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«-- Odds 'n Sods: | Main | Letter Re: Feedback on FoodSaver Vacuum Packing Systems --» Letter Re: Advice on Two-Way Radio CommunicationsJim, CB is potentially a good choice for folks that are not licensed amateur operators
if they use directional antennae and phase the antenna for horizontal
polarization instead
of the
normal vertical antenna. I am thinking base to base operations here.
Using antenna
with horizontal polarization can attenuate signals transmitted by a vertical
antenna by 20 dB.
Every 3dB of attenuation cuts the signal by 1/2 so that would be 1/64th or
slightly less signal power! [JWR
Adds: The means very low probability of intercept by anyone outside
of your private family or survival group "horizontal antenna network"! That suggestion just earned
you a Blinding Flash of the Obvious (BFO)
award. Yes, I know BFO means something different to hams (Beat Frequency Oscillator),
but here at SurvivalBlog it
means that I like your idea so much that I'm sending you a free book to thank
you for it!] A ham license [in the US] is now so easy to get that people should just get the ham license and that will open up more bands and allow the right equipment for the situation. See www.ARRL.com for testing locations and times. The first level ham license is the Technician class. To quote a recent ARRL
article: "Some Technician licensees who gained new privileges on February 23,
2008 remain unaware or
uninformed
as to what they may and may not do on the HF bands", says ARRL
Regulatory Information Specialist Dan Henderson, N1ND. In addition to all
Amateur Radio operating privileges above 50 MHz, Technicians who never passed
a Morse code test now have CW privileges
on certain segments of 80, 40, and 15 meters plus new CW, RTTY,
data and SSB privileges
on certain segments of 10 meters. And that's it. "Know your privileges," Henderson
advises all Amateur Radio licenses. He says some Technicians apparently believe
their new HF phone
privileges go far beyond what they really have. "Technicians
have no phone privileges on any HF band other than 10 meters, period!" Henderson
emphasizes. "That's the bottom line. If you want to operate phone on
the other HF bands, you'll have to upgrade to General or Amateur Extra class." [The
good news is that there is now] no
code test for any class of license now! However, code can get the message
through poor band conditions when voice is impossible. See QRZ.com for practice tests and a search engine to locate a ham radio operator in your zip code to contact for more information. 73s, - The Other Mr. Delta |
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