Posted on 11/24/2011 8:07:46 PM PST by SpaceBar
Proudest moment of my life ... getting my general class license in the mail. Worked hard for about a year learning the electronics necessary (back in the 60s) and passing the 13 wpm exam. Built my own rig and worked the world.
Along came the military and I dropped out as a HAM, never got back into it, to my regret. Glad to see there is a comeback to this marvelous hobby. Just wish they hand kept the original requirements ... forced everyone to discipline themselves into learning electronics and code.
And now something completely different.....
My first exam was before an FCC examiner on Commerce Street in Dallas in 1976. 2nd exam was at same place in 3 months. Left that one with my Advanced.
Extra was by a volunteer examiner in 1985.
GROL in 2000.
Yes, it has changed.
Yeah I’d be interested in hearing how to start out and the pros/cons of this given the internet/technology age. I remember a friend’s dad really into hamming it up but haven’t thought of that in years until today’s thread.
Morse was what always kept me out - had a commercial third class ticket at one point many years ago. Sounds like the Ham test might now be along those lines.
There’s little that ham radio can do that the internet, cell phones, droids, etc. can’t do a thousand times better. But when a tornado or a quake or a hurricane drops ALL the cell towers and takes out the local power grid, all the high-tech stuff in the world won’t work without the backbone. But the ham radio and car battery will. That’s a big reason to have one, even though they’re so pathetic compared to modern technology.
We have walkie-talkies with a five mile range for that too.
Dad works within the five miles.
Takes a pretty good OP to copy a bug. Electronic keyers sound much better, but so does a hand key used by an operator with a good fist.
I have a beautiful homebrew CMOS twin paddle keyer I use on QRP rigs. It has no on-off switch. The quiescent current is so low that shelf life of the battery is about how long it lasts. Silky smooth twin paddle key I fashioned for it is a joy to operate. The only cable is to the rig, battery and logic is in the brass base of the keyer.
Not really, because it hasn't happened.
"CB types" - even if we may use such a wide brush - are all sitting on 2m FM repeaters, enjoying their signals at +40 dB above the noise floor. Yes, there are people there. Not all of them are "CB types." Some have a long ham career and obviously they had to know the code at some point in time. I don't even have an HF rig in the car; the FT-8800 that I have there is tuned to repeaters, and I don't expect anything out of it than a nice chat on my way somewhere. No DXCC points, at least :-)
HF requires effort that is much higher than V/UHF. You have to have an antenna that is larger than your house. You have to have an expensive rig (if you want contacts, that is.) Or you can build one, if you are a professional (I am, and I do that on occasion.) HF is harder.
And on top of that, even if we somehow imagine an inundation by the "no-code" unwashed masses ... they don't have access to CW subbands anyway. Why to bother what's happening above 14.100? All the DX stuff is in the lower 5 kHz :-)
So far I don't see any problem with new hams - and I don't expect any. I will be working CQ WW CW tomorrow for a few hours, and I expect all bands to be full. Plenty of people know code. With modern equipment it is easier than ever to copy and to transmit. In fact, contesting pushes you toward automated keying because so much is tied into your logging software - generation of exchanges, rig lockout (in multi-TX setups,) tracking of worked stations and multipliers, perfect quality, and so on. Your old straight key still works, but you'd be doing double, if not triple work.
I hear the ‘ham’ radio commercials on the radio all the time lately “Become a ‘ham’ radio operator...” and it sounds to me that someone/some agency is pushing it for the pending problems of the future...when the SHTF what will be left? Ham and CB’s.....
One of my good friends was a ham actor, does that qualify?
They publish the exam question pool. ( http://www.arrl.org/question-pools ) If you can read the question and answers and remember the correct answer you can pass the exam.
Find you a local club and I will be someone can help and make the process half way interesting.
20 WPM was required when I got my Extra.
“Any recommendations on what equipment to start out with?”
Study a current Technician book. And pass the test. It is easy.
Then get a 2 Meter transceiver and “work” the local repeaters. Then possibly a TNC and discover digital capabilities. (radio email)
Antennas you can make.
Best bang tor those entry dollars.
Check out a local radio club.
Was that really the Technician book, or the one for General or Extra class? The Technician test has about two formulas, one equation, and it’s all multiple choice. There are practice tests online at: http://www.eham.net/exams/
I’ll bet you can top 50% taking it cold.
Thanks! Obviously there is a LOT to learn. Are there any small off the shelf portable units that would work better than say a CB for a SHTF scenario?
OTOH, I realized soon after getting my license and listening to all the jabbering, that I was just not the talking sort, and never got into much beyond packet radio for a short bit.
Would not mind whipping up an EME array for the challenge, but anal HOA rules make that a problem.
So, anybody can CW, code speed requirements no longer a requirement? Learn as you go I guess. Just curious.
That was the family assignment given to our daughter - become a ham. She got her licence last month and researching equipment, now.
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