Ian Jackson wrote:
Agreed. Unless there are any hills in the way, legal 27MHz CB should get
you a reliable 5 to 10 miles and, in the USA, I believe is a lot more
popular than elsewhere, and you could well be within range of other CB
users.
From what I have read it is very popular in the EU which has far less
limitations on what you can do with it. There seems to be no practical
limitation on equipment and power, I often see articles about people
using 100 watt ham rigs, transmitting FM and packet data.
However, that's almost irrelevant, a 5 watt rig, even a 1970' handheld
with channels 9,14 and 19 will do, a 40 channel ssb rig would almost be
too much.
To keep it almost on topic, if you were to buy a long whip antenna, fold it
over, (run it horizontaly), and connect it to an autotuner, you could use it
for CB and NVIS ham communication.
NVIS is an interesting mode of communication, it uses vertical skywaves to
get wider range local communication from HF radio.
It may all be a moot point anyway. If you join a club they will probably tell
you what equipment you need. They probably standardized on something readily
available without a license such as CB's, FRS or GMRS, or possibly if they
thought no one would notice VHF marine radios (which are illegal to use
on land, but required for almost anything that floats).
Geoff.
--
Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel
N3OWJ/4X1GM