land call, I could have gotten a sequentially-issued 3-land 1x2. But N2EY would not have been reissued to anyone. So there would be one less Extra with a 1x2, and I decided to keep N2EY. Did I do the wrong thing? Absolutely not IMHO. I've moved several times: from 8 land to 9 land to 0 land and back to 8 land. It would make no sense to me to keep changing my call sign. And if one were restricted to sequentially issued calls, all that was available by the time I moved into each of these areas were the 2x2s beginning with A. I don't happen to like them. If everyone had to change with every move, even those would probably be all tied up. If you have internet access in the shack, you could look up a callsign heard and see what state the ham is in. Not a new idea, though - there used to be this thing called a "callbook" 73 de Jim, N2EY Don't need internet access even today. There are callbooks available on CD ROM for a non-internet connected computer. My point was simply that even thr Ancient Ones in the BPC times had ways of finding the rare states. Besides that, what's wrong with just asking the guy (or gal)? Ya gotta work him first. In addition, if one is hunting states for WAS or whatever, monitor the contests that include section as part of the report and jump in when you find one. Or call CQ specifically for the states of interest. I've found that in CW SS, section-hunting is usually (not always) a waste of time. Except for the very rare/difficult ones (NT, NL, AK, PAC [from EPA]), I've found that simply working everything you can hear will get you 70+ sections. Getting the really rare ones is a different game, of course, but relatively few are "really rare". And the rare ones are often easily found by the size of the pileup on them. In SS 2004, the Type 7 and I worked all states except Hawaii. 100 homebrew watts, inverted V at 37 feet, paper logs and a bug. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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