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(sorta OT) Free Ham Radio Course



 
 
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  #31  
Old January 18th 05, 05:50 AM
Dave Stadt
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
...
"RST Engineering" wrote in message
...
With the crossbreeding of amateur (ham) radio operators and pilots being
something on the order of 25%, this is only slightly OT.


Bull****. It's 100% off-topic in rec.aviation.hombuilt AND
rec.aviation.piloting. There's no "crossbreeding", and I guarantee you

that
it's not true that 25% of all pilots are amateur radio operators. Even if
it were, that doesn't make your post on-topic here.

Not that you'd care, of course. You always do what you want, and call
anyone that doesn't like it an "asshole". But why would you bother lying
about the appropriateness of your actions?


Thanks for the post Jim. One of the 25% here and it is totally on topic
IMO.


  #32  
Old January 18th 05, 11:44 AM
Scott
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How to ID an RC transmitter? Skywriting, of course!

The license that used to be required for operating an aircraft radio was
called a restricted radiotelephone operators permit. I have one (kept
for posterity), along with a General Radiotelephone License w/Ship Radar
Endorsement and a "ham" ticket as well...

Scott
N0EDV

B2431 wrote:
From: "Ebby"
Date: 1/17/2005 19:47 Central Standard Time
Message-id:

Didn't at one time a pilot require a radio station license to legally
operate two-way radio equipment?



I don't remember what kind of license it was, but the FCC also required
licenses for R/C and CB at one tme. I always wondered how I was supposed to
give my station identification with my R/C ticket.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


  #33  
Old January 18th 05, 01:47 PM
Mark Hickey
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"Dave Stadt" wrote:

Thanks for the post Jim. One of the 25% here and it is totally on topic
IMO.


Ditto what he said.

Mark Hickey WB9KWY
  #34  
Old January 18th 05, 03:13 PM
Corky Scott
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On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 20:58:45 -0500, Jessica Carlson
wrote:

I've always
wished I could decode the morse code identifiers manually, and getting a ham
license seems like a lot of fun, especially if I can do it before my instrument
training starts in a few months. A friend of the family already has lots of
equipment that I can use.


Just curious Jess, but if you feel the need to manually decode
identifiers, couldn't you just study morse code and learn it?

Of course, if you have an interest in ham radios that's fine too.

Corky Scott
  #35  
Old January 18th 05, 05:00 PM
Rich S.
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"Mark Hickey" wrote in message
news
"Dave Stadt" wrote:

Thanks for the post Jim. One of the 25% here and it is totally on topic
IMO.


Ditto what he said.

Mark Hickey WB9KWY


More dittos..........

Rich S. N7FXR


  #36  
Old January 18th 05, 05:40 PM
Robert A. Barker
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"Ron Webb" wrote in message
...


Bull****. It's 100% off-topic in rec.aviation.hombuilt AND
rec.aviation.piloting. There's no "crossbreeding



Well...I can tell you for a fact there is at least ONE "crossbreed" here.
I
suspect you are right about the 25% thing though. At least 25% of the Hams
I
know are (or were) pilots, but pilots who are also Hams are rarer.

As for whether it is on topic - there has been a thread here about how to
do
an antenna on a composite aircraft. A Ham would have no trouble building a
half wave dipole with a gamma match for 120 MHz, I would outperform a
grounded quarter wave and it would cost almost nothing. But I guess a
PILOT
is too good for that!?!!



Ron Webb
KA6BDM
Experimental Pacer N5158G

Another cross-breed here.Thanks for the post Jim


Bob Barker N8749S
W1KXG


  #37  
Old January 18th 05, 06:14 PM
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Ebby wrote:
Didn't at one time a pilot require a radio station license to legally


operate two-way radio equipment?

snip

I'm going from memory here, but I believe the radio station license
was required for the plane ( and still is when flying to some
countries). The pilot required a separate radiotelephone operators
permit (also still required in some countries outside the U.S.).
John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180)

  #38  
Old January 18th 05, 08:25 PM
Denny
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Denny - K8DO - and Fat Albert the Apache...
One of my instrument instructors from way back had a bug about
carefully decoding each VOR and marker beacon and writing them down...
Of course, he had to copy down the dots and dashes then look each
letter up... By the time he did this we were usually established on the
glide slope... He would invariably challenge me with, "I didn't see you
write it down!" pugnacious glare
I invariably replied, "Didn't have to. I hear the morse code just like
I hear you"
Of course he never believed me and was always dialing up some VOR,
letting the identifier run through the code once, then he would quickly
turn off the audio and ask me what the letters were... I would tell
him... Then he would turn the audio back up and laboriously copy the
dots and dashes onto paper and look them up... Then he would glare at
me and pout for the rest of the ride...

  #39  
Old January 18th 05, 09:13 PM
Don Tuite
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Let it be said that you can fairly quickly learn the code well enough
to pass the 5 wpm ham test, but you really need to spend a few months
on the air working people on CW before you'll have internalized the
code well enough to reliably indentify VORs under pressure.

Don, NR7X
  #40  
Old January 18th 05, 09:42 PM
Dave Butler
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Don Tuite wrote:
Let it be said that you can fairly quickly learn the code well enough
to pass the 5 wpm ham test, but you really need to spend a few months
on the air working people on CW before you'll have internalized the
code well enough to reliably indentify VORs under pressure.


I disagree. I am a walking counterexample.
 




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