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Thread: Communications Preparations
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March 18th, 2020, 11:15 AM #21
Re: Communications Preparations
I have an AM/FM radio. I don't want to talk to anyone.
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Don't end up in my signature!
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March 18th, 2020, 12:07 PM #22
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March 18th, 2020, 12:18 PM #23Grand Member
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March 18th, 2020, 07:58 PM #24Active Member
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Re: Communications Preparations
My father was a ham from back in the early 60s when radios had tubes until he passed in the late 90s,he had a radio hooked up to his commodore 64 for contests. I think he called it packit. My brother has been a ham from the late 80s, I am not a ham, but I know a tiny bit about it. I bought a Baofeng uv5r a few years back for like $20. shipped. since then I have learned how to hack and mod my way through a few freqs using chirp. I bought 2 bf888s for $17. shipped and 2 radioditty ga2s for 24.99 shipped a year ago or so and even though they say the are UHF only, I hacked them in CHIRP to get VHF for EMS, fire, some police and NOAH weather broadcasts, and MURS and GMRS freqs. All my radios are set to transmit on GMRS freqs, even though they receive other freqs so there's no chance of fouling up a transmission to or from the EMS radios. I have found that the MURS freqs don't transmit or receive well with out the antenna that is tuned for the murs Freqs. I have also added the marine freqs since I am near enough to the water, but have not tested the transmission on my radios. So now I have 5 radios, that my family can pack up and be on the move and still get weather, ems, some police, marine even SERT if needed. Or, we can sit home pass them out to a few key neighbors, and keep in contact about the neighborhood. They all transmit and receive each other very well for a mile or 2 in my area without repeaters.
75/15/10
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March 18th, 2020, 08:00 PM #25
Re: Communications Preparations
Rules are written in the stone,
Break the rules and you get no bones,
all you get is ridicule, laughter,
and a trip to the house of pain.
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March 18th, 2020, 08:11 PM #26Active Member
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Re: Communications Preparations
streaker,
not sure , we lived in NJ at the time, Hunterdon County, I know his old call sign but after he passed my brother now has it, even thou my brothers orig call was a few steps up with a Q , and my fathers was K. I not comfortable giving it out at this time with out checking with my bro first. im sure you understand.
I can tell you my fathers name tho, Walter (Bud) Talbott, stationed in Califon NJ till the early 90s, then lexington va until he passed. he knew a ton of hams around the world.75/15/10
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March 18th, 2020, 08:13 PM #27
Re: Communications Preparations
Rules are written in the stone,
Break the rules and you get no bones,
all you get is ridicule, laughter,
and a trip to the house of pain.
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March 18th, 2020, 08:37 PM #28Junior Member
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Re: Communications Preparations
Hope its okay to ask this here but I am looking for recommendations on specific equipment to buy. Have been thinking about it for awhile and this thread gave me the kick to get moving. While I am pretty good with computers, radios are something I have no experience in. Ideally I would like to be able to listen in on emergency frequencies (police scanner?) to keep up with what is going on and possibly communicate with family members if the need arose (unlikely). I understand separate equipment may be needed and that's fine. On the communication front I am aware of CB as well as ham (license required) as for emergency I don't really know where to start if what I want is even possible. If you suggest a piece of hardware could you explain briefly what exactly it will and wont do if possible?
Location is currently Montgomery County just outside Philly but in 6 months I'll be moving back to Northumberland County permanently.
Thanks in advance for any advice your willing to offer!
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March 19th, 2020, 10:17 AM #29
Re: Communications Preparations
Optimum you'd want several pieces of equipment, one for monitoring and one for talking. Not knowing you or your family makes it hard to make anything more than a Generic Communications Plan.
The "optimum" (and most costly) way to go would be to get a Uniden digital trunking scanner. These automatically import all the local public safety and county frequencies from the internet. they also have a built in proximity scanner, so if someone is using a HAM (or other radio) on a frequency not prepopulated and it's close to you, it'll immediately focus on that. they run around 500-600 new. For the talk, I'd go with cheap cobra CB radios from Walmart. They give you decent range, for less than $50 you have reasonable ranged radio and antenna with no license requirement. You will need to invest in some form of power supply and for that you can go battery and battery tender, or AC power supply The battery and tender will run close to another $50 or so, might want two batteries, one running the radio, one on the tender. AC can run over $100, and if there is a power outage, no radio. For the future, getting your HAM license isn't difficult, and the license (while needing renewed at no cost every 10 years) is essentially a lifetime license, just keep your address up to date and let them know you want to renew every 10 years. I talked my daughter to getting her technician license for this, never know what will happen in the long term. The standard Red Cross emergency radio is great fro monitoring commercial AM FM, and usually has a built in crank or solar changer so again grid independent, some even are able to monitor shortwave broadcasts.
Hope this helps get you started.
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March 19th, 2020, 10:22 AM #30
Re: Communications Preparations
Packit and digital modes are making big moves lately. Reading,York and Lebanon County repeaters are doing weekly digital "nets" using FLDigi, and some other stuff. There's even been a rush for people signing up to get WinLink email accounts so they can send and receive email and weather reports. I keep telling people, HAM is an umbrella term for over 50 hobbies under one umbrella.
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