Responding to Disasters
11:25
5 ай бұрын
Winlink Ammo Can Gateway
2:21
5 ай бұрын
Winlink Mobile Radio Overview
26:52
Winlink Go Boxes
4:52
5 ай бұрын
Mobile Winlink Project
8:47
5 ай бұрын
Winlink Mobile Install
6:05
5 ай бұрын
Your Role & Reaction in a Disaster
23:51
Setting VARA FM for the IC-705
4:39
VARA FM Using DigiRig & HT
9:05
5 ай бұрын
Ham Radio Marathon Support
3:08
5 ай бұрын
Ordering A Pizza With A BAOFENG???
11:06
REPEATER Basics
8:49
9 ай бұрын
SIMPLEX Communications
3:43
9 ай бұрын
Communications TechKit
7:55
9 ай бұрын
Winlink VARA FM Signal Chain
8:03
SEND: Portable Winlink (SERIES E4)
13:37
Пікірлер
@user-mu1si5cn5f
@user-mu1si5cn5f 2 күн бұрын
Great episode, to much information to digest all now. I would love to have a separate episode about vlan. I understand that is needed to shield different areas from each other? I'm just know a little about networking while you're clearly the expert!
@mikecoffeen7991
@mikecoffeen7991 2 күн бұрын
Electric cars also.
@daveengstrom9250
@daveengstrom9250 6 күн бұрын
So, what frequency does one use to send these messages? What is on the "other end"?
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
When you select a mode in Winlink and open a session, there will be a list of gateways and their frequencies. There are gateways in the HF, VHF, and UHF bands.
@daveengstrom9250
@daveengstrom9250 6 күн бұрын
So.... you must have a computer "hooked up to" your radio, then? How does that hook up exactly? What wires/plugs/coax are needed???
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
There are several interfaces that work with a variety of radios. We cover this in several of our LIVE episodes and on our website. See WaveTalkers LIVE episodes 2, 33, 63,. We also have several dedicated videos on our channel for other interfaces.
@LoganKD6LLB
@LoganKD6LLB 6 күн бұрын
Great timing! I'm preparing to upgrade my internet service(s) and home network(s) in the very near future. The discussion today touched on several things I need to consider and gave me some good ideas. Thanks for another helpful episode!
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
Thanks, glad it's helpful.
@Hjaal904
@Hjaal904 7 күн бұрын
Awesome!
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
Thanks
@i8BBQ4Lunch
@i8BBQ4Lunch 7 күн бұрын
Great show
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
Thanks for learning with us!
@user-vt6pw2qq7h
@user-vt6pw2qq7h 7 күн бұрын
Good Monday morning 🌄
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
Thanks for learning with us!
@jstrunck
@jstrunck 8 күн бұрын
Thanks Chris and Dan!!
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
Thanks for learning with us!
@yv6eda
@yv6eda 8 күн бұрын
Great work guys! Thanks!
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
Thanks for learning with us!
@troyrussell5655
@troyrussell5655 8 күн бұрын
Thank you, very helpful.
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 5 күн бұрын
Thanks for learning with us!
@Hundert1
@Hundert1 8 күн бұрын
Yeah, but it doesn't twice the voltage coming into the controller compensate any with the in series method? Please explain in a nice video what's the advantages and disadvantages of each way to connect two panels. Thank you 🌞
@derbemobile
@derbemobile 13 күн бұрын
Thanks for the video. Glad I watched it before spending days setting this up
@J.R.1111
@J.R.1111 23 күн бұрын
Can you use DigiRig without a HAM license?
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 23 күн бұрын
@@J.R.1111 you need a license to transmit on the ham bands.
@J.R.1111
@J.R.1111 22 күн бұрын
So you need a HAM license to transmit a email message that only one person can read?. That would seem trivially irrelevant to the FCC, I would think Second question, can you only send DigiRig emails over the licensed HAM bands, buy not over other license free bands, like MURS or FRS?
@keithgordonk7ksg673
@keithgordonk7ksg673 23 күн бұрын
Capellini is very high Q. Lasagna would be more broadband.
@user-gi7cz2on5g
@user-gi7cz2on5g 26 күн бұрын
Ok, This is the 4th time I have watched this and I am finally getting to understand how to setup my Gateway. The -10, -4, -6 in our area. I am excited to have this up and running and to be a digipeater. Thks
@n6hpx
@n6hpx Ай бұрын
I have a question can I use a SCU-20 for VARA for my FTM100 I wish touse the free for now as I am now retired and am saving for a new radio
@SarahC2
@SarahC2 Ай бұрын
Nice! Thank you for sharing!
@vk2sky
@vk2sky Ай бұрын
@nswrfs (the New South Wales Rural Fire Service here in Australia) has just posted a short video about the deployment of one of their Large Air Tankers to help with the fire situation in Californina: kzbin.info/www/bejne/eamykIato92Jrqc
@HamTechRadioScannerDrones
@HamTechRadioScannerDrones Ай бұрын
Nice and clear .
@mrtechie6810
@mrtechie6810 Ай бұрын
Need to try this for QO-100 😂
@i8BBQ4Lunch
@i8BBQ4Lunch Ай бұрын
As always, excellent program. I learned how to add a webpage to my Android home screen. 😁
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers Ай бұрын
Such a helpful tip @i8BBQ4Lunch thanks for learning with us!
@joeb3300
@joeb3300 Ай бұрын
An unusually helpful episode for a volunteer Emergency Manager from New Jersey. Thank you.
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers Ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@vk2sky
@vk2sky Ай бұрын
Minor slip there - I'm in Australia, not New Zealand. 🤭 You're thinking of Terry ZL1HOG, who usually checks in, but was absent this week. Also, in the International Resources section, my link to the New South Wales Rural Fire Service is incorrectly labeled with the CalFire resource text. 73 and thanks as usual, Richard VK2SKY
@vk2sky
@vk2sky Ай бұрын
My favourite sitrep tool is the New South Wales government's "Hazards Near Me" app.
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers Ай бұрын
@vk2sky I discover I posted the wrong link, sorry correcting that. Yikes and ZL, doh! Apologies
@vk2sky
@vk2sky Ай бұрын
@@WaveTalkers No worries Chris, I'll tell my friends at the Australian embassy to stand down. 😛
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers Ай бұрын
@@vk2skyoh that’s a relief. The page has been updated at cq.wavetalkers.com/dashboard
@vk2sky
@vk2sky Ай бұрын
@@WaveTalkers One other very minor detail: Down Under, what you guys call wildfires, we call Bushfires. 🙃
@DavidColledge-h6x
@DavidColledge-h6x Ай бұрын
KB3NFQ Checking In
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers Ай бұрын
thanks for learning with us!
@robledgerwood6802
@robledgerwood6802 Ай бұрын
What do you mean 1200, not 9600?
@N4EJM
@N4EJM Ай бұрын
What size ferrites do you have on the Anker splitter? I have the same one.
@larryfields2652
@larryfields2652 Ай бұрын
can I use a rig blaster other than a signalinkusb I am planning to use a FT7900
@kf7bws
@kf7bws 2 ай бұрын
Thanks Guys KF7BWS
@kathyaustin8608
@kathyaustin8608 2 ай бұрын
Great example. Thank you very much!
@kathyaustin8608
@kathyaustin8608 2 ай бұрын
Great Tip! Thanks, Chris!
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 2 ай бұрын
Glad you found it helpful @kathyaustin8608
@dougbas3980
@dougbas3980 2 ай бұрын
Very good. So much to learn: Winlink, VARA, APRS, JS8CALL, VaraAC, and so much more! And more every day!😎 Thanks for all you do!
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for learning with us @dougbas3980
@bdinnocenzo
@bdinnocenzo 2 ай бұрын
I watched this to try and understand how amateur radio would be used in an emergency situation. The exercise described in this episode was geared primarily towards the tasks required by a volunteer. I guess the tie into amateur radio in that Winlink *may* need to be connected via radio. Given the advances in other forms of comms used by responders, how necessary is amateur radio needed...honestly? I'm really trying to learn and understand...
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 2 ай бұрын
Hi @bdinnocenzo, great question. The need for HAM radio in an emergency has never been greater. Yes, there is an obvious tie to Winlink using amateur radio and passing of voice traffic over the air, but it goes much further than that. Amateur Radio and the skills we learn as HAMs truly are the foundations on which nearly all modern communication systems are built. It is the foundational skills and our ability to translate those skills to additional domains that make us so incredibly valuable during an emergency. For example, over the past year I’ve personally supported several events and participated in multiple full-scale exercises. In each case it was my basic skills as a HAM that allowed me to find a working solution to the problem we were facing. In one case it was using knife edge refraction to link two repeater sites across nearly 50 miles of desert, allowing the linking of Dispatch in one city to mobile field medic stations and roving ambulances that communicated on VTAC frequencies. For that event (Baker2Vegas 120-mile Relay Race across Death Valley from Baker CA to Las Vegas NV) our field techs on the Medical Radio Network (MRN) were all volunteer HAMs that supported the medic stations at each stage, the ambulance drivers, and med base all linked back to dispatch. Our HAM communications backbone was all Amateur Radio and ran parallel to the commercial frequencies used by the first responders we were volunteering to support during the race. In one capacity we helped the professionals establish their network by setting up the antennas, emergency power systems, linked the repeaters, and testing the MRN across nearly 10,000 sq miles of desert. That portion of our mission leveraged our ham skills but not amateur radio frequencies. Once the race started, my team of MRN Ham volunteers provided the trouble shooting for various field stations solving basic antenna, power, and connectivity issues, and served as an additional backup to the backup should we be needed. For that role we did use our ham frequencies for our own coordination constantly testing our communications in the event we were needed to pass life safety traffic. Even with all the modern communications, Telcom, satellites, etc., it was basic HAM skills that got the job done in support of the larger mission. Check out Episode 66 for a more detailed walk through of that event and how we supported it. In two of the full-scale exercises, I participated in, it was the fundamentals of antennas that allowed for the IC to communicate with the rest of the exercise field including off site evaluators and participants across the exercise field. Was I using HAM radio to do those things? No, I was leveraging my skills a HAM radio operator to contribute to the success of the mission. However, in one of those exercises, we utilized AREDN MESH to create an ad hock wireless network to push live video across the exercise grounds and feed that video into a common video switcher that then pushed those feeds out to a live Zoom meeting to allow the command staff, off-site evaluators, and other players to see and hear what was going during the exercise. The AREDN portion was over amateur radio and filled a critical gap when needed and where appropriate. This allowed us as HAMs to seamlessly integrate and volunteer our skills and equipment where appropriate in support of the mission. In that case in particular, the professionals were blown away at what our small team of hams were able to accomplish and contribute to the exercise. Ham radio is so much more than just talking on the radio. We truly are communicators with advanced technical skills that we develop in the normal practice of ham radio operating but can translate our experience to supporting our communities, first responders, cities, states, federal and international needs.
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 2 ай бұрын
The 22 Tasks we covered in this episode were developed for an AuxComm operator supporting an Agency Having Jurisdiction, and thus were all geared such that a well-trained AuxComm HAM operator could work toward completing these tasks. Amateur Radio could be used to complete all the Winlink related tasks, participation in the Voice nets and traffic handling, operation under emergency power, Antenna Tuning / Station Power Output, DMR Digital Voice, Use of common ICS forms in Winlink or via traditional paper forms, leveraging the relationships between an Amateur EmComm group and served agencies such as a local hospital or EOC, and much more. The use of Winlink as a tool for EmComm is continuing to grow at an incredible rate and the transport of that traffic is largely handles over two primary RF paths: Amateur Radio and SHARES if the internet becomes unavailable. Hams that are supporting EmComm at all levels need to have good foundation in the operation of Winlink to pass the types of traffic that many of our served agencies need and are expecting. For example, in the Los Angeles area our ARES teams provide direct support to Hospitals in the area and regularly pass the hospital status and bed availability forms between the hospitals and the main Medical Dispatch Center (MAC) in the Region. That traffic used to be passed exclusively via voice by our HAMS, but the MAC now wants all those data submitted via Winlink, so they are able to process the data more efficiently. We still have voice as a fall back, but our operators will utilize a combination of existing HAM Winlink gateways, Tactical Winlink Gateways we establish on the fly, Digipeating, or even Winlink P2P to deliver that traffic across our region. In this episode we talked about the P.A.C.E. plan and noted that while the Emergency level may fall back to voice traffic (what many of us think of first when they think of HAM radio), higher rungs of the ladder are likely to include digital traffic such as data passed via Winlink and more specifically Winlink Forms. The data on these forms is completely independent of the transport layer being utilized such as RF via Amateur Radio / SHARES, or more traditional transport via commercial or emergency internet paths. In our WaveTalkers Winlink courses we emphasis first learning to operate Winlink for all operators and then add in the RF transport layer. This RF transport can and does take place largely via Amateur Radio using VHF/UHF FM or via AREDN MESH at the local level or via Amateur HF to pass traffic outside of the disaster zone. In California in particular, our Agencies have been adopting SHARES and are passing the exact same type of traffic using the same Winlink tools that we are using on the Amateur side. This allows Amateurs familiar with Winlink to seamlessly integrate into ICS structure when asked. The fundamental tools and skills are the same the only real difference is the frequencies used change and sensitive information can be encrypted on SHARES as opposed to on the HAM bands. Furthermore, skills we practice as HAMs supporting EmComm such as operating on Emergency Power, Antenna Tuning, ensuring our stations are putting out full power, operating on digital voice modes such as DMR, submitting accurate location information, providing ground proofing information, etc. were also included in the tasks. What I personally found so interesting about this particular exercise is that over those 22 Tasks for the AuxComm operator supporting an AHJ, the range of skills that were utilized from basic voice traffic, EmComm net participation, Basic to Advanced Winlink traffic handling, use of a variety of Winlink Forms, use of the Winlink Catalog, leveraging of relationships with served agencies, challenging instructions that needed to be followed to complete a task, to the basic practice of logging significant events really tested an Amateur's abilities. There really were tasks in this exercise for all levels of HAM operators. Plus keep in mind that we didn't even touch on the MSEL that were targeted at the Agency operators or professionals, we only focused on the MSEL for one type of AuxComm operator. As a HAM supporting EmComm, having a better understanding of the landscape of emergency communications helps us better integrate and support a mission when asked. HAMs certainly do not need to know all these skills, but being familiar with the landscape, terminology used, and standard procedures followed by the agencies and organizations we support allows us to be better able to take pieces of this larger puzzle and be more helpful when asked. 73 Chris W6AH
@lgarner9524
@lgarner9524 2 ай бұрын
There is no amateur radio in this exercise. It's all government or private enterprise.
@nathanjackson6874
@nathanjackson6874 2 ай бұрын
Curious to know how this conclusion was drawn? Signed one of many hams the participated in this exercise.
@siddharth4662
@siddharth4662 2 ай бұрын
Hi... Great presentation... But as I don't plan to use the VARA FM... is it possible to run Winlink RMS with any other option?
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 2 ай бұрын
Hi @siddharth4662, absolutely. Winlink RMS can support Packet on the UHF/VHF frequencies in addition to VARA FM. On the HF side Winlink RMS can support Pactor, VARA HF, Robust Packet, and ARDOP. Check out the next few episodes 59-62 for some of the other options.
@siddharth4662
@siddharth4662 2 ай бұрын
@@WaveTalkers thank you very much for the insights!
@jendiamond90026
@jendiamond90026 2 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this quick review. I used them to study along with a class and I passed my technician exam yesterday. I am wondering if you are going to update the questions ato the newest ones? (I realize that this was probably a lot of work. They were still very helpful.
@RBMD2A
@RBMD2A 2 ай бұрын
I’m concerned that AREDN may be a misnomer. It appears that it is extremely dependent on having the internet to operate or at least manage the connections. I may be wrong, as I often am, but in an emergency wouldn’t the internet infrastructure be disabled fairly soon? If that is the case, are we building something that may be useless?
@WaveTalkers
@WaveTalkers 2 ай бұрын
Great question, AREDN does not require the internet at all. It uses the same TCP/IP protocols as the internet but it is a complete standalone network. In fact at a recent event we used AREDN to move video data around but didn’t have an internet connection at all. The nodes once set correctly auto detect each other and begin talking and running the services that each is offering.
@roydugger7303
@roydugger7303 2 ай бұрын
Flashback of teaching Disaster Tech volunteers on Red Cross assignments. Very nice job. I use inexpensive cable testers as well. If you don't use them often, keep the batteries out of them. I use the lithium batteries (not rechargeable...the silver guys) since they don't leak when they wear out.
@i8BBQ4Lunch
@i8BBQ4Lunch 2 ай бұрын
Great program. Thanks.
@MARRANCA2
@MARRANCA2 2 ай бұрын
Fantastic show!! I'm thrilled that I had off work today so I could join in the fun. I actually saw my telnet and VARA FM check-ins. Learned a ton. Used Pat on my Win11 and Win7S laptops. 73 and great job!! 73 de KB2HSH
@LoganKD6LLB
@LoganKD6LLB 3 ай бұрын
It is also worth mentioning for those looking for more information that the discussion in the WaveTalkers Zoom after party goes into great detail and is very informative.
@LoganKD6LLB
@LoganKD6LLB 3 ай бұрын
I’m looking forward on working on this exercise with my EmComm partners.
@LoganKD6LLB
@LoganKD6LLB 3 ай бұрын
Another very helpful discussion!
@MeOnTech
@MeOnTech 3 ай бұрын
Great overview.
@LoganKD6LLB
@LoganKD6LLB 3 ай бұрын
This is a very helpful discussion. There are a lot of good tips and reminders here that even experienced volunteers will benefit from hearing. Thanks again, WaveTalkers!
@vk2sky
@vk2sky 3 ай бұрын
Plenty of great advice for Amateurs who don't want to act like "bloody amateurs". 🙂 Thanks guys! 73 VK2SKY
@jaselaskus6612
@jaselaskus6612 3 ай бұрын
where does source one of those wave talkers stickers for my pelican case?
@user-mu1si5cn5f
@user-mu1si5cn5f 3 ай бұрын
I love this video and shared it with several others. While not everyone is checking their Winlink messages that frequently, instead of the callsign you could use the e-mail-to-text address.
@Charlie-Bee
@Charlie-Bee 3 ай бұрын
How does this not have any comments yet? Great info! Thanks guys, 73.
@jstrunck
@jstrunck 3 ай бұрын
Good show!!