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Old May 1st 04, 09:24 PM
N8KDV
 
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Default Amateur License Statistics

I was looking up this info for another individual and as long as I have
it at hand I figured I'd post it here as well.

There are 637,404 licensed amateurs in the USA, the licences break down
this way:

Extra 14.61 %

Advanced 12.95 %

General 20.84 %

Tech Plus 12.16 %

Technician 33.85 %

Novice 5.59 %

No new Novice, Technician Plus, or Advanced Class amateur service
operator licenses will be issued. These licenses, however, may be
modified or renewed. Technician Plus class operator licenses will be
converted to Technician Class licenses if renewed. Technician Plus class
operator licenses will also be
converted to Technician Class when modified to show a vanity call sign.

Steve
Holland, MI
Drake R7, R8 and R8B





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Old May 26th 04, 10:02 PM
Doug
 
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Where did you get those figures?

They seem a little low.
Last I read, there were over 730,000 licenses.
About 20,000 or so are club, etc licenses.
So there are over 700,000 licensed Amateurs in the USA.

Doug

On Sat, 01 May 2004 16:24:42 -0400, N8KDV
wrote:

I was looking up this info for another individual and as long as I have
it at hand I figured I'd post it here as well.

There are 637,404 licensed amateurs in the USA, the licences break down
this way:

Extra 14.61 %

Advanced 12.95 %

General 20.84 %

Tech Plus 12.16 %

Technician 33.85 %

Novice 5.59 %

No new Novice, Technician Plus, or Advanced Class amateur service
operator licenses will be issued. These licenses, however, may be
modified or renewed. Technician Plus class operator licenses will be
converted to Technician Class licenses if renewed. Technician Plus class
operator licenses will also be
converted to Technician Class when modified to show a vanity call sign.

Steve
Holland, MI
Drake R7, R8 and R8B





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Old May 26th 04, 10:48 PM
dxAce
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Doug wrote:

Where did you get those figures?

They seem a little low.
Last I read, there were over 730,000 licenses.
About 20,000 or so are club, etc licenses.
So there are over 700,000 licensed Amateurs in the USA.

Doug

On Sat, 01 May 2004 16:24:42 -0400, N8KDV
wrote:

I was looking up this info for another individual and as long as I have
it at hand I figured I'd post it here as well.

There are 637,404 licensed amateurs in the USA, the licences break down
this way:

Extra 14.61 %

Advanced 12.95 %

General 20.84 %

Tech Plus 12.16 %

Technician 33.85 %

Novice 5.59 %

No new Novice, Technician Plus, or Advanced Class amateur service
operator licenses will be issued. These licenses, however, may be
modified or renewed. Technician Plus class operator licenses will be
converted to Technician Class licenses if renewed. Technician Plus class
operator licenses will also be
converted to Technician Class when modified to show a vanity call sign.


I got those statistics via:

http://www.qrz.com/

Steve
Holland, MI
Drake R7, R8 and R8B

http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm


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Old May 26th 04, 11:26 PM
Brenda Ann Dyer
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"dxAce" wrote in message
...


Doug wrote:
No new Novice, Technician Plus, or Advanced Class amateur service
operator licenses will be issued. These licenses, however, may be
modified or renewed. Technician Plus class operator licenses will be
converted to Technician Class licenses if renewed. Technician Plus

class
operator licenses will also be
converted to Technician Class when modified to show a vanity call sign.



I think this is in error. Technician Plus licensees are already eligible
for a General Class license simply for the asking, since the Technician Plus
license (formerly the coded Technician license, was renamed to Technician
Plus to differentiate it from the No-Code Technician license, now called
simply Technician Class) is/was obtained by taking the written requirements
for a General Class license, while retaining the code requirement for only a
Novice Class license (5WPM). Under current rules, General Class only
requires 5WPM, so the old Technician Plus is basically grandfathered. They
have only to show that they had their Technician license before the No-Code
Technician licenses began being issued.



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Old May 26th 04, 11:32 PM
dxAce
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Brenda Ann Dyer wrote:

"dxAce" wrote in message
...


Doug wrote:
No new Novice, Technician Plus, or Advanced Class amateur service
operator licenses will be issued. These licenses, however, may be
modified or renewed. Technician Plus class operator licenses will be
converted to Technician Class licenses if renewed. Technician Plus

class
operator licenses will also be
converted to Technician Class when modified to show a vanity call sign.


I think this is in error. Technician Plus licensees are already eligible
for a General Class license simply for the asking, since the Technician Plus
license (formerly the coded Technician license, was renamed to Technician
Plus to differentiate it from the No-Code Technician license, now called
simply Technician Class) is/was obtained by taking the written requirements
for a General Class license, while retaining the code requirement for only a
Novice Class license (5WPM). Under current rules, General Class only
requires 5WPM, so the old Technician Plus is basically grandfathered. They
have only to show that they had their Technician license before the No-Code
Technician licenses began being issued.


I'm not 100% sure of that, as I recall I may have received the part about the
license upgrades directly from the FCC, but I don't remember.

I'll have to go look it up again.

Steve
Holland, MI
Drake R7, R8 and R8B

http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm




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Old May 26th 04, 11:52 PM
dxAce
 
Posts: n/a
Default



dxAce wrote:

Brenda Ann Dyer wrote:

"dxAce" wrote in message
...


Doug wrote:
No new Novice, Technician Plus, or Advanced Class amateur service
operator licenses will be issued. These licenses, however, may be
modified or renewed. Technician Plus class operator licenses will be
converted to Technician Class licenses if renewed. Technician Plus

class
operator licenses will also be
converted to Technician Class when modified to show a vanity call sign.


I think this is in error. Technician Plus licensees are already eligible
for a General Class license simply for the asking, since the Technician Plus
license (formerly the coded Technician license, was renamed to Technician
Plus to differentiate it from the No-Code Technician license, now called
simply Technician Class) is/was obtained by taking the written requirements
for a General Class license, while retaining the code requirement for only a
Novice Class license (5WPM). Under current rules, General Class only
requires 5WPM, so the old Technician Plus is basically grandfathered. They
have only to show that they had their Technician license before the No-Code
Technician licenses began being issued.


I'm not 100% sure of that, as I recall I may have received the part about the
license upgrades directly from the FCC, but I don't remember.

I'll have to go look it up again.


Here is some info from ARRL:

http://www.arrl.org/news/restructuring/


Steve
Holland, MI
Drake R7, R8 and R8B

http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm


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