Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
notbob wrote: That scared the crap outta me. Though I'm no ham and have never had a license or even a CB, I know how CW, even QRP, could have probably saved this guy. Yet, he was clueless of even the most basic radio technology. Frightening. I swore then, it would never happen to me and I'm set on learning code and learning QRP radio. Far better would have been a satellite based emergency locator transmitter. Originaly designed for airplanes, they are available for hikers, etc. As for CW, even QRP saving him, it's possible but not likely. HF location is too coarse to find him, unless he had a GPS unit and was able to transmit an SOS with the correct coordinates, had a big enough antenna to be heard, and so on. I have a 10m HT and can "work the world" (or at least access 10m repeaters in the US and EU), but only when the band is open. It is not likely it will be until the middle of the current sunspot cycle, which is 4-5 years away if we are lucky. A VHF HT is not going to be of any use, unless he happens to get lost or snowed in to a valley with a repeater on the mountain above. Yes, we have a repeater here in Jerusalem that had to be moved to a different frequency because it was interfering with one on Crete, but that's tropspheric ducting, over water, and our repeater was at 3500 feet asl. It also depends upon finding a frequency that someone is listening on, in a lot of places if you want road help, etc you are better off on CB. Learn morse code if you want to, build and operate QRP if you want to, take a radio backpacking if you want to, but IMHO you are not going to really improve your chances if you are buried in a snow drift, or lost while hiking out in the middle of the forest. Geoff. A 2m HT may not help if you're really out in the sticks, but they have a much longer range than a cell phone. In the car with a mobile antenna I reliably reach a repeater that's 30 miles away with my VX-8r. Handheld with the standard antenna, I can often reach it, but not reliably. And of course there are many other repeaters that are closer than that in CT. The VX8r also has an optional GPS that can automatically send your location through APRS. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|