• Just saying Hello to the HAMS

    From Dthomasdigital@VERT/TLG to All on Mon Jan 19 14:34:00 2026
    KF5HSY here and just wanted to say hello to the HAMS, working on a new project and thought I's say hello. Working on getting a BBS setup and one day getting it radio ready, so hello.

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  • From Khronos@VERT/CWSHACK to Dthomasdigital on Mon Jan 19 18:30:20 2026
    Dthomasdigital wrote to All <=-

    KF5HSY here and just wanted to say hello to the HAMS, working on a new project and thought I's say hello. Working on getting a BBS setup and
    one day getting it radio ready, so hello.

    Cool.
    I haven't really ever connected to a bbs over the air waves.
    I suspect I'd have to do something like packet over hf or something
    since vhf is short range.


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  • From phigan@VERT/TACOPRON to Khronos on Tue Jan 20 15:24:47 2026
    Re: Just saying Hello to the
    By: Khronos to Dthomasdigital on Mon Jan 19 2026 06:30 pm

    I suspect I'd have to do something like packet over hf or something
    since vhf is short range.

    There are digipeaters!

    Packet BBSes are usually a bit different from 'dialup' BBSes. Usually just run on a TNC but sometimes on a PC, with very short and minimal menus and features.

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  • From Daryl Stout@VERT/TBOLTBBS to Dthomasdigital on Tue Jan 27 22:11:57 2026
    KF5HSY here and just wanted to say hello to the HAMS, working
    on a new project and thought I's say hello. Working on getting
    a BBS setup and one day getting it radio ready, so hello.

    Greetings from N5VLZ in Arkansas.

    Daryl

    ... Suit of Armor: A knightgown.
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  • From Daryl Stout@VERT/TBOLTBBS to phigan on Tue Jan 27 22:11:57 2026
    Packet BBSes are usually a bit different from 'dialup' BBSes.
    Usually just run on a TNC but sometimes on a PC, with very
    short and minimal menus and features.

    The NS2B BBS in Penfield, New York, has both RF and telnet access,
    and they have a weekly packet net most Monday evenings.

    Daryl, N5VLZ

    ... Astronauts are out to launch.
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  • From James Goble@VERT/RICKSBBS to all on Fri Jan 30 07:34:04 2026
    Re: Just saying Hello to the
    By: Daryl Stout to phigan on Tue Jan 27 2026 10:11 pm

    How long does it typically take to get this license? To become a ham radio op that is.

    James,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    IRC www.irccloud.com/irc/ricksbbs/channel/ricksbbs

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    þ Synchronet þ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
  • From fusion@VERT/CFBBS to James Goble on Fri Jan 30 19:55:00 2026
    On 30 Jan 2026, James Goble said the following...

    Re: Just saying Hello to the
    By: Daryl Stout to phigan on Tue Jan 27 2026 10:11 pm

    How long does it typically take to get this license? To become a ham
    radio op that is.

    a technician's license is really easy to get .. and in fact a lot of people
    do get them (perhaps unwanted lol) because of insistance from an SO or someone else.

    there are only 35 questions.. some of the questions are *extremely* easy. and they're multiple choice. some of the choices are obviously wrong, leaving you with something like a 50/50 shot on a lot of them.

    if you know the FCC is responsible for radio communications in the USA and you get that question, you've got one right answer..

    by extension, if the FCC is responsible for licensing, from whom do you think you'll get an email to download your printable license from? (the FCC doesn't mail anything anymore.. they're cheap as heck)

    some of them you might not know off hand but are easy to remember.. something happened just before they sent you that email.. they put your license in the ULS database.. so what proves you have a license, if they don't care whether you have a printed license or not? when you search the ULS database and your license is there :)

    there are a lot of questions about the rules, but you'll probably be interested in them anyways.. like where beacons are allowed (if you can hear the beacons that means there's probably good radio propagation toward/from where the beacon is, etc) or how repeater frequencies are chosen (you have things like repeater councils that coordinate them so they don't interfere with each other.. and you might get to know a lot of those people or want to run a repeater yourself someday)

    anyways.. imo the time isn't very long. if you mostly retain stuff you read, it's not very complicated where i think you'll be studying that hard. they offer ham-in-a-day classes at hamfests and fully expect you to pass.

    you'll probably wait longer for the license to show up in the database than you did studying..

    Also, try to avoid paying somebody to take the test if you can:

    https://larc-vec.org/home.php

    it really rubs me the wrong way when your first interaction with your local hams is handing some dude $40 for no reason

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  • From Mortar@VERT/EOTLBBS to James Goble on Fri Jan 30 21:28:12 2026
    Re: How long does it take?
    By: James Goble to all on Fri Jan 30 2026 07:34:04

    How long does it typically take to get this license? To become a ham radio op that is.

    Everybody's different, but a lot of it depends on how you prepare for the exam. You can take the all-to-easy way out and memorize the answers, but you won't really learn much, or you can actually study for the exam and really learn what your covering; there's plenty of sources for that.

    You don't want to one of those hams who, after getting on the air, ask loads of questions that you should've already learned. Hams have little patience for such people.

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  • From fusion@VERT/CFBBS to Mortar on Fri Jan 30 23:08:00 2026
    On 30 Jan 2026, Mortar said the following...

    You don't want to one of those hams who, after getting on the air, ask loads of questions that you should've already learned. Hams have little patience for such people.

    which ones? you? most of the hams i know take it as a point of personal pride to answer any questions they can to the best of their ability.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/25 (Windows/32)
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  • From Mortar@VERT/EOTLBBS to fusion on Fri Jan 30 22:51:44 2026
    Re: Re: How long does it take?
    By: fusion to Mortar on Fri Jan 30 2026 23:08:00

    which ones? you? most of the hams i know take it as a point of personal pride to answer any questions they can to the best of their ability.

    This is true...to a point. But if you keep asking basic questions like,"How much power can I use on 2-meter?" or "Do I have to use a repeater on 2-meter?"
    (Both of these I actually heard on-air), some hams will call you on it.

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  • From Daryl Stout@VERT/TBOLTBBS to James Goble on Tue Feb 3 17:47:27 2026
    James,

    How long does it typically take to get this license? To become
    a ham radio op that is.

    It depends how much time you want to take to study the material.
    You can't just walk in off the street without some preparation. You
    will be tested on rules, regulations, frequencies, propagation, RF
    safety, and electronic theory (including Ohm's Law).

    In the United States and its territories, the National Council Of
    Volunteer Examiner Coordinators (NCVEC) generate a Question Pool,
    in the public domain, of a set of questions devised by licensed ham
    radio operators of these classes:

    General -- for the Technician exam
    Advanced -- for the Technician or General exam
    Amateur Extra -- for the Technician, General, or Amateur Extra exam.

    The Question Pools change every 4 years, depending on changes with
    rules, technology, etc. There are also schematic diagrams, where you
    have to identify certain components. The pools have to contain at
    least 10 times the number of questions on an exam.

    The Technician and General exam have 35 questions, and the Amateur
    Extra exam has 50 questions. So at minimum, if you decide to go for
    all 3 in one sitting (it can be done, but it's not easy), you have
    a minimum of 1200 questions (multiple choice) to know...and the total
    could be over 1700 questions.

    I personally recommend HamTestOnline (hamradiolicenseexam.com).
    While a fee based course (6 month subscription), they offer a money
    back guarantee if you fail the exam. Back in 2007, in studying 2
    hours a day for 2 weeks (you will burn out if you do any more than
    that), I went from Technician to General in 14 days, and from General
    to Amateur Extra 13 days later.

    They cover not only the questions, but the concepts...so you are
    learning something, and not just memorizing answers. When you get to
    80 percent studying, start taking practice tests. When you start
    scoring 85 percent or better on a regular basis, you are ready to
    take the exam, and will likely pass.

    Yet, as noted above, if after adequate study and practice tests,
    you still fail the exam, send them proof of the failure, and they
    will cancel your subscription, and refund your money.

    With "internet radio" (for those like myself with medical/health
    issues, or for those with antenna prohibitions), you can still talk
    to hams around the world with just a Technician Class license.

    Daryl Stout, N5VLZ, Volunteer Examiner Team Leader
    University Of Arkansas At Little Rock Ham Radio Club

    ... Do you, Ham, take Radio, to be your lawfully wedded spouse??
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