The Uncertain Future of Ham Radio
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Oh well, I guess I should be thankful I can still operate 2m on the local repeater, but to be perfectly honest, I miss my HF station and all the contacts I made when I had it (I came very close to working all 50 states at my former location, a suburb of Cleveland). As far as ham radio's future goes, well, the fact is things have changed, drastically, since I started in the hobby 48 years ago, and will continue to change as time goes on. I will not say the hobby will eventually disappear (I honestly don't believe it will, with some 600,000 licensed amateurs in the US alone), but I will admit it is nothing like what it was when I started. This is the age of the Internet, and more young people are communicating using that than ever will on the radio again. I am reminded of this time and time again when I try to find someone to talk to on the local repeater. I can say over and over again that I am listening on the repeater, but I get very few (if any) replies, except on the 2-meter ragchew net my club has on Thursday nights. Another problem is that I do not know any amateurs in my town, despite knowing that one such amateur lives about a block away and will not have anything to do with me--why, I may never know, as I never said or did anything (that I know of, anyway) to cause him to ignore me on the air. I cannot attend the meetings of the radio club to which I belong and of which I have been a member since 1987 because I do not drive, and the local bus line does not operate late at night (the club's meetings often last until 10 PM or later). I am not at my wits' end (yet) over this, but the issue does bother me, and I wish there were some way I could get to my club's meetings once in a while. No one in the club is willing to take me because, as one club member recently told me, my membership in the club does not allow for that. I believe this is very unfair, as I am sure there are club members older than myself who do not drive and have no other way of getting to the meetings. I will not end my membership in the club because of this issue, but the fact remains I feel very left out because I have no way to get to the meetings. I don't know very many people here where I live (this is a village of about 3100 population) and feel I could get to know a few folks if I could only get to my club's meetings. All of which sometimes makes me wonder why I am still "spinning my wheels" on 2m after years and decades of being able to make worldwide contacts on HF, before having to give up my HF station when I moved. The only reason I can come up with for staying with the hobby is that I went to far too much trouble and effort to get my license 48 years ago. If I could give up this apartment and move to a house, things would be different, I'm sure, but since I will be in this place probably most of the rest of my life, I am stuck on 2m and Echolink, the latter, again (!), if I can ever get the password for the application needed for access to the system. 73, |
There is no current legislative threat to the spectrum reading the article, just a decline in the hobby and fears it will eventually make it easier for the FCC to mess with spectrum the way it has with TV.
I need to start getting active in the hobby. When I got licensed I had no money for a decent rig and having gotten interested in the hobby from listening to DX160m-10m on my Sony ICF-7600GR the propagation range and quality of traffic on 2m and up was dissapointing. I'm not interested in Morse so anything below 10m is not presently usable for me on a technician license (IIRC some digital modes can be worked there but I need to find time to do research and buy or build hardware before that happens). I probably should try to upgrade to general. Last week in an attempt to get active; I recaped my 10m and 6m tube SSB Heathkits, cut some dipoles and set up a shack in the loft of the family cabin...either my rigs need more work, I wasn't listening at the right time or those bands are fairly dead up there as I couldn't find a single station opperating on those bands...my 10m rig could work all bands from 10m down to 80m so I listened to the lower bands and found some SW and one ham conversation down there (but could only listen to those lower freq stations on my license). KD9IVO |
Jeff, you can make lots of contacts with an in house antenna with low power. A simple loops or dipole will do. You won't be a contest master but you can have some fun for sure. It doesn't sound like computers are your thing but some of the new digital modes work well on very low power.
E.M., you could have most digital modes working in a couple of hours. With a semi-modern rig it would be pretty easy. Do you have anything other than the Heathkits? At least around here it looks like it will be a while before licensing resumes. But you could get all prepped for the test. |
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Been meaning to get a General license. I have a UV-5R that I use for FRS and to listen to 2M, but I want a tubed HF rig or maybe one of those Kenwood hybrids.
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I have an Icom IC-T22AT handheld and also a Baofeng UV-5R-Plus HT (the model which superseded the original UV-5R) which at least keep me active on the local ham club's 2m repeater. I cannot presently use the UV-5R+ as I cannot seem to be able to set the repeater offset for the local repeater (147.81-21); that is, I know the offset is +600, but the manual is not clear at all as to how to set it. The UV-5R+ instruction manual is very poorly written, probably par for the course since that HT is made in China.
BTW, I am still trying, with no luck yet, to set the password which would allow me to use my Echolink software with the local repeater. This password is the only thing standing between me and a fully operational Echolink system, as I had for quite a while until the computer broke down last month; the person who repaired it erased everything on my hard drive including, yup, you guessed it, the Echolink software I had installed months earlier. I would much rather use that with my computer than my Icom HT, as the latter's audio output is extremely low unless I use an external headset-microphone. If I must use that from now on, I will (it works very well, as the repeater is only about two miles from me), but if there is any other way I can set up the Echolink software to work with the computer as I once had, I would much rather take that route. Thanks much and 73. |
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You can use the 2m repeaters with your UV-5R, as the Technician amateur license (and all other licenses above it) allows privileges from 50 MHz and up; this, of course, includes 2 meters. I have a UV-5R+ (the newest model) which I would use on the 2m repeater in my area, but I cannot seem to set the repeater offset because the instruction manual is very, very poorly written (this handheld is made in China). In the meantime, I will use my Icom IC-T22A 1.5-watt handheld with the local repeater, which is operated by a radio club of which I have been a member since 1987. 73, |
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https://www.miklor.com/COM/UV_ProgMem.php 73, jr |
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Defending (and growing) the spectrum allocated for amateur use in the USA is an important part of what the ARRL does. I often believe it's one of the most important things. |
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Thanks much for that info. I'm sure it will help me quite a bit with setting the transmit offset for local repeaters (where I live, about 30 miles from Cleveland, there is only one local machine, about two miles or so from me, which I can use with a handheld--especially a 1.5-watt rig like my Baofeng UV5R+). As I said in my first post, I could not set the repeater offset on my Baofeng HT because the original instructions are about as clear as muddy water (!), but the rewritten Miklor instructions make a lot more sense; hopefully, I can go ahead, set up the radio for the local machine and be done with it. After 48 years in ham radio (got my first license at the age of 16 in 1972), this Baofeng HT is a real challenge for me (I never had a Chinese HT before this one; my other two HTs were made in Japan and have very understandable instruction manuals, although I cannot use one of the HTs [the Yaesu FT-207R] because the local repeater has 110.9Hz tone access, which that handheld does not support), but I'm sure with these revised programming instructions I can get this Baofeng rig working as intended. Thanks again and 73, |
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Oh well. I'm not licked yet. I have successfully checked into my club's 2m net via Echolink, so that will be the method I use to check into the net from now on. I can do so online with my computer (if I can ever find the correct password for the Qtel software), with my Icom HT, my Amazon Fire tablet, or my smartphone. I realize full well this will not be "real" ham radio, but from what I have read in this thread, I guess that is where the hobby is headed in the Internet age. I have tried several times tonight to find someone to talk with on the local repeater using my Icom HT, but received no replies, just a short "beep" followed by the squelch tail, which lets the operator know he or she is at least hitting the machine; this reinforces what I just said after having read the thread I just mentioned. 73, |
Make sure that you are in high power mode....briefly press the # button to toggle between high and low power. An indicator will be seen on the screen top left corner, indicating “L” if you are in low power mode.
jr |
Thank you for the info. I won't make the same mistake again. I do wish, however, that the Baofeng HTs would have been designed with an industry-standard antenna connector, rather than the non-standard one they do have. Unless one uses an after-market adapter, any other antenna than the stock one will not fit the antenna connector. The only exception to this is the Nagoya NA-771 VHF/UHF portable antenna, which has likely been designed for use with the Baofeng HTs (UV-5R, UV-5R+, et al).
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https://www.amazon.com/DHT-Electroni...028523&sr=8-11 Just because you haven't seen a connector before don't mean it's not a standard... New standards arise as technology advances, and some applications have standards that aren't common in other areas. |
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