new hams guide
HOW TO FIT IN
May I suggest, you join a
club, and ATTEND
the Meetings, BE part of the group,
you may need to attend several meetings before you are accepted as one of the
gang.
It doesn't mater which club, pick a club , probably the best is your hometown
club??
Try to find a club that isn't focused on one aspect , like encomm or DX chasing,
find
a club that does it all !!
May I suggest, you join the
ARRL, then you'll get QST Magazine in the mail, it contains
lots of good articles & info about our hobby, If not the ARRL,
CQ magazine
is good to.
There is a big world of
interesting
things you can
do, Two Meter FM is just one little chunk.
If 2 meter FM is all you
know about, you may never fit-in.!!
Understanding how it was in the olden' days,
Lots of old time hams started as Shortwave Listeners SWL's, when
the ham bug bit
they got a 5WPM Novice License, the Novice was
CW only on a few
small segments of 80-40&15 meters.
The Novice
was a NON-renewable license, 1 year license. You had to
get moving to become a General
or Technician within
one year, NO other options. for a general
class license , you had one year to get your CW
speed to 13 WPM.
After a trip downtown to the FCC field office, and a little luck, you had a General
License.
Many guys wanted more frequencies and maybe some prestige, went on to get an
Advanced,
or the 20 WPM Extra.
That code test was 5 minutes long, you needed to copy ONE minutes worth 100%
perfect, no
mult-guess or fill in the blanks
That's just the way it was. HF was where it began.
In the 1970's came 2 meter
repeaters, and
lots of hams got a 2m rig to talk with there friends,
but HF was still the place to be,
with DX, traffic nets,
Contests, a Rag
Chew's, CW, RTTY and more
and to make new friends in far off place.
May I suggest, you buy some kind of Short Wave
Radio, tune around, find out about WWV,
shortwave broadcasters, etc. Do a little SWLing. There's a great big spectrum just full of
strange signals.
what to look
for in a SW radio .. don't spend a fortune doing this.
How to get a contact, FIRST CONTACTS
well on 2 meters , it seems the norm is to "just give your call", I Personally
think this is crazy, for whatever reason, CQ ing isn't totally
accepted on two meters..
BUT if you put out a quick
CQ I think it's OK or "this is KE7ABC looking for a
contact".
or "CQ this is KE7ABC is anyone around for a QSO" ... etc.. You can do it a
million ways.
2 meters is a
""clicky"" world.
There could be 50 people listening, and no one will
answer, that's just the way it is. Now here's a thought: (?) if you attend club
meetings, and get
to know the guys, more of them might answer your calls. ie:
talk with
their friends (see above)
What to say,
when someone answers you, you might want to have something to talk
about !!! ??
I hear so many new
guys get a reply, and then have absolutely nothing to say.
Don't make the old timer pry the information from your lips !
The only way
two people can have an intelligent conversation
is to exchange
information about yourself, start with your NAME then move
on to things like ??? your past,
your job, your family, your radio, your life, your location, your
life, your
driving conditions,
YOU've got to tell me something about yourself otherwise I have NOTHING to respond to.
Most HAMS are talkers, so talk about yourself, find common ground
to become friends..
if you were a CBer: FYI
A little history, ,
Most HAMs that have been Hams for more than a few years,
DISLIKE CB radio, Freebanders, ETC. Why? Because
These groups are basically made up of unregulated goofs and law breakers.
Hopefully you became a ham to get away from the children's band stuff ? SO
If your background is CB , the best thing to do is forget everything you did,
heard or thought.
burn your cb radios, don't admit you had a modified Yaesu 101 with a
slider & afterburner,
Pushing 5 KW.............after all , every bit of that was totally
illegal
some points to think about,
1. Ham's are mostly law abiding citizens. They respect the rules of Ham
Radio.
2. Ham's are not interested in your lawless CB days.
3. Ham's CRINGE at CB slang.
4. Ham's CRINGE if you talk like that fat cop in the movie "Smoky and the Bandit"
SO
First, Speak English, clear English. Don't mumble. Be proud of your Call Letters,
they are unique and you earned
them.
They are yours, and yours alone, totally unique, the only one like it in the world.
YOU DIDN'T get them in a Cracker Jack box, or make them
up one evening chat'en with your Buddies down on 19.
You got them from the FCC.
Hams have their own lingo, don't use CB slang.. here's some tips
if you use any of the language in red, you will give yourself away.
You have a NAME or maybe a Handle, not a Personal ,
this has to be the worst example of CB,
everytime a seasoned ham hears this he knows exactly where you escaped from !
Ham's don't ask if your "EARS" are on , we have RECEIVERs or a rig.
Don't talk like that southern sheriff , with an IQ of 10.
and speaking of ten,,
10 signals
aren't used much in Ham radio. saying 10-4 gud buddy , isn't good
or "what's your 20 buddy" also NOT GOOD
The term 73 is used at the end of a QSO,
it's kind of a "good bye for now" or "best regards"
it's pronounced, SEVEN THREE, or maybe SEVENTY
THREE,
BUT NOT Seventy THIRDS ...
its a three, not a 1/3rd
your signal is MAKING A GOOD TRIP,, ?? it would be better to say, you have a good signal. etc
ham rigs Don't PUSH 10 watts, ... I am running 10 watts
the easiest thing to do is Speak ENGLISH. Be intelligent ! Your a HAM
now.
Everyone starts at the bottom of the ladder. I'm sure back when I was a 15 year old
novice, the Old Timers were positive the "end of Ham radio" was just around the corner.?.
But the new guy learned from the OT'ers, and life is good.
If you are a Technician, and desperate for a contact, you might want to
UPGRADE your
license and try HF, that's where "the action is" .
The above ideas and thoughts are those of KØIP, and only KØIP. This may
not be what some
PARC members think ?