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   FIDOGAZETTE      FidoGazette: An Alternative Newsletter      8,941 messages   

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   Message 6,592 of 8,941   
   Daryl Stout to DAN CLOUGH   
   Becoming A Ham   
   19 Sep 19 08:57:00   
   
   TZUTC: -0500   
   MSGID: 216.fidonet-fidogaze@1:19/33 21e8c056   
   REPLY: 704.fido_fidogaze@1:123/115 21e7fa9e   
   PID: Synchronet 3.17c-Win32  Sep 16 2019 MSC 1922   
   TID: SBBSecho 3.09-Win32 r3.140 Sep 16 2019 MSC 1922   
   CHRS: CP437 2   
   Dan,   
      
   DC>Excellent!  I didn't intend my above comment to Daryl as anything   
   DC>bad, just didn't really see the relevance of him putting it like   
   DC>that...  I fully grasp the pride you have in the callsign and   
   DC>understand it completely.  Something I have thought about getting   
   DC>into for years (decades?) but just never have.  Maybe when I   
   DC>retire...  Thanks and 73!   
      
     Actually, one thing you no longer have to worry about is learning the   
   Morse Code. The FCC *DROPPED* that requirement in February, 2007. You   
   can still learn and use it (we also refer to it as CW for "Continuous   
   Wave"), but you don't have to prove that you know it.   
      
     The funniest example of this (a true story) was where 4 guys were   
   sitting around a restaurant table in Annapolis, Maryland...telling each   
   other dirty jokes in CW, and laughing about it. (As an aside, in ham   
   radio, the term "hi hi" is known as "the telegrapher's laugh", for the   
   Morse Code equivalent of hi -- .... .. -- or dit dit dit dit   dit dit.   
      
     Anyway, this drop dead, gorgeous, curvaceous female, walked up to   
   them, and sternly admonished them. "You boys need to watch your   
   language. I teach CW at the Naval Academy across the street!!", and   
   walked out -- they were as red as tomatoes!!    
      
     All you need to get on the air is the Technician Class license, and if   
   you study 2 hours a day for 2 weeks, you can learn enough to pass the   
   exam...which covers rules, regulations, frequencies, propagation, RF   
   safety, and basic electronic theory. The General Class license offers   
   more privileges, and much of the Technician Class exam stuff is on the   
   General exam, but in more detail. The Amateur Extra exam is the "booger   
   bear", but it can be done.   
      
     While I'm an Amateur Extra Class licensee (I had to obtain that, to   
   become a Volunteer Examiner (VE) Team Liaison (leader) (the hams   
   themselves give the exams now)...but, when I'm on the air, I operate in   
   the Technician Class bands, because I enjoy them.   
      
     I used HamTestOnline (www.hamradiolicenseexam.com). A 6 month   
   subscription gets you all you need to pass the exam. You learn the   
   questions, but ALSO the CONCEPTS -- so, you're learning something, and   
   NOT just memorizing answers. You study in the privacy of your own home,   
   at your own pace. You can do it on dial-up, DSL, or broadband...all you   
   need is a computer and a web browser.   
      
     When you get to 80% studying, start taking practice tests. When you   
   start scoring 85% or better consistently, you are READY to take the   
   exam, which unlike years ago, in some areas, is available once a month.   
      
     But, after adequate study and practice tests, if you still fail on   
   exam day, send them proof of the failure, and they will cancel your   
   subscription, and refund your money. So, you get your ham radio license,   
   or your money back...you can't lose!! Normally, when you buy a book or   
   study guide, it's yours...no refunds.   
      
     Studying 2 hours a day for 2 weeks (you'll burn out if you do more   
   than that), I went from Technician to General in 14 days, and General to   
   Amateur Extra 13 days later. It was the best money I ever spent in ham   
   radio. Prices vary depending on which exam(s) you go for.   
      
     The exams themselves are taken from sets of Question Pools, in the   
   public domain. So, unless a question has been withdrawn, there's a   
   chance that it'll appear on the exam. The pools have to have at least 10   
   times the number of questions that are on the exams, in the respective   
   pools. Over 400 questions each are in the Technician and General Pools,   
   and over 700 questions in the Amateur Extra Class Pool. The Technician   
   and General Exams have 35 questions each (you can miss 9, and still   
   pass), with the Amateur Extra Exam having 50 questions (you can miss as   
   many as 13, and still pass).   
      
     Yet, there is NO DISGRACE IN FAILING. If it takes you a dozen tries or   
   more to pass the exam, even if just barely, you have as much right to be   
   on the air as someone who made a perfect score the first time. And, once   
   you have your license and callsign, it's no one else's business how many   
   times it took you to pass the exams, or what your scores were. As far as   
   they're concerned, you aced it on the first try.   
      
     Besides, the guy or girl who GRADUATES DEAD LAST in Medical School, is   
   STILL....a DOCTOR. But, I may or may not want them doing a prostate   
   check or a pelvic exam.    
      
   Daryl, WX4QZ   
      
      
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