which amateur radio enthusiasts may know better as the 33 cm band. You can transmit on 915 MHz without a license (in the US), taking advantage of the Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM ...
He has a standard talk about amateur radio that involves tales gleaned from his many decades as a licence holder, and features QSL cards from rare DX contacts to show how radio amateurs talk all ...
For example the electronic music pioneer [Bob Moog, K2AMH], which most of you will recognise as an amateur radio callsign. Every licenced radio amateur is issued one by their country’s radio ...
Truckers have long been associated with Citizens Band (CB) radio. A section of the 11-meter amateur radio band was set aside by the FCC in 1958 as a poor man’s business radio band, and by the ...
A case in point is [Bryan Cockfield]’s recent article on a stealth antenna designed to skirt restrictions placed upon an amateur radio operator by the homeowners’ association (HOA) governing ...
The sting in its tail is the proposed relegation of amateur radio to secondary status of the widely used two-meter band (144 MHz) to permit its usage by aircraft. The machinations of global ...
Anyone who wants to operate on the bands reserved for the amateur radio service has to be licensed by the Federal Communication Commission. Unlicensed individuals are free – and encouraged ...
The FCC is circulating a proposal for new rules pertaining to amateur radio in the United States ... It appears the relaxed rules would apply only to some bands, notably some VHF and UHF bands ...
Build it yourself or do without, and when it broke down or you wanted to change bands or add features, that was all on you too. Like everything else, amateur radio has changed dramatically over ...
“Amateur radio has honestly changed my life, I’ve friends all over the world now.” Brian Webb has cerebral palsy and uses a ...
It’s something [Robert V. Bolton, KJ7NZL] has sounded off about in an open letter to the amateur radio community entitled “Ham Radio Needs To Embrace The Hacker Community Now More Than Ever“.
Both digital and print copies are available. “When all else fails”—in 2003, the Amateur Radio Relay League used this as the motto for Field Day, the annual demonstration of its capabilities to the ...