additional ham notes

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Thomas Bishop 2026-02-21 12:13:58 +00:00
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zk/Calling_CQ.md Normal file
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tags: [radio, ham-study]
---
The term "calling CQ" means making contact with other amateur radio operators.
There is an established protocol for doing this. Below is the convention for 2m
communications (VHF):
1. Tune to the _calling frequency_ for the band. For VHF this is 145.500 MHz.
2. Check that the calling frequency is not currently in use.
3. If free, call for a specific call sign, or, for general contact call "CQ".
4. Once you have found someone, find _another_ free frequency (not the CQ
frequency) and ask/check that it is not in use.
5. If it is free, return to the calling frequency and direct your contact to the
new frequency.
> Each of the main frequencies on the band plan will specify a "center of
> activity". This is where to start listening of contacts for the frequency when
> establishing CQ.

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tags: [radio, ham-study]
---
Digital voice (DV) radios are the same as normal analog radio but the vocal
sound wave is sampled and converted into digital information (bits) and
transmitted in this format.
This provides better audio quality for weak signals and transmits more
efficiently than analog (i.e. using less bandwidth).
There are various DV systems and generally they are not compatible with each
other. (Examples include D-Star and C4FM).
DV can only be used on certain frequencies so it is important to check the band
plan.
> DV radios often embed the call sign within the transmission. If using someone
> else's equipment, or second-hand equipment, you need to make sure to reprogram
> the call sign.
"Data modes" means transmitting anything other than voice or CW via SSB, FM, AM.
This is transmitted digitally like DV.
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tags: [radio, ham-study]
---
Repeaters exist in order to extend the range of mobile stations. They are
designed to solve the line-of-sight problem associated with VHF/UHF, receiving
your signal and re-transmitting it at much higher power, extending the range of
low-powered portable devices.
Repeaters **have an input and output frequency** so that they can receive and
transmit at the same time. On VHF, repeaters typically transmit at 600KHz above
their input (receiver) frequency. The difference between the transmitting and
receiving frequency is known as the "offset".
In order that the repeater can distinguish intentional communication from noise,
it will use CTCSS tones. These are non-audible low-frequency tones that are
transmitted along with your audio. The repeater will only activate if it "hears"
the right tone. You have to program your radio to transmit the right CTCSS tone
for the specific repeater. In the UK there are 9 blocks of tones.
> It is important that you do not use the calling frequency of a repeater for
> normal two-way communication (simplex). This would prevent people from using
> the repeater. When you are agreeing on a shared frequency for CQ, ensure you
> are not accidentally using a repeater frequency. The repeater frequency (and
> its offsets) should only be used for repeater-relayed communication.

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---
tags: [radio, ham-study]
---
Signal reports are used for reporting on the quality of a given frequency.
There are three values comprising **RST** (Readability, Signal, and Tone). Tone
is only used for [CW](./Frequency_modulation.md). Each value is given its own
score:
| Signal value | Scores | Meaning |
| ------------ | ------ | ----------------------------------------------------------- |
| Readability | 1,3,5 | Unreadable, readable with some difficulty, totally readable |
| Signal | 1,5,9 | Faint, fairly strong, very strong |
| Tone | 1,5,9 | Rough, some ripple. pure |
A very good signal report is therefore known as a "five and nine".