Rare Today, Gone Tomorrow?
Amateur (ham) radio
Knowledge of Morse Code is no longer required, but interest in
radio technology
appears to have been supplanted by computers and the Internet, and
the ranks of
amateur radio operators have been dwindling for several years.
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When I got my technician class license and a Heathkit Twoer, I simply needed to buy a taller mast for the rotator, and I installed my 2-meter beam above my father's antenna. I was on the ladder doing the work while some neighbors watched. I pretended to lose my footing once, and a woman rang the doorbell and said to my mom, "Joanne, do you know your son is standing on the top of your chimney?"
You could say that amateur radio helped eliminate my fear of heights.
It wasn't long before I met a guy online with a wicked powerful signal. He lived about eight blocks away. We became best friends. He also had a Twoer.
We both had 7-element Yagi beam antennas on the roof sitting on a rotator. When we had our beams pointed at each other, and he powered on his Twoer, its super-regenerative receiver leaked RF signals to the antenna, and I could easily hear it. I'd transmit, "Good evening, Mike," and he'd wonder how I knew his rig was powered on. I told him months later. Sadly, he began dating an ex-girlfriend of mine, and our friendship waned.
Incidentally, shortwave, as a government form of propaganda is virtually dead. Voice of America, BBC, and a few smaller outlets are about all that is left.
Here's a quote from the ARRL:
01/15/2013
As 2012 came to a close, ARRL VEC Manager Maria Somma, AB1FM, had a good reason to cheer: The number of radio amateurs in the US reached an all-time high of almost 710,000. “2012 was definitely a banner year for the number of Amateur Radio operators here in the US,” she said. “It is amazing to see these new numbers and to know that Amateur Radio is experiencing such a healthy trend.”
My most fun in ham radio was competing in the June and September VHF contests as part of the W2SZ multioperator team on the summit of Mt. Greylock in western Massachusetts.
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