Replying to Avatar Liberty Farmer

nostr:nprofile1qqszw48usckkhs9hcwt3q3np9k2z2c73s8qc0gu3uxqw66cqlq88ukcpz4mhxue69uhk2er9dchxummnw3ezumrpdejqzynhwden5te0wfjkccte9enrw73wd9hszgmhwden5te0wfjkccte9eek7an9wfjkjemwv4hxw6twv4jhy6twvuhxjmczv5ddh has some great posts with YouTube links and online courses.

It honestly isn't hard. Can get expensive....

An online course, some YouTube tutorials on getting your technician class ham license, and some study hours. I aced my tech test, and didn't study that much. There is literally a question bank with all possible questions and answers. Can memorize them all of you are able

Any links to these resources would be greatly appreciated and help me speed up the learning process.

I will have to check out some of their posts too. Thanks for the suggestions!

The expensive part does scare me since I am unemployed, but I would not mind parting with some old tech just to get some HAM radios that could cover a decent distance like 25 miles.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

25 is a stretch on anything but HF bands.

With a technician class, in the US, you are mostly limited to vhf and unfortunately bands. Those primarily work on line of sight. 5-10 miles, no problem on a 5 watt handheld radio. A larger base or mobile station of say 50 watts would be needed for more. 20 miles is very realistic on higher altitude and/or line of sight. 25 and up is possible but much more challenging and working with antennas, placements, etc ..