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dhunt
8th October 2004, 14:24
Just got my license yesturday in the mail and was wondering if any KB's are into Ham Radio's at all??

Hitcher
8th October 2004, 14:43
if any KB's are into Ham Radio's at all??
Sigh. What about the trainspotters?

"Calling all trucks, this here's the Duck. Land-sakes alive, we've got ourselves a convoy!"

riffer
8th October 2004, 21:38
My parents are both radio hams (ZL2ACW and ZL2AGS - see here (http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/%7Eamoeba/histdoc.html).). Spent many a weekend when young helping my father build radio aerials (some damn big ones too), helping them fix the repeater up on Mt Climie, and trying to interpret morse code.

Enjoy the ham radio...

Yamahamaman
8th October 2004, 22:15
I've had a T grade certificate for years. I don't have any transmitting equipment, but I sometimes listen on the 80 metre band.

NC
8th October 2004, 22:34
You hold pigs up to your ear?

dhunt
8th October 2004, 22:43
You hold pigs up to your ear?
Haven't you heard of that. It's all the rage. Normally you have to put in a knife to make an aerial then it's pretty hard to shut them up. :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

dhunt
8th October 2004, 22:53
You hold pigs up to your ear?
But if you really want to know Ham Radio is another name for Amateur Radio. This allows Amateur Radio operators to communication via radios to each other round the world for free :)

Skyryder
9th October 2004, 07:02
But if you really want to know Ham Radio is another name for Amateur Radio. This allows Amateur Radio operators to communication via radios to each other round the world for free :)

Is this where they tell 'porkies' to each other. :killingme :killingme

OK I know it's that's a bit of a lame duck joke but is only 8.00 in the morning and it is the best I can do at this hour. :beer: to wake me up.



Skyryder

Slipstream
9th October 2004, 09:06
Just got my license yesturday in the mail and was wondering if any KB's are into Ham Radio's at all??

My Dad just got a callcode again about a month ago and now he wants to give the learn :)

He's a retired telecomunications advisor. Helped some small island get radio. Designed it himself or something.

Guess he just can't get it outta his blood :)

badlieutenant
9th October 2004, 09:18
lol just read this on the link. should be in waris thread as well :D

Among the numerous side shows at a recent N.Z. Exhibition was one at which a man, after putting a cork into an empty cask, succeeded time after time in blowing the cork out of the bung hole in the top of the cask. A reporter of the Hutt Chronicle commenting on this, said:

"It is no doubt a clever performance, but if the man had put his mouth to the cork-hole and then blown the cask out of the bung hole, or if he had put his mouth to the cask hole and blown the cask out of the cork hole, or if he had put his mouth to the cask and blown the bung hole out of the cork hole, or if he had put the cask to the bung hole and blown the cork out of his mouth, or if he had put the bung hole to his ear hole and blown the cask out of the cork hole, or if he had put the cork up his ear hole and blown his mouth out of the bung hole, or if he had stuffed his ear hole up the bung hole and blown the cork hole inside out through the cask hole, or if he had blown his ear hole up his mouth and pulled the bung hole out of the cork hole, or if he had stuffed himself up his ear hole and blown the cask up his bung hole, or if he had stuffed the cork hole and the bung hole in his mouth and blown himself out of his ear hole, or if he had blown the cask hole up his ear hole and blocked his bung hole up with the cork hole, it would have been in his opinion much more extraordinary."

Storm
9th October 2004, 09:41
So with it being ham radio, I guess you dont get too many Islamic folks into it ? :shit:

NC
9th October 2004, 11:13
But if you really want to know Ham Radio is another name for Amateur Radio. This allows Amateur Radio operators to communication via radios to each other round the world for free :)



OHHH!!!! Like Bfm?

Slingshot
9th October 2004, 11:38
My old mans into ham radio (ZL2BFY), sounds like I had a similar childhood to celticn06. I tryed to get my ham radio ticket when I was thirteen, passed but had to do the morse code as well cause I didn't pass by enough.
It made physics & maths at school kinda easy, I remember my physics teacher making some comments that the stuff we had to know was at 1st year uni level.

Dad was also right into the comms side of search & rescue so we would quite often fly up to mt holdsworth & mt barton to do work on the repeators. That was cool.

Oh and who could forget the jamborie on the air with the cubs, where you actually got to talk to other cubs around the world on Ham radio.

WOW

dhunt
9th October 2004, 11:43
My old mans into ham radio (ZL2BFY), sounds like I had a similar childhood to celticn06. I tryed to get my ham radio ticket when I was thirteen, passed but had to do the morse code as well cause I didn't pass by enough.
It made physics & maths at school kinda easy, I remember my physics teacher making some comments that the stuff we had to know was at 1st year uni level.
Exam's pretty easy (multichoice) just have to learn a few regulations etc. They've taken out morse now so if you were keen you could go in and they'd give you a full license now.

StoneChucker
9th October 2004, 14:17
Would anyone know if you can use the radio operators licence you get while learning to fly (planes) with other radios, ham's for example?

Wouldn't it be cool if you could ask other bikes for a "weather report" as you ride by? (like US long haul truckies)

Slingshot
9th October 2004, 14:56
Exam's pretty easy (multichoice) just have to learn a few regulations etc. They've taken out morse now so if you were keen you could go in and they'd give you a full license now.

I couldn't be bothered now, cellphones are so much easier and everyones got one now...15 years ago things were a little different. Also with the advent of the internet, worldwide communications has become a whole lot easier.

StoneChucker
9th October 2004, 15:03
with the advent of the internet
I've heard about that, never used it though. Thinking of getting it soon. For now, I just plug the little white cable, from the black box on the tower thingie, into the hole inda wall, everything seems sweet after there.
:pinch:

riffer
9th October 2004, 18:19
My old mans into ham radio (ZL2BFY), sounds like I had a similar childhood to celticn06. I tryed to get my ham radio ticket when I was thirteen, passed but had to do the morse code as well cause I didn't pass by enough.
It made physics & maths at school kinda easy, I remember my physics teacher making some comments that the stuff we had to know was at 1st year uni level.

Dad was also right into the comms side of search & rescue so we would quite often fly up to mt holdsworth & mt barton to do work on the repeators. That was cool.

Oh and who could forget the jamborie on the air with the cubs, where you actually got to talk to other cubs around the world on Ham radio.

WOW

Shit I nearly forgot about JOTA. We used to host that every year for Eastern Hutt Cubs (I grew up in Stokes Valley).

You're right about the physics and maths stuff. I missed out on my ham ticket due to the morse as well (much to my parents chagrin).

We assembled a 30 metre tall YAGI antenna in the back yard of our property. My father, Ray Gotlieb, and another of the local hams called Barry Feikhart (sp?) who was a mechanical engineer assembled it. Awesome to climb to the top of - you could see nearly all of Stokes Valley from the top. I was the nominated on when the connections to the motor on the top went a bit corroded - sent up to reqire the sucker at 10!!!

Growing up with ham radio in the 70s was a great experience. It introduced me to the concept of world-wide communication, electronics engineering and computers.

I wanted to be an avionics engineer when I left school but diabetes screwed that one up. :(

Best of luck with your ham stuff dhunt. PM me and I'll give you my folks details if you want to have a chat with them - they've been doing it for longer than I can remember and may even have some gear to sell you if you are interested (big Yaesu and Kenwood Transceivers come to mind...)

You could also look at echonet (I think its called) - Ham Only P2P/Messenging software - taking over with the hams...

Hitcher
10th October 2004, 14:13
Despite having a Ham radio competition named after me, I deny all knowledge or connection with said!

dhunt
25th October 2004, 16:40
I got a radio on friday so I'm in business :) ZL2DVY is on the air. For those techinally minded the radio is a YAESU VX-2R and puts out 1.5W's on battery and transmittes on 2m (144Mhz) and 70cm(430Mhz) and receives on everthing from <1Mhz to 999Mhz (Except cellphone area :( )

I've attached a photo of it. The black one is the radio, greeny one is my cellphone for comparision.

Mongoose
25th October 2004, 19:29
HAd a T call for years, or should I say had a T call years ago? Used to be involved with JOTA thru the local club down here, was Pres for a while.
Like some one else said, the morse was not studied enough by me so missed out on a full callsign.
What is needed these days for a full? Or did they do away with T calls?

dhunt
25th October 2004, 19:46
HAd a T call for years, or should I say had a T call years ago? Used to be involved with JOTA thru the local club down here, was Pres for a while.
Like some one else said, the morse was not studied enough by me so missed out on a full callsign.
What is needed these days for a full? Or did they do away with T calls?
Not sure what a T call is so maybe the've done away with those??? All you need to do now is pass the theory (60 multichoice) exam and then you can send away for your call sign. Morse isn't need at all anymore, except if you would like to go some particular countries that still haven't done away with it and use your radio there.

Mongoose
25th October 2004, 19:52
Not sure what a T call is so maybe the've done away with those??? All you need to do now is pass the theory (60 multichoice) exam and then you can send away for your call sign. Morse isn't need at all anymore, except if you would like to go some particular countries that still haven't done away with it and use your radio there.

Hmm, maybe I should fig the old ticket out, who is in charge of the licences these days?That should give you an idea of how long it is since I had anything to do with it. Was the 2IC for Comms for CD and SAr locally back then. Sort of put it on hold till I grew old and decrepid, which hopefully is still a wee way away

dhunt
26th October 2004, 17:20
Hmm, maybe I should fig the old ticket out, who is in charge of the licences these days?That should give you an idea of how long it is since I had anything to do with it. Was the 2IC for Comms for CD and SAr locally back then. Sort of put it on hold till I grew old and decrepid, which hopefully is still a wee way away
MED (Ministry of Economic Development) is in charge of licenses. See http://spectrumonline.med.govt.nz/

If you have your old bit of paper that's says you passed the test, you just need to send that away to them and they'll give you a license.

Mongoose
26th October 2004, 17:35
MED (Ministry of Economic Development) is in charge of licenses. See http://spectrumonline.med.govt.nz/

If you have your old bit of paper that's says you passed the test, you just need to send that away to them and they'll give you a license.

Ahhh, yes they kept changing who was in charge of the RF even back then. Yep, still have to bit of paper and the old licence, of memory ZL4TJZ was my call.
Ta for that.