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Ham Radio
Anybody have a ham radio license?
My exam is on Dec 9th. It's incredible what shitty technical questions I have to learn. The exam consists of three parts. Technical equipment and regulations are not the problem. There are over 1000 technical questions though, and they are quite difficult to learn. I am not interested in the technology at all! All I want is to be legally allowed to use ham radio. :disgust |
I have an amateur radio license in Australia. When I did it there was still a morse code requirement. So there was an exam in electronics/radio theory, rules and regulations, morse code and a practical examination.
Nowadays they have done away with morse which makes things a bit easier. |
Oh, yes, morse code is optional. I am quite glad about that! Knowing morse code is cool, but it takes quite a long time to learn it.
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You may not be too keen on the technical side of things now, but when you are putting up an antenna and need to calculate the length of and how many radials that you need to use, or decide whether to bury them or have them elevated close to the base of the antenna then having the understanding of radio theory is handy.
Even simple things like how to measure field strength or filtering noisy power supplies requires a degree of understanding of radio-electronic theory. |
when I got my license, morse was mandatory, 10 wpm minimum if I recall correctly
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Sure. And when I mention to people that I am not interested in the technical side, they usually say "Oh, that's sad. It's such a nice hobby".
Well, that might be the case. But it's also pretty nerdy. I have the dream of sailing around the world with a sailing ship. Having a ham radio license is a good idea as a preparation of such a trip. |
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the equipment that can be used can also cause problems and interference to other important radio and other equipment, understanding the tecnical side of that is important, radio theory in regard to antennas is very important as well, as well as knowledge of rf power and transmission, it is actually kind of sad too that they removed morse requirements, as that was also a good marker of entry to the commitment to getting the privilege of the license |
Ham radio used to be very popular here in the 70's and 80's. Unless the antennas have changed it must have lost a lot of populariy in recent years?
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I got my ham license in Canada and had to pass the Morse code part. The code was easy to learn from tapes that were sold at Radio Shack. I attended classes at a local community college for about 3 months before sitting for the license exam.
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I'd like to see Davy try to erect an emergency antenna on the sailboat after a storm has taken down the permanent one. Can you imagine the outputs disappearing in a puff of smoke due to the antenna not being tuned properly? Davy nees to learn to run one of these: http://i816.photobucket.com/albums/z...Z/IMG_0522.jpg |
Go for a no code Tech License unless you want to include more bands. There is software that is available onine or from HRO that has all of the test questions. You dont need to know the endless rules and regs and its easier to cram and slam then learn items you will never use.
73's |
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sadly, internet and computers have killed the romance years of ham radio, the smell of tubes heating up in a high powered transmitter, and different crackling sounds coming through unexpectedly as sunspot cycles and other atmospheric phenomen changed unexpectedly some of the cold war oddities such as the russian woodpecker were cool thinking back to it now |
this video brings back memories, back then we had no idea what was generating the eerie strange sounds, we had a good idea it was Russian but there was no official confirmation of that
now that the USSR fell we know it was this huge military installation in Ukraine |
You don't need an amateur license to operate a radio on a sailboat, at least in the US. You can get a general radiotelephone operators license which isn't nearly as involved. You're not allowed to construct your own antennas or transmitters, and the wattage is limited.
Getting a ham ticket is what you do if you're interested in the technology, because it's made for hobbyists. If you're not, a commercial license seems more what you want. You can also operate in bands forbidden to hams, and more easily use your ticket for paying gigs (if a commercial sailboat requires you have a radiotelegraph license I'm pretty sure you need a commercial license, not a ham license). No one but old farts wanting to show off use the original Morse Code. It's been International Morse Code for over 150 years, and virtually no one knows the original version. You don't need to learn anything but "Morse Code" as it'll be the kind the world uses. What country has you answer 1,000 questions? It's been a long time since I took mine and maybe things have changed, but is it possible you have a book with 1,000 practice questions in it? I seem to recall there are just a few dozen questions for each level. |
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I have one, can't remember the morse code anymore though
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Once I make it through the ham radio exam (I will probably have to repeat the technical part :Oh crap), the LRC (Long Range Certificate) is next on my list. Not sure about the commercial license you are talking about. The GOC (General Operator's Certificate) and ROC are reserved for professional seamen (at least here in Germany). Quote:
The country is Germany and the ham radio guys are obviously all nuts here (because they built this huge catalogue of questions). Some of the questions can be solved with elimination, a bunch of them were designed to be hard to learn by heart, though. At least you know all the question beforehand and there is software available that makes the preparation easier. |
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Good luck getting the license you need.
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we talked about how it must have been Russian, because our directional antennas could tell us the general direction the signal was coming from, but we didn't really know what it was for sure at the time there are lots of strange things on the radio waves that you run across, weird sounding data signals used by military, "numbers" stations that are broadcast for spies in other countries, strange atmospheric and cosmic sounds, it's pretty cool actually |
was it the Ham Radio operators who picked up those crazy 'numbers stations' that were then collected and sold as 'the conet project'? those are so awesome. are they still being broadcasted?
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orthodox
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Only the basic licence never learnt morse to do the advanced.
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I wonder what could have been invented in the 80s that would replace *that*? :D |
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I don't know anything about them, never ran across the signal myself. lots of countries still broadcast "numbers stations" to their spies in other countries, China does it a lot here is a russian numbers station recorded from within the UK |
Try not to dance around what they want you to learn. Knowing all the technical details behind Ham Radio is cool. I almost went for a Ham license years ago and regret not following through. Go for it..!
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I just want to be allowed to buy a radio and push the button. But it's one of those skills that could come in handy if the world economy crashes completely. |
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Three more days to the exam. I know about half the technical questions. Will have to guess the other half. Oh well...
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(Got my license in 1967 - I still renew it religiously even though I haven't been on the air for probably 30 years lol) |
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