Any other HAMs?

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dicion
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Any other HAMs?

#1

Post by dicion »

I just took and passed the Amateur Radio Technician and General exams last night, so I am now a licensed Radio Operator :) Should be getting my callsign in a few days.

The only studying I did for it was one read-through of a General Study guide :lol: Guess all those years of wideband and Satcom in the military stuck with me after all :mrgreen:

I figured it would be a good thing to have for when Z-day comes, and civilization as we know it breaks down. Either that, or as a new fun hobby :thumbs2:
Plus now, I get to attempt to make the neighbors hate me more by erecting large antennas around my house. I have HOA Restrictions though, so I may need to get creative..

I'm pretty sure I'm not restricted from erecting a 50 foot Flagpole in my front yard.. that just may happen to have sections made of a RF Transparent fiberglass material... Plus, I'd get to show off a much larger Old Glory! :thumbs2:

So, question posed, any other HAMs on the forum? I've got some reading to do, and some equipment on order for me to play with ;)

Personal note.. I need to seriously STOP getting into hobbies that cost TONS of money.. Paintball, Computers, Firearms, Amateur Radio... Why can't I just take up bowling, or something that doesn't cost much. :rolll "rlol"

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Re: Any other HAMs?

#2

Post by chabouk »

dicion wrote:I figured it would be a good thing to have for when Z-day comes, and civilization as we know it breaks down.
When that day comes, the equipment might be a good thing to have, but the license won't matter. ;-)

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dicion
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#3

Post by dicion »

chabouk wrote:
dicion wrote:I figured it would be a good thing to have for when Z-day comes, and civilization as we know it breaks down.
When that day comes, the equipment might be a good thing to have, but the license won't matter. ;-)
You're right, It's more about needing the license to setup, test and train on the equipment, in preparation for it :lol:
I agree though, if it happens, all the bands will be wide open for anyone ;)
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TLynnHughes
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#4

Post by TLynnHughes »

KE5KAQ here.

Congrats on passing the exam!

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Re: Any other HAMs?

#5

Post by williamkevin »

Dicion,

KE5KAP here. My wife (KE5KAQ) and I operate on the two meter band on the Galveston County Emergency Operations Group repeater at 145.41. We each have Icom single band handhelds.

Cheers!!
:coolgleamA:

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dicion
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#6

Post by dicion »

williamkevin wrote:Dicion,

KE5KAP here. My wife (KE5KAQ) and I operate on the two meter band on the Galveston County Emergency Operations Group repeater at 145.41. We each have Icom single band handhelds.

Cheers!!
:coolgleamA:
Sweet, I just ordered a VX-8R as my first radio, so I should be able to get ya as soon as I get it hopefully. Still trying to decide what I want for a Transceiver for my shack here at the house. That, and saving up some dough for it :)
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#7

Post by jimlongley »

K5NRA here, gave myself a vanity call sign for passing the Extra.
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#8

Post by williamkevin »

dicion wrote:Sweet, I just ordered a VX-8R as my first radio, so I should be able to get ya as soon as I get it hopefully. Still trying to decide what I want for a Transceiver for my shack here at the house. That, and saving up some dough for it :)
Hey...that's a great little handheld rig!
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The Annoyed Man
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#9

Post by The Annoyed Man »

My wife says I'm a ham. Does that count? :mrgreen:
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#10

Post by OldSchool »

Dicion, congratulations on passing!

Haven't yet found time to try for my Amateur license, but I received my Commercial First Phone XX years ago (grandfathered to General when the FCC decided to consolidate commercial licenses in the '80's), then as broadcast engineer/announcer for around 15 years. My wife also received her 3rd Phone license at the same time. We'll get around to our Amateur licenses one of these days....
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#11

Post by flb_78 »

I've been licensed since the age of 10.

N9OHM

ex. KB9CQW
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dicion
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#12

Post by dicion »

jimlongley wrote:K5NRA here, gave myself a vanity call sign for passing the Extra.
NICE!

I figure I'll take the extra once I, you know, actually know how stuff works in the Ham world :lol:
For example, I noticed that the default practice for Ham when dealing with interference is to move to another frequency or channel.

Quite different than the military's practice of 'Crank up the Power!' "rlol"
Also, most of the frequencies I worked with were SHF, and tropo scatter shots were frequently > 10kw in power :shock:
Ever seen a mistuned (read: Dented) waveguide melt? :smilelol5:

http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/ac/e ... rc-170.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Was the main mobile Tropo setup I was trained on. Fun stuff.

It's not the theory that I have problems with, its the procedural and administrative stuff that I don't know.
Figure I'll just hit a study guide for that one as well. Maybe read through it more than once though :thumbs2:
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#13

Post by ELB »

Russell wrote:So...... just out of curiosity... what exactly is a licensed radio operator, and what's the point of it?

Not trying to be disagreeable or anything, it's an honest question.
Before there was the internet, there were "hams." :mrgreen:

Radio frequency spectrum is regulated for use at the international and national levels. Certain bands are set aside for citizen use, and you generally need a license to transmit on those bands. The FCC licenses radio operators in the US. Exceptions are the 'Citizens Band' (as in CB radios, good buddy), and maybe some a couple other freqs where the low-power radios you can buy at Home depot and Sportsman Warehouse operate, but I haven't kept up with that area.

As to why... this has a long history. Radios really were the internet of the 1920s/30s/40s/50s. Amateur hobbyists, instead of tinkering with computers and networks and iPods and such, spent their time on building radios and trying to contact each other, not only nationally but internationally. This paralleled the commercial development of radio with AM radios stations spring up across the country. Instead of reading bloggers and news websites on line, people listened to shows and commentators and news agencies.

On the amateur side, people ("hams") experimented with both radios sets (using crystals instead of transistor or computer chips :mrgreen: ) and antennas --- and did most of it in Morse code. A lot of what has become known about radio propagation was learned by amateurs' experimentation. One amateur was a guy named Curtis E. Lemay, who you may recognize as a rather famous WWII Air Force general. When he was setting up the Strategic Air Command after WWII, he went on a round the world bomber flight with a ham radio set on board, and kept in communication with his HQ in the US as they flew around the world. He did this to demonstrate that the USAF could set up a world-wide, realtime, command and control system for (nuclear) bombers. So it was the amateur field that laid the groundwork for today's military command and control systems.

Besides talking to each other, hams organized into groups that could establish communications during disasters and other big events. Radios don't require copper or fiberoptic connections -- as long as you have the radio and a power supply (like a gas powered generator) you can communicate. Hams are still a part of many civil defense/emergency management systems around the country. There are many "repeaters" around the country that will transmit your radio signal for quite some distance. When I was driving from California to DC on one trip, I often chatted with people who were several states away as a way to pass the time -- and it was also nice to know I could contact someone if I needed to in a hurry. This was long before cell phones were ubiquitous.
USAF 1982-2005
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dicion
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Re: Any other HAMs?

#14

Post by dicion »

Russell wrote:So...... just out of curiosity... what exactly is a licensed radio operator, and what's the point of it?

Not trying to be disagreeable or anything, it's an honest question.
Pretty much, from what I understand (and I'm BRAND NEW to it, so I may be wrong, someone please feel free to clarify), Ham radio operators are licensed to use much more of the RF spectrum for general communications than Joe Citizen. They can also transmit as MUCH MUCH higher powers than Joe Citizen can.

Generally, public non-licensed radios are limited to a few, congested unlicensed bands (900mhz, 2.4ghz, 5.8ghz are the most common IIRC), and only a maximum of 1 Watt of Transmit power.
These bands are where things like Wireless access points, bluetooth, walkie-talkies, etc run.

Amateur Radio Operators can transmit up to 1500 Watts of power on certain bands in the US.
EDIT: Looks like someone beat me to it, with a MUCH better explanation. :thumbs2:
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