louie535 Posted Friday at 04:55 AM Report Posted Friday at 04:55 AM Amateur radio, or ham radio, remains a critical tool for communication, especially in emergencies. When disasters disrupt internet and phone networks, ham operators provide a reliable lifeline, coordinating relief and sharing real-time updates using simple, battery-powered equipment. Beyond emergencies, amateur radio connects people globally, fosters innovation, and serves as a training ground for future engineers and emergency responders. Its independence from centralized systems makes it resilient against cyber threats and infrastructure failures. In a digital age, amateur radio proves that simple, reliable communication remains vital for connection, safety, and innovation. SteveShannon, BoxCar, WRUU653 and 7 others 10 Quote
nokones Posted Friday at 01:06 PM Report Posted Friday at 01:06 PM This is not the appropriate forum for the above posting. This is a GMRS forum and you should be posting this on a Amateur Radio Forum or Radio Reference. Raybestos, WRUE951, gortex2 and 3 others 3 1 2 Quote
WRUU653 Posted Friday at 02:25 PM Report Posted Friday at 02:25 PM 1 hour ago, nokones said: This is not the appropriate forum for the above posting. This is a GMRS forum and you should be posting this on an Amateur Radio Forum or Radio Reference. Actually this forum has an amateur radio category and since it does amateur radio posting is obviously welcome here by the owner. You might make the case this should be posted there but since it was posted under the category of general discussion it could be said it’s appropriate here as well. Come on, you should know this by now. RIPPER238, SteveShannon, WRUE951 and 2 others 4 1 Quote
WRXB215 Posted Friday at 02:32 PM Report Posted Friday at 02:32 PM 6 minutes ago, WRUU653 said: Come on, you should know this by now. Not all "sad hams" are actually hams. WRUU653, marcspaz, Willie and 2 others 2 1 2 Quote
OffRoaderX Posted Friday at 03:21 PM Report Posted Friday at 03:21 PM 10 hours ago, louie535 said: Amateur radio, or ham radio, remains a critical tool for communication, especially in emergencies. When disasters disrupt internet and phone networks, ham operators provide a reliable lifeline, coordinating relief and sharing real-time updates using simple, battery-powered equipment. Beyond emergencies, amateur radio connects people globally, fosters innovation, and serves as a training ground for future engineers and emergency responders. Its independence from centralized systems makes it resilient against cyber threats and infrastructure failures. In a digital age, amateur radio proves that simple, reliable communication remains vital for connection, safety, and innovation. Thats dumb.. Just use your cellphone! SteveShannon, marcspaz, GreggInFL and 1 other 1 3 Quote
marcspaz Posted Friday at 03:31 PM Report Posted Friday at 03:31 PM 7 minutes ago, OffRoaderX said: Thats dumb.. Just use your cellphone! I made a special EmComm rig with two Campbell's soup cans from the '70s and 5,000 feet of Spider Wire. Willie, Whiskey363, WRUU653 and 3 others 3 3 Quote
RayDiddio Posted Friday at 04:18 PM Report Posted Friday at 04:18 PM 47 minutes ago, marcspaz said: I made a special EmComm rig with two Campbell's soup cans from the '70s and 5,000 feet of Spider Wire. Ah... the good kind of comms! SteveShannon 1 Quote
WRUE951 Posted Friday at 04:18 PM Report Posted Friday at 04:18 PM 56 minutes ago, OffRoaderX said: Thats dumb.. Just use your cellphone! or your Elon Musk dish...... Quote
WRXB215 Posted Friday at 04:23 PM Report Posted Friday at 04:23 PM 51 minutes ago, marcspaz said: 5,000 feet of Spider Wire Your DX rig was far superior to mine. RayDiddio, marcspaz and SteveShannon 3 Quote
WRUU653 Posted Friday at 05:44 PM Report Posted Friday at 05:44 PM 2 hours ago, marcspaz said: I made a special EmComm rig with two Campbell's soup cans from the '70s and 5,000 feet of Spider Wire. Mmm mmm good SteveShannon, Raybestos, Willie and 2 others 3 2 Quote
BoxCar Posted Friday at 07:41 PM Report Posted Friday at 07:41 PM 4 hours ago, marcspaz said: I made a special EmComm rig with two Campbell's soup cans from the '70s and 5,000 feet of Spider Wire. Do birds roosting on the spider wire cause interference or just loss? RayDiddio, marcspaz and WRUU653 3 Quote
WRYZ926 Posted Friday at 07:47 PM Report Posted Friday at 07:47 PM 4 minutes ago, BoxCar said: Do birds roosting on the spider wire cause interference or just loss? I bet that will depend on if they are wet or dry on how much attenuation they cause. SteveShannon, RayDiddio, marcspaz and 1 other 4 Quote
WRXL702 Posted Friday at 09:11 PM Report Posted Friday at 09:11 PM ......And GMRS Station Operators & Repeater Owners Do The Same For Emergency Communications Just As Well - If Not Better. Quote
marcspaz Posted Friday at 09:15 PM Report Posted Friday at 09:15 PM 1 hour ago, BoxCar said: Do birds roosting on the spider wire cause interference or just loss? Depends on if they are sitting still or shuffling around. WSEZ 1 Quote
WRXL702 Posted Friday at 09:35 PM Report Posted Friday at 09:35 PM Meaning The Birds Or GMRS Operators - LOL...... marcspaz and WSEZ 2 Quote
WRYZ926 Posted Friday at 11:31 PM Report Posted Friday at 11:31 PM I'm sure that birds dancing around on the wire will change the SWR. Now if a person dances on the wire you will probably need new wire. marcspaz and WSEZ 2 Quote
Willie Posted yesterday at 04:48 AM Report Posted yesterday at 04:48 AM Man.... this thread has gone to the birds. Literally. WRYZ926, marcspaz and WSEZ 3 Quote
WRYZ926 Posted 13 hours ago Report Posted 13 hours ago Here is a good video from KM4ACK and his thoughts on why Hams need GMRS. And I have to agree that it is always good to have as many modes of communications as possible. Why Hams Need GMRS CaptainSarcastic 1 Quote
CaptainSarcastic Posted 13 hours ago Report Posted 13 hours ago 22 minutes ago, WRYZ926 said: Here is a good video from KM4ACK and his thoughts on why Hams need GMRS. And I have to agree that it is always good to have as many modes of communications as possible. Why Hams Need GMRS Good video - I am a ham and have a CB in my Jeep and also a GMRS handheld in my jeep. They are all tools with unique use cases in my opinion. There isn't an "end all be all" radio. WRYZ926 and SteveShannon 2 Quote
WRHS218 Posted 13 hours ago Report Posted 13 hours ago On 11/22/2024 at 7:31 AM, marcspaz said: I made a special EmComm rig with two Campbell's soup cans from the '70s and 5,000 feet of Spider Wire. Everyone knows Progresso cans are higher gain give you more fars. marcspaz, WSEZ, WRYZ926 and 1 other 4 Quote
WRYZ926 Posted 11 hours ago Report Posted 11 hours ago 1 hour ago, WRHS218 said: Everyone knows Progresso cans are higher gain give you more fars. You definitely have to check the resonance of different tin cans. WSEZ, SteveShannon and marcspaz 3 Quote
Willie Posted 11 hours ago Report Posted 11 hours ago Well just don't exceed the number of fars allowed or you know who might come around and tell you - "NO SOUP FOR YOU! WRHS218, Raybestos, WSEZ and 2 others 1 4 Quote
LeoG Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago No radio is fully reliable just like cell phones aren't. Just like anything it's technology and it works great until it doesn't. Raybestos 1 Quote
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