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#1
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I am glad the FCC finally took charge of the situation and decided to drop the code requirements. Here's why ...
I like Amateur Radio and want it to be a life-long hobby for me ... however, I just plainly can't take time to effectively study the code at this point in my life. I think my story is pretty common for most of the new people entering Amateur Radio today. I am a 43 year old married father of three children. I have a background in Aerospace Engineering and my full time work is in the high technology sector working with many well known computing infrastructure companies. I got my Technician license about two and a half years ago because it was a neat little challenge for me to combine radio communications with some of the newer digital modes. Basically, it was fun, not really technical challenging, but a nice way to relax. I do enjoy making contacts on 6 meters. I would play around with some different radio, antenna, and computer configurations and started to develop a relationship with some fellow ham buddies. Soon I became limited with the VHF/UHF band and wanted to hop onto HF. Of course, by the current rules one would have to jump on and take on learning Morse Code. I am absolutely sure I could do this if I had enough time. Having an ongoing career and being a family man, doesn't really leave a whole lot of time to practice dits and dahs. I have actually played around with the code several times, but real life events and changing priorities always got in the way; not en excuse just reality. I really do see learning the code as similar to my older engineering brethren making me learn how to use a slide rule; it's kind of neat, but not really effective for me, or most folks, given the advance of other computing methods and devices. Fellow hams need to sit back and take an objective look at this hobby because it is dying a rapid death! Amateur Radio needs me and people just like me to join in on the HF bands and to use our real world high tech expertise to help further Amateur Radio. Amateur Radio also needs my $$$$. Take a look at the declining number of amateur radio manufacturers and radios. How could any business justify spending a lot on research and development in a market that is collapsing? Finally, I honor all those of you who are code proficient. I too may one day still be code proficient even if there is no formal testing. However, I do think that the right decision has been made by the FCC and will ultimately be finalized with little changes. This will not kill our hobby, but will inject more life into it. 73's to All, Joe / KG4YJS |
#2
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Boy did you fall for a bunch of propaganda! Although we have fallen off the all time high as far as numbers go, we are in no significant decline. Rather we are in a period of stabilization. Some weeks ago, I had shown the hams as a percentage of population and it's been holding pretty stable. Unfortunately, I had a bit of a computer problem and lost the file. When I get time, I'll have to research the data again and recreate the file.
As far as the declining number of manufacturers goes, the normal progression in any business is towards fewer companies serving the market. Unless one takes steps to stop it, a free market economy goes through a cycle. New product with lots of new companies. Then continuing consolidation until there is a near monopoly by one or a handful of companies. Occasionally, a new company will break in but not too often. This has happened in EVERY industry not just radio manufacturing. At least a dozen car companies, if not more, have come and gone in the US and we are down to three. Dozens of computer companies have come and gone. Dozens of software companies and so on. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE "Joe Guthart" wrote in message ... I am glad the FCC finally took charge of the situation and decided to drop the code requirements. Here's why ... I like Amateur Radio and want it to be a life-long hobby for me ... however, I just plainly can't take time to effectively study the code at this point in my life. I think my story is pretty common for most of the new people entering Amateur Radio today. I am a 43 year old married father of three children. I have a background in Aerospace Engineering and my full time work is in the high technology sector working with many well known computing infrastructure companies. I got my Technician license about two and a half years ago because it was a neat little challenge for me to combine radio communications with some of the newer digital modes. Basically, it was fun, not really technical challenging, but a nice way to relax. I do enjoy making contacts on 6 meters. I would play around with some different radio, antenna, and computer configurations and started to develop a relationship with some fellow ham buddies. Soon I became limited with the VHF/UHF band and wanted to hop onto HF. Of course, by the current rules one would have to jump on and take on learning Morse Code. I am absolutely sure I could do this if I had enough time. Having an ongoing career and being a family man, doesn't really leave a whole lot of time to practice dits and dahs. I have actually played around with the code several times, but real life events and changing priorities always got in the way; not en excuse just reality. I really do see learning the code as similar to my older engineering brethren making me learn how to use a slide rule; it's kind of neat, but not really effective for me, or most folks, given the advance of other computing methods and devices. Fellow hams need to sit back and take an objective look at this hobby because it is dying a rapid death! Amateur Radio needs me and people just like me to join in on the HF bands and to use our real world high tech expertise to help further Amateur Radio. Amateur Radio also needs my $$$$. Take a look at the declining number of amateur radio manufacturers and radios. How could any business justify spending a lot on research and development in a market that is collapsing? Finally, I honor all those of you who are code proficient. I too may one day still be code proficient even if there is no formal testing. However, I do think that the right decision has been made by the FCC and will ultimately be finalized with little changes. This will not kill our hobby, but will inject more life into it. 73's to All, Joe / KG4YJS |
#3
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Dee Flint wrote:
Boy did you fall for a bunch of propaganda! Amen. In spades. As far as the declining number of manufacturers goes, the normal progression in any business is towards fewer companies serving the market. Unless one takes steps to stop it, a free market economy goes through a cycle. New product with lots of new companies. Then continuing consolidation until there is a near monopoly by one or a handful of companies. That's true in general Dee but what "declining number of manufacturers" - within the context of ham radio? It just ain't so. I suspect that if somebody put the effort into pulling together the actual facts they'd find that the total number of manufacturers in the ham radio market is higher today than it's ever been in the past. Almost all of the "glory-days" U.S. supply siders went bust or abandoned the ham radio market and moved on to survive when the JA's landed 1975-1980. Yaesu, Icom, Kenwood, Alinco, Honda, Toyota and Datsun pulled off what Yamamoto and Nagumo failed to pull off their way a bit earlier. Within ham radio Hallicrafters, Swan, National, Hammarlund, Drake and Heath simply evaporated with barely a trace left in the ham biz, Collins is one which simply moved on. Not a consolidation in sight anywhere. Off on another tangent consider the implications of another aspect: Collins offered only two basics routes a ham could use to get on the HF bands with their gear at any given point in time. One xcvr and one pair of separates. Period. Ditto Drake and for the most part Heath too. Those three companies overwhelmingly dominated the HF ham gear market for years. Today Icom is offering four desktop HF xcvrs with two more in the pipeline, Kenwood offers four, and Yeasu has seven in their catalog with another one coming. Ten-tec and Elecraft are doing nicely. Not counting all the HF mobile rigs and the equipment being developed in various skunk works. Yeah it's a free market economy cycle alrighty. We've never had it better and it keeps getting better. These Junior Grade "the sky is falling" yahoos need to be written off as as just that. w3rv |
#4
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#6
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wrote:
wrote: wrote: I knew I'd coax you outta yer lair when I tossed that one out. bwaahaahaa Back in the '60s we had Collins, Drake, National, Hallicrafters, Hammarlund, Gonset, Heath, Swan, Johnson... . . . five dollar 12V ARC-5 Jeep radios . . . or were they 6V? I've seen 12 volt ARC-5s (special units from a collection) and it was no hard task to convert them for six volts. Easy compared to homebrewing. and that's about it for major manufacturers of ham gear that lasted more than a few years and made more than a few products. Even in the above list there were limitations because many of the above did not offer a complete line (EFJ made mostly transmitters, for example). Today we have Yaesu, Icom, Kenwood, TenTec, Alinco, Standard, Elecraft, SGC, and maybe a few more. But see below. . . . yeah, OK so far . . . . . . Within ham radio Hallicrafters, Swan, National, Hammarlund, Drake and Heath simply evaporated with barely a trace left . . . Yep. In some cases it was that the founder had died or retired, and the company wasn't able to adjust to the new market reality. Founders exits aside it was the "adjusting to the new market realities" which knocked out the U.S. radio builders. GM is still trying to catch up with Honda. Darwin prevails. Darwin got some help in those areas, though. Detroit spent the '50s and '60s building big cars and was completely surprised by the oil embargoes. American electronics manufacturers, run by "PROFESSIONALS IN RADIO", didn't know how to compete with Japanese products. The rest is history. . . . Collins offered only two basics routes a ham could use to get on the HF bands with their gear at any given point in time. One xcvr and one pair of separates. Period. Ditto Drake and for the most part Heath too. Drake and Heath had slightly more elaborate product lines - but not by much. The point is still valid, though. The variety of new rigs today is amazing. Not even a discussion. Here's a game: Look up all the "100 watt class" HF rigs available today (mid 2005). Compare to what was available 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years ago. I bet today's variety is the largest. Not even a discussion Not counting all the HF mobile rigs and the equipment being developed in various skunk works. *And* not counting the enormous variety of clean, late-model used equipment that is still very much usable. Take TenTec - if an Orion is too much and you don't like the Jupiter, there's the Omni 6 in various flavors, its predecessor the Omni V, the Pegasus, the Paragon, and the Corsair 2, among others. Well yeah, scarfing up used gear to get more bang for the buck has been a ham tradition going back into the mists of time long before either of us came about. Yup. Or converting surplus - military or otherwise. Hams were doing that in the 1920s with surplus tubes - WW1 surplus tubes.... The other night I saw an ad for the Kenwood TS-520 in a 1975 QST. $629. That was back in the days when a new car was less than $4000 and starting salary for a degreed engineer was maybe $12,000. Sounds low to me because most of my classmates started for $9- 10k right out of school in 1963. I started for $7,600 for the gummint which was quite low then. Inflation in the '60s was quite low too until the end. Or look at the SB-101 from the mid 1960s. $369 for the rig, almost another hundred for the power supply, CW filter and speaker. Say $450 - for a kit! What's that in today's dollars? Beats me but the point is there. http://www.westegg.com/inflation says: $629 in 1975 inflates to $2355.99 in 2005 and $450 in 1965 inflates to $2681.16 in 2005 Either of those will buy quite a bit more rig than a TS-520S or SB-101. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#7
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![]() "Joe Guthart" wrote in message ... I am glad the FCC finally took charge of the situation and decided to drop the code requirements. Here's why ... I like Amateur Radio and want it to be a life-long hobby for me ... however, I just plainly can't take time to effectively study the code at this point in my life. 10 min a night Joe would get you there in several weeks ..... don't have to be an expert just 5 wpm ..... I think my story is pretty common for most of the new people entering Amateur Radio today. I am a 43 year old married father of three children. I have a background in Aerospace Engineering and my full time work is in the high technology sector working with many well known computing infrastructure companies. I got my Technician license about two and a half years ago because it was a neat little challenge for me to combine radio communications with some of the newer digital modes. Basically, it was fun, not really technical challenging, but a nice way to relax. Exactly Joe it is a good way to relax ....... if it were work then I wouldn't be doing it ...... I do enjoy making contacts on 6 meters. I would play around with some different radio, antenna, and computer configurations and started to develop a relationship with some fellow ham buddies. Soon I became limited with the VHF/UHF band and wanted to hop onto HF. Of course, by the current rules one would have to jump on and take on learning Morse Code. I am absolutely sure I could do this if I had enough time. Having an ongoing career and being a family man, doesn't really leave a whole lot of time to practice dits and dahs. I have actually played around with the code 10 min a night for several weeks would get the job done quite well ..... no problem for 5 wpm Finally, I honor all those of you who are code proficient. Joe .... honor the vets not people who have a simple skill ..... proficient ???? I don't have a good answer for that except 5 WPM is proficient for a 5 WPM op .... I too may one day still be code proficient even if there is no formal testing. Good Joe as you will be missing out on one "relaxing" mode ..... excuse me protocol ..... I look forward to seeing you on the lower edges ....... However, I do think that the right decision has been made by the FCC and will ultimately be finalized with little changes. This will not kill our hobby, but will inject more life into it. Joe I wish I could agree with you but I just don't see how that will happen ........ unless testing is done away with entirely. However if it does .......I will buy all a virtual beer on this group. 73's to All, Joe / KG4YJS Take care Joe ...73 Tom Popovic KI3R Belle Vernon Pa. |
#8
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Fat people would look a lot better and be healthier by losing just 10
pounds a month... .... just about as much chance as someone studying a worthless means of communication as that... .... well, I did, but I am kinda slow, by the time I passed the test it was too late to protest effectively! ROFLOL!!! John "garigue" wrote in message ... "Joe Guthart" wrote in message ... I am glad the FCC finally took charge of the situation and decided to drop the code requirements. Here's why ... I like Amateur Radio and want it to be a life-long hobby for me ... however, I just plainly can't take time to effectively study the code at this point in my life. 10 min a night Joe would get you there in several weeks ..... don't have to be an expert just 5 wpm ..... I think my story is pretty common for most of the new people entering Amateur Radio today. I am a 43 year old married father of three children. I have a background in Aerospace Engineering and my full time work is in the high technology sector working with many well known computing infrastructure companies. I got my Technician license about two and a half years ago because it was a neat little challenge for me to combine radio communications with some of the newer digital modes. Basically, it was fun, not really technical challenging, but a nice way to relax. Exactly Joe it is a good way to relax ....... if it were work then I wouldn't be doing it ...... I do enjoy making contacts on 6 meters. I would play around with some different radio, antenna, and computer configurations and started to develop a relationship with some fellow ham buddies. Soon I became limited with the VHF/UHF band and wanted to hop onto HF. Of course, by the current rules one would have to jump on and take on learning Morse Code. I am absolutely sure I could do this if I had enough time. Having an ongoing career and being a family man, doesn't really leave a whole lot of time to practice dits and dahs. I have actually played around with the code 10 min a night for several weeks would get the job done quite well ..... no problem for 5 wpm Finally, I honor all those of you who are code proficient. Joe .... honor the vets not people who have a simple skill ..... proficient ???? I don't have a good answer for that except 5 WPM is proficient for a 5 WPM op .... I too may one day still be code proficient even if there is no formal testing. Good Joe as you will be missing out on one "relaxing" mode ..... excuse me protocol ..... I look forward to seeing you on the lower edges ....... However, I do think that the right decision has been made by the FCC and will ultimately be finalized with little changes. This will not kill our hobby, but will inject more life into it. Joe I wish I could agree with you but I just don't see how that will happen ........ unless testing is done away with entirely. However if it does .......I will buy all a virtual beer on this group. 73's to All, Joe / KG4YJS Take care Joe ...73 Tom Popovic KI3R Belle Vernon Pa. |
#9
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![]() "John Smith" wrote in message ... Fat people would look a lot better and be healthier by losing just 10 pounds a month... ... just about as much chance as someone studying a worthless means of communication as that... ... well, I did, but I am kinda slow, by the time I passed the test it was too late to protest effectively! ROFLOL!!! John Huh ?????? I am glad it is Friday night and you don't have to work tomorrow ...... how about sharing some of that stuff you are drinking or smoking ........ cough syrup ?????? John get off of that bedspring antenna your using for that KW I think something has fried ....... dit dit 73 Tom KI3R ...... |
#10
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Geesh...
You guys are for real huh? You think code and a radio makes you special guys? Was the license really so difficult for you, you believe the rest of us with much different opinions are stupid and find it that big a challenge? I started building tesla coils at ~10, I got my novice ticket and built my first single tube transmitter when I was 12, my first degree was in electronic engineering in '72... I ate this chit up... I was bored and didn't know what I wanted to be--until they invented the computer... I returned to college in 1978 and got my BS in CS in 1981 along with a BA in journalism, I completed my MS in CS in '83... since then I have always taught a night class at the local jr. college and continue to take classes at the local university to stay current and be with fresh young minds... Get real... lay down the opium pipe and step out of the gutter! And, I just consider myself an average guy (you should see my sister, she has all the brains in the family!)... of course, I do live in a nice neighborhood and have nice neighbors... John "garigue" wrote in message ... "John Smith" wrote in message ... Fat people would look a lot better and be healthier by losing just 10 pounds a month... ... just about as much chance as someone studying a worthless means of communication as that... ... well, I did, but I am kinda slow, by the time I passed the test it was too late to protest effectively! ROFLOL!!! John Huh ?????? I am glad it is Friday night and you don't have to work tomorrow ...... how about sharing some of that stuff you are drinking or smoking ........ cough syrup ?????? John get off of that bedspring antenna your using for that KW I think something has fried ....... dit dit 73 Tom KI3R ...... |
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