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Old December 16th 06, 04:40 AM posted to rec.radio.cb
Jim Hampton Jim Hampton is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 74
Default No More Element 1


"Steveo" wrote in message
...
Vinnie S. wrote:
On 16 Dec 2006 02:58:54 GMT, Steveo wrote:

Vinnie S. wrote:
Remember that exemption thing with the hams? I have two buddies that
are extras' - local here and they'd like to hear me on 20 40 or 80
(160?) NOT TWO METERS THO!

The thing about it is they still use 11 meters as much as they use
any of those bands. You do too, right?

Remember the guy I bought my Icom from? He told me that the biggest
offenders in radio are extra class hams.

I think this is a great thing for ham radio. You can now get some new
blood into this hobby.

Vinnie S.

You're probably right, it should make it easier for the no codes to

gain
more HF privilege but that doesn't blow my hair back either. I may end
up there after I pass 50, or not. I'm happy with my little shot down CB
so far.

btw..i remember who you bought your radio from man.


I'm telling you, With 75M, I can talk to you all the time. Take the
practice tests on eham.net. You'll pass them easily.

Vinnie S.

I'm not worried about passing the no code test, and we have each others
land line in case it's really pressing, right?

Get ready to hear me on 11M in your hometown as the band opens up. If you
don't hear me directly, you'll hear people calling out my name. g

I'm getting ready for it again, because the last time was so much fun.


Hello Mopar

I remember well when I had the monster antenna when I was a kid. I could
reach Washington, D.C. from Rochester, NY running 65 watts in the middle of
the day and all points in between. On 160 meters.

At night, that extended over most of the lower 48 states - running 25 watts
on 160.

Between 80 and 20 and all bands in between, you're good for much of the
world by picking your frequencies and time of day - unless the bands are
really messed up by a big solar storm.

Heck, I ran a phone patch running 12 watts rms into the beam from Guam
Island back to Rochester, NY. Until the guy said I was weak, at which point
I threw on the afterburner. Nearly knocked his speaker off the shelf. Guam
to Rochester has to be pushing the heck out of 10,000 miles .... and 12
watts would have been sufficient for a qso on ssb, just needed a titch more
for the phone patch

For the most part, you really don't need a lot of power. Just pick the
frequency, mode, and time appropriately.

I'll chat with you off-group via e-mail.


73 from Rochester, NY
Jim