R
Robin Scott Marsh
Guest
On Saturday, December 26, 2015 at 2:33:26 PM UTC-8, Michael A. Terrell wrote:
I too received my NABER certification paperwork and card back around 1986. I recall having to drive up to L.A. from San Diego and taking a long test covering all type of electronic, RF, Television and FCC type questions. It was a 3 or 4 hour brutal test. I think the NABER certification disappeared from usage more than twenty years ago. I looked to see if I could recertify it 20 years ago and it was nowhere to be found. I Had my NARTE CET and GROL licenses and wanted to beef up my resume with the NABER license. No Joy!Ralph Mowery wrote:
That is what I got when the First Class Phone was not needed any more and
the First and Second Class was changed over to the GROL.
I agree , I think many companies were started up or started handing out some
kind of certification just to make money. Where I worked I had to get
certified every year for something about radiation. Then came the
refregeration and ozone scare, certified to operate a stud gun, operate some
man lifting platforms, the Star program, ISO 6000 or was it 9000 , TPM,
deversity training, PLC certification (only thing that I got any training on
worth anything), don\'t recall what all else. Retired about the time the six
sigma came out with all the stupid belts. I even thought the First Phone
was a joke when I took it in 1972. I had studied some on a 2 nd class book
and at the time it cost one dollar more to take the First, so I signed up
for that and passed everything the first day. Never did see a TV
transmitter and would not know what to do if I had.
The first thing you would have discovered is that TV used a pair of
transmitters, in 1972. That was the year that I tested out of the three
year, depot level school for broadcast engineering. It was the
equivalent of the FCC First Phone, and was convertible without taking
the FCC test, until the year before I left the service. I worked at
three TV stations, in all. One AFRTS Army station, and two commercial
UHF stations without a First Phone.