Remember Me?
Menu
Home
Search
Today's Posts
Home
Search
Today's Posts
RadioBanter
»
rec.radio.amateur
»
Antenna
>
How to begin? (To become a Ham Radio operator)
Reply
LinkBack
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Display Modes
#
1
December 17th 15, 05:16 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Fred McKenzie
external usenet poster
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 317
How to begin? (To become a Ham Radio operator)
In article ,
lid wrote:
The way I understand it, the Ham radio equipped Spotters get on a
channel and can exchange storm information for the region, or the state.
That would be real useful.
AllThumbs-
You are trying to take all of Ham Radio in at once! There are many
facets, including weather spotting.
You may find there are Hams near you. I think it is a rare community
that does not have some around. You might inquire at your local
Emergency Operations Center (EOC) to see if they have contacts with a
club in the area. If there is none, you may be the spark that gets one
started.
Weather spotting is an example where a local club is needed. A local
club would be likely to have a "Repeater" station that would enable
individuals with a handheld radio to relay reports to a central
operations center. The repeater has a tall antenna with wide coverage
area, so individuals do not need high power or a tall antenna.
Ham equipment can be expensive, especially if you must have the newest
and best available. At the other extreme, there are some Chinese
handheld radios available that cost less than $50 and work well.
High Frequency (HF) radios that use wire antennas or tall towers,
general are used to talk long distances. You can save money with older
model used equipment, and antennas can be quite simple. For example, I
have an antenna in my attic made of several mobile whip antennas mounted
to an electrical box. It does not work as well as an outdoor wire
antenna, but at least I am on the air and making contacts. (Search the
web for Octopus Antenna.)
Very High Frequency (VHF) and Ultra High Frequency (UHF) radios are
often less expensive than HF radios. They do not work over as long a
distance, and often work through a club repeater station to cover the
community.
As Ralph suggested, look for information at The American Radio Relay
League (ARRL). They have a study guide for each class of license. If
there is a nearby club that teaches a Ham class, they will likely use
the ARRL study guide as their text.
Another source of information is at http://www.w5yi.org/.
73,
Fred
K4DII
Reply With Quote
Reply
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Show Printable Version
Search this Thread
:
Advanced Search
Display Modes
Switch to Linear Mode
Hybrid Mode
Switch to Threaded Mode
Posting Rules
Smilies
are
On
[IMG]
code is
On
HTML code is
Off
Trackbacks
are
On
Pingbacks
are
On
Refbacks
are
On
Similar Threads
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Watch the eBay Bidding War Begin - Sony ICF-2010 Radio - Collectors Quality !
Barry in Wyoming
Shortwave
0
September 10th 07
12:33 PM
Watch the eBay Bidding War Begin - Sony ICF-2010 Radio - Collectors Quality !
[email protected]
Shortwave
0
September 10th 07
12:31 AM
Watch the eBay Bidding War Begin - Sony ICF-2010 Radio - Collectors Quality !
radfine
Shortwave
1
September 8th 07
05:45 AM
Watch the eBay Bidding War Begin - Sony ICF-2010 Radio - Collectors Quality !
ShortwaveLoonWatch LtD
Shortwave
0
September 6th 07
06:14 PM
(OT) : Nova M Radio to Begin Broadcasting on XM Satellite Radio Network - March 01, 2007
David
Shortwave
2
February 22nd 07
10:51 PM
All times are GMT +1. The time now is
08:23 PM
.
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
Contact Us
RadioBanter forum home
Privacy Statement
Copyright © 2017
LinkBack
LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks