A Mooresville man is marshaling forces and sending in help - without ever leaving his home. www.qcnews.com/severe-weather/how-old-tech-is-being-used-to-remotely-help-in-wake-of-helene/
@outdoorsylife42884 ай бұрын
HAM Radio Operators Filling The Gap 🙌✝️🙏💪🇺🇲
@JimJimmington-e8i4 ай бұрын
Ham or ham. Never HAM 😉 But it's what hams do! ARES is a thing as well! Amateur Radio Emergency Services
@sleeve86514 ай бұрын
HAM's doing what Ham's do ! Don't let them fool you ! This is incorporating Cutting Edge technology, and perhaps some old school ways bringing it all together ! And important to know, Amateur Radio Operators do this , voluntarily ! And have no pecuniary interest, by Law ! Truly unsung Heroes ! In an age where most have their heads bowed worshiping their cell phones, Amateurs are looking above and beyond the heads of their fellow Citizens ! Glory be to GOD for these folks ! Too, many likely don't understand the sometimes life long study Amateur Operators put into their Craft ! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 👍😉
@EvanK2EJT4 ай бұрын
Dan, I've been listening to you every day for the past several days...........and all I can say is you are awesome! Your ability to run that net and pass traffic is humbling. You're a true hero in every sense of the word, and the people in NC are lucky to have you.
@Windmill974 ай бұрын
Cell towers, ISP’s, and electric grids can fail. Most hams who are emergency prepared will have battery power and solar cells to operate independent of the grid with long-distance communications. Consider getting your own license to be ready in cases like this.
@noneyabizniss17654 ай бұрын
I was just thinking, maybe that would be a good idea to get that kind of a set up. Living in Louisiana, we never know when the you know what is gonna hit the fan!
@sandycove7774 ай бұрын
@noneyabizniss1765 go for it 👍 KQ4KUO
@echo-hotel4 ай бұрын
@@noneyabizniss1765if you can’t afford equipment you can at least take the test and get a call sign so you can borrow a radio in emergencies.
@tc1uscg654 ай бұрын
I'm sure many of the people he's helping, in areas he's helping, or too financially strapped to drop all that money on a rig. However, just an example, MIDLAND has radios that operate on GMRS and Repeaters. GMRS in the mountains isn't going to do you much good, but hitting a repeater would be better then nothing and even a CB with SSB wouldn't hurt . That gear is more affordable. License is cheaper and you do not need to have anything extra to connect to a repeater other then permission of the owner to do so. Right? \JS
@randygc37044 ай бұрын
@@tc1uscg65 The license fee for GMRS and Amateur Radio licenses are the same. The difference is that a GMRS license covers your entire family. So getting more than one person access would be cheaper with GMRS By keeping an eye out and talking with local ham groups you can easily find used functional ham equipment for around as much as you would spend on new GMRS gear. Some of the Chinese VHF/UHF radios brand new are easily found for under $50.00 It's not an either or. Get what fits your use case the best. Maybe start with GMRS and expand to amateur (with HF capabilities that require no repeaters, talk to the world with 50W and a wire, some folks do it on 5W).
@Boog83024 ай бұрын
Listening to them now. Have been for 2 days. I am glad I got my HAM license. These guys are doing great work. Dan is doing fantastic. 73's
@Tom-zs6bb4 ай бұрын
Why do you capitalize 'ham?' Is it an acronym?
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
@@Tom-zs6bb Nah. He's just YELLING!!! Some say "ham" was self-deprecating humor because the professional telegraph operators found the amateurs to be "ham-handed" on the code key. Kind of like the lyrics of the song "Yankee Doodle" took mockery from the English "professional" soldiers and rallied around it.
@jamieb95564 ай бұрын
I'm glad the hams could help. I hope Franklin Graham sees this. Some years ago, some people he was affiliated with wanted the repeater 145.19MHZ removed from Mt Mitchell. I'm glad this didn't happen.
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
There had been a bid for SpaceX to sprinkle Starlink all over the region, but the Feds pulled the plug. That would have been another option. As with most of these things, we can only see what happened, not what never got a chance to exist.
@tamstutz9214 ай бұрын
Proud to be a ham. Thanks, Dan, for showing what we do.
@TheBrokeHam4 ай бұрын
I've been listening to Dan since the start of this disaster, him and the other hams on the ground are doing incredible work! keep it up! 73
@melr66744 ай бұрын
A TRUE HERO! THANK YOU FROM US WHO HAVE FAMILY MEMBERS IN THIS HORRENDOUS SITUATION!!!
@iamkj15014 ай бұрын
Several years back, the owners of that Mt Mitchell transmitter tower site, a well-known Christian Broadcast Radio Station, wanted the Ham repeater off their site and equipment. Ham operators told them if a disaster occurred, it would be the only form of communication for the area. I'm glad the station changed their stance, and the Ham Repeater was allowed to stay.
@Robbie-sk6vc3 ай бұрын
I'm betting they wouldn't admit to that now! But agreed, I'm glad they left it in place.
@kareneachus86304 ай бұрын
Thank God for older technology! We still need it. This should be a lesson to all of us. We can’t get rid of all the old stuff. Just like there are mules carrying supplies into areas unreachable!
@prizeking16474 ай бұрын
Ham radio isnt that old 😂 but I get your point
@miket71844 ай бұрын
The technology you use for your cell phone is just as old as ham radio. Sure, the electronic gadgets are smaller, but both transmit and receive radio waves the same way. Some ham radios use repeaters the same way cell phones do (two way communication via a repeater transmitter/receiver on a tower). In addition, ham radios can transmit and receive point to point like CB radios. And we use HF frequencies (much like AM radio stations) to reflect radio signals that bounce off the ionosphere for long distances between states and other countries. I do an activity called "Parks on the Air" where members communicate with each other between state parks, national parks, wildlife areas, etc. I can set up my portable radio and antenna, and within 15 minutes, it's ready. Within an hour, most times I routinely make an average of 50 contacts with people across the country and a few outside the United States.
@kareneachus86304 ай бұрын
@@miket7184 thank you for the information.
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
It's exactly the same technology the television crews use to get their reports to the station and beamed out on the airwaves and nothing less. 😁 Only difference is that hams all run their own radio stations and the "pros" operate under a license held by someone else (usually a corporation). It's not uncommon for engineers who run radio and TV stations to be amateur radio operators as well.
@Robbie-sk6vc3 ай бұрын
@@MarkNobleUSExactly. But these guys are "reporters" and their target audience isn't the best and brightest always! Not the best informed either! So they have to relate the story in a way the masses understand. It also makes hans seem old fashioned, so that people don't abandon their TV. The "reporters" want to make it seem like their cutting edge, while all others are "old fashioned". That way, they stay relevant.
@KD9ZHF4 ай бұрын
Old tech? There is some very advanced tech in those radios. It's not like he's using a 1940's tube radio.
@DK5ONV4 ай бұрын
Roger that. Hope you and the Family are save there. Happy Humpday from southwest Germany. 73 de Your Friend Uncle Günter 🙋♂
@charleswoods29964 ай бұрын
You know how superiorly intelligent all those in news media are. 🤣🤣🤣 Only they can, in a subtle manner, mock such a thing. KD8EFQ/73
@SteverRob4 ай бұрын
I have 3 HF rigs, one SDR, one SS and 1 with vacuum tubes. To be honest, I like turning a lot of knobs so I use the VT all the time 😊
@tc1uscg654 ай бұрын
Just a hunch but I took what was meant was, "using ham radio/airwaves to communicate where all MODERN communications can't". He could be using the latest SDR transceiver and a hand key and it would still be viewed as "old tech". I bet he could be using flashing light running on a LED source and it would still be looked at as "old tech" even though he's using a HI-Tech flashlight. Don't get lost in the media's view. Be glad they even gave the subject the light of day. IMO, they have not given enough credit to all those operators relaying traffic for those who can't. JS.
@charleswoods29964 ай бұрын
@@tc1uscg65 I hear ya. I was deliberately insulting the lacking intellect of the news media just with the phrase "old technology", as they imply. By my obsevation and experioence, people in mainstream news media are simple minded low intellect flesh bots that say things like that because they're actually so ignorant that it could be a defective disorder! They're the epitome of vanity that lacks intellect. They've never had respect for people /like/ Amateur Radio operators because we were never marketed like rock stars.🤣🤣
@raymondkb2nzo7884 ай бұрын
Thank God ham radio is still alive. Kb2nzo
@TerraMagnus4 ай бұрын
Absolute legends, these hams. But also it’s not just old tech. Our radios are improving all the time. And we can use them to pass digital data just like your iPhone does with the internet.
@TheStudentOfNumbers4 ай бұрын
Just an old ICOM 7610 & ICOM 7300. Dusty old stuff. Haha. Nothing to see here!
@tc1uscg654 ай бұрын
Don't forget, iPHones in emergency mode can communicate with satellites. I understand that TMO has been trying to work it out with Starlink to do the same thing but they are dragging their feet. Maybe this will move them along. Gear has come a long way and I don't thing the media was taking a poke at the hardware, just when all normally everyday methods have failed, people are back to using the airwaves. Now, if whipped out a hand key, regardless what deck of cards sized xmitter he had in his pocket plugged into a blender sized fusion reactor for power, it would STILL be considered "old ways". \JS.. I don't think they were trying to put the high tech gear down, just pointing our HAM ops know something that all the non-ham op peeps don't. Regards.
@kingduckford4 ай бұрын
Yes, and no. A lot of this digital Ham stuff has been around for several decades, and the quality of modern radios has basically been the same for the last 10 years or so, or at the very least the noticeable gains in accuracy and other features has been over for a while now. Sure, we have improvements, we have easy programs like WinLink, but sending data and e-mail by amateur radio is actually not new, either. Then again, smart phones are now old technology.
@TerraMagnus4 ай бұрын
@@tc1uscg65 don’t forget Appalachia has had a large impoverished population for generations that isn’t exactly the target audience for the latest iPhone models.
@RadiofieldOperatorАй бұрын
@@TheStudentOfNumbersand yet the telephone is 20 year older than radio……
@superblindeye13 ай бұрын
I've been listening to Dan and the other radio operators for the last few days. They have really been a help to a lot of people with information about road closures, which counties need help and supplies, and relaying information about loved ones, especially in the beginning. Hats off to all of them.
@filanfyretracker4 ай бұрын
Just be aware, off and on the FCC wants to refarm some HAM frequencies over to the cell people like they did all the good TV frequencies. National weather service still uses ham operators for their skywarn system and many towns or counties have a club, Often times its even part of a local emergency management plan.
@mobiltec4 ай бұрын
This is where the hams shine. We come through when stuff happens. All my prayrers go out to all the victims and all my praise goes out to my fellow hams. 73 and keep up the great work. K7ZFI
@little2nothingify4 ай бұрын
This radio is the same old technology that everyone's mobile phones depend on today. And most of his gear is modern. I believe they are missing the point... this success and utility has to do with a privately owned and decentralized application of radio communications that is capable of operating without internet connectivity, etc. This has a more resilient distributed human connection and doesn't require an entire online connected infrastructure to operate.
@erichansen73774 ай бұрын
That's what makes it a winner
@danvswild95343 ай бұрын
Day 8, I'm monitoring this man still running nets. I salute you sir.
@gunsofsteele4 ай бұрын
Thank you sir!!!
@uvebern64414 ай бұрын
A great advantage the hams have is having/owning the equipment ready at home and their cars, emergency service resources typically have to get to the office to grab them. Watching this reminds me a bit of Ghost Buster 2, forgotten heroes that saved the city, becoming popular again when needed! Thank you for your forever help and readiness.
@seaningram32854 ай бұрын
This is NOT old Tech. Ham radio operators have been doing this for a long time.
@1tim.ch.5v.84 ай бұрын
excellent reporting thank you
@genemarsh54904 ай бұрын
As a member of the Hurricane Watch Net team, THIS is amateur radio and a great operator.
@KO4GAR4 ай бұрын
You can get a Baofeng handy talkie for 23 dollars. It can be programmed to listen to local repeaters. There are many video’s on youtube of how to program them. It is perfectly legal to listen. Hopefully it will pique the interest of many to get their license so they can transmit. The true learning process begins after you get your tech license. We need more Ham’s !!
@tc1uscg654 ай бұрын
They do make a couple that has the FCC's blessing. I used CHIRP to set up a few that I put in my "go bags". Even set the kids who live outside the home with one and a comms plan. They do understand they can't go willy nilly on the transmit side but during an emergency, all bets are off, the FCC can pack sand and they know to use the radio when all else fails. Oh, and they all have a license for GMRS use. I agree that maybe this will gain some attention and get people to look into taking up another hobby.
@charlie_nolan4 ай бұрын
That’s how I got into it a few years ago. I’m a pretty young one. Now I’ve got a general license, part 90 private carrier license, and a small radio business.
@radiohobbyist133 ай бұрын
They should change the headline to, How calling Ham Radio "old technology" is an insult to Ham Radio.
@RamblingRodeo3 ай бұрын
THAT IS AWESOME, Old tech is still relevant! God Bless you sir!
@wercrooks14 ай бұрын
Love hearing stories like this!
@DarkShadowCustoms4 ай бұрын
If he was using vacuum tube radios you could say he is using old tech. From what I saw in your footage he is using modern ham radio equipment that is currently on the market today. Sure amateur radio has been around for 100 years, but the radios being used today consist of circuit boards and use a combination of firmware and software to function.
@jasongibson94014 ай бұрын
Hats off Dan, you’ve done an amazing job.
@stevefisher10364 ай бұрын
We did not use old tech. Our low power communication networks are the most advanced in the world. We can work the world on power that can light a nite light.
@Uniblab90004 ай бұрын
It always annoys me when people-sometimes even hams-refer to amateur radio as old technology. It's radio, and cell phones use radio, our personal computers use radio, all wireless devices use radio. The main difference is that hams don't need the infrastructure that other systems do. And current ham radio equipment employs state-of-the-art digital technology.
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
@@Uniblab9000 Some even point to the need for a "Government license" but the bulk of that is understanding conventions, ettiquette, and what other hams have found to work - and much of it is flexible.
@BruceForster-k9n3 ай бұрын
K2DMG deserves a Carnegie Award!
@johnny44k3 ай бұрын
This is some cutting edge technology hams are working with now a days the, my hats off to Dan for doing the good work he’s doing
@joshua5114 ай бұрын
Right in the feels...
@srobak3 ай бұрын
This is why HAM will always be king - no matter how much all other tech advances - even to Star Trek levels. It requires infrastructure. Radio - ham radio specifically - does not. Portable power - even down to battery packs or a 12v in a car and a radio is all you need. Covid generated RECORD numbers of new licensees - and this is one of the first times those are really being called into service as a need. Keep it up, y'all. The rest of you - You can study for a week and be able to obtain your no-code tech class license, which would enable you to participate in scenarios such as this, and using some very cool radio gear in HF, VHF and UHF bands.
@Jah_Rastafari_ORIG4 ай бұрын
I listened to the net on that repeater for hours the first day after the storm blew through; thought I recognized that voice...
@Terran.Marine.23 ай бұрын
Good on all the hams and CB people.
@KG6NLW4 ай бұрын
Not "old tech" by any stretch of the imagination!! We do things bigger and better!
@jimbragg89094 ай бұрын
Your awesome Dan. 73, Jim N8NHB
@curtw88274 ай бұрын
An emergency management officer came to speak at our ham club, I challenged him as to why ham radio is their plan B.
@charaznable23794 ай бұрын
Net and community r amazing prayers and thanks to all
@Bobbysoxer24 ай бұрын
Yep. So many stories of hams filling the gap when everything else is down. When the major earthquake hit Mexico City years ago, and normal communications were down, one ham in that city was able to get on the air, and field the many requests from folks in the Americas who were inquiring about their loved ones and business associates who were in that city. When Hurricane Michael destroyed Panama City, Mexico City Beach, and other areas in the Florida Panhandle, all communications were down. No TV, Radio, Cell, police, even most hams were off the air. A few hams along the coast were able to get their equipment on the air and antennas up, and for days provided emergency comms in the area and across the USA for families who inquired about friends and families in the affected area. Yep. Neighbors and HOA's hate the Ham antennas, until something like that happens.
@davidtheriault76524 ай бұрын
Great work! 73 KO4KHB
@bhamptonkc74 ай бұрын
Good one
@rickasisco4 ай бұрын
I bet his ham equipment is newer tech than the new rooms systems. lol
@olsonspeed4 ай бұрын
Amateur Radio remains a valuable resource and aid in times of diaster.
@HippocratesGarden4 ай бұрын
just to re-emphasize. Ham, can be very very high tech. Ever heard of "Amsat"? Ham Radio, communication satellites. Yeah, as in, up in space. There are many digital modes. The highest tech used, is that computer between the operators ears. Don't focus on tech, focus on what works.
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
Also worth noting that all Astronauts are trained as Amateur Radio operators - and speaking to hams on the ground is a backup plan for the ISS if other communications fail.
@the_1drummajor4 ай бұрын
Like everyone said: this isn't old tech with the old tubes. We've got radios that are computer-controlled, have internet linking capabilities, we have radios that will transmit and receive digital voice, we have radio setups that can transmit digital packet data, we even have high-speed mesh networks. Don't think of us as having nothing but a microphone or a morse code keyer because we have moved along with times and the technology. Pretty sure AI will find a place in ham radio as well.
@michaellin45534 ай бұрын
It already has. FreeDV has a new neural digital voice modem that can pack high intelligibility into a standard phone bandwidth. That's tech that would not have existed mere years ago. Plus, RTL-SDR is relatively new. SDRs used to cost hundreds to thousands of dollars, now they're so cheap that you can buy like 4 of them and use it to track down signals in a DF array, for less than $100.
@TheStudentOfNumbers4 ай бұрын
Yeah you can send photos over DSTAR or 20m with an Icom 705, for example. Folks can get emails out with the right setup too, or send text messages using js8call. Not just scratchy voice, which is what many folks think!
@kingduckford4 ай бұрын
Digital packets, SSTV, sending e-mail via amateur radio, ect., are hardly new. Decades old, in fact.
@the_1drummajor4 ай бұрын
@@kingduckford it's new in the sense that it's newer than what the average person would assume ham radio to be. When the average person thinks of ham radio, they would picture a vintage 1930s radio set up. If it's not that, then at the very least, they aren't thinking about relevant technology that goes into ham radio. It's like getting people to picture what a train engine would be: the average person would picture first a steam locomotive, when in reality, we have modern diesel-electric.
@markanderson80664 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dan de WB2SMK
@joewoodchuck38244 ай бұрын
"Old" tech is an insult. It's current tech.
@Brenda-jf2pe3 ай бұрын
This man is a hero. KJ7TBR
@my2cents9453 ай бұрын
LOL, young folks cursing us boomers until their high tech stuff goes splat. Kicking it old school and getting the job done, good job.
@mikeingeorgia14 ай бұрын
The county I live in in Georgia has 2 emergency coordinators. I’ve emailed both of them to ask what backup plan is in place in the event the cell towers aren’t working. Neither one of them has bothered to reply. I guess it infringes on their little fiefdom that is funded wholly by the taxpayers
@Robbie-sk6vc3 ай бұрын
Sadly, that shows how much they care about being useful in a real emergency! Sounds like they don't have a plan "B"! Our coordinator last year told the local club that we were "just a bunch of hobbyists"! Then said that she couldn't use hobbyists! How unfortunate!(and ignorant) We showed her helper a video of what hams actually do and that cleared up things a bit for them. But we shouldn't have had to do that.
@joshjosh65263 ай бұрын
Sounds like the ARES club I was a part of when I lived in GA as well. All talk but no exercises or activities. Just the monthly meeting and a weekly ten minute net. Now here in MS, the clubs I am a part of are EXTREMELY emergency oriented and have official stations in the EOC’s. We do tests, fox hunts and participate in simulated emergencies to keep us on our toes.
@jhopkins2134 ай бұрын
Old tech? Come now. That brand new iPhone 16 in your pocket uses radio waves to communicate with cell towers. Amateur radio uses radio waves too, just different frequencies. Most of the ham radio transceivers shown in this piece are computer controlled. Stop with the “old tech” nonsense!
@SeanFlaherty4 ай бұрын
Look into getting your Amateur Radio License, it’s not hard to do.
@noneyabizniss17654 ай бұрын
How much does it cost to get a real basic set up and get a license, ballpark?
@the_1drummajor4 ай бұрын
@@noneyabizniss1765$35 for the FCC filing fee (if an exam is completed with a passing score) and a minimum score of 80% on a Technician Class license exam gets you a call sign! Some clubs might charge an extra exam fee but it's mostly to cover the cost of bringing people to proctor the exams and even with those extra fees, the cost is usually no more than $10-15 on top.
@DarkShadowCustoms4 ай бұрын
@@noneyabizniss1765 for getting licensed it is no more than $15 to the volunteer examiner team to cover the cost of testing materials then a $35 fee to the FCC once you get an email from them stating an application has been submitted on your behalf. For study guides there are books available on Amazon and the ARRL website as well as free study guides on KZbin and various websites such as HamStudy and Ham Radio Prep. Some of the websites study guides you have to pay for and others are free. As far as the cost of equipment it really depends on what you want to get. Just starting out most will take the Technician exam and not take the exam for the next level, which is General. As a Tech you will have full privileges on the VHF, UHF, and higher frequencies, with some limited privileges in the HF bands. Most people get a handheld (think walkie-talkie) as their first radio, however they have very limited range so if you are 10 miles from the nearest repeater you might not be able to talk in it from inside your home with a handheld. You would be better off getting a 25 or 50 watt dual band mobile radio, a DC power supply for the radio, and a base station antenna as your first radio. If you buy inexpensive equipment off Amazon you can have a 25 watt radio, power supply, coax, antenna, and a mounting bracket for the antenna for around $350 as a rough guesstimate. Just keep in mind that you get what you pay for. If you just want to talk to people in your local area VHF and UHF is perfect for that, but if you want to talk to someone three counties over or on the other side of the country you will want HF which means you need at least the General class license. For HF you can get a 20 watt portable radio, a 49:1 transformer, and a 200 foot spool of wire to build an 133-ish foot End Fed Half Wave antenna for around $550, but that does not include a way to get the antenna in the air. You might want to look up a ham radio club in your area and talk to the members to get a better idea of the type of equipment you would need.
@michaellin45534 ай бұрын
@@noneyabizniss1765Study first, try to get competent enough to the General class exam (Element 3) so you can do it all in one session, which saves money. The license costs $35 and lasts effectively for life (you have to renew for free every 10 years). VHF/UHF radios are cheap. You can get a Quansheng UV-K5 for $30, and it has a firmware hack letting you transmit on bands besides the common 2m/70cm bands. You can contact local repeaters easily using a cheap handheld. Some local repeaters host NTS nets, letting you send messages around the country through a structured message passing system, mainly to relay information in and out of disaster areas. HF radios let you go completely off the grid with no external assistance from intermediate stations. They are far more expensive if you want a normal 100W one. A used rig will costs more than $500, occasionally less if you find a good deal. Most new hams will spend around $1000 for the IC-7300, which is an entry-level, newer solid state transceiver that packs a lot of value. That's your best bet if you don't want to fiddle around too much learning how to deal with common radio problems. If you live in a rural area, you can get away with a QRP (low power) rig for much cheaper, on the order of $100-200, as you can afford to put up a long, non-compromise antenna. The cheaper QRP radios have less features, and often require additional setup, but are more lightweight and portable. Look for ones such as the uBitx, or its more expensive cousin, the sBitx. Antennas for VHF/UHF are small and low profile. You can either use one directly attached to your handheld, attach one to your vehicle, or homebrew one for a base station. You can also make directional Yagi-Uda antennas from PVC pipe and tape measures, letting you reach many miles out with a handheld. HF antennas tend to be large. If you have the space, you can homebrew a simple dipole for
@bleirdo_dude4 ай бұрын
Look into 2 meter licensing , and a Baofeng radio.
@ron02simpson4 ай бұрын
HAM radio is still very reliable.
@shovelyjoe10593 ай бұрын
Recommend Dan for the Presidential Citizens Medal
@scottyelliott57094 ай бұрын
This is awesome! Hopefully the HAM operators are encouraging other operators to reach out to their neighbors to let them know they have access to information. My brother and his family are stranded with very low access to a phone signal anywhere around their home. I was finally able to get a message to them that HAM operators are able to give and receive information, but of course they have no idea where to go to ask without traversing the hills and knocking on random doors.
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
I hope they get through their ordeal. Be sure to look into "National Traffic System Radiograms". You can send them to and from disaster areas with the help of local hams. Whenever I talk to a ham who lives near loved ones, I put them in touch with each other as a potential emergency contact point. Doesn't even have to be real time either. It can be very useful sending a wellbeing check, or a note that a house was damaged to the point of being unlivable, so the family is moving to a particular shelter until further notice. That kind of communication is quick for hams to pass, and offers vital info in tracking down loved ones in a disaster.
@davidkerl14314 ай бұрын
Way to go Dan!! de N9HF Dave Ormond Beach, Fl.
@alboesenberg35943 ай бұрын
Old Tech!! And Vlad N3CZ has volunteered his repair services for any ham in the area whose rig needs repair, free of charge. My rigs are down and I'm trying to get the up but having a hard time, or I'd be on the air helping. Ham radio came through for me numerous times overseas when nothing else could get through. Al KI4FJS , ex TU2DP
@BlakeLindsey-m3e4 ай бұрын
Iron Man! 👍🏻
@miket71844 ай бұрын
I like how the headline says "old tech". It's no different than cell phone service, You're transmitting and receiving RF over the air on UHF frequencies, same is ham radio does with VHF/UHF repeaters.
@philipwyman33254 ай бұрын
SDR isnt old tech!
@DK5ONV4 ай бұрын
That's correct but to be honest I prefer the 1980's - 1990's Transceivers way before the nowadays Knickknack Toys. And one Thing the HAM Radio World does not really need is FT-8
@user-zp6ff2gr4n4 ай бұрын
Old tech? Everything we use depends on radio. LOL
@echo-hotel4 ай бұрын
Everyone should get an amateur radio license (ham radio license)! Even if you never buy the equipment you can borrow a radio. And go ahead and get a GMRS license first to learn a bit while you study to take the ham radio test.
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
1:25 Technology is simply the application of scientific knowledge for practical purposes. For example, using radio waves to communicate over great distances. It isn't technology that has failed in this disaster, it is the reliance on centralized providers of technology (such as Gov regulated telecom, power, and other utilities). What is succeeding is the individual application of technology - which it turns out is a rewarding hobby in its own right, and a valuable asset in the event of natural disasters.
@JeffJustice14 ай бұрын
emergency service now longer considers HAM radio viable.
@Robbie-sk6vc3 ай бұрын
Sadly your right! A lot of them don't think of us as a viable resource anymore. I my area just last year, the emergency manager said that the local club was just full of "hobbyists", and said that "I can't use hobbyists"! She really had no clue what we did! But I'm glad this guy was around to help. Good job! 73 de kd7cjo
@merlinobreslin9874 ай бұрын
Old tech ? Really? Better than the internet ......can you hear me now.....
@davidhenderson34003 ай бұрын
A tree fell on my neighbor's house and I couldn't even call 911 because the cell phone went out. I would really like to get me a CB radio in a trolling motor battery in emergency backup.
@danielbrinnemancom4 ай бұрын
This is not old tech.
@bouchee20074 ай бұрын
it is old tech. ham raio is out dated. but it is still very reliable and has modern day needs
@richarddegen61844 ай бұрын
@@bouchee2007 not outdated........very much high tech....do some research,,,,,,,,
@DarkShadowCustoms4 ай бұрын
@@bouchee2007 it is not outdated at all. The radios on the market today are high tech and you can do more than just hit the PTT on the microphone and talk to people. We have ways to send messages to standard email addresses over the air waves. Sure there is some internet infrastructure required for it, but message originates from a program called Winlink on computer hooked up to a radio that sends it over the air waves. We can also send an SMS message to someone's cellphone number through the use of the Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS). If I had an APRS capable handheld and was in range of an APRS I-gate or digi-peater, which are basically modems that receive a signal from a ham radio and sends it over the internet, I could send a SMS message to a cellphone number. The messages are not one way either. If I was in an area without cellular service, but I have the capability to send either a Winlink or APRS message to friends and family they can also reply back to me. Sure it won't be as instantaneous as sending a text or social media message with my cellphone, but I will get messages out and I will receive incoming messages.
@nerdygirl8573 ай бұрын
This is why...still..the old ways are the best ways.
@1106SONY3 ай бұрын
As an amateur radio operator myself, these are not the “best ways”, per se, but they are definitely what works when all else fails. I’ve been doing my best to push my friends in bad areas to get their license and a cheap radio incase of emergencies. Now they have reached back out to me and have decided they want to do just that.
@30CalCoreLokt3 ай бұрын
Dan is still at it today.
@ArunLal-d6s4 ай бұрын
Wish there was a way to tune in online!
@Klaire12233 ай бұрын
KZbin channel starship is broadcasting it
@Klaire12233 ай бұрын
Starship adventures....it's a live feed
@ArunLal-d6s3 ай бұрын
@@Klaire1223 Found it - thank you!
@joshjosh65263 ай бұрын
WebSDR
@donjennings29754 ай бұрын
Ham radio operators train for this. It's a part of being a Ham. KI0EO
@thebugg3334 ай бұрын
I don't understand "old tech" , perhaps clickbait? Those radios are high tech, you guys are on TV also right...is that old tech also?
@DWDrang3 ай бұрын
Ham of the Year K2DMG... We like to say that "When all else fails amateur Radio gets out", but that assumes that yu have trained hams, with equipment and power, and someone at the other end to talk to. If you're licensed, get involved with your local club and emcomm organization, and CERT. Don't just check in to a net, but volunteer to be Net Control Operator.
@Uniblab90003 ай бұрын
It's ham radio, not HAM radio. Thank you, and good night.
@MarkNobleUS3 ай бұрын
He was yelling. 🤷♂ You should welcome the enthusiasm.
@TheHuntercamper3 ай бұрын
Pick up a lot on Skip beaming south
@donoliver964 ай бұрын
Old or new technology stop getting butt hurt and help someone thats what counts
@ChonyiR3 ай бұрын
👏🏽👏🏽
@r.hernandez61523 ай бұрын
Old tech is the most reliable tech!
@josephmccormick66024 ай бұрын
Bravo Dan de N5JYQ
@chrisgarrett6013 ай бұрын
HAM/ Amature Radio is not really old tech with the updated radio's it is alive and well, just as CB Radio is still going strong. Also, there is GMRS/FRS and MURS all are good when Cell Networks are down.
@winstonchurchill65064 ай бұрын
👍🇬🇧
@WestonUSofA3 ай бұрын
Ham radio is old and new tech.
@skepticalmechanic4 ай бұрын
Old tech my A$&!
@Ryan_Christopher4 ай бұрын
Anyone still use CB radios aside from truckers?
@mikesmith-po8nd4 ай бұрын
Very few truckers use them.
@kingduckford4 ай бұрын
Go listen to the frequencies, they are jam packed. A lot of idiots, but CB is nowhere near quiet or dead on a national level, and there are many local communities throughout the country. Some of the worst operators, but some of the most powerful stations in the US.
@chrisdelong29324 ай бұрын
Yeah, they now charge $35.00 for an Amateur Radio License. To people who volunteer to provide assistance to the community in these disasters. Government should be ashamed of themselves.
@echo-hotel4 ай бұрын
I can’t disagree more. The pandemic and youtube surges got tons of news hams added that are very used to skipping over EULAs and they took that same mindset to the rules and common courtesy. $35 is nothing but a reminder that this is important and maybe you should consider reading about the new toys you bought.
@chrisdelong29324 ай бұрын
@@echo-hotel Anyone who has to ask government permission to do something is NOT free. Secondly paying to volunteer to assist disaster stricken people is shameful any way you attempt to justify it. The license and the license plates were free to licensed amateur radio operators. Government is the disease masquerading as the cure.
@chrisdelong29324 ай бұрын
@@echo-hotel Anyone who has to ask government permission to do something is NOT free. Secondly paying to volunteer to assist disaster stricken people is shameful any way you attempt to justify it. The license and the license plates were free to licensed amateur radio operators. Government is the disease masquerading as the cure.
@Wipatriot17764 ай бұрын
Ham radio is not old Tech
@Kody105384 ай бұрын
Old tech... that brand new old tech likely costs more than your car
@sammas74404 ай бұрын
LOL, I don't think so. But that's beside the point.
@Kody105384 ай бұрын
@@sammas7440 Couple grand for a radio. A good tower and beam setup 10k+. And everything else to get it done add another few thousand. A nice shack is easily north of 20k. Just a 7300 and a wire, about 2500. Anywho.
@Robbie-sk6vc3 ай бұрын
Depends on the car! 😉
@placeholder-0654 ай бұрын
"How old tech is being used.." OLD tech? You obviously haven't got the slightest idea what you're talking (writing) about. Gust ON6KE
@mikeperry25614 ай бұрын
This IS ham/amateur radio!
@ghostblackout13 ай бұрын
its not old tech
@SouthCarolinaSirens4 ай бұрын
Old tech my ass
@miket71844 ай бұрын
What these news people fail to realize, is every time they pick up a cell phone and call someone, their tech is just as old as ham radio! The electronics have become smaller with more features, but transmitting RF through the air is as old as when Marconi invented it!
@jamieharkin51413 ай бұрын
Um. One moment. So 'dozens and dozens' of people respond to your initial call? Only HAMs with operable stations could possibly respond to you. Please reconcile?
@Capecodham4 ай бұрын
Ham radio getting in the way for 50 years.
@SteverRob4 ай бұрын
Aw cmon man
@Capecodham4 ай бұрын
@@SteverRob The truth will set you free.
@SteverRob4 ай бұрын
@@Capecodham I am the truth
@mikesmith-po8nd4 ай бұрын
@Capecodham Show us on the doll where the mean ol' ham hurt your fefes.
@Capecodham4 ай бұрын
@@SteverRob Not if you think hams are NOT getting in the way.
@charleswoods29964 ай бұрын
Don't mention the "free airtime" aspect, or the ability to facilitate such equipment, set it up, put a simple antenna and get on the air and not be concerned with a "plan" for a monthly fee. Outside of the one time purchase of equipment, the "air time" is free! KD8EFQ/73 P.S. - Amateur Radio ALWAYS works.