This FREE web site is hosted by BaPpY.cOm - Newest sites hosting with BaPpY.cOm
Related Services: Free web spaceBuild a web pageMake a web siteWeb Design and GamesPromote your siteLearn about hosting
Google
1953: Paul Danzer, N1ii






Welcome to the Novice Historical Society Home Page!

Submit a Novice Story

(sample story) My Elmer

History - 1950s: The Beginning

1951: Elmer Harger, N7EL

1951: BobMcDonald, W4DYF

1951: Charlie Curle, AD4F

x

1951: Byron Engen, W4EBA

1951: Jim Franklin, K4TMJ

1951: Bill Weinhardt, W9PPG

1951: Hank Greeb, N8XX

1951: Richard Schachter, W6HHI

1952: Tom Webb, W4YOK

1952: Ron Baker, WA6AZN

1952: Steve Jensen, W6RHM

1952/1955: The CQ Twins (Clint, W9AV & Quent, W6RI)

1952: Jim Leighty, W6UJX

1953: Joe Montgomery, W1DWJ

1953: Paul Danzer, N1ii

1953: George Marko, K2DWL

1953: Dan Girand, W5ARB

1953: Charlie Lofgren, W6JJZ

1953: Bob Rolfness, W7AVK

1954: Novice Callsign History License (Dan, K6PRK's License)

1954: John Johnston, W3BE

1954: L.B. Cebik, W4RNL (sk)

1954: Bob Brown, W4YFJ

1954: Dan Smith, K6PRK

1954: Dick Zalewski, W7ZR

1954: Carl Yaffey, K8NU

1954: Novice Logbook (Dick Zalewski, W7ZR)

1955: Jack Burks, K4CNW

1955: Al Cammarata, W3AWU

1955: Dan Marks, ex-K6IQF

1955: Jack Schmidling, K9ACT

1955: Paul Johnston, W9PJ

1956: Chuck Counselman, W1HIS

1956: Mike Branca, W3IRZ

More - Mike Branca, W3IRZ (sk)

1956: Bill Penhallegon, W4STX

1956: Ray Colbert, W5XE

1957: Doug Millar, K6JEY

1956: Dan Cron, W6SBE

1956: Cam Harriot, KI6WK

1956: Keith Synder, KE7IOW

1957: Richard Cohen, K6DBR

1957: Jim Cadien, KC7ZMV

1957: Paula Keiser, K8PK

1958: Jay Slough, K4ZLE

1958: Richard Dillman, W6AWO

1958: Jeff Wolf, K6JW

1958: Mike Chernus, K6PZN

1958: Operating an Amateur Radio Station

1959: Val Erwin, W5PUT

1959: Don Minkoff, NK6A

1959: Dean Straw, N6BV

1959: Chas Shinn, W7MAP/5

History - 1960s: Mid-Peak

1960: Art Mouton, K5FNQ

1960: Bob Silverman, WA6MRK

1961: Rick Roznoy, K1OF

1961: Mark Nelson, AJ2K

1961: Joe Park, WB6AGR

1961, Kent Gardner, WA7AHY

1961: Rick Swain, KK8o

1961: Richard Pumphrey, WN9DDV

1961: Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA

1961: Gary Yantis, W0TM

1962: Steve Pink, KF1Y

1962: Joe Trombino, W2KJ

1962, Walt Beverly, W4GV

1962, Steve Meyers, W0AZ

1962: Terry Schieler, W0FM

1962: Bob Roske, N0UF

1963: Learning the Radiotelegraph Code

1964: Geoff Allsup, W1OH

1964: Phil Salas, AD5X

1964: John Shidler, NS5Z

1964: Michael Betz, WB8ZFQ.

1964: License Manual - Chapter 2, Novice

1964: How to Become a Radio Amateur

1964: Advertisements

1965: AL LaPeter, W2AS

1965: Bob Jameson, N3LNP

1965: Gary Pearce, KN4AQ

1965: Jan Perkins, N6AW

1965: Ken Widelitz, K6LA / VY2TT

1965: Novice Code Test (Ken Widelitz, K6LA / VY2TT)

1965: Dan Gaylord, W7IDG

1965: FCC Exam Schedule

1966: Tom Morgan, AF4HL

1966: Tom Napier, AI4QV

1966: Kelly Klaas, K7SU

1966: Brian Wood, W0DZ

1967: Pete Malvasi, W2PM

1967: Dave Fuseler, NJ4F

1967: Grover Cordell, WB5FSP

1967: Ted White, N8TW

1967: ARRL Handbook

1967: Frequency Chart

1968: Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU

1968: Bob Dunn, K5IQ

1969: Bill Continelli, W2XOY

1969: Phyllis Webb, WN4IIF

1969: Dennis Kidder, W6DQ

1969: Mike "Jug" Jogoleff, WA6MBZ

History - 1970s: Late Peak

1970: Brad Bradfield, W5CGH

1970: Jim Zimmerman, N6KZ

1970: Paul Huff, N8XMS

1970: David Kazan, AD8Y

1970: Ward Silver, N0AX

1970: Alan Applegate, K0BG

1971: Charles Ahlgren, WB6IYM

1971: Jonathan Kramer, W6JLK

1971: Ronald Erickson, K0IC

1972: Steve Ewald, WV1X

1972: Rick Andersen, KE3IJ

1975: David Collingham, K3LP

1975: Tim Madden, KI4TG

1975: Last of the Distinct Novice Callsigns (Cliff Cheng, WW6CC; ex-WN6JPA)

1975: First of the Non-distinct Novice Callsigns (Cliff Cheng, WW6CC; ex-WA6JPA)

1975: Cliff Cheng, WW6CC

1976, Rick Palm, K1CE

1976: Steve Melachrinos, W3HF

1976: Mary Moore, WX4MM

1976: Scott McMullen, W5ESE

1976: Marcel Livesay, N5VU

1977: Barry Whittemore, WB1EDI

1977: Tom Herold, N9BUL

1977: Russ Roberts, KH6JRM

1978: Larry Makoski, W2LJ

1978: Alice King, AI4K

1979: Ann Santos, WA1S

1979: Matt Tinker, AA8P

History - 1980s: Early-Decline

1982: Penny Cron, W6SBE

1987: Matt Cassarino, WV1K

1987: Lou Giovannetti, KB2DHG

1987: Roger Brown, N3HCA

1987: Buddy Brannan, KB5ELV

1988: James Kern, KB2FCV

1988: Jamie Markowitz, AA6TH

1989: Michael Tracy, KC1SX

1990-2000: The End

1994: Brian Lamb, KE4QZB

1997: Novice Question Pool.

ABOUT

  


1953: Paul Danzer, N1ii


Paul Danzer, N1ii (ex-KN2DGR, 1953; K2DGR; W1DQJ).

Novice Days 1953

I was a teenager ­­­ - 15 years old, the January or February of 1953 when I passed my novice exam. In those days you had to go down to an ancient building in lower Manhattan and deal directly with a cigar-smoking FCC examiner. He had a fierce reputation among teen-age hams - we were all
scared of him - but little did we know that he always went out of his way to help kids.

In those days there were real radio stores in New York. I learned code by renting a paper tape machine called an "Instructograph," from one of them for fifty cents a week, if I remember the cost correctly. It had two spools for the paper tape, a variable speed motor drive, metal contacts that read the dots and dashes cut through the paper tape, and a vacuum tube tone oscillator.

I passed the in-person exam first shot, but then followed the longest 4 or 5 months of my life. Just when I passed the exam, and was waiting for the little piece of paper to arrive in the mail so I could go on the air, the FCC lifted the freeze on new TV stations. For reasons lost in the mists of
time, they had frozen all TV station license actions. The timing was such that after passing the exam, and of course waiting to know my call - the FCC paper mill stopped processing all applications except those of TV stations.

Every day I rode the subway and bus for an hour and a half back from high school. The last two blocks on foot were unbearable, and each day my mother told me "no mail."

Finally, in June, the precious piece of paper arrived.  I was now KN2DGR. By this time, of course, I was ready to pass the general exam. The next day I went back to the FCC office - it was not far from my high school - and passed it. The new license appeared two months later. Hanging on the wall of
my shack today are two QSL cards dated August 1953, addressed to my novice call, and confirming my DX from Queens, NY to Greenwich CT and Dayton Ohio. I must have been thrilled with the Dayton contact!

My first transmitter was out of an ARRL book, and was a 6L6 built on a pair of 1x2 pieces of wood. Unfortunately, it did not work. With limited experience and skill I naturally took it apart and carefully rebuilt it. Still no success. I changed to circuit of another configuration out of the Handbook, and still no success. Curiously, the problem was I was always getting output, even when the key (A J-38 of course) was up. How should I know the key was missing the little insulating washer belo w the center contact?

My first receiver was a surplus 6-tube WW2 marine receiver with an usual configuration. No RF stage, two IF stages, metal case and AC/DC. The shockpotential was very high; one side of the line was wired directly to the chassis and case! Naturally I added a BC-453 as a Q-5er and a FL-5. If you are not familiar with those numbers, well you just have not been around long enough.

My novice days, or almost novice days, culminated in receiving an official FCC notice that a neighbor was complaining about my station. TVI? No, she claimed I was interfering with her washing machine. Remember, these were the days of electromechanical timers - washing machines did not have the electronics they have today.

These were also kinder, more gentle days. I called the FCC office and asked what to do. After the FCC engineer stopped laughing, he told me just to reply to their letter that I have examined my 6L6 transmitter and can find no way it could be interfering with the washing machine in question.

de N1ii - Paul Danzer

Ex KN2DGR, ex K2DGR, ex W1DQJ