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GFED 03-23-2012 08:56 PM

Entry Level HAM Radio Recommendations?
 
Can anyone recommend a good entry level HAM radio for emergency situations and maybe a little playing around with but nothing too fancy.


Thanks

2MuchMark 03-23-2012 09:32 PM

Curious about this too.

Godsmack 03-24-2012 12:27 AM

http://yaesu.com/

rowan 03-24-2012 12:35 AM

This question is a bit like asking what software to use for starting a TGP. Cue Shemp... :thumbsup

iwantchixx 03-24-2012 12:38 AM

http://yaesu.com/indexVS.cfm?cmd=Dis...5&isArchived=0


holy fuck,

haha friggin cool

Godsmack 03-24-2012 01:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by iwantchixx (Post 18841934)

Yes its a spaceship.. i love that machine, would buy it just for all the buttons :)
Yaesu makes awesome radios.

the Shemp 03-24-2012 01:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rowan (Post 18841933)
This question is a bit like asking what software to use for starting a TGP. Cue Shemp... :thumbsup

thanks for the mention, bro
i dont want people to forget about me ...:thumbsup

MrGusMuller 03-24-2012 05:58 AM

Kenwood!
12 yrs ago I wanted to be a radio amateur (CT) ...
Always wanted a Kenwood

http://www.kenwoodusa.com/Images/Store/579.gif

BradBreakfast 03-24-2012 08:37 AM

I would recommend a 2 meter Yaesu or a dual band 2m/440 radio if you can afford it of at least 5 watts. Buy a spare battery and replace the stock antenna with a higher gain omni directional and I'd also have a mobile antenna ready as well.

I used to talk to other states with a handheld with very low wattage and a high gain mobile antenna on top of Mt. San Jacinto in California.

I've been registered since I've been 16 and I'm 27 now. A few times people have gotten smart and asked if I went to college for RF engineering when I had to correct them about something RF related... they always shut up when I can pull up my "Technician" license in the FCC database. :1orglaugh

One thing HAM knowledge has really helped me better understand is wireless networking. You should totally get your license. A Technician license isn't hard to obtain.

Sunny Day 03-24-2012 01:28 PM

73 Ham Magazine
 
http://www.flickriver.com/photos/badwsky/3309915402/

73 was the magazine for Hams

My GfF's dad was editor & HAM legend. Girl in the boots is my GF's sister.

JFK 03-24-2012 01:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sunny Day (Post 18842615)
http://www.flickriver.com/photos/badwsky/3309915402/

73 was the magazine for Hams

My GfF's dad was editor & HAM legend. Girl in the boots is my GF's sister.

The mag was a a Lousy Dollar in 1971:1orglaugh:thumbsup

GFED 03-24-2012 11:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BradBreakfast (Post 18842202)
I would recommend a 2 meter Yaesu or a dual band 2m/440 radio if you can afford it of at least 5 watts. Buy a spare battery and replace the stock antenna with a higher gain omni directional and I'd also have a mobile antenna ready as well.

I used to talk to other states with a handheld with very low wattage and a high gain mobile antenna on top of Mt. San Jacinto in California.

I've been registered since I've been 16 and I'm 27 now. A few times people have gotten smart and asked if I went to college for RF engineering when I had to correct them about something RF related... they always shut up when I can pull up my "Technician" license in the FCC database. :1orglaugh

One thing HAM knowledge has really helped me better understand is wireless networking. You should totally get your license. A Technician license isn't hard to obtain.

thanks for the info... yea only thing i know about HAM is that some BBS's in the 80's were run off them instead of a computer and modem like I had.

rowan 03-25-2012 07:34 AM

Have you looked at UHF CB? For emergency use, the general public is probably more likely to have that type of radio.

2MuchMark 03-25-2012 08:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Godsmack (Post 18841943)
Yes its a spaceship.. i love that machine, would buy it just for all the buttons :)
Yaesu makes awesome radios.

Same here - that is a cool looking machine. Could not find a price on it though.

Had a CB like this one when I was a kid:
http://www.cbmuseum.nl/images/realistic_trc46.jpg

Lots of fun.

Coyote 03-25-2012 08:49 AM

I had recieved an ad from a ham in our club which had the wouxun uv3d (pronounced 'ocean') for $57, including shipping. I can't seem to find it at the moment, so If you're interested drop me an email, coyote - linuxdude - com, and I'll have him re-send it to me.

@BadBreakfast: You participating in this year's field day?

Jey p 03-25-2012 09:48 AM

I used to be a ham radio operator since I was 14yo and then I kind of had to quit that hobby when I started working in the adult industry hehee.
Actually I remember I was around 19yo and I used to connect to American BBS stations on 10meters to download pictures of naked ladies. Such a pervert! LOL
I have a lot of experience on this field, and I also worked for Motorola repairing they radio devices ( I have an electronics engineering background )
If you want something simple and easy to use I would suggest the famous "Citizen Band" of 14Megs. Those ones are super cheap and you can have some nice long distance communications too.
Email me at [email protected] or call me on skype "idsonline" and I would be more than happy to help you out!

AdultKing 03-25-2012 04:33 PM

A good basic HF radio is the IC-718 by Icom. For 2m/70cm I have the
Yaesu FT-7900R in the car and at home, a good handheld 2m/70cm radio is the Yaesu FT-60R which is a great little radio however I'd suggest attaching a third party high gain antenna for optimum use.

Remember that the most important part (for HF especially) is the antenna. If you don't get your antenna right then you wont have much luck with the radio.

fris 03-25-2012 04:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Godsmack (Post 18841926)

great company i sitll have my modified ft-50

CIVMatt 03-26-2012 07:02 AM

Yaseu, kenwood, icom etc... what are you looking to do HF or just local 144 communication repeaters?

fris 03-26-2012 08:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CIVMatt (Post 18844956)
Yaseu, kenwood, icom etc... what are you looking to do HF or just local 144 communication repeaters?

If i was buying i would get

Yaesu VX-8DR

http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/ht/0008.html

Dont know how easy it is to modify, My ft-50r i modified so i can speak on freqs, like security channels at hotels, drive thrus, etc.

Why 03-26-2012 09:03 AM

i have a Yaesu FT-270R, does everything i need. I use it for flying... and other stuff.

Jey p 03-26-2012 10:34 AM

can't believe so many people share this hobby here !!! I am very surprised!

CIVMatt 03-26-2012 11:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fris (Post 18845032)
If i was buying i would get

Yaesu VX-8DR

http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/ht/0008.html

Dont know how easy it is to modify, My ft-50r i modified so i can speak on freqs, like security channels at hotels, drive thrus, etc.

that's a nice radio, I'll have to search around and see if I can find a sheet of mods for it

Joe Obenberger 03-26-2012 11:50 AM

Been a SWL my whole life - as a kid, in the late fifties and early sixties, I can remember sitting in the attic with my dad listening to HCJV, "The Voce of the Andes" with the warm glow of the tubes and dial from his WWII-era National receiver - that probably weighed 80 pounds.

Next to my computer, here at home, I've got a Japan Radio Corporation NRD-5350 and sometimes I use it with a program to decode CW and RTTY. Less often, I use a Grundig Satellit 3400 that I bought in Germany when the Army stationed me there - the Grundig repair people in Chicago say that it's the best DX radio ever built. I've got a modern Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium, but I think it's more consumer grade and a less serious radio.

I have a fancy loop antenna from MRJ but most of the time, I just use a longwire. One of these days, I'll get around to stringing up one of those multi-band dipoles over the back yard, but the problem would the the length of the coax to bring it inside, on the other side of the house.

With that Satellit 3400, I was able to track that nonstop, round the world flight in the tiny plane during the nineties, the two pilot experimental thing which was using 25 watts HF. Tracked them from Bolivia to landing in California when they switched to Aircraft Band and I lost them.

A long time ago, a client who couldn't pay a bill gave me one of those tiny Alnico triple-conversion all-band micro-minuaturized DX2 radios, but it's not very serious, and its only real purpose is portability - it does fit in a pocket.

Finally, got the digital version of the Sony ICF-SW7600F that I take along sometimes on trips to speak at webmaster shows, especially in Europe, but mainly use as a clock radio.

Tom_PM 03-26-2012 11:55 AM

Watch your papers for a local Ham Fest and go there and check for deals. Usually on a Saturday at wherever your local flea market setup place is.

chipmunk 03-26-2012 05:17 PM

Ranger (RCI 2970)-
Inexpensive and rock solid.
http://www.rangerusa.com/photos/rci2950dx_page.jpg

-=Chipmunk=-

d-null 04-16-2012 04:22 PM

strange how when people nowadays talk about ham radio, they are more often talking vhf or uhf than they are talking hf :upsidedow

Rochard 04-16-2012 04:26 PM

Years ago back when the phone company charged for long distance calls, my parents got fed up. My step father had his own business and my mother worked from home and there was a lot phone calls between the two. At some point they bought ham radios, base stations, and we used them just like a CB. I think we had a call sign, but we never used it. Eventually my father got a portable unit and we could pretty much communicate anywhere we were.

Not impressive today of course, but back in the 1970s when I was a kid that was so fucking cool.

Rochard 04-16-2012 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PR_Tom (Post 18845535)
Watch your papers for a local Ham Fest and go there and check for deals. Usually on a Saturday at wherever your local flea market setup place is.

We had one of these at the local high school. I showed up for a football game and the parking lot was packed. Turns out they were having a ham radio swap meet.


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