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How to find other Amateurs on Air

Discussion in 'Amateur Radio News' started by VK6FLAB, May 26, 2018.

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  1. VK6FLAB

    VK6FLAB Ham Member QRZ Page

    foundations-of-amateur-radio_1400.jpg
    Foundations of Amateur Radio


    How to find other Amateurs on Air

    Where are all the Amateurs is a question that I am asked regularly by new entrants into our community. The journey most new amateurs go through and the one I followed starts with becoming interested, getting a license, buying a radio, setting it up and then turning on your radio. If you're lucky you are at this point surrounded by other amateurs, hopefully in a club setting, or you have a friend nearby and you're off and running.

    The reality is likely that even after a successful first on-air adventure, you'll be on your own in your shack asking yourself where everyone went.

    I've talked in the past about picking the right day, for example, a Wednesday is likely to have less people on air than a Saturday, but that's only part of the story.

    One of the things that had never occurred to me until a while after I became an amateur is that listening is a really important way to find other amateurs.

    Let's start with some things that might not have occurred to you.

    Most amateurs are not in your time-zone.

    There is amateur radio activity almost all the time, 24/7 on whatever the appropriate band is.

    Not all bands sound the same.

    What worked yesterday might not work today.

    This hobby isn't exact or precise, that is, there are an infinite number of variables which each affect the experience either positively or negatively and even if you used your radio in exactly the same way with the same settings on the same band in the same location at the same time with the same antenna, the landscape around you has changed, the ionosphere is a lot like the ocean, flat and calm one day, storms and waves the next.

    Those things aside, each of which could be a whole story is still only part of the story of finding other amateurs.

    There is a tendency for new amateurs to think of frequencies as numbers, as parameters to add to your radio, pick 7.093 MHz, pick 21.250 MHz, or 28.500 MHz, they're just numbers, things that you pick with your radio, set-up your antenna to and listen.

    That's part of the story, but there is another part.

    If you think of light and you go from Infra-red through visible light through to Ultraviolet light and beyond, all you're doing is changing a number, from somewhere around 300 GHz through to 3 PHz. It's a long dial in amateur radio terms, but the difference is just a number, right?

    It should be obvious that the human day-to-day experience of Infra-red and Ultraviolet are completely different. The 28.5 MHz 10m band frequency is on the same spectrum as both Infra-red and Ultraviolet but you don't expect to see these frequencies or use them in the same way.

    The same is true for amateur radio bands. The 80m band, the 40m band, 15m and 10m are all different. They're in use by radio amateurs, but their experience is also completely different. Some are good for day-time communications, others for night-time, some work regardless of the solar-cycle, others need solar flux. Magnetic activity affects some bands more than others and that's just the tip of the iceberg.

    If you have a hand-held radio and you're used to listening to a local 2m repeater it's likely that you've set up the squelch on your radio to hide noise and your day-to-day experience is one where there is silence when nobody is talking. You might tune to 15m and look for the same silence, only to learn later on that noise is what you're actually looking for.

    The sounds that the 10m band makes is different than the 80m band, the 20m band responds differently to changing conditions to the 40m band and every different radio you use has a different feel, so what you're used to with one radio will be different on another.

    All this to say that the way you find other amateurs is to listen. You'll need to get a feel for this thing, a sense of opportunity.

    I've compared amateur radio to fly fishing on more than one occasion. Standing up to your arm-pits in a river tossing out a line, finding a bite will be different depending on the day, the temperature, how much you moved around and the appetite of the fish around you at the time. The more you do this, the more you get a sense of opportunity and the better your results.

    Instantaneous gratification is going to be elusive, get used to it, be patient, be curious and experiment.

    I'll leave you with this image.

    I'm currently standing in my wardrobe, surrounded by clothes, shoes, boxes and jumpers in the middle of my home with the door closed, crammed in with my microphone stand, a laptop and a tablet in an attempt to ward off the background noise that comes from a winter storm that is currently overhead unleashing the first rain of the season in spectacular style.

    Some days I fantasise that my budget could manage a recording studio or even a sound-proof booth.

    I'm Onno VK6FLAB

    To listen to the podcast, visit the website: http://podcasts.itmaze.com.au/foundations/ and scroll to the bottom for the latest episode. You can also use your podcast tool of choice and search for my callsign, VK6FLAB, or you can read the book, look for my callsign on your local Amazon store, or visit my author page: http://amazon.com/author/owh

    If you'd like to participate in discussion about the podcast or about amateur radio, you can visit the Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/foundations.itmaze

    Feel free to get in touch directly via email: onno@itmaze.com.au, or follow on twitter: @VK6FLAB (http://twitter.com/vk6flab/)

    If you'd like to join the weekly net for new and returning amateurs, check out the details at http://ftroop.vk6.net, the net runs every week on Saturday, from 00:00 to 01:00 UTC on Echolink, IRLP, AllStar Link and 2m FM via various repeaters.
     
  2. KA5ROW

    KA5ROW Ham Member QRZ Page

    Put out a request on QRZ & e-Ham at a specific time and frequency + /- 5 . Do this only one day maybe 2, in advance, that way you will know what weather you will have, You know thunderstorms lightning.
     
  3. N3TS

    N3TS Ham Member QRZ Page

    Probably the best way for a newcomer to find other hams is to program their handheld with a few local repeaters. You will soon find which ones are active and which are dead. After listening a while you'll want to push the transmit button and join the conversation. Repeaters offer a low technical barrier to the newcomer, since all the hard technical work has been done by the repeater operator. This allows newcomers to quickly get their feet wet communicating with the ham community.

    And now there are linked systems. Here the local system has a 2 meter transmitter, numerous 2 meter remote receive sites, as well as a 70 cm receiver and transmitter at one of the remote sites. We've got another popular system which is very active which has 2 dozen receivers and more than a dozen transmitters spread out over a 4-state area. And then there's there's a wide area system, which gets linked up with systems in the UK. The repeater systems extend the capabilities of a simple handheld far past what could be done with simplex in the distant past.

    And then there are digital voice modes. My favorite at this point is D-star. Once again, they regularly link the local system up to various reflectors. I often hear stations from as far away as Hawaii and Australia checking into some of the D-star nets.

    All of this with a simple handheld. IMHO, this is the "gateway drug" which encourages newcomers to move on to HF and other aspects of the hobby.
     

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