From charlesreid1

 
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Ham Radio mnemonics from studying for a [[General]] class ham license.
=Chapter 3=
=Chapter 3=
==Regulatory Bodies==
==Licensing Rules==


==Operating Privileges==
==Operating Privileges==


Spectrum Sequence:
===Spectrum Sequence===


{|
{|
Line 16: Line 14:
|3.5 || 80
|3.5 || 80
|-
|-
|7 || 40
|''7'' || ''40''
|-
|-
|14 || 20
|14 || 20
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|}
|}


10 meters:
===10 meters===
 
The Ham's Band
 
28.0 - 29.7 MHz
 
(28.000-28.300 MHz data, 28.300-29.700 MHz phone)
 
satellites, wide4, all modes
 
sunlight+, sunspots+, solar cycle+


<pre>
working ham satellites up in the heavens
  twenty-eight-zero to twenty-nine-seven
  twenty-eight-zero to twenty-nine-seven
  working ham satellites up in the heavens
  </pre>
 
===12 meters===
 
Spotty DX
 
24.8 - 24.9 MHz
 
(24.890-24.990 MHz)


12 meters:
heavily influenced by sunspots, bad dozens mi, good thousands mi


twelve-to-twenty-four, 8 to 9,
<pre>
  if there are sunspots 12 meters is fine
  if there are sunspots 12 meters is fine
twelve-to-twenty-four, eight-to-nine
</pre>
12 m ---(doubled)--> 24 MHz --> 24.8 to 24.9
===15 meters===
Daytime DX
21.0-21.4 MHz
(21.025-21.450 MHz)
Like 40
<pre>
fifteen in the daytime will open the door
twenty-one-zero to twenty-one-four
</pre>
===17 meters===
Mobile DX
18.0-18.1
(18.068-18.168 MHz, of which 18.068-18.110 MHz data, 18.110-18.168 MHz phone)
<pre>
mobile DXing for profit and fun
seventeen-eighteen, zero-to-one
</pre>
17 m ---(+1)----> 18 MHz -----> 18.0 to 18.1 MHz
===20 meters data===


17 meters:
DX


seventeen-eighteen, zero-to-one,
14.025-14.150
mobile DX-ing for profit and fun


20 meters:
(14.025-14.150 MHz data)


<pre>
for data on 20, you need to do math
  fourteen and a quarter, a buck and a half
  fourteen and a quarter, a buck and a half
for data on 20, you need to do math
</pre>
 
===20 meters phone===
 
DX
 
14.225-14.350 MHz phone
 
(14.225-14.350 MHz phone)


<pre>
phone contests are nifty
  two-two-five to three-fifty
  two-two-five to three-fifty
phone contests are nifty
</pre>
 
20 meters is half of 40 meters, and 40 meters is a good reference point (7 MHz). Half of 40 is 20, so twice 7 is 14. That makes 20 m = 14 MHz.
 
===30 meters===
 
Digital pocket
 
10.100-10.150 MHz data
 
Secondary, data, no phone


30 meters:
200 W PEP


  ten-ten to ten-fifteen
<pre>
  ten-dot-ten thru ten-dot-fifteen
  for data on 30, be squeaky clean
  for data on 30, be squeaky clean
</pre>
===40 meters===
Old Faithful
DX night, NVIS day
7.025-7.125 MHz (data)


40 meters:
7.175-7.300 MHz (phone)


<pre>
use an antenna that's tied to a tree
  seven-point-zero to seven-point-three
  seven-point-zero to seven-point-three
use an antenna that's tied to a tree
</pre>
 
===60 meters===
 
5chan
 
5.3 - 5.4 MHz
 
100 W ERP


60 meters:
(5332 kHz, 5348 kHz, 5358 kHz, 5373 kHz, 5405 kHz)


<pre>
  6-5-4-3,
  6-5-4-3,
  don't go on a power spree
  don't go on a power spree
</pre>
===80 meters===
The Ragchewer's Band
regional, high weather/urban noise floor, 1000 mi max
3.5-3.600 MHz
(3.525-3.600 MHz data)


80 meters:
3.800-4.000 MHz


<pre>
the ragchewer's band has quite a noise flo'
  three-five to three-six, three-eight to four-oh
  three-five to three-six, three-eight to four-oh
the ragchewer's band has quite a noise floor
</pre>
 
===160 meters===
 
The Gentleman's Band
 
1.800-2.000 MHz


160 meters:
Original, oldest, LORAN, night DX


<pre>
  one-point-eight to two-point-oh
  one-point-eight to two-point-oh
  the Gentleman's Band's the way to go
  the Gentleman's Band's the way to go
</pre>
==Digital Mode==
Work on mnemonic for digital mode bandwidth and symbol rates
=Flags=
{{MnemonicsFlag}}
{{RadioFlag}}

Latest revision as of 07:08, 23 May 2016

Ham Radio mnemonics from studying for a General class ham license.

Chapter 3

Operating Privileges

Spectrum Sequence

Frequency Wavelength
1.8 160
3.5 80
7 40
14 20
21 15
28 10

10 meters

The Ham's Band

28.0 - 29.7 MHz

(28.000-28.300 MHz data, 28.300-29.700 MHz phone)

satellites, wide4, all modes

sunlight+, sunspots+, solar cycle+

 working ham satellites up in the heavens
 twenty-eight-zero to twenty-nine-seven
 

12 meters

Spotty DX

24.8 - 24.9 MHz

(24.890-24.990 MHz)

heavily influenced by sunspots, bad dozens mi, good thousands mi

 if there are sunspots 12 meters is fine
 twelve-to-twenty-four, eight-to-nine

12 m ---(doubled)--> 24 MHz --> 24.8 to 24.9

15 meters

Daytime DX

21.0-21.4 MHz

(21.025-21.450 MHz)

Like 40

fifteen in the daytime will open the door
twenty-one-zero to twenty-one-four

17 meters

Mobile DX

18.0-18.1

(18.068-18.168 MHz, of which 18.068-18.110 MHz data, 18.110-18.168 MHz phone)

mobile DXing for profit and fun
seventeen-eighteen, zero-to-one

17 m ---(+1)----> 18 MHz -----> 18.0 to 18.1 MHz

20 meters data

DX

14.025-14.150

(14.025-14.150 MHz data)

 for data on 20, you need to do math
 fourteen and a quarter, a buck and a half

20 meters phone

DX

14.225-14.350 MHz phone

(14.225-14.350 MHz phone)

 phone contests are nifty
 two-two-five to three-fifty

20 meters is half of 40 meters, and 40 meters is a good reference point (7 MHz). Half of 40 is 20, so twice 7 is 14. That makes 20 m = 14 MHz.

30 meters

Digital pocket

10.100-10.150 MHz data

Secondary, data, no phone

200 W PEP

 ten-dot-ten thru ten-dot-fifteen
 for data on 30, be squeaky clean

40 meters

Old Faithful

DX night, NVIS day

7.025-7.125 MHz (data)

7.175-7.300 MHz (phone)

 use an antenna that's tied to a tree
 seven-point-zero to seven-point-three

60 meters

5chan

5.3 - 5.4 MHz

100 W ERP

(5332 kHz, 5348 kHz, 5358 kHz, 5373 kHz, 5405 kHz)

 6-5-4-3,
 don't go on a power spree

80 meters

The Ragchewer's Band

regional, high weather/urban noise floor, 1000 mi max

3.5-3.600 MHz

(3.525-3.600 MHz data)

3.800-4.000 MHz

 the ragchewer's band has quite a noise flo'
 three-five to three-six, three-eight to four-oh

160 meters

The Gentleman's Band

1.800-2.000 MHz

Original, oldest, LORAN, night DX

 one-point-eight to two-point-oh
 the Gentleman's Band's the way to go

Digital Mode

Work on mnemonic for digital mode bandwidth and symbol rates

Flags