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#1
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I am new to Ham Radio. I am very interested in APRS and Packet radio.
As I start to build my ham shack and complete my vehicle for RACES what is some good advice for me? I work mainly with Mac computers in the design and graphics area so I am currently shopping around for cheap PCs to install in my Ham shack and an old laptop for the vehicle to do APRS. I listened to some interesting conversations on VHF concerning the above subjects but as you would know it is not the complete picture. So if you were starting out in too this two fields of Ham radio what advice would you give if you are an Elmer to a newbie. I am interested in buying used equipment when possible. regards, Robert KD5YHY |
#2
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![]() "Robert" wrote in message om... I am new to Ham Radio. I am very interested in APRS and Packet radio. As I start to build my ham shack and complete my vehicle for RACES what is some good advice for me? I work mainly with Mac computers in the design and graphics area so I am currently shopping around for cheap PCs to install in my Ham shack and an old laptop for the vehicle to do APRS. I listened to some interesting conversations on VHF concerning the above subjects but as you would know it is not the complete picture. So if you were starting out in too this two fields of Ham radio what advice would you give if you are an Elmer to a newbie. I am interested in buying used equipment when possible. regards, Robert KD5YHY For most ham radio use, junker Pentium machines work well. I have a couple of them in the shack, picked them up from friends or relatives who had upgraded and were going to toss out the old machine. You might need to find a few of those free old junkers to get enough working parts, but the cost is right :-) -- ... Hank Hank: http://horedson.home.att.net W0RLI: http://w0rli.home.att.net |
#3
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![]() "Robert" wrote in message om... I am new to Ham Radio. I am very interested in APRS and Packet radio. As I start to build my ham shack and complete my vehicle for RACES what is some good advice for me? I work mainly with Mac computers in the design and graphics area so I am currently shopping around for cheap PCs to install in my Ham shack and an old laptop for the vehicle to do APRS. I listened to some interesting conversations on VHF concerning the above subjects but as you would know it is not the complete picture. So if you were starting out in too this two fields of Ham radio what advice would you give if you are an Elmer to a newbie. I am interested in buying used equipment when possible. regards, Robert KD5YHY For most ham radio use, junker Pentium machines work well. I have a couple of them in the shack, picked them up from friends or relatives who had upgraded and were going to toss out the old machine. You might need to find a few of those free old junkers to get enough working parts, but the cost is right :-) -- ... Hank Hank: http://horedson.home.att.net W0RLI: http://w0rli.home.att.net |
#4
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Robert
First of all, go have a chat with your local EC/RO. A lot of amateurs feel that they can contribute in an emergency by being prepared to operate portable or mobile without commercial mains power. This is one dimension, but unless you are connected to your local ARES/RACES organization, and understand the procedures, your primary contribution is likely to be delivering coffee. When there is a serious problem of some sort, there just isn't time to train folks that want to help. You need to be connected with your local folks well ahead of time, so you can learn just what has to happen in the event of an incident. If you don't know who your local EC is, contact your SEC (k5mwc at arrl.net) to find out. VHF packet can be an inportant component of emergency response, we use it extensively up here, but it will be totally useless unless it is a component of YOUR county's plan. This is another reason you want to get with the local folks and understand your local infrastructure. The suggestions about a junk laptop are pretty good. If you are using a TNC, it doesn't take much in the way of a computer to operate packet. If you are looking at a used laptop, I would take care to find one with a decent battery. For many old laptops a replacement battery will cost more than the laptop. The TNC is an expensive bit and it's a pain to carry around yet another box for portable operation. Of course, one advantage to you is that with the TNC, there's probably no need to leave your Mac behind. There are now software only packet implementations, but if you choose this route, you will want a little beefier computer. It doesn't need to be some killer machine, just something that will run Windows 98 reasonably well. I would look for something like a Pentium II, although you probably could get away with a Pentium. It needs to have a decent sound card built in, many early laptops didn't so look at this. For use with a TNC, you are just as well off with a 386/486 type of machine, which are amazingly cheap these days. If you intend to do a bit of experimentation, you may want to avoid the newer NT/W2K/XP machines for the time being. They throw a lot of roadblocks in the way of some of the ham software, and it's probably worthwhile waiting until the software catches up before jumping on that bandwagon. However, if all you intend to do is packet, MixW does work reasonably well in the newer environments. Hope this helps.. ... "Robert" wrote in message om... I am new to Ham Radio. I am very interested in APRS and Packet radio. As I start to build my ham shack and complete my vehicle for RACES what is some good advice for me? I work mainly with Mac computers in the design and graphics area so I am currently shopping around for cheap PCs to install in my Ham shack and an old laptop for the vehicle to do APRS. I listened to some interesting conversations on VHF concerning the above subjects but as you would know it is not the complete picture. So if you were starting out in too this two fields of Ham radio what advice would you give if you are an Elmer to a newbie. I am interested in buying used equipment when possible. regards, Robert KD5YHY |
#5
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Robert
First of all, go have a chat with your local EC/RO. A lot of amateurs feel that they can contribute in an emergency by being prepared to operate portable or mobile without commercial mains power. This is one dimension, but unless you are connected to your local ARES/RACES organization, and understand the procedures, your primary contribution is likely to be delivering coffee. When there is a serious problem of some sort, there just isn't time to train folks that want to help. You need to be connected with your local folks well ahead of time, so you can learn just what has to happen in the event of an incident. If you don't know who your local EC is, contact your SEC (k5mwc at arrl.net) to find out. VHF packet can be an inportant component of emergency response, we use it extensively up here, but it will be totally useless unless it is a component of YOUR county's plan. This is another reason you want to get with the local folks and understand your local infrastructure. The suggestions about a junk laptop are pretty good. If you are using a TNC, it doesn't take much in the way of a computer to operate packet. If you are looking at a used laptop, I would take care to find one with a decent battery. For many old laptops a replacement battery will cost more than the laptop. The TNC is an expensive bit and it's a pain to carry around yet another box for portable operation. Of course, one advantage to you is that with the TNC, there's probably no need to leave your Mac behind. There are now software only packet implementations, but if you choose this route, you will want a little beefier computer. It doesn't need to be some killer machine, just something that will run Windows 98 reasonably well. I would look for something like a Pentium II, although you probably could get away with a Pentium. It needs to have a decent sound card built in, many early laptops didn't so look at this. For use with a TNC, you are just as well off with a 386/486 type of machine, which are amazingly cheap these days. If you intend to do a bit of experimentation, you may want to avoid the newer NT/W2K/XP machines for the time being. They throw a lot of roadblocks in the way of some of the ham software, and it's probably worthwhile waiting until the software catches up before jumping on that bandwagon. However, if all you intend to do is packet, MixW does work reasonably well in the newer environments. Hope this helps.. ... "Robert" wrote in message om... I am new to Ham Radio. I am very interested in APRS and Packet radio. As I start to build my ham shack and complete my vehicle for RACES what is some good advice for me? I work mainly with Mac computers in the design and graphics area so I am currently shopping around for cheap PCs to install in my Ham shack and an old laptop for the vehicle to do APRS. I listened to some interesting conversations on VHF concerning the above subjects but as you would know it is not the complete picture. So if you were starting out in too this two fields of Ham radio what advice would you give if you are an Elmer to a newbie. I am interested in buying used equipment when possible. regards, Robert KD5YHY |
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