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K4YZ wrote:
Dee Flint wrote: Perhaps the FCC is wanting to see how this will go for a while and depending on the results, reduce the number of classes to two. I am willing to bet that there will be some arguments made to the effect that once the code is dropped it WILL become a defacto 2-class license, and they will just go ahead in this NPRM and do it. Well, let's look at the history.... Before 1951, there were effectively two license classes, A and B. (The third license class, C, was just a B taken by mail). Both allowed access to all amateur frequencies and all authorized modes, at full power, with one exception. The exception was that only Class A hams could operate 'phone on the ham bands between 2 and 25 MHz. From February 1953 until November 1968, there were effectively three license classes, Novice (1 year 1-time-only newcomer license), Technician (VHF-and-up experimenter license) and General/Conditional/Advanced/Extra (all privileges licenses). Some people refer to that time as a "golden age"..... In 1998 FCC proposed reduction to 4 license classes (open to new issues, that is) - Technician, General, Advanced, Extra. In 2000 they went one step further and closed off the Advanced, too. So there's definitely a precedent. OTOH, FCC has steadfastly refused free upgrades. Then how far till 1? Then none? Admin work - that's the rub. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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