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#1
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Sounds like totally illegal activity to me ... if I were you, I
would not expect help here and would be prepared to duck for cover as the flames erupt ... Carl - wk3c "Cindy W" wrote in message ... There is worldwide packet radio activity on 27540 kHz. Which qsy to 6890 at night. I know of some people in the Tampa area who operate on this frequency and have qso'd other packet stations in the U.S. as well as worldwide DX. Alfa-Delta domestic call signs & Rapert International calls are being used on the frequency. Does anybody know the policy and protocol for hobby packet ops? tnx, Cindy W Worldwide #3815 friendly op endorsement |
#2
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youre troll meter is out of whack, must have been golden screwdrivered
troll meter is pegged on this one! |
#3
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![]() Ham Dat Am wrote: Cindy -- you have to understand you asked a question about illegal CB operation and Hams are very much against ANY illegal operations on any band. Kinda like asking an atheist question in a Catholic Church. Go to rec.radio.cb --- you will get sympathy there and also probably bad mouthed about illegal operations. But perhaps you didn't know it was illegal -- now you do. Read FCC rules at URL: http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/personal/cb/ As far as your visit to the club meeting -- here in Southern California we have a youth group of young Hams under the age of 18, about 20 of them. We have donated lots of equipment to their schools, given them free books, make a point to welcome them to the repeaters and club meetings. All ethnic groups and genders are represented. They had a table and setup at Field Day just for the youth group at the GOTA station. They meet each Thurs eve for a net on one of our repeaters. Some are involved in Emergency Communications. We treat all Hams the same, young, old, green or blue. Maybe you live in an area where the converse is true. So your comments are like --- this cat is green -- so all cats are reen --- too generalized. And your comment about "Old White men" is racist and stupid, as you too will be old someday. Sooner than you think. Oh, I don't think Cindy will ever be an old white man! 8^) Ask yourself a question "When did I start to hate Old Folks ??" The ones that Tom Brokaw termed "The Greatest Generation". The ones who made this country the great nation it is. Old white guys are a legitimate target - and I hope to someday be an old white guy. |
#4
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Bravo well sed! Ditto
Maybe like taking the kids to a Lions or Rotory meeting. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... But, to answer your paragraph, why would anyone take a group of kids to an amateur club meeting? It's a completely different environment than they would be comfortable in. And there is usually business to take care of at a meeting that would be mind numbing for kids to listen to, like finances, membership issues, etc. If you really wanted to get them interested, you would get a few amateurs to meet with the kids on the kids turf, like a classroom, the local YMCA, places like that. The kids would be comfortable, only hams who ar interested in public outreach would be involved, and a program could be put together that would keep the kids involved and interactive. - Mike KB3EIA - |
#5
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FYI Cindy From FCC URL:
http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/per...ons/#equipment You must use an FCC certificated CB transmitter at your CB station. You can identify an FCC certificated transmitter by the certification label placed on it by the manufacturer. Cindy W |
#6
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![]() "Cindy W" wrote in message ... Which is exacly why young kids are turned off by ham radio. I once took a group of young black kids to a local ham radio club meeting. All the old white men ignored the kids or made rude remarks. These same frustrated old white men then wonder why the hobby is rapidly going the way of the horse & buggy. Cindy W Cindy, take that group of young Black kids and turn to CB Super Bowl channel 6 get them 10 kw amplifiers and they will fit right in.... |
#7
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![]() "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... But, to answer your paragraph, why would anyone take a group of kids to an amateur club meeting? It's a completely different environment than they would be comfortable in. And there is usually business to take care of at a meeting that would be mind numbing for kids to listen to, like finances, membership issues, etc. If you really wanted to get them interested, you would get a few amateurs to meet with the kids on the kids turf, like a classroom, the local YMCA, places like that. The kids would be comfortable, only hams who ar interested in public outreach would be involved, and a program could be put together that would keep the kids involved and interactive. - Mike KB3EIA - I think that getting kids involved with local ham clubs is an excellent idea. It will socialize them with the older, more experienced hams that can "elmer" them, show them that there is order and organization, expose them to programs and activities, etc. The KEY is finding the RIGHT ham club that will treat the kids the way they be deserve to be treated as the future of amateur radio, not a club that will shun and ridicule them as Cindy has described. Carl - wk3c |
#8
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Tom wrote:
You are mistaken. CB radio is a legal hobby and so is packet radio. But not packet on CB. |
#9
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![]() "Tom" wrote in message ... You are mistaken. CB radio is a legal hobby and so is packet radio. Both are legal but combining packet with CB is NOT legal. Also US law limits CB communications to LOCAL use only although propagation makes it possible to communicate world wide. You are not allowed to make cross country or out of country contacts on CB. Actually given the fact that we are in the trough of the sunspot cycle, long distance communications on the CB band will be rather rare for the next few years. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
#10
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![]() "Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ... "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... But, to answer your paragraph, why would anyone take a group of kids to an amateur club meeting? It's a completely different environment than they would be comfortable in. And there is usually business to take care of at a meeting that would be mind numbing for kids to listen to, like finances, membership issues, etc. If you really wanted to get them interested, you would get a few amateurs to meet with the kids on the kids turf, like a classroom, the local YMCA, places like that. The kids would be comfortable, only hams who ar interested in public outreach would be involved, and a program could be put together that would keep the kids involved and interactive. - Mike KB3EIA - I think that getting kids involved with local ham clubs is an excellent idea. It will socialize them with the older, more experienced hams that can "elmer" them, show them that there is order and organization, expose them to programs and activities, etc. The KEY is finding the RIGHT ham club that will treat the kids the way they be deserve to be treated as the future of amateur radio, not a club that will shun and ridicule them as Cindy has described. Carl - wk3c Not only that but if the group is larger than two or three, it would be very wise to arrange it with the club in advance so that they can set aside some time from the business meeting to welcome the kids and have material prepared to show them some of the marvels of ham radio. Just springing a batch of kids on the club is not the best way to introduce the kids to the club and vice versa. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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