Message from @[VA] JediComms
Discord ID: 705702525554262026
Nice
Sweet, guess I need to get back to practicing the tests
Oohhh I love that.
Anyone have a book they can recommend that teaches me everything about HAM? Preferably an eBook.
Got a 40 min ride, gonna be in voice if anyone wants to talk
I'd chat with ya, but I'm working.
@Bogs_Bunny - here is a website to start: https://theprepared.com/survival-skills/guides/beginners-guide-amateur-ham-radio-preppers
Murs worth fucking with?
Stick to ham has the longest range if you change your mind you can always convert your radio to work on any band. It’s illegal but who’s gonna know
FRS is way more common anyway
You can also convert even the cheapest ham to that rather easily
Yeah, exactly
Im fairly familiar with comms on the 10 and 11 meter band. However for simplex base to movile am transmissions in my area of southeast ky it takes 500+ watts to talk more than 5 or 6 milea because of the terrain. Im mostly looking for something that can do this without so much power
The lower the frequency the better the simplex propagation, but by nature the more power you'll need... physics is a bitch sometimes.
But, with a few cheap baofeng radios, a Tupperware container and a decent solar panel you can make yourself a nice cheap repeater to drop on a high peak and rock out.
What did I just listen to?
(Not mine)
I don’t even know
@Phill - MURS is good to have loaded into your radio if it is VHF capable. Just think of it similarly to FRS in the UHF spectrum.
Anybody in here owns UV 3R plus? Can this radio charge from the uv5r deck?
Howdy
Anyone got common freqs for cenCal?
Just started getting into radios, got a Baofeng UV-5R
Been listening to fire dispatch and scanning through FRS, but not really picking up anything besides static, random beeps, and the very rare Morse code
You're probably gonna need a trunking scanner, they are most likely on the P25 system from the sounds of it
Oh I see
Honestly didn't know the UV-5R was analog only, whoops.
To be clear, I DO receive signal from EMS and Fire dispatch, it was only the FRS frequencies that seemed dead
FRS is not what you think it is... those are the cheap walkie talkies you get from Walmart
What you are probably getting is UHF rebroadcasts of fire and EMS, they do that around me, but the main channels are up in the 700 and 800Mhz range and digital.
Use that website and look at your area and you'll see what frequencies you need to tune into for everything and if they are encrypted or not, which most likely they are out there.
Sure thing, I'll take a look, thanks
And yeah, I realise that FRS was the walkie-talkie freqs. I'll look through GMRS next time I can.
I guess I was just hoping to just catch non-professional chatter on those freqs
GMRS is the same thing, you're not gonna find any government agencies using those channels.
And any of the "side channels" formally known as talk channels are typically encrypted for the very fact that they don't want us plebs hearing their chatter.
Right, I'm not trying to find government channels on FRS or GMRS just local people who also happen to have radios
Lol gotcha, alright thanks
I'll keep tinkering with it.
My my programming cable arrives, I'll try to program into my local repeaters.
By chance, if I set my freq to listen to the repeater offset, I should be able to RX traffic through it, right?
Ah, got ya... yeah, if you're just listening until you get a callsign then yeah if programmed right you'll be able to listen.
You're not gonna catch much of FRS or GMRS except families on vacation and possibly some small businesses. But you're gonna get less than a mile of range out if them because they are super low power.
That's the plan.
I figured if I happened to catch someone on FRS GMRS, I would attempt to talk to em.
I wont attempt to TX on 2m till I understand what I'm doing a bit better
Ypu mean until you get your license and have a callsign.... don't make the fudds mad and make it harder for the rest of us. They just finally made remote testing possible.
It's a super easy course, you'll learn alot, and then you can do whatever you want in the radio and even talk around the world.
Sure thing, I'll do that
Finally got this base station mobile up and running this evening. Using it right now to listen to a Patriot leaning Net on a local Ham repeater, so far so good. That makes two mobiles I have set up now.....one to remain stationary at home and one in a Pelican that I can take anywhere and be on the air in minutes. Next will be one actually installed in my truck for true mobile use.