Stan Cooper
Pattern Altitude
http://www.arrl.org/ (American Radio Relay League) is a good place to start.
Stan’s advice on arrl site is good. There’s information there on licensing, operating modes and plenty of posts regarding activities going on in the community. It has been very useful for me. Finding a local amateur radio club near by and going to a meeting would be helpful as well. I have a brother that is my goto guy for lots of the more mundane operational questions.Uh oh... after reading through this thread I feel a new hobby coming on…
What is a good website/forum/Facebook page/book that I could start reading through to start getting a feel for current state of the art and how to get started in ham?
I honestly thought ham was dead before reading this thread. Silly me.
Yeah, it's still alive, and some aspects are growing.Uh oh... after reading through this thread I feel a new hobby coming on…
What is a good website/forum/Facebook page/book that I could start reading through to start getting a feel for current state of the art and how to get started in ham?
I honestly thought ham was dead before reading this thread. Silly me.
Three-round burst mode? Oh, wait... wrong category of equipment.My first call sign was WN3SBS. I figured if I had a keyer that had a mode that sent three dots at a time it'd be perfect.
I tried that the other night, I guess I wasn't looking in the right place or didn't know how to work the tuning. I'll play with it again either tonight or tomorrow.What do you want to listen to? There are shortwave stations broadcasting all over the world. Google can be your friend... lots of lists of stations and frequencies.
Thanks.
Thanks.
That first link was to a site that I was using when I was playing around with this. I couldn't get anything tuned in - maybe the antenna is too limited, maybe I was doing something wrong. I'll see how it goes tonight.
OK - firing it up in a couple minutes...I have a cat on my lap.Let us know how it works out. Keep in mind that propagation as a function of frequency changes depending on a number of factors, including time of day, sunspot numbers, etc. These days I'd try lower frequencies, rather than higher ones. Low sunspot numbers, so the higher frequency HF bands are pretty dead.
This seems about right. I've had this radio for a long time. When I first got it, I was able to pick up stations - again, not knowing what I was doing, so I was just putting in frequencies to see what I'd get. Since then, with local construction and everything going wireless, there's probably a lot more interference both physically and in whatever RF spectrum I'm trying to use. The whip antenna might not be cutting it any more. But at least I was able to, faintly, pick up enough of something that sounded other than static. The radio takes a bunch of C batteries, so I have it plugged into a power supply right now and that makes it a little less than portable. If I were to take it out on my deck where I have a place to string an external antenna, what kind of wire would I need? I'll have to look at the radio to see what connections it provides. I could hang the antenna on the covered deck along that roofline and then run it indoors through a window.9395 kHz is correct. But yeah, with a little whip antenna and especially indoors you're not going to get much more than static. Try an outdoor wire antenna -- length is not critical, "as long as you can make it" is good.
I don't know about your house, but mine is a swamp of RFI. It seems every single electrical device in the house has a very, very noisy switching power supply. My ham rigs and even my aviation handheld are utterly useless unless I walk out into the yard. The last time I tried using an HF ham receiver with my attic dipole, the noise floor was about S9 +20. In 2004 when we moved in, it was maybe S2 or S3.
Ha. I have a 40m dipole up in the attic, with feedline run down to the basement. There was an article in QST about it, in fact (Surviving in Suburbia). It worked great for a couple of years -- I worked Russia QRP, over the pole with it. Then the computer power supplies, TV power supplies, touch lamps, and city-installed stoplight controllers a block away started wiping out HF more and more of the time. For a while my "hobby" shifted from ham radio to RFI chasing. Then we got a steel roof... so much for the attic dipole. I loaded up a flagpole with a remote tuner, which only lived a few months at a time. I considered a ground mounted vertical or a wire loop run through the trees, but in the end it just became too much work and I gave up. Haven't been active in years now.I worked a lot of DX with a 20 meter Dipole strung from one end of the attic to another. My wife drew the line at the feed line running down the stairs. I had to run it through the spare bedroom closet instead.
I had an R7 for a while. Pretty nice for tight spaces. I finally pitched it when I sold that house as I hadn't used the thing in years.
I don't know about your house, but mine is a swamp of RFI. It seems every single electrical device in the house has a very, very noisy switching power supply. My ham rigs and even my aviation handheld are utterly useless unless I walk out into the yard. The last time I tried using an HF ham receiver with my attic dipole, the noise floor was about S9 +20. In 2004 when we moved in, it was maybe S2 or S3.
It's not just the shack. Everything in the house pollutes the AC wiring, which radiates everywhere. One source of S9+40 noise I was able to track out of the house and across the yard where the buried AC feed line ran. The power company eventually found a city traffic light controller a few blocks away that was defective and putting a ton of noise on the AC ground. Or neutral, whatever.If you're using CFL lights in the house, those things are horribly noisy. If I get back on the air someday, I might use candles for shack illumination.
Some are really quiet, and others are so noisy that you expect it to significantly affect their efficiency.but are mostly switched over to LEDs now. I haven't even checked to see how noisy they are, I'm not sure I want to know.
Thanks. Seems like the simple thing is to get a length of 16ga or so and clip it directly to the end of the existing antenna, or figure out some sort of plug that will fit into the radio external antenna port. I might have 20'-30' of that in the garage somewhere.There are lots of places you can look to get info on how to make up a simple antenna. Here's one:
http://hamuniverse.com/shortwaveantenna.html
Tip or sleeve? Both? Either?There's an on-line manual for this radio here:
https://www.manualslib.com/manual/63359/Grundig-400-Pe.html?page=29#manual
and according to this manual, the external antenna plug is a 3.5 millimeter or 1/8 mono plug, like you'd find on a pair of earbuds, for example.
Here's a PDF version of the manual:There's an on-line manual for this radio here:
https://www.manualslib.com/manual/63359/Grundig-400-Pe.html?page=29#manual
and according to this manual, the external antenna plug is a 3.5 millimeter or 1/8 mono plug, like you'd find on a pair of earbuds, for example.
CFL was a passing fad. As they die I replace them with LED bulbs now. Still, I've not noticed a whole lot of interference from them. Lots of other horrendous RF sources around. Used to be that people were more careful so as not to interfere with TV reception, but now that TV is all digital and usually not OTA, people are getting a bit more lax.If you're using CFL lights in the house, those things are horribly noisy. If I get back on the air someday, I might use candles for shack illumination.
Shortwave stations generally use highly directional antennas that are intended to "beam" their signal to the parts of the world they're intending to serve. US shortwave stations are usually licensed to transmit to places other than the continental US.What am I looking at?
I see frequencies like:
>>
9395 RMI Oldies with Bob Biermann English 01:00 24:00 TTTTTTT Okeechobee6100 KW
<<
So I put in 9395 kHz and get static. But if I try hard enough, I *think* I can hear something in the background. There's a SSB on/off switch, I have it off.
What freqs are the S/W freqs? Some of the frequencies in that list look like AM stations.
I saw that chart the other night. I wasn't specifically looking for that station, it just happened to be on in the US and in English, so I figured I'd give it a shot. I'm in KC, so N/W from Miami. I didn't know the antennae were directional, now I have something more to look for.Shortwave stations generally use highly directional antennas that are intended to "beam" their signal to the parts of the world they're intending to serve. US shortwave stations are usually licensed to transmit to places other than the continental US.
Here's the lineup of antennas for WRMI, along with parts of the world they are intending to serve: http://www.wrmi.net/index.php/about-wrmi/technical-facilities/ All of them are directional, and all but 2 or 3 point to regions that are well outside the US. The program schedule shows 9395 operating with an antenna aimed 355-degrees (practically due north) from Miami/Okeechoee, if you are pretty much due north, it may be skipping over you. If you're in the west or midwest, you're probably outside the main beam of the antenna. Here's the program schedule - antenna orientation is given in Az (azimuth). https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet...VpCzjmPAw_SB1r3YOdzQc/edit?pref=2&pli=1#gid=0
Some are government, non-profit, and religious - those are generally not commercial. Some, like WRMI and WBCQ are commercial in the sense that they sell block time to people who want to put a message on the air. You can buy time on those stations & put your own program on.I saw that chart the other night. I wasn't specifically looking for that station, it just happened to be on in the US and in English, so I figured I'd give it a shot. I'm in KC, so N/W from Miami. I didn't know the antennae were directional, now I have something more to look for.
I'll get the radio back up in a couple minutes.
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Q: Are SW radio stations usually commercial? I guess I hadn't really thought about it before. They intend to transmit to distant locations, so I can understand news and other national broadcasts, like VOA, that would be used to reach locations and spread a particular flavor of news. But something like a Miami based station? I guess they would have been able to broadcast into Cuba and get around Castro news censorship. But I wouldn't think that a commercial for a local carwash would mean much to someone a thousand miles away.
WBCQ and it's owner have an interesting history.