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Amateur Radio

A fascinating hobby for the twenty first century

Amateur radio has a history of a hundred years but it is very much hobby for the twenty first century.  From the very earliest days of experimental wireless to the present day of worldwide communications, radio amateurs have been at the forefront of developments. Communication over distance, with out wires, is as exciting today as it was to the early pioneers. 

Radio today is a vital part of the modern world.  Just think of all the areas in which the transmission and reception of radio waves is an essential part of life today, television, broadcasting, satellite communications, mobile phones, GPS, emergency services, air traffic control, shipping etc.  Radio amateurs, by international agreement, have access to a wide range of wave bands that allow them to transmit using techniques that have been developed over the years and those that are still very experimental.  Every thing from Internet linking to Morse code.  It’s this huge variety of ways in which radio can be used that makes amateur radio such a fascinating hobby.

Amateur Radio

Amateur radio, commonly called "ham radio", is a hobby enjoyed by many people throughout the world; about 3 million worldwide, 70,000 in Germany, 60,000 in the UK, 5,000 in Norway, 57,000 in Canada, and 700,000 in the USA.
A holder of an Amateur Radio license has studied and passed required tests in his or her country and been issued a call sign by its government. This call sign is unique to the operator and is often a source of pride. The holder of a call sign uses it on the air to legally identify all voice and data communications.
Amateur Radio should not be confused with CB radio which is limited to voice operation, allowed lower power limits, fewer frequency allocations, and is unlicensed in most countries.



Amateur Radio serves the following purposes;

Promotion and enhancement of the Amateur Radio Service as a voluntary noncommercial public communications service.
Continual advancement of the art of radio communication.
Expansion of the reservoir of trained radio operators and electronic experts.
Enhancement of international goodwill at the grass roots level.


Governance and Amateur Radio Societies

The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) governs the allocation of communications frequencies world-wide, with participation by each nation by representation from their communications regulation authority. IARU member nations may choose to further limit specific frequency allocations within IARU guidelines.


Many countries have their own national Amateur Radio society that coordinates with the communications regulation authority for the benefit of all Amateurs. The oldest of these societies is the Wireless Institute of Australia (WIA), formed in 1910; other notable early societies are the Radio Society of Great Britain founded in 1913 and the American Radio Relay League created in 1914. National societies also cooperate through the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU).

Use and available activities

Licensed Amateur Radio operators enjoy personal two-way communications with friends and complete strangers, all of whom must also be licensed. They support the larger public community with emergency and disaster communications. Increasing a person's knowledge of electronics and radio theory as well as radio contesting are also popular aspects of this radio service. A good way to get started in Ham Radio is to find a club in your area to answer your questions and provide information on getting licensed and then getting on the air!

Ham Radio offers the licensed operators a variety of radio modes that help to ensure reliable communications during and after disasters. Many of these rely on the "simplex" mode, that is direct, radio-to-radio, avoiding the problems associated with networks that might fail. In Ham Radio simplex communications would allow skilled radio operators to talk across town on VHF or UHF frequencies, or across the world on the HF (shortwave) bands of frequencies. Hams also have another powerful tool available, repeaters. Repeaters are radio relay devices usually located at height, on a tall building for example. A repeater allows the licensed Ham to have radio coverage for tens of miles from just a small handheld or mobile two-way radio.

Within amateur radio, one can pursue interests such as providing communications for a community emergency response team; antenna theory; satellite communication (see AMSAT and OSCAR series satellites); disaster response; packet radio (using data transmission protocols similar to that used on the internet, but via radio links); DX communication over thousands of miles using the ionosphere to refract radio waves; Internet Radio Linking Project (IRLP) which is a composite network of radio signals and the internet; and super low-power or QRP operation.

QSL cards and Contesting
Dxpedition qsl card

One of the many exciting activities of ham radio is the DX-pedition. GB2LI FOR EXAMPLE Radio amateurs collect QSL cards from other stations, indicating the continents and regions which they have contacted. Certain zones of the world have very few radio amateurs. As a result, when a station with a rare ID comes on the air, radio amateurs flock to communicate with it. To take advantage of this phenomenon, groups of hams transport radio equipment into a remote country or island (such as normally uninhabited Bouvet Island, which has the rare callsign prefix 3Y). These expeditions can help hams quickly achieve a communication award such as a DXCC. To obtain the DXCC award a ham needs confirming QSL cards from hams in 100 countries around the world.

Contesting is another activity which has garnered interest in the ham community. During a period of time (normally 24 to 48 hours) a ham tries to successfully communicate with as many other hams as possible. In the UK, one such event is Field Day, held in the last full weekend in June. The contesting amateur may concentrate on just DX stations, or only on stations powered by emergency generation equipment or running on batteries, which is meant to simulate hurricane or other emergency disaster conditions. Some contests may or may not be limited in allowable modes of transmission.

Weak signal and Low power activities

Some hams use VHF or UHF frequencies to bounce their signals off the moon. The return signal is heard by many other hams who also do EME (earth-moon-earth). The antenna arrays are massive so a lot of real estate is needed. Other hams transmit with very low power. Signals on the order of 5 watts or less are heard all over the world by these QRP (low power) operators.

Past, present, and future

Despite all these exciting specialties, many hams enjoy the informal contacts, long discussions or "rag-chews", or round table "nets", whether by voice transmission (SSB, AM, or FM), CW (morse telegraphy), or one of the digital modes (RTTY, PSK31, and others).

Even with the advent of the internet (offering email, music, broadcast audio, video, voice over IP (VoIP) ham radio is not diminishing in countries with advanced communications infrastructure. Amateur radio remains strong even today, as figures from the American Radio Relay League will prove. This may be partly because Hams enjoy communicating using the most minimalist simple hardware possible as well as finding the most technically advanced way, advancing the art of radio communication at both ends, frequently beyond what professionals are willing to try and risk.

Voice over IP (VoIP) is also finding it's way into Amateur Radio. Programs like Echolink tie hams with computers into ham radio repeaters across the globe. The Internet Radio Linking Project (IRLP) utilizes VoIP to tie repeaters together directly by user command. This nascent use is finding applications in emergency services as well, as an alternative to expensive (and sometime fallable) trunking systems.

In times of crisis and natural disasters, ham radio may be the only surviving means of communication. It has been found all too often that both wire and cellular telephone systems either fail or are overloaded in times of crisis and radios dedicated to emergency services fare little better. In the United States, two organizations of amateur radio operators exist nationally for disaster communications. They are the Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) and the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service (RACES). Typically a local radio club will have information on joining either or both. In areas where known disaster problems exist, amateur radio has a long-standing tradition of cooperation with local emergency services.
Los Angeles County and the Disaster Communications Service exists as an example and a model.

On March 18, 1909 Einar Dessau used a short-wave radio transmitter which made him the first to broadcast as a ham radio operator.

Amateur Radio on the screen

Tony Hancock's 1960 BBC TV episode "The Radio Ham", in which he plays an incompetent ham radio operator, has remained popular in the UK and has played a small part in keeping the memory of ham radio's heyday alive.

Hollywood movies have also used Amateur Radio as a convenient and often fanciful part of their plot:

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Amateur Radio".