Hi Dave and All,

        I can't speak for the masses, but I can say what drew me into amateur 
radio.

        I was never drawn to ham radio to be able to talk to people in faraway 
places. Rather I had an early interest in science and technology.  Most of us 
here were born in an era where technology was simple and understandable.  Our 
technology was transparent in a sense.  Our table top radios typically 
contained five tubes.  TV's at the time were only about four to five times as 
complex.  In my young days I was absolutely fascinated when we bought a set of 
wired intercom phones.  My brother and I could magically talk between our 
bedrooms connected only by a small wire.  The concepts I learned in those days 
were small bite size lessons.  

        When I got my license and a used HW16 I began my lifetime journey of 
ham radio.  My telegraph key was one that I had pulled out of a garbage pile.  
My antenna  was around 70 feet of wire strung between the chimney of our house 
and a telephone pole.  I built an antenna tuner using a single coil of wire and 
a variable capacitor. I was absolutely fascinated with CW.  The signals would 
magically appear from nowhere and I could respond to them.   When I wasn't on 
the radio I would pour over the HW16 manual and spend hours decoding each 
corner of its schematic.  

        When I was young and ham radio "found me" there were far fewer 
distractions than there are today.  We had real quiet time to fill with.   
Simple things could catch our attention.  For the most part our parents never 
felt the need to entertain us 24 hours a day.  I spent many hours at the 
library reading and learning the basics of science and electronics.  Today the 
collection of books at the library are nearly useless.   Simplicity allowed me 
to focus and understand.  I would breakdown complex things and understand 
individual parts.  That skill set has traveled with me my entire life and 
helped me in my professional life as well. 

        First, no offence to Wayne and Eric, but radios today are FAR too 
complex for beginners.   I absolutely LOVE my KX radios, but I am in a 
different place than a beginner.  It seems that we are setting the expectations 
for new users based on our place in ham radio.  We are expecting new users to 
jump into DX, contesting, and things that require high end equipment.  How 
about giving new users a desire to understand radio and the equipment with 
fewer bells and whistles.  Today we buy appliances, turn the key and go. I 
think that is fine for someone who understands what they are doing.  But for a 
beginner is steps over the "falling in love phase".  I love my Elecraft radios 
because I understand what it took to create them.  I understand both the HW and 
SW engineering.  I understand how easy it makes things for me.  But that is 
secondary  to why I am fascinated with radio.  My fascination comes from 
knowing how it works and the people like Marconi that endured deafening sparks 
to 
 get us here.  My fascination came from the incremental steps of my "radio" 
education. 

        Many hams will complain about our current sunspot cycle and say the 
lack of propagation discourages new users, to that I say BS.  When you first 
learn how to drive a car you do so in small steps.  You start with the family 
Junker, not an Indy car.  You don't drive the lower 48 states, but your local 
neighborhood, and typically in a school parking lot.  Most people average 45 to 
55 mph, very few people will ever drive 150 or 200 mph.  When propagation works 
we talk far, when it's broke we don't.  That's life, and mostly physics.

        With ham radio we need to set expectations. This is NOT a cell phone, 
it will never be a cell phone.  Each tool  in the box has a different use.  Ham 
radio was never intended to provide universal communications, AT&T did that 
already. It can however provide for a fun hobby and occasionally emergency 
communications.  We should never approach new users and set the expectation 
that ham radio competes or will replace a phone, or the Internet.  We all grew 
up with phones, and it never replaced them for us.  We all grew up with phones 
and still enjoy ham radio.  Our phones could call anyone else on the planet, 
just like today.   (I laugh that people say the cost is "cheaper" to make calls 
today.  Sure, we had to pay higher long distance charges.  But our basic phone 
service was only 10$ to 20$ per month.  Try adding up an 800$ smart phone and 
the 100$ monthly voice and data charges, your internet and cable bill.  I think 
the telcos got the last laugh!)

        I think the thing that encourages me is to see the quality and quantity 
of DIY projects that exist today.   If you don't follow the tech blogs check 
out hackaday.  There are some seriously amazing individuals playing with 
technology and building really interesting things.  Many of these 
"hackers/makers" are people like us who love radio and technology.   I suspect 
that these people are our future if we don't run them off.

        And last...  The real thing that drew me to ham radio was  another ham, 
Russ Michaelson N7SM (SK 2019).  Russ and I meet at the University of Utah's 
surplus store.  Even though we had a 12 year age difference, Russ and I 
connected almost immediately and became lifelong friends.  I was in Junior high 
school and Russ was beginning a family when we meet.  From Russ I learned about 
more about radio and electronics, and we had many adventures in the process.  I 
never remember Russ complaining about the ionosphere.  He built a magnificent 
basement "shack".  When he built his own 100 foot tower from scratch I climbed 
to the top to help set up and adjust antennas. (By then I was in my 20's, no 
child labor involved. :)   If we expect this hobby to continue into the future, 
we need to be the "Russ" in someone else's life.  We need to pass our love of 
radio to the next generation.  Just expecting someone to "be" interested and on 
their way after the exam will never happen.  Propagation
  will always change, we need to be the constant.

73

KA7FTP

Len


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David Gilbert
Sent: Friday, December 13, 2019 9:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Reaching across the chronological divide


This of course is a discussion that isn't likely to die before we do, but I 
really don't think that any significant portion of today's youth will ever look 
at amateur radio like we do.  I wish that weren't the case, but reality bites.

1.  The major lure of amateur radio for most of us was the ability to freely 
talk to faraway places.  Young people today can do that with FM quality and yet 
often they don't ... they text or chat via message groups and forums.

2.  Communicating today is license free, and while even now with today's lesser 
requirements getting an amateur radio license is maybe not a roadblock it's a 
nuisance to have to study for something that you don't otherwise care about.

3.  Effectively communicating today is far cheaper hardware-wise than for 
amateur radio, especially for long distances.

4.  Communicating today is independent of time of day or position in the 
sunspot cycle.

5.  A basic competency in amateur radio was once considered a stepping stone to 
a technical career.  That is hardly the case today.  In fact, I remember one 
manager of a test department in another company telling me he tried to avoid 
hiring hams because they talked about it too much on the job.

One thing I do believe has carryover appeal is the spirit of competition.  
Humans in general always seem keen to compete at almost anything ... from 
eating hot dogs to running to vicariously watching football to quilting to 
barbeque.  Young people today have video games that provide a FAR richer 
competitive environment than any ham radio contest (I do both, by the way), and 
I've always thought that one way to drum up interest in ham radio is to develop 
a contest format that has similar elements.  Ham radio contests are essentially 
endurance events that involve independent action throughout the contest with 
the comparison occurring at the end, and often weeks or months later.  Video 
games require different but otherwise comparable proficiency (both mental and 
physical) but involve real time counter moves to any opponent.  The closest we 
hams come to offsetting somebody we view as competition is to steal their 
frequency or QRM them.  I'm not at all suggesting that we do any suc
 h thing, but a contest where we could take some action that subtracted from 
somebody else's score is the kind of thing I'm talking about.  And no, I don't 
know how to do that either, but it illustrates what I'm talking about.

It's not any surprise to me that contesting is one of the few surviving ham 
radio activities with high participation.  Even ragchewing has practically died 
out, and if anyone disputes that take a look at how much time you spend each 
week reading email reflectors versus being on the air (other than in a contest).

I'm not really sure what Wayne was referring to here, and maybe he implied that 
same thing that I'm saying, but we aren't going to bring young folks into the 
hobby by trying to convince them that the same things that appealed to us 40 
years ago are going to appeal to them. This isn't a communication or publicity 
problem.  In spite of the comments from hams I've seen over the years, most 
young people pretty much know the general framework of ham radio and they've 
simply rejected it in favor of other things.  There are always a few 
exceptions, of course, but I'd bet $100 that the bulk of those young people who 
pop up online or in QST as shining examples of young blood in the hobby are 
nowhere to be found two years later.

If for any reason we want young folks to embrace the hobby, the hobby itself is 
going to have to adapt.  That most of us seem unable to understand that fact is 
probably another facet of the problem ... we're old and inflexible (in both 
appearance and in fact), which doesn't help the image of the hobby one wit.  
The pictures from Dayton or any other hamfest have the same appeal as if they 
were taken at a Lawrence Welk concert.

I guarantee that those of us who are still above ground five years from now 
will be having this same discussion, and it won't be because we weren't 
persuasive enough.

73,
Dave   AB7E


On 12/13/2019 7:24 PM, Wayne Burdick wrote:
> Hams of a certain age, including yours truly (first licensed in 1971) recall 
> their excitement on joining the hobby: there was the promise of contact with 
> faraway places, collection of vivid QSL cards, mastery of esoteric equipment, 
> synchrony with the rhythms of Morse code, and the crafting of antennas to 
> harness action at a distance.
>
> Most of us still feel that spark, occasionally--some on a daily 
> basis--experiencing the wonder all over again.
>
> While the accoutrements and equipage of youth have evolved over the decades, 
> their DNA has not. Somewhere, nestled between the genetic codes for half-pipe 
> snowboarding, Instagram, Juul, and ambient house, there's a dormant sequence 
> for the Radio Art waiting to be stirred.
>
> Is there a Battle Royale for ham radio? A tactical RPG?
>
> What is our sorcerer's stone? Our rap?
>
> Will Gen-Z or Gen-Alpha tickle the ionosphere, and if so...why?
>
> To hand our batons across the chronological divide, we'll need empathetic, 
> open-ended inquiry.
>
> 73,
> Wayne
> N6KR
>

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