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On Tue, 19 Apr 2005 06:05:03 GMT, Michael A. Terrell wrote:
The radio station at Ft Greely, Ak was built in 1948 as the first permanent "Armed Forces Radio Network" station. It was the first site built with commercial broadcast equipment instead of modified military gear used at some sites during WW II. The radio transmitter was a gates BC250 In the early '70s AFRTS claimed to be the only all tube network in the world. A former subordinate of mine at the FCC, Don Browne, was an EE and ROTC-trained AFRTS officer in the late 1960s and after his three years on active duty with the Signal Corps went Reserve and came to work for me. He spent several years at the field office and several more at headquarters. His reserve billet was abolished in an AFRTS reorganization (even though he was a MAJ) but when a vacancy on the civilian engineering staff of the AFRTS came up he transferred to that. He retired as the chief of engineering for AFRTS several years ago and still hangs around the broadcast business. AFRTS IS NOT Amateur Radio -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
"cl" wrote in message o.verio.net... "cl" wrote in message o.verio.net... "Dee Flint" wrote in message ... "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... cl wrote: which required code. 5 WPM is not impossible to learn. It only takes a few minutes a day and about 2 weeks at least to get enough to pass a test. Took me 45 minutes a day for over 6 months, plus one failed test to get to 5 wpm. I'm all in favor of Morse code testing, but you guys have to show some understanding that it isn't that easy for a lot of people. I aced the writtens, without a whole lot of study by comparison to a lot of people. I don't go around calling them retards or stupid. - Mike KB3EIA - I agree with you Mike. I hate it when I hear someone say "it only took me a few days" as that raises unrealistic expectations on the part of the students. It becomes very hard to convince them that they will probably need more time than that and to keep them motivated to keep working on it. The average person needs 30 hours of study (1/2 per EVERY day for 60 days) to get there. Some will take longer such as yourself but at least once they have put in the 30 hours, they will be able to tell that they are making progress even if it takes longer for them. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE NOT EVERYONE - can learn code in a few days or whatever. There are some things I can't learn in a month where others picked it up right away. Different strokes for different folks. Each person has to take whatever time as needed to learn whatever it is they're needing/desiring to learn. Some fields don't allow a lot of time to learn, while others - such as ham - do. There is nothing saying that ANYONE has to learn code overnight or they're a failure. Just because I was fortunate enough to get enough in - in that 2 weeks - to pass the exam, doesn't make me a "CW" king. I use code "rarely". But, I had a chance once to teach some youngsters the code. One picked it up pretty quick, the others - were a bit slower. If anyone wants/needs to learn the code to get a license, they will - in whatever time it takes - IF they start on it and don't give up. The last part is the key...... To get started and stick with it. As to time, when they get all the characters down, then they'll have learned the code. Be it 2 weeks or 2 years. cl Maybe someone would care to explain to me and to the rest of the world, how Gordon West's mini camps held on a "weekend" - were designed to work to get people ready to pass an exam by the end of the weekend. At least that is the understanding "I" got from reading the ads. I can't recall if some of those weekends were just for NO Code Tech OR if perhaps they also may have been for "code" as well. IF SO, and someone never had code, then how the hell did they do it in 3 days? Two weeks is a reasonable amount of time - as it took me. Three days? I don't know...... Is it possible? Even if it were just for the theory, most I know, can't learn all that in 3 days. You'd have live, eat, sleep, breathe and take the books to the can with you. IF anyone took one of those weekends, speak up. IF maybe "I" misunderstood the ad wordage, someone - anyone - feel free to correct me. cl It was for no code Tech and students were expected to have read the book once through before attending the weekend seminar. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
Phil Kane wrote:
A former subordinate of mine at the FCC, Don Browne, was an EE and ROTC-trained AFRTS officer in the late 1960s and after his three years on active duty with the Signal Corps went Reserve and came to work for me. He spent several years at the field office and several more at headquarters. His reserve billet was abolished in an AFRTS reorganization (even though he was a MAJ) but when a vacancy on the civilian engineering staff of the AFRTS came up he transferred to that. He retired as the chief of engineering for AFRTS several years ago and still hangs around the broadcast business. A lot of people got caught in RIFS. I worked with an E5 who was riffed from Captain to E3 a few years before. he decided to stay in the service so he took the reduction. I spent more time in the TV end, but I had to take care of the radio station as well. AFRTS IS NOT Amateur Radio I know its not but those old stations were maintained like a lot of homebrew ham stations. Jury rigged repairs to get back on the air, running a very marginal signal because you weren't allowed to shut the transmitter down till scheduled maintenance, which was once every six months. Repairs done with used parts salvaged from old radios and TVs. You could see the handiwork and creativity used by former staff and I always wondered how many were hams. The station manager at Ft Greely was, but he was a real lid. He truly believed in tuning for minimum smoke rather than learn how a transmitter worked, but he was the only one like that I met in the service. Instead of using the station monitor, he would call his wife to ask how the picture was as he screwed with the transmitter. BTW, I was offered a civil service job while at Ft Rucker and turned it down. I would have finished my active duty there while I filled the slot, then the slot would become a civilian job again. -- Former professional electron wrangler. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
cl wrote: "bb" wrote in message oups.com... cl wrote: A whole bunch snipped. Those who defy wanting to learn the code jump at any chance to perpetuate rumors of code being eliminated. Similarly, those who promote Morse Code will latch on to any idea, no matter how wrong, to claim the Code Exam remains valid. Leave it in, take it out, the riff raff is already invading the bands. My comments with respect to the NPRM were, "What I fear most about changing the Morse Code exam requirements is a lack of enforcement, and what I fear most about maintaining the status quo is a lack of enforcement." You're right, it will take a while, even if they were to decide to write a NPRM to do such. If these people jumped into Alligator infested waters as fast as they do rumors, the population would take a sudden drop. I'm not a "lover" of code, but I have hold a license which required code. Ditto. 5 WPM is not impossible to learn. It only takes a few minutes a day and about 2 weeks at least to get enough to pass a test. 2 weeks is not long, It may be impossible for some. I learned it over a considerably longer period of time with frequent practice. you probably drove longer on a permit before being allowed to drive on your own. Probably studied the book longer too! It takes little effort. I disagree. It took a great effort. For some - it may! One argument I've heard, is that those musically inclined pick it up quicker than others, yet I knew some who "were" musically inclined and claimed to have a hell of a time with it. Reason? I don't know. I can't get inside their head. Steve can. He can even have them incarcerated with a simple phone calls. The biggest problem with most is "laziness". Was that your problem? If you hadn't been so lazy you could have learned the code in under a week? Eh - I had the code down in 2 weeks for the Novice exam. AND I'm now an Extra. Been licensed since the early 80s. Yeah, I probably could have learned it in under a week, if I pushed myself. That wasn't my point. My point is that everyone is different, and the length of time it takes to learn 5WPM varies greatly. The time it takes to learn 20WPM could be lifetimes. Not everyone is even capable of 13WPM. Most anyone will tell you - it isn't good to do such. Besides, at that time, I was chasing rug rats - so study time was premium. I've been told that is absolutely no excuse. Nothing in your personal or professional life can be more important than learning the code. Most recommendations are 15 minutes to a half hour a day. That hardly makes it possible in a week. I used the words " "AT LEAST" 2 WEEKS". Some are faster learners than others, that is a given. BUT my point was, you have to get started to learn ANYTHING. You can't absorb it through osmosis. Back to the timing thing, I hope someone from the military can step in to tell us how much time they were given to get the code down. I think they had to "Cram". They've finally left the group. They were paid to learn the code, and they kept getting paid even if they failed. Of course, insteading of doing intercept comms, they were peeling potatoes. Maybe you never will use it again. Perhaps. I've found little use for it so far. Maybe once I'm an old fart, have loads of time, and wax nostalgic for things that never were, I'll take it up and enjoy it, and demand that all learn it. Probably the same age bracket as me. I do listen to call signs now and then on the scanner to pick out the services they represent - if I don't immediately know who the service is. I do listen some times to code on the H.F. Bands. I don't dislike the code. It was difficult for me to make the few QSO's that I did make as a novice. I'd like to pick it up again someday. There are many things you learn in life and may never use again, unless you plan to play on Jeopardy. Many people learned the skeletal system in health class, microorganisms in Biology class. It doesn't mean they use it now. Probably forgot it as soon as they graduated. But, it was "required". It's not a big deal people. Once you get past the "do I have to" and start doing it, you'll amaze yourself at how fast and easy it can be. Indeed. I never had the "do I have to?" attitude as there was no code-free license when I became a ham. Yet it took me about 9 weeks of daily practice. And you stuck with it!!!!!!!! You didn't quit, and it got you where you wanted to be. OR had to be - for your class of license. 2 weeks, 9 weeks, so what... you did it. A milestone to be proud of. No one can fault you for that effort. My ex-wife certainly can. I DO use code now and then, but not daily like many others do. Everyone has their own thing. Some are into Packet, RTTY, AMTOR, etc, I'm not... To each his own. But we all had to learn "something" about those modes to pass an exam. cl Use it all you want. I'm against the Code Exam as an unnecessary government requirement. Funny thing is, we're all arguing pros and cons and in the end, it won't matter. WE do not have control. So, if we're going to debate the issues we have no control over, may as well keep it clean. Hardly any of us know the other and it isn't worth making enemies over. Certainly not worth name calling.... Whether I'm right or wrong, I do value opposing view points. Everyone has a right to his/her own opinion. It sure will be interesting to see how it all unfolds. I think in the end, we both know the answer to that. Pro or con, it is a matter of time. May be a year, may be 5, but it will come to pass. cl I don't think that's 100% correct. You and me don't write the FCC regulations, but the FCC looked to the ARRL to put forth modern exam requirements. The ARRL movers and shakers wrung their hands and bit "thier" knuckles and said that there was no concensus. So the FCC plowed ahead with modernization, and the ARRL came up with reductions in the Morse requirements lickety split. Amazing, all that. So in the end, if more folks has been exposed to viewpoints other than the ARRL's, there just might have been a concensus. Just my opinions, of course, but by tomorrow I'll probably be labeled a liar, a homosexual, and maybe even a horse thief. |
Dee Flint wrote: Most of the computer programs let you select a pitch you like. Of course you would have to arrange with the VE team well in advance of the test to have one set up at that pitch for her testing. Dee, not everyone has a ham-husband to tell them all of the modifications that the VE may make to an examination |
"cl" wrote in message o.verio.net... I hope someone from the military can step in to tell us how much time they were given to get the code down. I think they had to "Cram". Navy RM "A" School, the basic school which trained Navy Radiomen, was 13-weeks long. Morse practice was 3 hours per day, 4 days per week, but students could come in after-hours for additional practice. Graduation requirement was to be able to copy 5-letter coded groups at 18WPM for 10 minutes, with 3 uncorrected errors allowed. 73, de Hans, K0HB |
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K4YZ wrote: wrote: From: "cl" on Sun,Apr 17 2005 11:33 pm Eh - I had the code down in 2 weeks for the Novice exam. AND I'm now an Extra. Been licensed since the early 80s. Yeah, I probably could have learned it in under a week, if I pushed myself. Most anyone will tell you - it isn't good to do such. Sorry, according to many in here you have to approach it as THE MOST IMPORTANT THING IN YOUR LIFE!!! Actually, Lennie, YOU are the only one making that assertion. Nope, in-between homosexual and pedophilia inuendo, you have made such assertions. So that makes lie #25. |
Phil Kane wrote: AFRTS IS NOT Amateur Radio -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane Hi! Awesome! Can I borrow that sometime? |
K=D8HB wrote: "cl" wrote in message o.verio.net... I hope someone from the military can step in to tell us how much time they were given to get the code down. I think they had to "Cram". Navy RM "A" School, the basic school which trained Navy Radiomen, was 13-weeks long. Morse practice was 3 hours per day, 4 days per week, but students could come in after-hours for additional practice. Graduation requirement was to be able to copy 5-letter coded groups at 18WPM for 10 minutes, with 3 uncorrected errors allowed. And they had a choice of Morse Code or Farnsworth Code, and could vary the pitch. Hi! What was the wash-out rate? What happened to the wash-outs? |
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