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The following, written a few years back by my friend
Don Stoner, W6TNS, (SK) bears repeating. His organization, NARA, is defunct, but the message he states in his editorial is still absolutely valid. 73, de Hans, K0HB - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - In My Opinion.... An editorial by Donald L. Stoner, W6TNS In November of 1988, the Federal Communications Commission slipped a bomb into our hamshacks and lit the fuse.. The FCC announced they were reallocating a portion of the 220 MHz band to a new communications service based on a petition submitted by United Parcel Service. Our national organization, The American Radio Relay League has tried to snuff out the fuse and get the decision reversed. But as far as I can tell, the 220-222 MHz part of the band is a goner! How could this have happened? Well, for starters, we took the Amateur Radio Service and our fraternity for granted. It never occurred to us that the FCC might give some of "our" frequencies away just because we didn't use them. The FCC even warned us of their intention. In 1984 Robert Foosaner was Chief of the FCC Private Radio Bureau. He indicated in a CQ Magazine interview that the band was not being used adequately. Mr. Foosaner flatly stated it might be assigned to other services. Unfortunately we didn't believe him . I have a theory that the FCC confiscated these frequencies to send Amateurs a message. I believe the message is "shape up or ship out." Warm up the tar and start collecting feathers if you like, but in my opinion, the Commission did Amateurs an enormous favor. A two MHz slice of radio frequency spectrum is a small price to pay for awakening us from our long sleep. The Amateur Radio Service is coming back to life after 20 or more years of being totally oblivious to the changes taking place all around us. Amateurs are starting to ask how they can contribute to the fraternity. They want to improve themselves and they want to see the service revitalized. They want more young people to enjoy Amateur Radio. Teachers, particularly those who are Amateurs, are beginning to realize how the service can be used to educate our youngsters in a number of disciplines. This metamorphosis also happened to your humble editor in November of 1988. I've enjoyed Amateur Radio for almost 40 years. In the 50's and 60's I wrote a number of books and articles for Amateurs. I have also taken the Amateur Radio Service for granted. I'm as guilty as anyone. But that stopped when we lost part of the 220 MHz band. The National Amateur Radio Association became more than just a gleam in my eye. What Are The Goals of NARA? Broadly speaking, the goal of The National Amateur Radio Association is the promotion of ham radio. The organization has four specific goals within this broad framework. These are to a) publicize or market Amateur Radio to the general public, b) attract young people to the Amateur Radio Service, c) help existing Amateurs achieve the greatest benefit from the Amateur Radio Service and d) make Amateurs aware that our radio frequencies are in jeopardy from commercial interests. Here are some of my specific thoughts on these four areas: Marketing Amateur Radio To The Public Many people don't understand the significance of marketing and sales. The difference is very germane to this discussion. Let's say you go into a ham radio store and tell the person behind the counter you want to buy an ICOM IC-781. He or she takes your order along with your money and hands you a radio. In this instance the person is simply an order taker and not even a sales person. A sales person tries to convince you to buy a specific product but they are not marketeers. The people who publish the brochures, run the advertisements and create your desire to own the IC-781 are the marketeers. Marketing creates the desire to have something. For as long as I can remember, we hams have been order takers. We have not been salespersons and by no stretch of the imagination could be called marketeers of ham radio. If someone expressed their desire to be a ham, or an ex-CB'er convinced us they were a born-again communicator, we'd "take their order" and accept them into our ranks. Until recently, we never tried to be salespersons or marketeers for our hobby. Deep down inside the human brain, is a little grey glob that scientists label the "I've got mine" lobe. In this area of the Amateur's brain is stored the feeling that we really don't want any more hams than we already have. We'll never admit it, even to ourselves, but the feeling is there. More hams equal more QRM, more problems with the FCC and more drift away from the way things used to be in the "good ole days." More is not always better. More people with an Amateur Radio license may not have a positive or beneficial effect on the Amateur Service. We must mold and shape these people in the traditions that have guided us since the early part of the century. How we accomplish this will be the subject of articles in future issues of this journal. Attracting Young People When I was a kid, ham radio was a young peoples hobby. My best friend was a guy named Barry Windsor. Barry and I were fascinated by ham radio. We used to go over to Sid Dunn's house every Saturday morning. I never saw Sid without a cigar in his mouth. It was just another one of his appendages. When the end of his "stoggie" would get all goopy and slobbery, he'd line it up on the edge of the workbench, along with the other stubs, to dry out. Anyway, Sid used to take time each week to teach us about ham radio. He'd work somebody in Upper Slobovia on 20 meters and our eyes would stand out on six inch stems. Then Sid would tell us the reason he could do this was (insert lecture here) his three element beam and how it worked, or the 304TL amplifier and how it worked, or radio propagation and how it worked. You get the idea. Barry and I and some of the other kids pecked away at keys rather unsuccessfully trying to learn the Morse code. I lost track of the others but finally made the grade when the FCC, in their infinite wisdom, created the Novice and Technician license. Somehow, someway, we must resurrect the magic aura that existed back in Sid's hamshack. Essentially, we must try to give something back to our fraternity in exchange for all the wonderful things it has given us. It's not going to be easy! Today kids have computers, Nintendo games, cars, the opposite sex and Madonna, MTV and a million other distractions. We've taken the first step to redress the problem of attracting young people by creating a new "code-free" license. What this license becomes, and whether it is successful in attracting newcomers is entirely up to us. If we don't tell anyone about the Amateur Radio Service and how easy it is to become a ham, the new Technician Class license will be a "dud." In short, we must all make an effort to /b1 market ham radio to the public. In marketing, you commonly give away a sample which gets the "hook in and set", to use a fishing metaphor. That's what the new Technician license can do that for our fraternity. It can be the "hook" that we use to attract people to Amateur Radio. But we must get out and hustle the service to young people. That's where NARA comes in. We intend to tell our members how to recruit youngsters. We intend to print stories about how others have done it successfully. We believe the place to recruit youngsters is in the schools as early as possible. Again, we are going to have a lot to say about our schools in future issues of "The Amateur Radio Communicator". Helping Existing Hams Like it or not, a lot of hams passed their written test simply by memorizing the questions and the correct answer. Why not? What's wrong with that? You memorize the code don't you? But these hams are not particularly proud of the fact they don't understand the answers or even the questions. They are curious about the technical aspects of the Amateur Radio Service. I have yet to meet a ham that does not want to improve him or herself. Some Volunteer Examiners have established classes to teach people how to become a ham. Who has a class to teach you how to upgrade from Novice/Technician to General? Very few, I suspect. Each issue of "The Amateur Radio Communicator" will have a theory article. Hopefully they will be as useful and interesting to existing hams as well as to newcomers. If you have specific questions that you would like to see answered in this publication, send them to "Editor- A Touch Of Class". Preservation Of "Our" Frequencies- I put the word "our" in quotes. We seem to think of the radio spectrum as "ours." A number of bands of frequencies are loaned for our use, by the Federal Communications Commission. We can continue to use them so long as it is in the national interest to do so. Make no mistake about it fellow hams. The FCC did not let us use parts of the radio spectrum because they think we are nice guys or gals. They do so because it is more in the national interest to loan these frequencies to the Amateur Radio Service than to someone else. If that equation changes, more frequencies will be lost to other activities which are perceived by the FCC to better advance the national interest. In November 1988, the FCC brought the point forcibly to our attention. They reminded us, once again, "If you don't use 'em, you're gonna lose 'em!" Some of our bands are barren waste-lands that we Amateurs seem to be saving for a "rainy day." Six meters is under utilized except for a few hardy souls in Southern California. The Commission knew the 220 MHz band was not adequately occupied. It won't be adequately occupied even when the FCC allocates the 220- 222 MHz portion for land mobile use. We have already lost the 902 MHz band and the fate of our satellite "S" band will be decided next year by the World Administrative Radio Conference (WARC) in Spain. The 1296 band is priceless. Do you know of anyone who operates this band? Does your ham store have any 1296 MHz equipment in stock or do they have to order it? Is there a 1296 MHz repeater in your town. I doubt it. If we maintain our "business as usual" approach, we are going to lose more frequencies. A lot more! 73, de Don, W6TNS |
#2
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Hans,
What can I say? Here is the place to go: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HamRadioHelpGroup Everyone is welcome. I'm not going to worry as Don has a *heck* of a group going. 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA "KØHB" wrote in message ink.net... The following, written a few years back by my friend Don Stoner, W6TNS, (SK) bears repeating. His organization, NARA, is defunct, but the message he states in his editorial is still absolutely valid. 73, de Hans, K0HB - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - In My Opinion.... An editorial by Donald L. Stoner, W6TNS In November of 1988, the Federal Communications Commission slipped a bomb into our hamshacks and lit the fuse.. The FCC announced they were reallocating a portion of the 220 MHz band to a new communications service based on a petition submitted by United Parcel Service. Our national organization, The American Radio Relay League has tried to snuff out the fuse and get the decision reversed. But as far as I can tell, the 220-222 MHz part of the band is a goner! How could this have happened? Well, for starters, we took the Amateur Radio Service and our fraternity for granted. It never occurred to us that the FCC might give some of "our" frequencies away just because we didn't use them. The FCC even warned us of their intention. In 1984 Robert Foosaner was Chief of the FCC Private Radio Bureau. He indicated in a CQ Magazine interview that the band was not being used adequately. Mr. Foosaner flatly stated it might be assigned to other services. Unfortunately we didn't believe him . I have a theory that the FCC confiscated these frequencies to send Amateurs a message. I believe the message is "shape up or ship out." Warm up the tar and start collecting feathers if you like, but in my opinion, the Commission did Amateurs an enormous favor. A two MHz slice of radio frequency spectrum is a small price to pay for awakening us from our long sleep. The Amateur Radio Service is coming back to life after 20 or more years of being totally oblivious to the changes taking place all around us. Amateurs are starting to ask how they can contribute to the fraternity. They want to improve themselves and they want to see the service revitalized. They want more young people to enjoy Amateur Radio. Teachers, particularly those who are Amateurs, are beginning to realize how the service can be used to educate our youngsters in a number of disciplines. This metamorphosis also happened to your humble editor in November of 1988. I've enjoyed Amateur Radio for almost 40 years. In the 50's and 60's I wrote a number of books and articles for Amateurs. I have also taken the Amateur Radio Service for granted. I'm as guilty as anyone. But that stopped when we lost part of the 220 MHz band. The National Amateur Radio Association became more than just a gleam in my eye. What Are The Goals of NARA? Broadly speaking, the goal of The National Amateur Radio Association is the promotion of ham radio. The organization has four specific goals within this broad framework. These are to a) publicize or market Amateur Radio to the general public, b) attract young people to the Amateur Radio Service, c) help existing Amateurs achieve the greatest benefit from the Amateur Radio Service and d) make Amateurs aware that our radio frequencies are in jeopardy from commercial interests. Here are some of my specific thoughts on these four areas: Marketing Amateur Radio To The Public Many people don't understand the significance of marketing and sales. The difference is very germane to this discussion. Let's say you go into a ham radio store and tell the person behind the counter you want to buy an ICOM IC-781. He or she takes your order along with your money and hands you a radio. In this instance the person is simply an order taker and not even a sales person. A sales person tries to convince you to buy a specific product but they are not marketeers. The people who publish the brochures, run the advertisements and create your desire to own the IC-781 are the marketeers. Marketing creates the desire to have something. For as long as I can remember, we hams have been order takers. We have not been salespersons and by no stretch of the imagination could be called marketeers of ham radio. If someone expressed their desire to be a ham, or an ex-CB'er convinced us they were a born-again communicator, we'd "take their order" and accept them into our ranks. Until recently, we never tried to be salespersons or marketeers for our hobby. Deep down inside the human brain, is a little grey glob that scientists label the "I've got mine" lobe. In this area of the Amateur's brain is stored the feeling that we really don't want any more hams than we already have. We'll never admit it, even to ourselves, but the feeling is there. More hams equal more QRM, more problems with the FCC and more drift away from the way things used to be in the "good ole days." More is not always better. More people with an Amateur Radio license may not have a positive or beneficial effect on the Amateur Service. We must mold and shape these people in the traditions that have guided us since the early part of the century. How we accomplish this will be the subject of articles in future issues of this journal. Attracting Young People When I was a kid, ham radio was a young peoples hobby. My best friend was a guy named Barry Windsor. Barry and I were fascinated by ham radio. We used to go over to Sid Dunn's house every Saturday morning. I never saw Sid without a cigar in his mouth. It was just another one of his appendages. When the end of his "stoggie" would get all goopy and slobbery, he'd line it up on the edge of the workbench, along with the other stubs, to dry out. Anyway, Sid used to take time each week to teach us about ham radio. He'd work somebody in Upper Slobovia on 20 meters and our eyes would stand out on six inch stems. Then Sid would tell us the reason he could do this was (insert lecture here) his three element beam and how it worked, or the 304TL amplifier and how it worked, or radio propagation and how it worked. You get the idea. Barry and I and some of the other kids pecked away at keys rather unsuccessfully trying to learn the Morse code. I lost track of the others but finally made the grade when the FCC, in their infinite wisdom, created the Novice and Technician license. Somehow, someway, we must resurrect the magic aura that existed back in Sid's hamshack. Essentially, we must try to give something back to our fraternity in exchange for all the wonderful things it has given us. It's not going to be easy! Today kids have computers, Nintendo games, cars, the opposite sex and Madonna, MTV and a million other distractions. We've taken the first step to redress the problem of attracting young people by creating a new "code-free" license. What this license becomes, and whether it is successful in attracting newcomers is entirely up to us. If we don't tell anyone about the Amateur Radio Service and how easy it is to become a ham, the new Technician Class license will be a "dud." In short, we must all make an effort to /b1 market ham radio to the public. In marketing, you commonly give away a sample which gets the "hook in and set", to use a fishing metaphor. That's what the new Technician license can do that for our fraternity. It can be the "hook" that we use to attract people to Amateur Radio. But we must get out and hustle the service to young people. That's where NARA comes in. We intend to tell our members how to recruit youngsters. We intend to print stories about how others have done it successfully. We believe the place to recruit youngsters is in the schools as early as possible. Again, we are going to have a lot to say about our schools in future issues of "The Amateur Radio Communicator". Helping Existing Hams Like it or not, a lot of hams passed their written test simply by memorizing the questions and the correct answer. Why not? What's wrong with that? You memorize the code don't you? But these hams are not particularly proud of the fact they don't understand the answers or even the questions. They are curious about the technical aspects of the Amateur Radio Service. I have yet to meet a ham that does not want to improve him or herself. Some Volunteer Examiners have established classes to teach people how to become a ham. Who has a class to teach you how to upgrade from Novice/Technician to General? Very few, I suspect. Each issue of "The Amateur Radio Communicator" will have a theory article. Hopefully they will be as useful and interesting to existing hams as well as to newcomers. If you have specific questions that you would like to see answered in this publication, send them to "Editor- A Touch Of Class". Preservation Of "Our" Frequencies- I put the word "our" in quotes. We seem to think of the radio spectrum as "ours." A number of bands of frequencies are loaned for our use, by the Federal Communications Commission. We can continue to use them so long as it is in the national interest to do so. Make no mistake about it fellow hams. The FCC did not let us use parts of the radio spectrum because they think we are nice guys or gals. They do so because it is more in the national interest to loan these frequencies to the Amateur Radio Service than to someone else. If that equation changes, more frequencies will be lost to other activities which are perceived by the FCC to better advance the national interest. In November 1988, the FCC brought the point forcibly to our attention. They reminded us, once again, "If you don't use 'em, you're gonna lose 'em!" Some of our bands are barren waste-lands that we Amateurs seem to be saving for a "rainy day." Six meters is under utilized except for a few hardy souls in Southern California. The Commission knew the 220 MHz band was not adequately occupied. It won't be adequately occupied even when the FCC allocates the 220- 222 MHz portion for land mobile use. We have already lost the 902 MHz band and the fate of our satellite "S" band will be decided next year by the World Administrative Radio Conference (WARC) in Spain. The 1296 band is priceless. Do you know of anyone who operates this band? Does your ham store have any 1296 MHz equipment in stock or do they have to order it? Is there a 1296 MHz repeater in your town. I doubt it. If we maintain our "business as usual" approach, we are going to lose more frequencies. A lot more! 73, de Don, W6TNS --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.687 / Virus Database: 448 - Release Date: 5/16/04 |
#3
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"KØHB" ) writes:
The following, written a few years back by my friend Don Stoner, W6TNS, (SK) bears repeating. His organization, NARA, is defunct, but the message he states in his editorial is still absolutely valid. 73, de Hans, K0HB The point about being visible has always been obvious to me, and it makes me want to scream that often it does not seem obvious to others. I learned of amateur radio because it was out there. I can't even remember where I read about it first, maybe a magazine for Scouting here in Canada, maybe it was "Jack & Jill" or "HIghtlights for Children" and both of those magazines were aimed at quite a young crowd. Obviously when I found the hobby electronic magazines a year or so later, after I had decided I would indeed get a ham licesne, there was still amateur radio content in them. But while that would have steered people with an existing predisposition to the hobby into the hobby, it doesn't do a thing if somebody has no knowledge of the hobby. But it's rare, and seems increasingly rare with each passing year, to see references in common areas of society. The local ham clubs do not promote the hamfests, which at the very least can be of interest to the electronic and computer hobbyist and might let the hobby rub off on them. Promoting hamfests is not merely about getting bodies to the event, it's an excuse to be out there. I'm the one who posts to the local buy and sell newsgroup about some of the local hamfests, trying to provide a bit about the event and amateur radio (I always put a link to the Radio Amateurs of Canada website), making sure it's not merely the facts to bring in hams to the event. Maybe someone will see the notice, and take enough interest to look further, and that's as important as getting people to the event. It would be better if those involved in the clubs, who were generating the information in the first place, was doing the simple act of posting a message each time there is a hamfest. Posting to amateur radio related newsgroups does not reach the newcomer, or potential newcomer. Likewise, for some years I've been putting up "bootleg" posters about one of the local hamfests. I don't do a good job of it, but I do a near infinitely better job than is done already (ie nothing at all). One year, I even pointed out that there should be such a poster, hanging from the club's website, so anyone interested could print up a few, and stick them up, but no luck. So I just copy the information from the website, stick the club's logo at the top, and print out some. I think I put up 200 this year, putting them near some universities, getting them up at the local Ben & Jerry's putting them not where hams congregate, but where the general public might see them. Since they have the URL to the club's website, anyone seeing them has a chance to learn of the hobby, which is far better than in the days before the internet. They rarely get the announcements in the various listings of upcoming events by non-profit groups, though I'm not sure if that's lack of trying or the publications have to choose what to list due to space. But we do need to work on this. There was a time when amateur radio was likely part of the common language of society, even if most were not hams and might not even know much about the hobby. I think most were aware of the hobby, and had a vague idea of what it was about. This was because it was out there in public view. Local stories, friends of friends, big antennas in the neighbor's back yard. But I'm not so sure this is the case anymore. It seemed to be much more visible when I was a kid, thirty five years ago. Someone would come across it, and something would tempt them enough for them to seek out more information. But if they don't come across the hobby in the first place, how could they be interested, how could they do any searches? It is far easier for us to get the details to them today, but unless we have a presence out in existing clusters, they will never find our websites (or whatever). Michael VE2BVW |
#4
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On 18 May 2004 17:20:32 GMT, Michael Black wrote:
I learned of amateur radio because it was out there. I can't even remember where I read about it first, maybe a magazine for Scouting here in Canada, maybe it was "Jack & Jill" or "HIghtlights for Children" and both of those magazines were aimed at quite a young crowd. I learned about SWL-ing and ham radio from "Boy's Life", the magazine of the Boy Scouts of America, when I was in the 8th grade. It helped that a close family friend (a non-ham) had been a radio repair tech in WW-II which had ended only a few years before and he steered me in the right direction. After messinmg around listening to and repairing AM and SW radios of the late 1930s-1940s era, I finally got hooked on ham radio in the 11th Grade at the high school radio club (W2CLE, the oldest HS radio club in the country, founded before WW-I). I got my Novice/Tech license at the end of 11th Grade (1952). Along the way I changed my intended college major from chemistry to electrical engineering. Neither I nor ham radio nor electrical engineering has been the same ever since. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
#5
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Hello, Phil
Was it a shocking experience? ![]() 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA "Phil Kane" wrote in message et... On 18 May 2004 17:20:32 GMT, Michael Black wrote: I learned of amateur radio because it was out there. I can't even remember where I read about it first, maybe a magazine for Scouting here in Canada, maybe it was "Jack & Jill" or "HIghtlights for Children" and both of those magazines were aimed at quite a young crowd. I learned about SWL-ing and ham radio from "Boy's Life", the magazine of the Boy Scouts of America, when I was in the 8th grade. It helped that a close family friend (a non-ham) had been a radio repair tech in WW-II which had ended only a few years before and he steered me in the right direction. After messinmg around listening to and repairing AM and SW radios of the late 1930s-1940s era, I finally got hooked on ham radio in the 11th Grade at the high school radio club (W2CLE, the oldest HS radio club in the country, founded before WW-I). I got my Novice/Tech license at the end of 11th Grade (1952). Along the way I changed my intended college major from chemistry to electrical engineering. Neither I nor ham radio nor electrical engineering has been the same ever since. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.688 / Virus Database: 449 - Release Date: 5/18/04 |
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