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Re: [Amps] Fleamarkets

To: dezrat1242@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] Fleamarkets
From: Roger <sub1@rogerhalstead.com>
Date: Sat, 06 Feb 2010 15:51:53 -0500
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>

Bill, W6WRT wrote:
> ORIGINAL MESSAGE:
>
> On Sat, 6 Feb 2010 20:18:17 +0200, "Alex Eban" <alexeban@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>   
>> The tendency to pay someone else to do the job robs a lot of people of the
>> thrills of creating something new with their own hands.
>>     
>
>   
Bill, what you say makes a lot of sense.

> REPLY:
>
> If a person really does get a thrill out of it, fine, but that runs
> contrary to history.
I sometimes forget that others find little interest in doing the things 
I do.
>  I hate to sound preachy, but the Industrial
> Revolution is the history of people specializing in various fields. We
> are most effective when we do what we do best, earn money for it, and
> pay someone else to do what they do best. We can't all be the best at
> everything. 
>   
By necessity any field I can think of as split into multiple disciplines 
and those disciplines end up with specialists within them.

When I was *much* younger living on a farm, we had to know how to repair 
virtually every piece of equipment we used. In the winters we would 
rebuild the engines and all work was done in the barns or sheds. The 
only time something went to a shop was if it was too big for us to 
handle. Splitting the differential on one of those big tractors was 
borderline and sometimes akin to finding yourself working on top of the 
tower and realizing you are hanging onto more antenna than you can 
safely handle.  Instead of specialists, we were generalists, but things 
were not terribly complicated either.

With my first car, I rebuilt the engine so many times I almost wore it 
out.  35 years later my son did the same thing to the engine in his car 
and pretty much killed that poor engine with kindness.

We were talking about programming earlier. In the years after college 
and before retirement, I saw more languages come and go than I ever 
learned. When I started, we learned computer architecture and actually 
wrote programs in machine language (not assembler) to directly 
manipulate the workings inside the CPU, but that was a different world 
too. All of the CPU instructions were contained on what was 
affectionately called a "bingo card". It was actually a folding card 
with two double sided pages with close to a few hundred instructions. 
Today's CPUs instructions number well into the thousands. No way can a 
normal individual learn more than a fraction of the languages available 
and become proficient. I've worked with computers since they used core 
memory, loaded the OS from punched tape, and the machine code loader had 
to be entered with push buttons on the front panel, an operation that 
could take an hour to hour and a half.

I view Ham Radio the same way.  Traffic handlers are one of the reasons 
we still exist, although I have absolutely no interest in handling 
traffic. I do find storm chasing ... interesting.  I enjoy building, but 
I'm limited to the bigger parts...within reason...bad back. So I have a 
valid reason for building QRO <:-)).

However when it comes to kits I don't see much difference between the 
old kits where we built a complete, modern transceiver and the K3 where 
you plug in parts. I  constructed a lot of those kits and other than 
being more work and knowing how to solder  you didn't learn a lot more 
than some one plugging the parts into the K3. True it took hundreds of 
hours  and many individual parts so you knew what resistors, capacitors, 
and coils looked like. If the builder was...well...just building, which 
most were, at best they learned how to do a neat wiring job, but those 
that wanted to could learn a bit of basic electronics.

As many know, I fly high performance airplanes 
http://www.rogerhalstead.com/833R/833r_photos.htm , but there is little 
that I can actually do except change the oil and tires, wash the 
windows, and vacuum the carpet. For one the regulations are so strict 
I'm not even supposed to work on the radios however the new radios are 
far more complex than anything I have here. More expensive too!

I love flying, but find few others who do in the general population. The 
general reaction is usually, "I hope he doesn't get started on flying, 
or his airplane again". Of course the same could be said about any of my 
other interests, Ham radio in particular as the general public only sees 
it as a hobby with no practical use, just like 4 and 6 passenger 
airplanes. They don't realize the truth behind "when all else fails, 
there is Amateur Radio", nor will they listen.

So, yes we've not only progressed into specialists, but specialists who 
may not even understand other segments of the same field and many of 
which do not want to.

Oh! as to the exams...I've been reading through the question pool, and 
so far most of what I've read pertains to operating practices and 
protocols. I read through the Extra portion and my reaction was, "why 
would I care about this?" to almost every question. Why devote time and 
questions to contests when you have to look up the rules for every 
contest anyway as they tend to change.

Sorry about the soapbox<:-))

73

Roger (K8RI)
> Having said that however, I don't want to take away from the
> satisfaction of homebrewing. I do it and I encourage others to do it,
> but at the same time I understand those who do not want to. 
>
> My two cents.
>
> 73, Bill W6WRT
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