ARLA/CLUSTER: Episódio 135 da série "Foundations of Amateur Radio"

João Costa > CT1FBF ct1fbf gmail.com
Segunda-Feira, 8 de Janeiro de 2018 - 15:07:48 WET


Foundations of Amateur Radio #135

What is amateur radio? What's not part of the hobby and what is?

The more you dig into this, the deeper the rabbit hole goes. I'll
start with an analogy to set the scene.

In aviation, Sir George Cayley was the first person to investigate
heavier-than-air flying vehicles. He invented the aeroplane in 1799.
The first full-sized glider, built in 1849 carried the first person in
history to fly, the ten-year-old son of one of his servants. Since
then the Wright brothers made their flight at Kitty Hawk. We saw the
invention of commercial aviation, the turbo prop, the jet engine, the
space-shuttle, helicopters, drones, rockets, hot-air balloons, the
Hindenburg, the Goodyear blimps, hang-gliders, gyro-copters and many,
many other contraptions.

Each of those are considered aviation and the person controlling the
device is considered a pilot.

In amateur radio we talk on the radio.
We also create repeaters and talk on them. We link them together using
what ever technology is available. We make it possible to connect to
such networks using software such as Echolink, AllStar Link, IRLP and
other internet based systems. We create digital networks with DMR, use
WSPR to exchange information, make contacts using CODEC2, have
contests using CW and Morse code.

We build software defined radios where we use computers to decode and
encode radio signals, test back scatter using all manner of signal
processing, use packet radio, RTTY, Hellschreiber and bounce signals
off the moon and nearby meteors or an overflying aircraft.

We make auto-tuners with a Raspberry-Pi or an SWR meter with an
Ardiuno. We build valve based amplifiers and program mp3 voice-keyers,
GPS lock radios, map propagation using the internet and have a rag
chew on the local 2m repeater.

We investigate 13cm propagation, do experiments with amateur
television and we set up radio stations on top of mountains, in light
houses and on remote islands.

All of this is amateur radio, and frankly I've only just scratched the surface.

There are heated discussions about if a linked repeater using the
internet to create the link is real amateur radio or not, whether
using your mobile phone as a node on the Echolink network is real
amateur radio or not, if using a computer to create contacts on a
digital mode such as JT65 is real radio or not.

Each of these questions highlights a misconception about our hobby.

There are no boundaries in amateur radio. We're a bunch of inventors,
mavericks, people who attempt the unthinkable, try the impossible and
make progress.

There are people who are passengers on planes, and there are people
who fly them. There are people using technology and there are people
who invent it. We have a unique perspective as a community. We have
the ability to imagine something that doesn't yet exist. Why would you
spend any energy on whether that thing is real amateur radio or not?

Amateur radio is a myriad of things, some of them related to antennas
and radio spectrum, some not. This hobby is what you make of it, so go
forth and invent something, try something, get on air and make some
noise!

I'm Onno VK6FLAB



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