Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Posted February 16 Posted February 16 (edited) I'm not a HAM, nor interested in getting a license or being a HAM. But it would be interesting to listen in on HAMS. Do they make a HAM scanner? And if so, is it easy to use? I've got a huge collection of HAM material as part of my Radio, Record, Recorder and TV Archive. So that is where my interest stems from. If you're a HAM...you know what these are...have tons of them! I've got a huge TV and radio archive. All fascinating stuff, all visuals more or less. (I don't like text much.) But I have no interest in the technical end of things. I only like visuals and easy to listen to scanners. Problem with scanning nowadays is they encrypt the conversations in the big city. Luckily for me I don't live in the big city any longer, so I get pretty good scanning material. Uniden needs to make an encryption breaker. But greedy Uniden would charge a fortune for it! Weegee was into police scanning, but he did it for his job. Back in the day we had cheap scanners that let you listen in on the cell phones and new cordless telephones. Crazy stuff you would hear. Guess scanner people are voyeurs of sorts. If Perry had an interest in radios... You've got to be of a certain nature to be a HAM. I like the photos only, not the gear and the education you need to run the gear. But the new scanners they have now can be more or less preprogrammed. All you do is enter your zip or GPS info. And if you want a little more, you send $50 to Uniden to 'unlock' certain features. For zip code programming, you just get the basics, but that is good enough for me. "Trade curses everything it handles; and though you trade in messages from heaven, the whole curse of trade attaches to the business." ~ Thoreau Car makers tried to make wire insulation out of soybean oil to save on evil crude oil. Result...rats ate the insulation off the wires! Back in the day you built your own radio or TV. Amazing stuff...never bored with seeing history! <><><><> Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Archival Collection Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Small Gauge Film Archive Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Advertising Archive Daniel D. Teoli Jr. VHS Video Archive Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Popular Culture Archive Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Audio Archive Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Social Documentary Photograph Edited February 16 by Daniel D. Teoli Jr.
Steve Switaj Posted February 16 Posted February 16 (edited) Oddly, I have an amateur radio license. I actually didn't care about any any of the radio stuff, but in the rural area where I grew up the local amateur radio club had free hands-on electronics classes to prep for the exams. It was kind of bizarre, because I was too young to drive and here I was sitting in class with all these retirees that had too much time on their hands, but the club was the only group within 50 miles doing any kind of technology, so I earned my license while I learned about transistors. The transistor part was useful, but buch like "stop, drop and roll" or how to escape from quicksand, the ability to tap out 20WPM in morse code has not come in as handy as I was told it would be when I was a child. Edited February 16 by Steve Switaj
Daniel D. Teoli Jr. Posted February 23 Author Posted February 23 On 2/16/2025 at 3:31 PM, Steve Switaj said: Oddly, I have an amateur radio license. I actually didn't care about any any of the radio stuff, but in the rural area where I grew up the local amateur radio club had free hands-on electronics classes to prep for the exams. It was kind of bizarre, because I was too young to drive and here I was sitting in class with all these retirees that had too much time on their hands, but the club was the only group within 50 miles doing any kind of technology, so I earned my license while I learned about transistors. The transistor part was useful, but buch like "stop, drop and roll" or how to escape from quicksand, the ability to tap out 20WPM in morse code has not come in as handy as I was told it would be when I was a child. That is something! I had to look up stop, drop and roll. I thought it was the same as duck and cover that was taught in school. Except you use it on the street if a bomb went off. Why were they worried you would burst into flames in radio school?
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now