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linuxgeek said:Guess we'll have to start working on a QSL card design. I'm wondering how much pink she will want to put on it...
fulie57 said:Wow, congrats on your upgrade - I'll be listening on my shortwave for you guys - of course I don't know your call - and maybe I'll get me one of those QSL cards!
Lady Christabel said:Check your PMs, dear heart.
The Heretic said:At one time I was going to get my HAM license but then I got into the pro side of it instead. I got my general license, but I never really had a job that required it, although I did work with 1KW transcievers for several years. Great big huge LP antennas. Mostly in the 30-70 mHz range.
You would probably never guess what the mode was or the medium we used. *evil grin* I'll give you a clue though; it was a WAN with a range of 1000 miles between nodes.
The internet is what most people are interested in now.
linuxgeek said:Sweet. From what I've seen, the ARES group here does their EOC HF via dipoles. Part of the work we did a couple of weekends ago was to replace a HF veritical with a 60 foot pushup tower and set it up to have rigging for 2 dipoles plus a 2m/70m vertical on the top. They strung one and tested it that day. The other HF equipment is on the 'war wagon'. I haven't had a chance to see inside it yet.
Radiowise, I have a FT-8900R in the vehicle with a Comet UHV-4. Being a new general class myself and having only worked on 2m & 70cm previously, I'm starting to wonder how much I will actually be able to do in the 8900R on 6m & 10m. It only does FM & AM; no SSB.
I'm starting to lust after the Icom 706 and equivilent other models. I've does a bit of poking at the tech specs, but not nearly enough to have a good idea which I want. At $800 + antennas, I've got a while to figure it out. I'm figuring the mobile I find with the automatic antenna tuner will have the suitespot in my heart.
I'm going to go and visit my mom some time in the next month so I can eyeball the rig my Dad had. May see if I can convince the mangement of the apt complex I'm at to allow me to string a loop in the trees behind the building I'm in. When we were signing the lease, they seemed interested in what amateur radio is, so I figure I have a chance. Already have a 2m/70cm vertical standing off from my balcony.
Ended up not getting done with my server upgrades until 2:30 last night. Spent a bit building the response to the CB question and then crashed. If I can get motivated, I want to hit to top of one the parking garages and see if I can hear WX4NHC on 10m during their test today. If not, I'll probalby just come home and check in with them via Echolink.
I have plenty of insight into what would need to be done . . . we’d need to get the internet back up, that’s what!linuxgeek said:Unfortunately, from what I've seen, single-mindedly entranced by the internet and having little if any foresight to what would need to be done if the internet disappeared for a while.

crysede said:I have plenty of insight into what would need to be done . . . we’d need to get the internet back up, that’s what!
PS. Sulphuric acid worked a treat on the ants; neighbours were slightly ticked about the big dead patch in the lawn, but I told them they should just be grateful that I didn’t set fire to anything (this time) and they couldn’t really argue with that![]()
It was out for a week here last fall - actually, everything was out for a week. Was fabu - really made me appreciate the largely negative impact electricity has on my quality of life. ‘Sucks that we don’t get many category 2 hurricanes in Atlantic Canadalinuxgeek said:Yes, getting it back up would be a priortiy these days if only considering the comerce which happens via the internet. But what if it was out for days for an area? Like I suspect it was for much of the N.E. US last August during the blackout. Batteries on Cellular phones only last so long as well as the fuel for the generators on some of the cell towers.
LOL, acid is fun to play with. Oh, did I say that out loud? Just have to remember to dilute when done.

crysede said:It was out for a week here last fall - actually, everything was out for a week. Was fabu - really made me appreciate the largely negative impact electricity has on my quality of life. ‘Sucks that we don’t get many category 2 hurricanes in Atlantic Canada
I know, I know, I can always go camping to escape from all these modern inconveniences - but there’s just something so intensely satisfying about a city plunged into total darkness for days on end . . . Makes a girl want to go smash weaving frames n’stuff
Sorry, I’ve said too much haven’t I. Didn’t mean to traumatize you or anything - my brother’s a geek, I know how much the grid means to you guys![]()
My interests generally tend more towards evading the flow of communication trafficlinuxgeek said:Part of my interest and activity in Amateur Radio is planning for and keeping communication traffic flowing in those times where the grid goes away--whether due to nature or human activity. Being raised on the edge of the Ocala National Forest also helps me feel comfortable if my part of the world goes dark. Hell, where my parents are, they still don't have cable TV service.

crysede said:My interests generally tend more towards evading the flow of communication traffic
But I actually like radio - way cooler than phones, you get to use neato jargon, no answering machine, what’s not to love?
I grew up in an area that still doesn’t have cable - the place used to look like a freakin’ space observatory, just bristling with those big-assed satellite dishes lol. Ah, the joys of simple country life: living at one with nature, just you and your RV sized dish standing proudly on a concrete pedestal in the front yard . . .