Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

My Assumptions about You 2

Icons Used in This Book 3

Beyond the Book 3

Where to Go from Here 4

Part 1: Getting Started with Ham Radio 5

Chapter 1: Getting Acquainted with Ham Radio 7

Exploring Ham Radio around the World 8

Tuning into Ham Radio 9

Using electronics and technology 10

Joining the ham radio community 12

Radiosport — Competing with Ham Radio 15

Communicating through Ham Radio Contacts 16

Ragchews 17

Nets 17

Citizen Science and HamSCI 18

Chapter 2: Getting a Handle on Ham Radio Technology 21

Getting to Know Basic Ham Radio Gear 21

Building a Basic Ham Radio Station 23

Basic stations 23

Communication Technologies 26

Understanding the Fundamentals of Radio Waves 28

Frequency and wavelength 29

The radio spectrum 30

Dealing with Mother Nature 32

Experiencing nature affecting radio waves 32

Overcoming radio noise 33

Chapter 3: Finding Other Hams: Your Support Group 35

Finding and Being a Mentor 36

Interacting in Online Communities 37

Social media and blogs 37

Videos, podcasts, and webinars 38

Email reflectors 39

Online training and instruction 40

Web portals 41

Joining Radio Clubs 41

Finding and choosing a club 42

Participating in meetings 44

Getting more involved 45

Exploring the ARRL 46

ARRL benefits to you 47

ARRL benefits to the hobby 48

ARRL benefits to the public 49

Taking Part in Specialty Groups 50

On the Air — IOTA, SOTA, and POTA 50

Young Hams — YOTA 51

Competitive clubs 51

Handiham 52

AMSAT 53

TAPR 54

YLRL 55

QRP clubs 56

Attending Hamfests and Conventions 57

Finding and preparing for hamfests 57

Buying equipment at hamfests 58

Finding conventions and conferences 59

Part 2: Wading through the Licensing Process 63

Chapter 4: Understanding the Licensing System 65

Getting Acquainted with the Amateur Service 66

FCC rules 66

Ham radio frequency allocations 67

Learning about Types of Licenses 69

Technician class 70

General class 70

Amateur Extra class 70

Grandfathered classes 71

Getting Licensed 72

Studying the exam questions 72

Taking your license exam 72

Volunteer examiner coordinators 73

Volunteer examiners 73

Receiving Your New Call Sign 74

Call-sign prefixes and suffixes 74

Class and call sign 75

Chapter 5: Preparing for Your License Exam 77

Getting a Grip on the Technician Exam 77

Finding Study Resources 78

Licensing classes 79

Books, websites, and videos 80

Online practice exams 82

Locating Your Mentor 82

Chapter 6: Taking the Exam 85

Types of Exams 86

Public in-person exams 86

Remote exams 86

Exams at events 87

Exam sessions in homes and online 87

Finding an Exam Session 88

Registering with the Universal Licensing System (ULS) 88

Getting to Exam Day 90

What to have with you 91

What to expect 91

What to do after the exam 93

Chapter 7: Obtaining Your License and Call Sign 95

Completing Your Licensing Paperwork 95

Finding Your Call Sign 98

Searching the ULS database 98

Searching other websites for call signs 99

Printing your license 100

Identifying with your new privileges 101

Picking Your Own Call Sign 101

Searching for available call signs 102

Applying for a vanity call sign 103

Maintaining Your License 104

Part 3: Hamming It Up 105

Chapter 8: Receiving Signals 107

Learning by Listening 107

Finding out where to listen 108

Understanding how bands are organized 109

Using Your Receiver 110

Tuning and scanning with channels 112

Continuous tuning with a knob 113

Software-controlled tuning 114

Listening on VHF and UHF 115

Listening on HF 116

Using beacon networks and contact maps 118

Receiving Signals 121

Receiving FM voice 121

Receiving SSB voice 125

Receiving digital voice 127

Receiving digital or data modes 128

Receiving Morse code 131

Chapter 9: Basic Operating 133

Understanding Contacts (QSOs) 134

Common parts of contacts 135

Casual contacts 139

Nets and talk groups — On-the-air meetings 139

Contests and DXing — Radiosport 141

How contacts get started 142

Joining a contact 144

Failing to make contact 145

During a contact 147

Calling CQ 150

Casual Conversation — Ragchewing 152

Knowing where to chew 152

Identifying a ragchewer 154

Calling CQ for a ragchew 155

Making Repeater and Simplex Contacts 156

Understanding repeater basics 156

Making a repeater contact 160

Using access control 161

Miscellaneous repeater features 163

Maximizing your signal 164

Setting up your radio 164

Making a simplex contact 168

Digital Voice Systems 169

HF digital voice 170

VHF/UHF digital voice 170

Digital repeater networks 172

The DMR system 176

Casual Operating on HF 178

HF bands 178

Picking good times to operate 179

Contacts on CW and digital modes 181

Chapter 10: Public Service Operating 185

Joining a Public Service Group 186

Finding a public service group 186

Volunteering for ARES 188

Preparing for Emergencies and Disasters 189

Knowing who 189

Knowing where 190

Knowing what 190

Knowing how 192

Operating in Emergencies and Disasters 193

Reporting an accident or other incident 194

Making and responding to distress calls 195

Providing Public Service 197

Weather monitoring and SKYWARN 197

Parades and charity events 198

Participating in Nets 199

Checking in and out 200

Exchanging information 200

Tactical call signs 202

Radio discipline 202

Digital Message Networks 203

Winlink — email by radio 204

AREDN 206

NBEMS 207

Chapter 11: Operating Specialties 209

Getting Digital 210

Digital definitions 211

WSJT modes — fast and slow 212

FT8 and FT4 213

PSK31 and PSK63 216

Radioteletype (RTTY) 216

Non-WSJT MFSK modes 218

PACTOR, ARDOP, and VARA 219

Packet radio 220

APRS and tracking 220

DXing — Chasing Distant Stations 223

VHF/UHF DXing with a Technician license 223

HF DXing with a General license 227

Taking Part in Radio Contests 235

Choosing a contest 237

Operating in a contest 238

Chasing Awards 245

Finding awards and special events 245

Logging contacts for awards 246

Applying for awards 247

Mastering Morse Code (CW) 247

Learning Morse correctly 248

Copying the code 249

Pounding brass — sending Morse 250

Making code contacts 251

QRP (Low Power) and Portable Operating 251

Getting started with QRP 252

Portable operating 253

Direction-finding (ARDF) 256

Operating via Satellites 257

Getting grounded in satellite basics 257

Accessing satellites 258

Seeing Things: Image Communication 259

Slow-scan television 259

Fast-scan television 261

Part 4: Building and Operating a Station That Works 263

Chapter 12: Getting on the Air 265

What is a Station? 265

Planning Your Station 266

Deciding what you want to do 266

Deciding how to operate 267

Choosing a Radio 270

Allocating your resources 271

Software defined radios 272

Radios for VHF and UHF operating 273

Radios for HF operating 278

Filtering and noise 281

Choosing an Antenna 282

Beam antennas 283

VHF/UHF antennas 284

HF antennas 285

Feed line and connectors 289

Supporting Your Antenna 293

Antennas and trees 293

Masts and tripods 294

Towers 295

Rotators 296

Station Accessories 298

Mikes, keys, and keyers 298

Antenna system gadgets 299

Digital mode interfaces 301

Remote Control Stations 302

Remote control rules 302

Accessing a remote control station 303

Upgrading Your Station 304

Chapter 13: Organizing a Home Station 307

Designing Your Station 307

Keeping a station notebook 308

Building in ergonomics 309

Viewing some example ham stations 312

Building in RF and Electrical Safety 316

Electrical safety 316

RF exposure 317

First aid 318

Grounding and Bonding 319

AC and DC power 320

Lightning 320

RF management 321

Chapter 14: Computers in Your Ham Station 323

What Type of Computers Do Hams Use? 323

Windows 324

Linux 324

Macintosh 324

Android and iOS 324

Microcontrollers 325

What Do Ham Computers Do? 325

Software-defined radio 326

WSJT-X and fldigi 327

Radio and remote control 327

Hardware considerations 328

Keeping a Log of Your Contacts 329

Paper logging 329

Computer logging 330

Submitting a contest log 333

Confirming Your Contacts 335

QSL cards 335

QSLing electronically 336

Direct QSLing 337

Using QSL managers 337

Bureaus and QSL services 338

Applying for awards 339

Chapter 15: Operating Away from Home 341

Mobile Stations 341

HF mobile radios 342

Mobile installations 343

Mobile antennas 347

Portable Operating 349

Portable antennas 353

Portable power 354

Field Day 355

Field Day “gotchas” 357

Chapter 16: Hands-On Radio 359

Acquiring Tools and Components 360

Maintenance tools 360

Repair and building tools 366

Components for repairs and building 368

Maintaining Your Station 370

Overall Troubleshooting 372

Troubleshooting Your Station 372

Power problems 373

RF problems 374

Operational problems 375

Troubleshooting RF Interference 377

Dealing with interference to other equipment 378

Dealing with interference to your equipment 380

Building Equipment from a Kit 383

Building Equipment from Scratch 384

Part 5: The Part of Tens 385

Chapter 17: Ham Radio Jargon — Say What? 387

Spoken Q-signals 387

Contesting or Radiosport 388

Antenna Varieties 388

Feed Lines 389

Antenna Tuners 389

Repeater Operating 390

Grid Squares 391

Interference and Noise 391

Connector Parts 392

Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 393

Chapter 18: Technical Fundamentals 395

Electrical Units and Symbols 395

Ohm’s Law 396

Power 397

Decibels 397

Attenuation, Loss, and Gain 398

Bandwidth 398

Filters 399

Antenna Patterns 400

Standing Wave Ratio (SWR) 401

Battery Characteristics 402

Satellite Tracking 402

Chapter 19: Tips for Masters 405

Listening to Everything 405

Learning How It Works 406

Following the Protocol 406

Keeping Your Axe Sharp 406

Practice to Make Perfect 406

Paying Attention to Detail 407

Knowing What You Don’t Know 407

Maintaining Radio Discipline 407

Make Small Improvements Continuously 408

Help Others and Accept Help from Others 408

Index 409

Ham Radio For Dummies

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A Paperback / softback by H. Ward Silver

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Ham Radio For Dummies by H. Ward Silver

    Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
    Publication Date: 24/05/2021
    ISBN13: 9781119695608, 978-1119695608
    ISBN10: 1119695600

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Table of Contents

    Introduction 1

    About This Book 1

    My Assumptions about You 2

    Icons Used in This Book 3

    Beyond the Book 3

    Where to Go from Here 4

    Part 1: Getting Started with Ham Radio 5

    Chapter 1: Getting Acquainted with Ham Radio 7

    Exploring Ham Radio around the World 8

    Tuning into Ham Radio 9

    Using electronics and technology 10

    Joining the ham radio community 12

    Radiosport — Competing with Ham Radio 15

    Communicating through Ham Radio Contacts 16

    Ragchews 17

    Nets 17

    Citizen Science and HamSCI 18

    Chapter 2: Getting a Handle on Ham Radio Technology 21

    Getting to Know Basic Ham Radio Gear 21

    Building a Basic Ham Radio Station 23

    Basic stations 23

    Communication Technologies 26

    Understanding the Fundamentals of Radio Waves 28

    Frequency and wavelength 29

    The radio spectrum 30

    Dealing with Mother Nature 32

    Experiencing nature affecting radio waves 32

    Overcoming radio noise 33

    Chapter 3: Finding Other Hams: Your Support Group 35

    Finding and Being a Mentor 36

    Interacting in Online Communities 37

    Social media and blogs 37

    Videos, podcasts, and webinars 38

    Email reflectors 39

    Online training and instruction 40

    Web portals 41

    Joining Radio Clubs 41

    Finding and choosing a club 42

    Participating in meetings 44

    Getting more involved 45

    Exploring the ARRL 46

    ARRL benefits to you 47

    ARRL benefits to the hobby 48

    ARRL benefits to the public 49

    Taking Part in Specialty Groups 50

    On the Air — IOTA, SOTA, and POTA 50

    Young Hams — YOTA 51

    Competitive clubs 51

    Handiham 52

    AMSAT 53

    TAPR 54

    YLRL 55

    QRP clubs 56

    Attending Hamfests and Conventions 57

    Finding and preparing for hamfests 57

    Buying equipment at hamfests 58

    Finding conventions and conferences 59

    Part 2: Wading through the Licensing Process 63

    Chapter 4: Understanding the Licensing System 65

    Getting Acquainted with the Amateur Service 66

    FCC rules 66

    Ham radio frequency allocations 67

    Learning about Types of Licenses 69

    Technician class 70

    General class 70

    Amateur Extra class 70

    Grandfathered classes 71

    Getting Licensed 72

    Studying the exam questions 72

    Taking your license exam 72

    Volunteer examiner coordinators 73

    Volunteer examiners 73

    Receiving Your New Call Sign 74

    Call-sign prefixes and suffixes 74

    Class and call sign 75

    Chapter 5: Preparing for Your License Exam 77

    Getting a Grip on the Technician Exam 77

    Finding Study Resources 78

    Licensing classes 79

    Books, websites, and videos 80

    Online practice exams 82

    Locating Your Mentor 82

    Chapter 6: Taking the Exam 85

    Types of Exams 86

    Public in-person exams 86

    Remote exams 86

    Exams at events 87

    Exam sessions in homes and online 87

    Finding an Exam Session 88

    Registering with the Universal Licensing System (ULS) 88

    Getting to Exam Day 90

    What to have with you 91

    What to expect 91

    What to do after the exam 93

    Chapter 7: Obtaining Your License and Call Sign 95

    Completing Your Licensing Paperwork 95

    Finding Your Call Sign 98

    Searching the ULS database 98

    Searching other websites for call signs 99

    Printing your license 100

    Identifying with your new privileges 101

    Picking Your Own Call Sign 101

    Searching for available call signs 102

    Applying for a vanity call sign 103

    Maintaining Your License 104

    Part 3: Hamming It Up 105

    Chapter 8: Receiving Signals 107

    Learning by Listening 107

    Finding out where to listen 108

    Understanding how bands are organized 109

    Using Your Receiver 110

    Tuning and scanning with channels 112

    Continuous tuning with a knob 113

    Software-controlled tuning 114

    Listening on VHF and UHF 115

    Listening on HF 116

    Using beacon networks and contact maps 118

    Receiving Signals 121

    Receiving FM voice 121

    Receiving SSB voice 125

    Receiving digital voice 127

    Receiving digital or data modes 128

    Receiving Morse code 131

    Chapter 9: Basic Operating 133

    Understanding Contacts (QSOs) 134

    Common parts of contacts 135

    Casual contacts 139

    Nets and talk groups — On-the-air meetings 139

    Contests and DXing — Radiosport 141

    How contacts get started 142

    Joining a contact 144

    Failing to make contact 145

    During a contact 147

    Calling CQ 150

    Casual Conversation — Ragchewing 152

    Knowing where to chew 152

    Identifying a ragchewer 154

    Calling CQ for a ragchew 155

    Making Repeater and Simplex Contacts 156

    Understanding repeater basics 156

    Making a repeater contact 160

    Using access control 161

    Miscellaneous repeater features 163

    Maximizing your signal 164

    Setting up your radio 164

    Making a simplex contact 168

    Digital Voice Systems 169

    HF digital voice 170

    VHF/UHF digital voice 170

    Digital repeater networks 172

    The DMR system 176

    Casual Operating on HF 178

    HF bands 178

    Picking good times to operate 179

    Contacts on CW and digital modes 181

    Chapter 10: Public Service Operating 185

    Joining a Public Service Group 186

    Finding a public service group 186

    Volunteering for ARES 188

    Preparing for Emergencies and Disasters 189

    Knowing who 189

    Knowing where 190

    Knowing what 190

    Knowing how 192

    Operating in Emergencies and Disasters 193

    Reporting an accident or other incident 194

    Making and responding to distress calls 195

    Providing Public Service 197

    Weather monitoring and SKYWARN 197

    Parades and charity events 198

    Participating in Nets 199

    Checking in and out 200

    Exchanging information 200

    Tactical call signs 202

    Radio discipline 202

    Digital Message Networks 203

    Winlink — email by radio 204

    AREDN 206

    NBEMS 207

    Chapter 11: Operating Specialties 209

    Getting Digital 210

    Digital definitions 211

    WSJT modes — fast and slow 212

    FT8 and FT4 213

    PSK31 and PSK63 216

    Radioteletype (RTTY) 216

    Non-WSJT MFSK modes 218

    PACTOR, ARDOP, and VARA 219

    Packet radio 220

    APRS and tracking 220

    DXing — Chasing Distant Stations 223

    VHF/UHF DXing with a Technician license 223

    HF DXing with a General license 227

    Taking Part in Radio Contests 235

    Choosing a contest 237

    Operating in a contest 238

    Chasing Awards 245

    Finding awards and special events 245

    Logging contacts for awards 246

    Applying for awards 247

    Mastering Morse Code (CW) 247

    Learning Morse correctly 248

    Copying the code 249

    Pounding brass — sending Morse 250

    Making code contacts 251

    QRP (Low Power) and Portable Operating 251

    Getting started with QRP 252

    Portable operating 253

    Direction-finding (ARDF) 256

    Operating via Satellites 257

    Getting grounded in satellite basics 257

    Accessing satellites 258

    Seeing Things: Image Communication 259

    Slow-scan television 259

    Fast-scan television 261

    Part 4: Building and Operating a Station That Works 263

    Chapter 12: Getting on the Air 265

    What is a Station? 265

    Planning Your Station 266

    Deciding what you want to do 266

    Deciding how to operate 267

    Choosing a Radio 270

    Allocating your resources 271

    Software defined radios 272

    Radios for VHF and UHF operating 273

    Radios for HF operating 278

    Filtering and noise 281

    Choosing an Antenna 282

    Beam antennas 283

    VHF/UHF antennas 284

    HF antennas 285

    Feed line and connectors 289

    Supporting Your Antenna 293

    Antennas and trees 293

    Masts and tripods 294

    Towers 295

    Rotators 296

    Station Accessories 298

    Mikes, keys, and keyers 298

    Antenna system gadgets 299

    Digital mode interfaces 301

    Remote Control Stations 302

    Remote control rules 302

    Accessing a remote control station 303

    Upgrading Your Station 304

    Chapter 13: Organizing a Home Station 307

    Designing Your Station 307

    Keeping a station notebook 308

    Building in ergonomics 309

    Viewing some example ham stations 312

    Building in RF and Electrical Safety 316

    Electrical safety 316

    RF exposure 317

    First aid 318

    Grounding and Bonding 319

    AC and DC power 320

    Lightning 320

    RF management 321

    Chapter 14: Computers in Your Ham Station 323

    What Type of Computers Do Hams Use? 323

    Windows 324

    Linux 324

    Macintosh 324

    Android and iOS 324

    Microcontrollers 325

    What Do Ham Computers Do? 325

    Software-defined radio 326

    WSJT-X and fldigi 327

    Radio and remote control 327

    Hardware considerations 328

    Keeping a Log of Your Contacts 329

    Paper logging 329

    Computer logging 330

    Submitting a contest log 333

    Confirming Your Contacts 335

    QSL cards 335

    QSLing electronically 336

    Direct QSLing 337

    Using QSL managers 337

    Bureaus and QSL services 338

    Applying for awards 339

    Chapter 15: Operating Away from Home 341

    Mobile Stations 341

    HF mobile radios 342

    Mobile installations 343

    Mobile antennas 347

    Portable Operating 349

    Portable antennas 353

    Portable power 354

    Field Day 355

    Field Day “gotchas” 357

    Chapter 16: Hands-On Radio 359

    Acquiring Tools and Components 360

    Maintenance tools 360

    Repair and building tools 366

    Components for repairs and building 368

    Maintaining Your Station 370

    Overall Troubleshooting 372

    Troubleshooting Your Station 372

    Power problems 373

    RF problems 374

    Operational problems 375

    Troubleshooting RF Interference 377

    Dealing with interference to other equipment 378

    Dealing with interference to your equipment 380

    Building Equipment from a Kit 383

    Building Equipment from Scratch 384

    Part 5: The Part of Tens 385

    Chapter 17: Ham Radio Jargon — Say What? 387

    Spoken Q-signals 387

    Contesting or Radiosport 388

    Antenna Varieties 388

    Feed Lines 389

    Antenna Tuners 389

    Repeater Operating 390

    Grid Squares 391

    Interference and Noise 391

    Connector Parts 392

    Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 393

    Chapter 18: Technical Fundamentals 395

    Electrical Units and Symbols 395

    Ohm’s Law 396

    Power 397

    Decibels 397

    Attenuation, Loss, and Gain 398

    Bandwidth 398

    Filters 399

    Antenna Patterns 400

    Standing Wave Ratio (SWR) 401

    Battery Characteristics 402

    Satellite Tracking 402

    Chapter 19: Tips for Masters 405

    Listening to Everything 405

    Learning How It Works 406

    Following the Protocol 406

    Keeping Your Axe Sharp 406

    Practice to Make Perfect 406

    Paying Attention to Detail 407

    Knowing What You Don’t Know 407

    Maintaining Radio Discipline 407

    Make Small Improvements Continuously 408

    Help Others and Accept Help from Others 408

    Index 409

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