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Old 12-11-2008, 04:26 PM #1
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Default Radio Hobbies

I enjoy HF radio listening. Does anyone else have this hobby? I listen to shortwave radio that is able to travel around the world sometimes.

I also listen to UHF,and VHF radio. I listen to aircraft,police,and emergency radio. I have several radio scanners. I also have reception antennas on the roof. I have a GMRS licence.

I was just wondering. These hobbies use to be more popular. BF
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Old 12-11-2008, 05:03 PM #2
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We have a scanner that was my Dad's. They used to have it on ALL the time, and it drove me up the wall. Everybody had to "shhhh" while they listened, and there was always something going on.

I don't have it on all the time, but I have the local volunteer fire department programmed in, the local rescue squad, state police, fish & wildlife, highway department and local road crew. My neighbor gives a little "whoop" on his siren when they're toned out, and I turn on the scanner to keep track of them.

We also have my Dad's short wave radio that he got when he was in the Navy during WWII. My mom used to collect QSL cards (is that the right term?) and listen to folks from Belize during the night. They never transmitted, though, just listened.
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Old 12-12-2008, 01:31 AM #3
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Originally Posted by Blessings2You View Post
We have a scanner that was my Dad's. They used to have it on ALL the time, and it drove me up the wall. Everybody had to "shhhh" while they listened, and there was always something going on.

I don't have it on all the time, but I have the local volunteer fire department programmed in, the local rescue squad, state police, fish & wildlife, highway department and local road crew. My neighbor gives a little "whoop" on his siren when they're toned out, and I turn on the scanner to keep track of them.

We also have my Dad's short wave radio that he got when he was in the Navy during WWII. My mom used to collect QSL cards (is that the right term?) and listen to folks from Belize during the night. They never transmitted, though, just listened.
Yes,that is the right term. QSL cards are sent to confirm that their station was heard. Some people do that in a contest. Some just talk. I listen.

Wow. A shortwave radio from WWII. My Dad was also in WWII in the Army Air Corp,which is now the US Air Force. I'll bet your dad sent Morse Code. They did allot of that in WWII.

So your neighbor gives you a "Woff",or a "Whoop",on their siren. They must be volunteers. Good for them. BF
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Old 12-12-2008, 06:18 AM #4
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I was a "bad boy" back in the '70s. I was an avionics tech in the Navy at the time. We would fire up the HF radio in a helicopter, dial in a CB frequency, listen for awhile, and when one of the CBers got to talking all cocky about how powerful his rig was, we'd hit the transmit (TX) key and blank him out.

I don't recall the exact wattage of the HF radio, but other techs claimed that you could walk by the antenna with a fluorescent light tube and have it light up when the transmitter was keyed.

But that may be urban legend. I don't know for sure. I do know that if you were working on it at a bench and put your fingertip over the end of the coaxial connector at the final output, you'd get a nasty RF burn.
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Old 12-12-2008, 10:17 AM #5
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Hi BF,

My business partner is a radio expert. His hobby is repairing ham radios of all brands, the guy is a radio genius.

Soooo.... I hear the people on the ham radios conversing even at the office most days. When his friends call, they give their call sign first, then their name.

There are some younger guys getting into it too, because it has such reliability in emergencies (over cell phones) and they can hear things from all over the place, like you said, even around the world.

Aren't radio waves something?

OldSteve:

My son was an avionics tech for the F16's in the Air Force a few years back.
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Old 12-12-2008, 02:11 PM #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by oldsteve View Post
I was a "bad boy" back in the '70s. I was an avionics tech in the Navy at the time. We would fire up the HF radio in a helicopter, dial in a CB frequency, listen for awhile, and when one of the CBers got to talking all cocky about how powerful his rig was, we'd hit the transmit (TX) key and blank him out.

I don't recall the exact wattage of the HF radio, but other techs claimed that you could walk by the antenna with a fluorescent light tube and have it light up when the transmitter was keyed.

But that may be urban legend. I don't know for sure. I do know that if you were working on it at a bench and put your fingertip over the end of the coaxial connector at the final output, you'd get a nasty RF burn.
Hi old Steve. Yes that would happen. You'd feel that RF where you touch the Coaxial connection,and you'd possibly do harm to the transmitter.

Some of those CBers do get arrogant,and some of them use words I wish that they wouldn't. There are a few good one's out here. BF
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Old 12-12-2008, 02:37 PM #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ewizabeth View Post
Hi BF,

My business partner is a radio expert. His hobby is repairing ham radios of all brands, the guy is a radio genius.

Soooo.... I hear the people on the ham radios conversing even at the office most days. When his friends call, they give their call sign first, then their name.

There are some younger guys getting into it too, because it has such reliability in emergencies (over cell phones) and they can hear things from all over the place, like you said, even around the world.

Aren't radio waves something?

OldSteve:

My son was an avionics tech for the F16's in the Air Force a few years back.
Yes. Radio Waves are amazing. If the cell phones,land Lines,internet,and other forms of communications go out in a emergency,there's always the reliable shortwave band. Shortwave broadcasts over a long distance,without the need for repeater antennas. A repeater is a antenna on a tower that picks up a radio signal,and amplifies it,and sends it out all over a given area. That's how the police talk on their walkie talkies,to there police station.

I wish I where a radio expert. Your business partner sounds like a interesting person. BF
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