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|    AMATEUR_RADIO    |    Ham radio for when Armageddon strikes    |    2,531 messages    |
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|    Message 1,835 of 2,531    |
|    Ed Vance to Jeff Smith    |
|    ARRL Requests Expanded HF    |
|    07 Mar 18 11:01:00    |
      03-06-18 20:19 Jeff Smith wrote to Ed Vance about ARRL Requests Expanded HF       Howdy! Jeff,               JS> @MSGID: <5A9F63DA.1780.amtradio@capitolcityonline.net>        JS> Hello Ed,               > You would know for sure.        > Is the General and Technician Written Test the same?               JS> I didn't think the General test was that much harder at all. The only        JS> part that was a tad harder was memorizing the band plans and knowing        JS> what frequencies went where, but that clicked eventually. Everything        JS> else is basic electronic theory. The Technician license seemed to focus        JS> on rules and regulations, while the General is more technology-based.              The General writen test back in 1959 had R&R, Electronics and Technology       in the 50 Multiple Choice Questions.              I'm thinking back then it took 74 per cent correct answers to pass the       written test.              I used the scratch paper provided with the test to mark the Question Number       on if I wasn't really sure of the answer I marked.              Or, if the question was a really hard one I would mark its number down so       I could go back to it after I had marked my answer for all of the other       test questions.              I sure didn't want the F.C.C. Examiner to see an unmarked question, which       He would put a Red Pencil Mark on.              Before going to the Exam I had figured out that I could miss 13 of the 50       Questions and still get my License upgraded to General.       So if I saw less than 13 numbers on my scratch paper I was sure that       I had passed the written portion.              But I would look again at the questions that I marked on my scratch paper       to see if maybe I needed to make a different choice than the one I had       marked on the test paper.              In 1959 the only Frequency Restrictions was for the Novice and Technician.              A General, Conditional, Advanced and Amateur Extra could operate A1 CW on       all of the Band(s) and A3 or A3a Voice on the upper portions of the Band(s).       Somewhere in the 10 Meter Band and above F3 Voice could be used (iirc).              I'll have to go look at my old A.R.R.L. License Manual to see how close I       was to what I wrote in my last paragraph. Duh!              73 de Ed W9ODR . .                     ... I can't remember how long I've had amnesia.       --- MultiMail/MS-DOS v0.49        * Origin: CCO BBS - capitolcityonline.net:26 (1:2320/105)    |
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