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Old August 4th 03, 01:33 AM
Kim W5TIT
 
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"N2EY" wrote in message
...
In article , Mike Coslo


writes:

Put it that way, Mike, yes. It is hard to argue that removing *any*

part
of
a test is not a reduction in the amount of knowledge needed to pass a

test.
But, that is simply a word game and nothing else.


It's more than a word game. Encouraging radio knowledge of all types is

one of
the most basic reasons to have the ARS exist at all. The tests are there

to
insure a minimum knowledge level. ("Knowledge" including skills, concepts,
facts, etc.)

The point is, what does passing a CW test prove in the way of
knowledge--other than that one can pass a CW test?


It proves that:

1) The person has learned a useful radio skill at a very basic level.


Then, why not have a "net operation" test? Net operation is fairly
standard. That's as basic a level as you can get: everyone understands the
English Language (at least those who are testing for a US amateur radio
license).


2) The person was willing and able to devote the time and effort necessary

to
learn that skill.


That has nothing to do with their participation in ham radio.


3) The person has been exposed to a useful, widely-used-by-hams radio
communications mode other than voice or data.


Like I said, then test on voice. It's the widest-used-by-hams radio
communication. Why not test the most used mode?


What does passing the
written tests prove in the way of knowledge--other than that one can

pass a
written test?


It proves that:

[Skip 1 and 2, we already went over those]
3) The person has been exposed to several aspects of the amateur radio

service
(regulations, operating practices, technology).


Agreed.


If you see the parody in both of those questions, then I go
one step further and say: What does passing a CW test have to with

anything
related to overall knowledge of ham radio?!!!!!???? In my mind,

*NOTHING*

Then your knowledge of amateur radio is very lacking. Like it or not,

CW/Morse
is a very big part of amateur radio today. Of course, that by itself

doesn't
prove we must have a code test.


Thank you. And, was that you acquiescing? Yes, CW is incredibly important
and a big part of amateur radio. But, no, it does not prove that we must
have a code test.


It's bad enough that the written tests don't prove a whole lot, without

the
added argument of CW in the mix. To continue to support CW as some

form
of
proof that people know more about ham radio, know more about

communication,
know more about the standards and technology of ham radio, et al, is to
continue to do nothing but whine about a tradition--which is really all

CW
really is: A TRADITION that no one wants to see fade away.


You are mistaken on several counts there, Kim.

1) The written tests are what they are. They are in a continuing state of
development.

2) ALL ELSE BEING EQUAL, a ham who has Morse skills knows more about

amateur
radio than one with no Morse skills.


I disagree. A ham who has CW skills knows more about CW than one with no CW
skills.


3) Morse/CW has certain advantages to hams beyond being "just another

mode".


That does not merit a CW test.


4) Morse/CW is more than "just a tradition". It's a useful mode of radio
communication enjoyed by hundreds of thousands of hams.


That does not merit a CW test.


5) There do exist folks who want Morse/CW USE (not just the TEST) by hams

to
simply go away. They are a very small minority, but they do exist. Or at

least
there are people whose rhetoric indicates they want Morse use by hams to

end.


That's their problem, not mine. I don't believe CW will ever exit from the
ham radio scene.


Of course, whether all of that "proves" we must have a code test is simply

a
matter of opinion.

Passing CW is nothing.


Maybe not to you. To others, it's a big deal.


Well, I worded that wrong. Passing CW is a big deal, but it does nothing
for the benefit of ham radio, save that that particular operator may use
CW--but that particular operator would probably have used CW anyway, then.


And it proves nothing to anyone else, except that
they studied CW and passed it in a test. I've seen idiots on every

side of
ham radio, so it does nothing to prove quality or *interest* as

everyone
seems to like to argue. If CW was that kind of instrument, then we'd

have
no jerks on ham radio and, believe me, I've heard them.


That's simply illogical. No test, no matter how contrived, will filter out
every single "jerk" from the ranks of amateur radio. Or anything else, for

that
matter.


I know that, and you know that. But others here either don't know that or
don't want to let go of that part of the argument.


Look at how much it takes just to become a physician. The training and

testing
required is phenomenal, and designed to weed out the incapable. The hard

work
and dedication required just to get into medical school are extraordinary,

and
yet that's just the beginning. I could go on and on, but you get the

picture.


I will not argue the merit of CW testing against the measure of training and
testing for a professional field. There is no reason to put someone through
the same stressful training and testing that a physician goes through, for
an amateur radio license.


Using CW as a test to prove "diligence" to the desire of wanting to be

a
ham
radio operator is pure crap in my not-so-humble opinion.


OK, fine. At least you note that it's your opinion.


One would hope, Jim, that everyone realizes we post our opinions.


It is wrong to
even attempt to measure someone's desire and interest.


Why? I'd rather have an ARS consisting of a few hundred thousand

interested,
active, dedicated, skilled, knowledgeable hams than one of a few million
inactive, apathetic, unskilled, ignorant ones who could not care less.

Code
test or no code test.


And, I'd rather have *everyone.*


If I have an Extra
license and I have no equipment or haven't even been on the radio in

years,
then what did passing CW prove, in terms of proven interest? Nothing.

And
it never will.


Incorrect. It proved that at one time the person had the interest.


Oh, wow...


Yes, CW is a useful communication skill. Hell, *ANY* type of

communication
skill is useful. If we place such importance on CW, then why not RTTY,
phone, ATV, etc.


Because those modes don't require the acquisition of new skills for their

use.


Uh, 'scuse me? They require being able to establish communication between
devices, have the signal within a certain bandwidth, etc.


You know what I'm saying.


Not really.

And, if CW proves a higher
plane of dedication and knowledge, then why are there extremely skilled

CW
operators out there, who are real jerks?! And you know there are.


No, I don't. Name some. If your only reference is how a few folks behave

in
this newsgroup, it should be remembered that lots of folks on both sides

of the
code test fence have behaved like real jerks in their posts here.


No, it would not be only by a few folks in this newsgroup. And, I won't
name them because they are from my local area. Suffice it to say their
interference for the use of spelling curse words in CW was frequent and
sufficient enough to end a years long tradition of hams getting together
every night at 10:00PM for a phone net on 10M.


So, how
can someone, *anyone* then turn around and say that CW proves

*anything*?
It proves nothing but that the person studied for and passed the CW
requirement.


Seems to me that you want the Morse code test to be a perfect "jerk"

filter.
And of course no test can do that.


Not at all. Others already think it does.


But note this plain, simple fact: Almost all of the FCC enforcement

actions for
"jerk-like" on-air behavior (obscenity, jamming, failure to ID, exceeeding
license privileges, etc., etc.) are against hams using PHONE modes, not
CW/Morse or data modes. ALL of us have taken written tests detailing what

we
should and should not do on the air, but it seems like violations are much

more
prevalent among the talkers than the brasspounders or keyboarders. Why?

73 de Jim, N2EY


I've already said that there are probably more reasons for that than it
being because a CW operator is a finer person than others who are not. And,
talking is much easier and quicker to let things roll off that we shouldn't.
CW is mostly callsign/whereabouts/weather/TNX and that's it. If an actual
conversation ensues, I'm sure no one (except the jerks I know of) would
waste their time getting carpal tunnel with cursing in CW.

Kim W5TIT


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