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#1
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I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is
amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. 7290, 7285, 14.265, 3935, 3873, 3965 and many others I am sure. I'm listening to a young lady right now with the Baptist feeding unit in Biloxi Mississippi on the Alabama net frequency of 3965 passing messages to family and friends outside of the disaster area. Such as "Daddy were alright" Don't worry have not been able to call before. And this is for you Len Anderson......take your anti-ham crap and shove it. Back to work, thanks to you all for the help you are providing. Dan/W4NTI |
#2
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![]() "Cmdr Buzz Corey" wrote in message ... Dan/W4NTI wrote: I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. 7290, 7285, 14.265, 3935, 3873, 3965 and many others I am sure. I'm listening to a young lady right now with the Baptist feeding unit in Biloxi Mississippi on the Alabama net frequency of 3965 passing messages to family and friends outside of the disaster area. Such as "Daddy were alright" Don't worry have not been able to call before. And this is for you Len Anderson......take your anti-ham crap and shove it. Back to work, thanks to you all for the help you are providing. Dan/W4NTI Ask frankieboy to turn on his SeeBee and tell us all about the disaster traffic they are handling. This just came over 3965... On 3965, KB7BSA is with the Baptist feeding unit in Biloxi MS. She just passed this along after sending out 40 Health and Welfare messages..... " Ham radio is all there is for communications. Police, Fire, Rescue, Emergency Services, all of them using Ham Radio, there is NOTHING ELSE that works" Dan/W4NTI |
#3
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From: Dan/W4NTI on Sep 1, 5:26 pm
I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. "Commercial infrastructure" is defined as anything non-amateur? Strange, I still see rather "commercial" and "military" infrastructure radios very much at work on TV news, along with lots and lots of "infrastructure" personnel. Flood conditions high enough to inundate "commercial infrastructure" equipment will ALSO inundate amateur equipment and render it useless as well. The relief efforts in Louisiana and Mississippi are being handled by MANY, MANY different volunteers and MOST of them do not appear to be or are identified as amateur radio operators. 7290, 7285, 14.265, 3935, 3873, 3965 and many others I am sure. Those networks are operating OUTSIDE the flood regions, have NOT been inundated with flood waters. I'm listening to a young lady right now with the Baptist feeding unit in Biloxi Mississippi on the Alabama net frequency of 3965 passing messages to family and friends outside of the disaster area. Then that young lady is NOT under water and has gotten to a location that is NOT under water or destroyed (somehow, you have not specified that transport) and has the help of an amateur radio station set up for this purpose on DRY land (some place unspecified). Such as "Daddy were alright" Don't worry have not been able to call before. That is excellent service that is provided (partly) by amateur radio. "Daddy" somehow has gotten the news and that probably is completed over a telephone circuit...a telephone circuit of the evil "commercial infrastructure" that was NOT destroyed. And this is for you Len Anderson......take your anti-ham crap and shove it. Tsk, tsk, tsk. I've NEVER been "anti-ham." What I HAVE been against is the morse code test for any amateur radio license. What I HAVE been against is the braggadoccio of morse code mode over and above any other mode in effectiveness. What I HAVE been against is that morse code mode is the "only" mode possible in emergency communications. And what I HAVE been against is all you PCTA emotional retards who think/state/live the notion that U.S. amateur radio is ONLY about morse code mode, morsemanship, and neglecting the majority of licensed radio amateurs who do NOT agree with you waving the ham flag as ONLY yours and ONLY that of the morsemen. You greatly confuse all of "hamdom" as having YOUR personal opinion. You don't understand that someone having opinions contrary to YOURS does NOT act in any "anti-amateur" manner. Back to work, thanks to you all for the help you are providing. Dan, go to the grill and fork yourself. You're done. |
#4
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Dan/W4NTI wrote:
I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. 7290, 7285, 14.265, 3935, 3873, 3965 and many others I am sure. I'm listening to a young lady right now with the Baptist feeding unit in Biloxi Mississippi on the Alabama net frequency of 3965 passing messages to family and friends outside of the disaster area. Such as "Daddy were alright" Don't worry have not been able to call before. And this is for you Len Anderson......take your anti-ham crap and shove it. Back to work, thanks to you all for the help you are providing. Dan/W4NTI Ask frankieboy to turn on his SeeBee and tell us all about the disaster traffic they are handling. |
#6
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... From: Dan/W4NTI on Sep 1, 5:26 pm I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. "Commercial infrastructure" is defined as anything non-amateur? Agreed. Strange, I still see rather "commercial" and "military" infrastructure radios very much at work on TV news, along with lots and lots of "infrastructure" personnel. Agreed, but there's no doubt that hams are assisting in the overall process. Such assistance at least lightens the communications load on the remaining commercial infrastructure. Flood conditions high enough to inundate "commercial infrastructure" equipment will ALSO inundate amateur equipment and render it useless as well. Maybe, maybe not....depending on the portability of that equipment and how/where the ham actually has/had it when disastor stuck. The relief efforts in Louisiana and Mississippi are being handled by MANY, MANY different volunteers and MOST of them do not appear to be or are identified as amateur radio operators. 7290, 7285, 14.265, 3935, 3873, 3965 and many others I am sure. Those networks are operating OUTSIDE the flood regions, have NOT been inundated with flood waters. But they are delivering messages to and from the flood areas. I'm listening to a young lady right now with the Baptist feeding unit in Biloxi Mississippi on the Alabama net frequency of 3965 passing messages to family and friends outside of the disaster area. Then that young lady is NOT under water and has gotten to a location that is NOT under water or destroyed (somehow, you have not specified that transport) and has the help of an amateur radio station set up for this purpose on DRY land (some place unspecified). I must ask... What's the difference? Does it mean that ham radio isn't providing helpful and needed additional communications? Such as "Daddy were alright" Don't worry have not been able to call before. That is excellent service that is provided (partly) by amateur radio. "Daddy" somehow has gotten the news and that probably is completed over a telephone circuit...a telephone circuit of the evil "commercial infrastructure" that was NOT destroyed. Again, the fact that hams played a part is all that matters if the communication between father/family could not have otherwise been completed. SNIP Cheers, To those hams in the thick of the emergency...well done and keep up the good work. Cheers, Bill K2UNK |
#7
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![]() "Bill Sohl" wrote in message ink.net... wrote in message oups.com... From: Dan/W4NTI on Sep 1, 5:26 pm I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. "Commercial infrastructure" is defined as anything non-amateur? Agreed. Let me revise that. If non-amateur includes CD, FRS and GMRS then I agree. If by amateur Len is only referencing the Amateur Service (Part 97) then I disagree and would suggest the following. Commercial Infrastructure is anything other than CB, FRS, GMRS or Amateur Service. Cheers, Bill K2UNK |
#8
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... From: Dan/W4NTI on Sep 1, 5:26 pm Nothing worth wasting bandwith on from the idiot on the left coast. plonk Dan/W4NTI |
#9
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The mobile unit I was refering to is OBVIOUS to anyone that has Ham Radio
Emergency Com experience. This totally elliminates dip**** Lennie. But to help the dummy out....they drove in from Anniston Alabama.....and to help him out....yes they had a proper pass. Lennie, just sit down on your hands and shut up. You have NOTHING to contribute, as usual. Dan/W4NTI "Bill Sohl" wrote in message ink.net... wrote in message oups.com... From: Dan/W4NTI on Sep 1, 5:26 pm I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. "Commercial infrastructure" is defined as anything non-amateur? Agreed. Strange, I still see rather "commercial" and "military" infrastructure radios very much at work on TV news, along with lots and lots of "infrastructure" personnel. Agreed, but there's no doubt that hams are assisting in the overall process. Such assistance at least lightens the communications load on the remaining commercial infrastructure. Flood conditions high enough to inundate "commercial infrastructure" equipment will ALSO inundate amateur equipment and render it useless as well. Maybe, maybe not....depending on the portability of that equipment and how/where the ham actually has/had it when disastor stuck. The relief efforts in Louisiana and Mississippi are being handled by MANY, MANY different volunteers and MOST of them do not appear to be or are identified as amateur radio operators. 7290, 7285, 14.265, 3935, 3873, 3965 and many others I am sure. Those networks are operating OUTSIDE the flood regions, have NOT been inundated with flood waters. But they are delivering messages to and from the flood areas. I'm listening to a young lady right now with the Baptist feeding unit in Biloxi Mississippi on the Alabama net frequency of 3965 passing messages to family and friends outside of the disaster area. Then that young lady is NOT under water and has gotten to a location that is NOT under water or destroyed (somehow, you have not specified that transport) and has the help of an amateur radio station set up for this purpose on DRY land (some place unspecified). I must ask... What's the difference? Does it mean that ham radio isn't providing helpful and needed additional communications? Such as "Daddy were alright" Don't worry have not been able to call before. That is excellent service that is provided (partly) by amateur radio. "Daddy" somehow has gotten the news and that probably is completed over a telephone circuit...a telephone circuit of the evil "commercial infrastructure" that was NOT destroyed. Again, the fact that hams played a part is all that matters if the communication between father/family could not have otherwise been completed. SNIP Cheers, To those hams in the thick of the emergency...well done and keep up the good work. Cheers, Bill K2UNK |
#10
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![]() "Cmdr Buzz Corey" wrote in message ... wrote: From: Dan/W4NTI on Sep 1, 5:26 pm I hope you folks can give a listen to HF during this disaster. It is amazing how Ham Radio has stepped up to the plate and is providing Communications where the Commercial infrastructure is destroyed. "Commercial infrastructure" is defined as anything non-amateur? Strange, I still see rather "commercial" and "military" infrastructure radios very much at work on TV news, along with lots and lots of "infrastructure" personnel. Flood conditions high enough to inundate "commercial infrastructure" equipment will ALSO inundate amateur equipment and render it useless as well. You truly are an idiot lennyboy. Exactly my point about Lennie. He has absolutely no idea what ham radio does and is capable of. So why do we even read what he says? Dan/W4NTI |
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