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unxdfa | 2 years ago
The thing that gets me with ham radio is some see it as a social responsibility even here in the UK where its totally unnecessary from an emergency comms perspective.
unxdfa | 2 years ago
The thing that gets me with ham radio is some see it as a social responsibility even here in the UK where its totally unnecessary from an emergency comms perspective.
themodelplumber|2 years ago
Not sure what "weirdos" is meant to mean in context but with regard to disagreeable people, this has not been my experience at all unless I go looking for it. YouTube comments, specific freqs in 80m band come to mind, but again, not where I typically go to look for anything interesting.
Local friends and meetups, classes, and even the academic side of the hobby are pretty amazing. Emergency drills at the local hospital are fun and I've connected with really nice people in and out of the hobby that way.
> totally unnecessary from an emergency comms perspective.
Completely different over here I guess. I've assisted people in wildfire emergencies and cell outages due to fiber optic cuts.
I've also had some close calls while hiking in e.g. sudden lightning storms in remote areas and had people on the radio asking how I was doing, if I needed assist, etc.
Seems what you shared is more about your local and family experience though? If so, don't let my take on the situation yum your yucks...
unxdfa|2 years ago
It's pretty not exciting here as far as emergencies go. So our emcom network (Raynet) are limited to dressing up like police offers as far as they can legally do it and managing the car park at public events. The real emergency services here are very well equipped to handle this themselves with cross service commercial radios. And there's very few places you can't get a 4G signal now, even in the middle of bloody nowhere.
I did enjoy working CW QRP and chasing miles-per-watt to some degree. It was also difficult to be an asshole on CW so people didn't bother. SSB / FM is just urgh.