OK, as you can probably guess,
with
all the recent attention on the Vanity Call Sign System, not to mention
the half dozen calls that I've held in the past 27 years, this edition
of "The Wayback Machine" is going to focus on call signs in amateur
radio
history.
Prior to 1912, getting a call sign was easy, just make one up and get
on
the air. Legend has it that's how the word "ham" came to mean amateur
radio-the
letters H-A-M were in fact the initials of the three operators of a
powerful
station in the early 'teens. With the passage of the Radio Act of 1912,
the first licenses were issued. Call signs at that time for "private
stations"
(amateurs) consisted of a number followed by two (later three) letters,
i.e., 1AW, 1TS, 8XK etc. Other countries adopted this system. This was
adequate
in the early, spark days of amateur radio, but as the shortwaves were
developed,
and CW became universal, problems appeared. Dave Sumner, Executive Vice
President of the ARRL, and Trustee of NU1AW, the station of the
International
Amateur Radio Union, picks up the story...
"When transoceanic amateur communication started becoming commonplace
in
1924, a problem immediately became apparent: call signs were all of the
`one numeral followed by two or three letters' format, with no built-in
means of determining who was where. At first, an informal system of
prefixes
(called `intermediates' at the time) was used by amateurs where `a'
stood
for Australia, `b' for Belgium, `c' for Canada, `f' for France, `g' for
Great Britain, `j' for Japan, `u' for United States, `z' for New
Zealand,
etc. The single-letter system was fine until it became apparent that
Amateur
Radio was spreading to too many countries for this system to
accommodate.
"In January 1927 QST, a new intermediate list was unveiled as the work
of
the Executive Committee of the International Amateur Radio Union. The
new
list took effect at 0000 GMT (UTC) February 1, 1927. It was a
two-letter
system with the first letter indicating the continent (E for Europe, A
for
Asia, N for North America, F for Africa, etc.) and the second letter
indicating
the country (mostly following the old system). Thus, stations in the 48
United States used the intermediate `NU.'
"The new system was quickly overtaken by events. The regulations
adopted
by the Washington International Radiotelegraph Conference later the
same
year included the allocation of a series of `call signals' such as K,
N,
and W for the United States, and mandated that stations have a call
signal
from the series. The Washington regulations were to become effective on
January 1, 1929, but August 1928 QST noted that Canadian amateur calls
had
changed to VE in April and September 1928 QST announced the effective
date
of October 1, 1928, in the United States for the W prefix (K outside
the
48 states). Thus, US amateurs sported voluntary NU prefixes for just 20
months before they became Ws.
"The founding president of the International Amateur Radio Union was,
of
course, Hiram Percy Maxim, 1AW, who remained in that office until his
death
in 1936. The call sign NU1AW commemorates HPM and the IARU's creative,
if
short-lived, solution to the problem of international identification of
stations.
"As trustee of NU1AW it is my intention to use the call sign as a
`permanent
special event station' operating in connection with World
Telecommunication
Day, significant IARU anniversaries, the IARU HF World Championship,
and
other events that will call attention to the contributions of the IARU
to
organized Amateur Radio."
(My thanks to K1ZZ for allowing me to reprint the above).
Thus, the call sign structure was set up for the rest of the '20's and
the
1930's. Stations in the 48 States had a 1x2 or 1x3 call sign beginning
with
"W" and containing a numeral from 1 to 9. Stations in Alaska, Hawaii,
or
other US Possessions had a "K" prefix. Incidentally, note that I said 1
thru 9; this is because the numeral "0" WAS NOT available to amateurs
at
that time. As a result, the call sign districts had different
boundaries
than they do today; for example, the western sections of New York and
Pennsylvania
were in the 8th call district then, as opposed to the 2nd and 3rd
today.
Southern portions of New Jersey were part of the 3rd, rather than 2nd,
call
district.
When amateur radio resumed after World War II, the increased number of
amateurs necessitated the addition of the tenth call district and the
numeral "0".
Except for the redrawing of the boundaries, things remained the same
until
1951-53.
In 1951, the FCC eliminated the old Class A, Class B, and Class C
licenses,
and replaced them with the Novice, Technician, Conditional, General and
Extra Class licenses. (What happened to the Advanced Class? "The
Wayback
Machine" will tell you in a future edition!) With this change came the
first
"distinctive" call signs. Novices, who at that time could only get a
one
year, non-renewable license, had a special 2x3 call sign with the
letter
"N" following the "W", i.e., WN2ODC, WN6ISQ etc. When they upgraded,
the
"N" would be dropped.
This system barely had a chance to settle in before the next change hit
in 1953. Due to the increase in the number of amateurs, the FCC was
running
out of "W" 1x3 call signs. So 1x3 "K" calls began to appear in the 48
states,
with the US possessions receiving 2x2 and 2x3 "K" calls, such as those
issued
today. Novice calls in the 48 states continued to have the distinctive
"N"
(such as KN4LIB) which disappeared upon upgrading.
Barely 5 years later, the growth of amateur radio, particularly in the
2nd
and 6th call districts, caused another problem for the FCC, they were
running
out of "K" and "W" calls. So, in 1958, the FCC began issuing 2x3 "WA"
calls,
to be followed by "WB" when necessary. For some reason, Novices under
this
new system were given "WV" instead of "WN" as their prefix. The "V"
would
change to an "A" or "B" upon upgrading. (After only a few years of
this,
the FCC decided that their original idea was better, and went back to
the
Novice "N" prefix). With the uneven amateur population in the ten call
districts, it took time for the "K" calls to run out in the other
areas.
As late as 1964, you could still get a "K" call in the 1st, 3rd or 7th
call areas, while the 2nd and 6th districts were well into the "WB"s.
The 60's had some other call sign oddities. For a period of time, you
could
hold BOTH a Novice and Technician Class license simultaneously; the FCC
gave you 2 call signs at once (such as WA/WN2ORS) and you used the
appropriate
call based on the amateur band and your privileges on it. The FCC also
allowed
you to have two calls if you maintained two homes in separate call
areas;
for example, Senator Barry Goldwater, K7UGA, also held K3UIG which he
used
while he was in Washington. (In theory, under this system, an amateur
could
hold four call signs if he/she had a Novice/Technician license and two
separate addresses).
Except for the Novice and the distinctive "N", there was no way under
this system to tell what class of license an amateur held. As older
hams became
Silent Keys and the number of available 1x2 calls slowly increased, the
FCC instituted a program whereby those who held an Extra Class license
for
more than 25 years would be eligible for a 1x2. The length of time one
needed to be an Extra was gradually reduced, until July 1977, when any
Extra Class could apply for a 1x2.
There was one block of call signs that were unavailable to ANY amateur,
regardless of license class. These were calls in which the suffix began
with "X", such as W1XW, W3XCV, WB6XXK etc.. The FCC reserved these
calls
for experimental stations; for example, W2XB, W2XOY, W1XMN and KE2XCC
were
originally call signs of early TV and FM broadcast stations. While the
FCC
has relaxed their position on the 1x2 and 1x3 "X" suffix calls, the 2x3
call signs (such as KA6XYZ) are still reserved for experimental use.
By the mid 70's the 2nd, 4th, 6th and 8th call areas had run out of
"WB"s.
For a period of time, the FCC recycled older "WA" and "WB" calls that
had been vacated, but when those ran out, they went to "WD"s. ("WC"s
were reserved
for and being issued to RACES/ Civil Defense stations.) Before the "WD"
prefix could become popular, however, an incident occurred that would
change
the whole call sign structure.
In early 1977, an FCC employee was indicted for taking bribes offered
by
amateurs wanting special call signs. He was convicted and sent to jail.
Partly as a result of this scandal, the FCC on February 23, 1978,
adopted
the call sign structure we have in place today. For 18 years, until the
opening of the Vanity System, it had been impossible to request a
specific
individual or club call. Given the passionate love affair that some of
us
have with our calls, the FCC stands to make millions.
So, as you contemplate the call of your dreams, Form 610V in hand, take
a moment to tune in NU1AW and work a piece of history. Meanwhile, "The
Wayback
Machine" is preparing for it's next journey to another moment in
amateur
radio history. I hope you're on boar