Ham radio frequency advice please

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SCOMAN

Life Member
Dec 31, 2005
2,587
452
54
Perthshire
I'm intending going for a ham radio licence and a friend has offered a Yaesu VX10 handheld transceiver. He needs to get them reprogrammed from their current state and have been asked the following question.

"What 2m repeaters do you want to use up there? Let me know the frequencies and CTCSS access tones?"

I'm up in Perthshire and will be travelling in Scotland where I plan to play about. Any advice please
 

Mikey P

Full Member
Nov 22, 2003
2,257
12
53
Glasgow, Scotland
UKrepeaters.com is the best resource. I have a few repeaters programmed but only tend to use GB3CS at Kilsyth as it's closest. If you just tell your friend which repeaters you want to use, he can use the UKrepeaters website to get the tx/rx frees and the CTCSS tones. Hope this helps.

Also - try contacting 'Doc' as he's pretty active in Perthshire on amateur radio and is much more experienced than I am.
 

ged

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jul 16, 2009
4,981
15
In the woods if possible.
If it isn't going too far off the thread topic, are there repeaters for CB, and if so what sort of coverage and range etc. do they offer?
 

ScoobySnacks

Tenderfoot
May 14, 2012
52
0
Berkshire
As far as I know there are no CB repeaters in the UK. Most CB rigs aren't equipped with duplex, or CTCSS, to allow access to a repeater even if it were available.

The 70 cm's repeaters are good, if not a little limited. Can you get your hands on a 2m rig, or even a combined 2m/70cm's?

What license are you going for? It's so long since I did any hamming that I'm completely out of touch with what licences are issued, what the criteria are and what the band limitation is. I hold a novice A, which required morse and a training course. I'm not sure that type of licence exists any more, keep meaning to get hold of RSGB and find out but never seem to get round to it.
 

Globetrotter.uk

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jan 24, 2008
2,063
5
Norwich UK
As far as I know there are no CB repeaters in the UK. Most CB rigs aren't equipped with duplex, or CTCSS, to allow access to a repeater even if it were available.

The 70 cm's repeaters are good, if not a little limited. Can you get your hands on a 2m rig, or even a combined 2m/70cm's?

What license are you going for? It's so long since I did any hamming that I'm completely out of touch with what licences are issued, what the criteria are and what the band limitation is. I hold a novice A, which required morse and a training course. I'm not sure that type of licence exists any more, keep meaning to get hold of RSGB and find out but never seem to get round to it.

Novice license is now the foundation license, I'm doing mine next month.
 

ged

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jul 16, 2009
4,981
15
In the woods if possible.
According to the info I was given morse is covered in the foundation license.

Its use is optional, it hasn't been required by the UK for any amateur radio since 2003.

Before then I think it was only necessary for a short wave licence, at least that's how it was when I passed the Radio Amateurs' Exam in 1969.

As Rik says, it's a shame hat it seems to be a dying art but it's hardly surprising as technology has moved on.

Still useful to know a few phrases though, like SOS and XYL. :)
 

rik_uk3

Banned
Jun 10, 2006
13,320
24
69
south wales
My step dad, G5IW/GW5IW now sadly silent key started off with crystal sets, moved on to valve (tubes for you Americans) and when passed away sending packet data and programming his BBC computer... thats some changes. I was 11 when I first moved in with him and naturally was facinated with his various rigs. He showed me how to use them but would not let me use them until I could recieive morse at @20 words a minute. He would record messages for me on a reel to reel tape and would use deliberate spelling mistakes to stop me guessing at words. I just could not do it but he said "keep at it and all of a sudden it will just click into place" and blow me down he was right and thats pretty much what happened one evening, morse just made sense. Same with copy typing, struggled like crazy and then one day I could just do it.

The man himself at a meeting of MARS the midland ham radio group. He owned Barlows of Birmingham and used the firms vans to transport this lot

G5IW3Custom.jpg


g5iw1Custom.jpg
 
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Big Stu 12

Bushcrafter through and through
Jan 7, 2012
6,028
4
Ipswich
According to the info I was given morse is covered in the foundation license.

It is but its only a quick understanding/aprecation of morse... not realy a test, you have to recive a message and send a message at you own pace with the morse chart in front of you on the foundation.
 

santaman2000

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Jan 15, 2011
16,909
1,114
67
Florida
I'm sure a lot of people were put off getting involved with amateur radio because of the morse test.
However, even if it's not compulsory now, those who have an interest in it aren't barred from using it if they wish, no? :)

I don't know about there but over here it's actual use is partially determined by your chosen frequency. The majority of frequencies are open use but some are reserved for CW (morsse) only while others are for data only and still others are for phone (voice) only. I suspect that much of that is international as well.
 

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