Sounds like an excellent idea to me, to get them involved in digital modes.  I 
do not, however suggest it be within the CW bands.  And keep them limited to 
less than 50 or at most 100 watts.  Other than RTTY, I see no reason whatsoever 
to run that much power on PSK etc.  Todays rigs easily are adjustable upward 
from 5  or so watts, so it is no problem to limit power to less than full 
output. 

  I thought getting rid of Novice, was the worst (or maybe second worst) thing 
that the FCC ever did.  

We have always had a problem getting new ops to purchase equipment and get on 
the air. In the Novice days, and because they had actually worked at getting 
the ticket, I would have estimated that 90 percent or more got on the air.   I 
never heard it was now anything like 10 percent though, and that would be 
terrible if it is that wide spread across the board.

  
Danny Douglas
N7DC
ex WN5QMX ET2US WA5UKR ET3USA SV0WPP VS6DD N7DC/YV5 G5CTB
All 2 years or more (except Novice). Short stints at:  DA/PA/SU/HZ/7X/DU
CR9/7Y/KH7/5A/GW/GM/F
Pls QSL direct, buro, or LOTW preferred,
I Do not use, but as a courtesy do upload to eQSL for those who do.  
Moderator
DXandTALK
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DXandTalk
Digital_modes
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/digital_modes/?yguid=341090159

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Gary 
  To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 12:55 PM
  Subject: [digitalradio] Techs on HF digital


    
  I thought I'd run something up the flagpole and see if anyone salutes:

  With the currently extended low sunspot cycle reducing the occurrence of 10 
meter openings to near zero, there is little to offer new hams for radio 
operating opportunities besides VHF FM. Many of the people who attend our 
Technician license classes are interested in doing much more than chatting with 
the local guys on a local repeater. Sure, VHF SSB is a possibility but for us 
rural folks, even that provides slim pickings for distant contacts.

  We are seeing a very low percentage of newly licensed people ever buying a 
transceiver and getting on the air. We are estimating that number to be less 
than 10%. Other clubs in our area are experiencing the same problem: good turn 
out for classes and lots of licenses issued but few new hams getting on the 
air. It may be that VHF FM is not a viable stepping stone to getting very many 
new folks active in Amateur Radio. 

  Being an old fart, I naturally began as a novice operating CW on the HF 
bands. Finding other stations to make contact with was never a problem as there 
was always activity on either 40 or 80 meters, depending upon the time of day. 
Making contact with other stations hundreds of miles away was common. While 
that same opportunity is available today, at least theoretically, CW operation 
is not part of a new ham's skill set.

  So... Here is the idea. Would you be amenable to allowing Technician Class 
licensees to operate digital modes in the Technician CW bands and do you think 
that would be of interest to new hams?

  I would imagine, the license limitations would have to state something like a 
maximum of 300 baud and 500 Hz bandwidth with a 200 watt power limit. There may 
be other limitations that might be nice to toss into the mix but this is a 
starting point for discussion.

  Your thoughts?

  Gary - N0GW



  

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