Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Maintaining what we've built

Interesting dialog at the ARRL Forum in Richmond, KY this past weekend.  It had to do with teaching new people about ham radio.  Not the usual "Elmering" to get someone a license.  But the stuff that we all have done, and learned, and the fact that it needs to be passed on.  Stuff like tower work.  Many of us are too old to safely climb anymore.  But we know how to do it, and how to instruct on safety.  We can still be "ground crew," while helping those younger and more vigorous people to change out antennas, etc., safely.
And repeaters.  Those of us who work on repeaters need to pass that knowledge along.  True, the equipment is less finicky, more reliable.  You don't have to tear into the guts of a repeater nearly as much.  But you have to know how it all goes together, and what parts do what.  And you have to know how to measure things like output and deviation.  And so on.

There are no simple solutions, but we as hams need a willingness from the older people to help share our knowledge, and a willingness from the younger ones to realize that all these things we built and put together won't last without someone knowledgeable staying with it. 

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