Posted on 04/08/2024 7:08:51 PM PDT by kawhill
Before you can get on the air, you need to be licensed and know the rules to operate legally. US licenses are good for 10 years before renewal and anyone may hold one except a representative of a foreign government. In the US there are three license classes—Technician, General and Extra.
Thanks very much!
L
I agree, and it’s interesting, but it cut a lot of people out who couldn’t get it.
(My husband got trapped in an elevator once, so he ‘Morsed’ the SOS on the alarm. I had been wondering what was taking him so long to come home...)
But it cut a lot of people out who couldn’t get it.
I know I was one of them I passed the written test couldn’t get the code but I believe code is a must your husband is proof of it’s many uses.
.. -.-
Even if you’re not licensed to transmit, it’s useful to have in an emergency so you can hear what’s going on in your area.
Now, I need to learn how to use it.
Well, I was thinking of ‘normal’ emergencies like big storms and other natural disasters.
(Just be careful of the circumstances under which you decide licenses to be ‘meaningless’. The ham community doesn’t take kindly to people ignoring the rules.)
I'll look into a license, when I figure out how to use the radios.
I got them, primarily, for SHTF, which I think is highly probable within the next year.
Morse Code Lives.
73
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