To: | <tentec@contesting.com> |
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Subject: | Re: [TenTec] Extra Class Licensing |
From: | "Larry Robison" <robison@buckeye-express.com> |
Reply-to: | tentec@contesting.com |
Date: | Wed, 6 Oct 2004 12:37:31 -0400 |
List-post: | <mailto:tentec@contesting.com> |
Hi Duane, I agree that both skills are part of the definition of Amateur Radio. I think the FCC does also. At the beginning of Part 97 the FCC states "(c) Encouragement and improvement of the amateur service through rules which provide for advancing skills in both the communication and technical phases of the art." I think this is the crux of the problem with the "dumbing down" of the service. The amateur license is not just permission to communicate, although that is a part of it. Amateur transmitting equipment does not participate in the rigorous "type acceptance" program that the FCC places on the equipment for other services (CB..FRS) because there is an expectation that the amateur is somewhat technically capable. It is inconceivable that an amateur should reach the ranks of the highest, most difficult license available to the amateur, and not know the basics. Ahh but what the heck, it has given rise to new industry. Now you can buy microphones with connectors already installed and antennas already cut and ready to hang and coax jumpers custom made to your exact length requirement! Guys who used to read radio publications under the covers with a flashlight after bedtime, like me and Scott, and had to put on own connectors and coax fittings are rare anymore! My crystal ball is telling me that there will come a day when the amateur license will come in the box, with the radio. Sign it, drop in a check, and send it in! We're not that far away now! --Larry W8ER ----- Original Message ----- From: "Duane A Calvin" <ac5aa@juno.com> To: <tentec@contesting.com> Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2004 11:58 AM Subject: Re: [TenTec] Extra Class Licensing I usually don't respond to these discussions, and I don't want to start a firestorm, but I have to disagree with this idea. Ham radio is *both* a technical and a communications hobby. The reason there is a test on both technical and operational knowledge is that the licensee-to-be is expected to *understand* the material. It's not a high hurdle set up to test your memorizing skills, despite what it may have become. Once licensed, you are authorized build your own equipment and put it on the air without FCC type acceptance or other approvals required on commercial gear. Once licensed, when you tell someone you are a ham, they consider you a technical expert, not just a communicator. CB was about communications (if I can stretch it that far), FRS is about communications, but ham radio is about technology and communications. When the emergency communications station goes down, it's expected that the ham will have some concept of where to start looking in order to get it back up and operational, for example. So, while we have crash courses to get folks on the air in order to get the numbers up, I don't think we are doing the newcomers or the existing ham population any favors. That's also why we have a graduated license structure so that folks can start out at a lower knowledge level and gradually work their way up to the higher skills in the science of electronics and communications.
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