N1EXA
FT8 Huntin Mudd Duck on the deep end of the pond !
Like Saying it 7.62 !
What Cartridge ?
Nah Above the 40 meter band !
Pete N1EXA
What Cartridge ?
Nah Above the 40 meter band !
Pete N1EXA
Hi JHooten- Side note- I was with the 1/41st FA BN-S3, Pershing 1A in Scwaebisch Gmuend, W.Germany as a Radio-Tele Op from 1980-1982. 73, Eric n6spp-cm98Some people refer to 80 meters for the lower part of the "band" where digital modes are used and 75 meters for the upper part of the band normally used for voice modes.
The formula also works in reverse. 300/80=3.75 Mhz, BTW
Now as if you are not confused enough here are two examples that should add to the confusion. Cavmedic used the example “ I worked Joe on 2 meters last night”. Technically that is incorrect. It should be “ I worked Joe on the 2 meter band last night”. 2 meters is 150Mhz which is not a frequency allocated to Amateur radio. Middle of the band would be 2.0547 Meters. For the sake of simplicity it gets rounded off to 2 meters. 10 Meters is another. 10 meters is 30 Mhz which is, again, out side of the band but is simpler than saying ten and a half meters.
I said all that to say this. There is no apparent logic to band number assignments. And some of the confusion comes from the actual frequency assignments changing over the years while the customary band names remaining constant.
HHB 3/84 TRC-80 Section 76-78 and 80-82.Hi JHooten- Side note- I was with the 1/41st FA BN-S3, Pershing 1A in Scwaebisch Gmuend, W.Germany as a Radio-Tele Op from 1980-1982. 73, Eric n6spp-cm98
Wow! I remember the "Track-80".. We had a detachment in Gmuend.. Small world. Good to meet you. 73,n6sppHHB 3/84 TRC-80 Section 76-78 and 80-82.
Thanks! Everyone there told me the same. They said "its like binary, either on or off. Nothing else matters". I was glad to be done after those two tests. When my very first questions was one I had never seen before and I was distracted by everyone milling around me talking I was stressed that I was going to blow that test. I could have lived with getting only my Technician license but if I had walked out of there without either, I would NOT have been happy. I settled down after I passed the first one and felt pretty confident on the General. Even though there were some new questions, enough of them were just reworded or had different wrong answers and the concepts remained the same. Also the material from the General test was fresher in my old brain since I finished up the Technician material a month ago.Well congratulations on passing your Tech and General tests. The number of questions that you got right or wrong, makes no difference. What matters is that you passed. They only record pass/fail.
Congratulations on passing both tests! You might want to speak to the VE's or their VEC about the nearby jabberers being a distraction during the test session.My next decision is on what segment of ham I want to start exploring and equipment I want to start with.
I used to be a VE team leader and no matter how many times I told them to shut up, I couldn't keep the VEs quiet during a session. The only one I didn't have an issue with was the one that always fell asleep during a session.Congratulations on passing both tests! You might want to speak to the VE's or their VEC about the nearby jabberers being a distraction during the test session.
On top of that there were about 8 guys standing around shooting the breeze just feet from where I was taking the test. It was not very conducive to to my though processing after the stress of seeing new questions.
....... Things were similar enough however that I passed the Technician test but with very little to spare even though I made 80's and 90's on several practice tests. I then took the General test that I did much better on. I think I missed 4 questions. I probably had some lucky guesses. They kind of encouraged me to give the Amateur Extra test a try but I declined.
Thanks for the support!