Superb, I'll start with the licensing, I know some of Morse from when I
was a kid, and I'm sure I can brush up on it and get back up to speed, I
just missed Will Donzelli, he's off on a equipment run out west, and I
know he's huge into HAMfest stuff so I'll also see if I can catch up
with him once he's back, maybe it will be good for me to go to hamfest
and see some stuff as well... So packet is the same as the old x.25
protocols?!??! If so, that's great as I used to work with that stuff
many years ago, so I think I should be able to get up to speed in a
couple of months, I'll take a look at what you've liked, thanks Tom!
Curt
Tom wrote:
At 08:07 PM 4/16/2011, you wrote:
Any HAM radio operators here? I'm interested
in getting some
equipment to setup a HAM radio transmission/reception system and
possibly look to hook it up to a terminal for text transmission too.
I'm totally in the dark on this, so I'm looking for anybody who can
point me in the right directions, thanks.
Best way? Get a license. Never been easier; the tests are multiple
choice and the tests and answers are posted online, legally. There's
something like 35 questions on any given exam, out of a pool of 625 or
something, but there's like 5 ohm's law questions and they'll ask you
one of them, and 10 rules and regs, and you'll get two of them, etc.
No more morse code requirement for a technician class license. That
gets you access to 50 MHz and up-- the six meter, two meter, and 70cm
bands are the more popular ones. Lots of used gear out there for that.
You can build a soundcard interface or buy one. Packet radio uses
AX.25 and usually the two meter band to send 300 baud serial data
keyboard-to-keyboard, or more often, keyboard to mailbox. You get a
little box called a TNC (a radio modem) and plug it into a radio.
You can do some of what you want without a license (just listening)
but many of the resources for learning how to do this stuff are on the
air, and it you can't transmit, you can't ask.
Sounds like you're interested in digital modes. There's some of that
available to the technician class ham. There's the original digital
mode, morse code, but that's hard for some people to learn. There's
packet, like I mentioned. There's RTTY (radioteletype) but I'm not
sure how much of that is out there on 6- and two-meters.
There's an entirely new set of protocols out there, called D-Star,
which is true digital. The radios for D-star are built digital from
the ground up. That's a voice-over-digital mode, whereas many of the
others are data (messages) over digital.
Getting a license:
You need each lower level first before you can get the next one. Start
with Technician, then if you want to use lower frequencies/other
modes, get the General Class license.
You can buy/beg/borrow a license manual lots of places, but make sure
it's recent.
Lots of people use the ARRL manuals or the Gordon West ones, I
personally think the later are better.
The question pools change. The current Tech questions went into effect
July 1 2010 and are good until the middle of 2014. The General class
exam changes to a new question pool July 1 2011.
Example:
http://www.aesham.com/photos2/ARR0847.jpg
This URL will probably get split up, you'll have to stitch it
together. It's all ARRL publications and there's books, CDs, and study
guides.
http://search.cartserver.com/search/search.cgi?bool=AND&cartid=a-6994&a…go.x=16&go.y=7&go=GO!
Read a book, and then go here to take practice exams (this is just one
example, there are lots)
http://www.qrz.com/exams
or
http://www.qrz.com/xtest2.html
Here's a "Getting ready for your ham exam" site that looks good:
http://www.radioexam.org/
THEN, find an exam near you. The best way to to go to a hamfest, which
is a swap for amateur radio and computer gear. There's one every few
months here in the midwest. What state are you in?
Go here to find hamfests:
http://www.arrl.org/hamfests-and-conventions-calendar
Search by city and state, or zip code (that's all you need to fill in)
The problem with that one is that it only lists ARRL sanctioned
events, and there are a lot more than just those. You'd have to tell
me your state and what major cities you're near for me to do some
digging.
Partial list of exam coordinators:
http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=licensing_5&id=amateur
That's a lot of info; I hope something was helpful.
73 (best regards) de N9QQB
210 . [Philosophy] "Brilliance is typically the act of an individual,
but incredible stupidity can usually be traced to an organization."
--Jon Bentley
NEW: a50mhzham at
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