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re: Does anyone still use ham radios?

Posted on 8/24/14 at 11:52 am to
Posted by shutterspeed
MS Gulf Coast
Member since May 2007
65113 posts
Posted on 8/24/14 at 11:52 am to
What do most people seem to use it for?

What kinds of conversations are typical?

How many people tend to participate in conversations at once?
Posted by LongueCarabine
Pointe Aux Pins, LA
Member since Jan 2011
8205 posts
Posted on 8/24/14 at 12:04 pm to
quote:

What do most people seem to use it for?

What kinds of conversations are typical?

How many people tend to participate in conversations at once?


My family and I use it to keep in touch when traveling together. (Among other things)

Conversations are just normal stuff, you can't use HAM for commerce.

You can have pretty much as many as you want, as long as you don't step all over each other.

LC
This post was edited on 8/24/14 at 12:05 pm
Posted by ChuckM
Lafayette
Member since Dec 2006
1657 posts
Posted on 8/24/14 at 12:10 pm to
quote:

shutterspeed


There are all kinds of uses, the most obvious is just for fun. All aspects somehow involve a radio. There are different radios that perform different functions, so there are different uses.

Examples would be just talking with each other, like a chat room. Closely resembles what most people think of when they think of CB radio. As many people as you want all meet on a certain frequency and talk about just about anything. Radio, sports, news, politics, whatever. Generally speaking you'd only gather with a group of people that you share common interests with, so naturally you'd have something to talk about. I routinely meet with a bunch guys at night that stretch from Texas to North Carolina. This probably the most common "use".

There are the guys like anyone who's listened to CB on Channel 6 knows, that like to talk to stations as far away as possible. This can be other states or other countries, just depends on the conditions, band, time of day, energy from the sun, etc. Generally this is followed up by an award (nothing more than a certificate to say you did it). To get the award you have to send a post card proving in writing that you've talked to the other station. These are the QSL cards you see on the wall. Gather up enough of them, send them into someone who certifies them, and you get the award.

Although this sounds easy, turn on the radio, talk to someone get the card and turn it in, you have to put this whole thing into perspective and what makes this part challenging. There are countries that stand in the way of completing all 340 recognized countries, that are pretty freaking isolated. Either geographically like somewhere in the middle of the African desert or Antarctica, or somewhere where politics rule and there are no hams, like North Korea. So the challenge is to get all of the countries, but you have to wait for them to be active.

Then there are the emergency guys, who rush into disasters. Its more than just turning on a radio and talking. Bottom line is, such as in Katrina where the Doctor at Tulane set up his car as a station on the parking garage, you have to be smart enough to adapt and make do. The true sense of the hobby isn't the guy who passed the test and talks on a walkie talkie. Its the guy smart enough to take the battery out of a car, use some stereo speaker wire and hook up the Xray machine to transmit information into and out of New Orleans in the event of a loss of all facilities.

So there's talkers, experimenters (Maker Faire), Contesters, distance talkers, digital people, morse code people, satellite people, etc.
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