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#1
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continuing the discussion...
I got interested in ham radio about 1960. I built an R-55 and a DX-60. At the advice of a fellow, John, who was really, really interested in ham radio but could not pass 13WPM at the FCC, I got my novice station together and working before I took the novice exam. Sound advice from him, "You only have one chance in your life to get your code speed up, the only way to do that is on the air. Have your station ready to go, the minute the license comes." John was stuck with a useless Technician license. This was in Hawai'i where if you could not get on 15, 20, and 40, there's no point to Ham radio. I got my Novice in 1963. I was on the air with the DX-60 and an SX-101A. I could not get the R-55 working well enough to use as a 40 meter CW receiver, forget 15. It just didn't work above about 10 mHz. My recollection was that the license exams were hard then. I passed the general with a few months to spare. About 1964, the years are blurring together, incentive licensing degraded my general and I took the Advanced. I still did not have the 20 WPM for the Extra. I lost track of John. He was rebuilding a Superpro, experimenting with UHF because with a tech, in Hawai'i, the only way to get out was Moonbounce. I find it odd beyond words that John's 1960'ish Technician license, schematic diagrams, hand calculations of series and parallel circuits, 5 WPM sending and receiving with 1 minute of solid copy at the FCC, no question pool, is arguably a more difficult exam than the current Extra. I operated a lot between 1963 and 1970 and then tapered off until a couple years ago. I did get to two Daytons around 1980. In the 1960's radios were very expensive. A DX-60 kit was about $70. I paid $200 for the used SX-101A. I clearly remember carrying it in the front door. At that time, all the old-line manufacturers were still going strong. The HQ-215 solid state Hamarlund had come out and folks were waiting for a solid state Drake. Collins prices were climbing fast. Someone mentioned RIT. It's important if you're working transceiver to transceiver. It's much less important if you're using a transceiver and working an HT-37/SX-101A. The station with the HT-37 won't re-zero when he retunes his receiver. Also boatanchor receivers like SX-101A's had BFO pitch controls so, again, it wasn't obvious that a transceiver needed RIT until transceivers became common. The 1960's were the transition from the big heavy radios to the relatively smaller Collins S-Line profile. From this vantage point, there were dozens of U.S. manufacturers in the Ham Radio market in the 1960's. Looking at the historic record, there is a layer of Iridium in the strata about 1970 and after that, the radio firms died off. It was parts, retail outlets, the entire sector collapsed. Again from today, 2004, it looks instantaneous although it took years. Unfortunately, I dropped out of Ham radio to work on S/360 OS/MVT and then MVS systems so I didn't have the first hand experience of seeing the dieoff. In the late 1970's, I did a brief turn as the rep to the Foundation for Amateur Radio, paid for an AMSAT life membership, but just didn't have time to operate and didn't buy the magazines. In the 1970's, I bought a VVF accu-keyer kit. I wish those were still available, the nice big SSI TTL parts and the good circuit boards. I built it in an LMB box. I saw folk running around with their Drake TR-22's. Seemed that everyone had one. I ended up with a Wilson WE-800. Whatever happened to Wilson??? de ah6gi/4 -- |
#2
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No Spam wrote:
Unfortunately, I dropped out of Ham radio to work on S/360 OS/MVT and then MVS systems so I didn't have the first hand experience of seeing the dieoff. Same hear, running around fixing 360 main frames and related I/O kept me too busy to ham much. |
#3
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![]() "JJ" wrote in message ... No Spam wrote: Unfortunately, I dropped out of Ham radio to work on S/360 OS/MVT and then MVS systems so I didn't have the first hand experience of seeing the dieoff. Same hear, running around fixing 360 main frames and related I/O kept me too busy to ham much. Both of you (as well as myself) *WERE* the die off.... jak |
#4
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jakdedert wrote:
"JJ" wrote in message ... No Spam wrote: Unfortunately, I dropped out of Ham radio to work on S/360 OS/MVT and then MVS systems so I didn't have the first hand experience of seeing the dieoff. Same hear, running around fixing 360 main frames and related I/O kept me too busy to ham much. Both of you (as well as myself) *WERE* the die off.... And, I suppose, I: my Novice lapsed while I was off at school, then I started working in the space program (read "6 or 7 12-hour shifts most weeks"), then went in the military (read "no time while in tech school, then no time while out of country") and then got into ... working on MFT-II, MVT, and MVS systems, like No Spam. Then I started acquiring boatanchors, after my late wife died. Some of them actually have been known to work. But I'm gonna get my General ticket Real Soon Now! -- A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? A: Top-posting. Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet? |
#5
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![]() "Mike Andrews" wrote in message ... jakdedert wrote: "JJ" wrote in message ... No Spam wrote: Unfortunately, I dropped out of Ham radio to work on S/360 OS/MVT and then MVS systems so I didn't have the first hand experience of seeing the dieoff. Same hear, running around fixing 360 main frames and related I/O kept me too busy to ham much. Both of you (as well as myself) *WERE* the die off.... And, I suppose, I: my Novice lapsed while I was off at school, then I started working in the space program (read "6 or 7 12-hour shifts most weeks"), then went in the military (read "no time while in tech school, then no time while out of country") and then got into ... working on MFT-II, MVT, and MVS systems, like No Spam. Personally, I got intensely involved in the music scene and became a sound engineer. Traveling around the world with various musical groups gave me little time/place/incentive to raise an antenna farm.... jak Then I started acquiring boatanchors, after my late wife died. Some of them actually have been known to work. But I'm gonna get my General ticket Real Soon Now! Probably too late for me. However in stories like these, there might be some hint of an idea where ham radio failed us--and we--it. The common threads seem to have to do with time, money, interest, space...perhaps relevance to the lifestyles we chose. In hindsight, perhaps better minds than mine could have come up with a solution in time.... jak -- A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? A: Top-posting. Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet? |
#6
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#7
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On Fri, 2 Jul 2004 17:44:23 UTC, "jakdedert"
wrote: "Mike Andrews" wrote in message ... jakdedert wrote: "JJ" wrote in message ... No Spam wrote: Unfortunately, I dropped out of Ham radio to work on S/360 OS/MVT and then MVS systems so I didn't have the first hand experience of seeing the dieoff. Same hear, running around fixing 360 main frames and related I/O kept me too busy to ham much. Both of you (as well as myself) *WERE* the die off.... And, I suppose, I: my Novice lapsed while I was off at school, then I started working in the space program (read "6 or 7 12-hour shifts most weeks"), then went in the military (read "no time while in tech school, then no time while out of country") and then got into ... working on MFT-II, MVT, and MVS systems, like No Spam. Personally, I got intensely involved in the music scene and became a sound engineer. Traveling around the world with various musical groups gave me little time/place/incentive to raise an antenna farm.... jak Then I started acquiring boatanchors, after my late wife died. Some of them actually have been known to work. But I'm gonna get my General ticket Real Soon Now! Probably too late for me. However in stories like these, there might be some hint of an idea where ham radio failed us--and we--it. The common threads seem to have to do with time, money, interest, space...perhaps relevance to the lifestyles we chose. It's not too late. I got interested again when a hand surgery went bad and my doc said to work my fingers or he'd send me to physical therapy (PT = Physical Torture). I bought a beater SB-303 off eBay and began cleaning it up. Fortunately it had been owned by a smoker and smelled of tobacco. I had to wipe down the components individually, wipe the wires, clean the boards between the components. I spent a couple days learning the ins and outs of the Heathkit SB drive. I replaced the main cap, fixed a few other problems. When I was done, I had a terrific SB-303, a better receiver than my old SX-101A. 1 kHz analog readout, 2.1, 3.75, and .5 crystal filters, better than 200 Hz/week stability from a stone cold start. Re-invigorated, I downloaded the question pool, glanced over it for, oh, 1 or 2 hours and made the final upgrade. I've dragged out my VVF accu-keyer from the 1970's and my Brown Bros. dual lever paddle. In spite of arthrytis and incipiant geezing I'm slowly rebuilding my code speed. I dropped out operating at about 15-20 WPM. Probably like the rest of you, my health is an up and down thing. I clocked BP 250/100 on a thallium treadmill but passed the cardio-scan and logged a resting BP 110/78 a month later. I don't think I let Ham Radio down. I did my turn as a rep to the Foundation for Amateur Radio. Even when I wasn't very active, I bought occasional parts and radios. My Wilson WE-800 has 10-20 hours of use. I built a Heathkit HO-10, AA-14, HW-2021, etc. Between the early 1970's and today, other than 2 meters, I logged maaaaay-be 20 QSO's but in that time, I spent about $4,000, half in the early 1980's for an ICOM IC-720A and accessories. In retrospect, perhaps I should have gone for a Triton IV digital a few years earlier, the QSK. I think the new HF entry license will help. I sure hope so. I've been listening to HF and it is not what it was in 1965. Too many round tables, too few stations calling CQ. Not enough fun. It was fun working stations on 40 and 15 CW as a novice. de ah6gi/4 |
#8
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#9
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![]() "Aaron Jones" wrote in message ... "No Spam " No wrote: I find it odd beyond words that John's 1960'ish Technician license, schematic diagrams, hand calculations of series and parallel circuits, 5 WPM sending and receiving with 1 minute of solid copy at the FCC, no question pool, is arguably a more difficult exam than the current Extra. The Tech and General were the exact same written test at the time. The General had to be passed in front of a FCC examiner whereas the Tech could be taken by mail. I think the present Extra test is much harder than that General was then as far a *technical questions* are concerned. However the current ham tests are easier to memorize and pass without knowing anything. I will admit that as a high school student I was able to pass the General test in 1958 without knowing much... ![]() About 1964, the years are blurring together, incentive licensing degraded my general and I took the Advanced. Yep, did the same thing, although somewhat later than you. A guy by the name of Bash got me going. Seems he published a book with the *exact* questions and answers for the exams. Everyone seemed to think that was cheating at the time. How things change... It was cheating, and still is. Dan/W4NTI |
#10
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![]() In a recent posting about Ham Radio History, "No Spam" wrote that he wished there were still Accu-keyer kits, using small-scale logic chips. I have a bare, drilled, "accu-keyer" board made by by WB4VVF, with a sheet of his corrections. I bought the board in the mid 1970's, then gave up keyers when I realized that my bug fist had gotten lousy. Interested? email to k4pf at juno dot com 73, Ed Knobloch |
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