BARTLEVILLE AMATEUR RADIO CLUB - podcast episode cover

BARTLEVILLE AMATEUR RADIO CLUB

Jun 23, 202312 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

The podcaster did not provide a description for this episode.

Transcript

And good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome. It is time now for our community connection right here on K one, the one that you trust, and we're gonna be hamming it up a little bit out. Did I say I knew I was going to do that. I'm sorry, but we have Paul ready in here and he's vice presidents here with the local HAM radio at Bartsville Amateur Radio Club. How are you doing? First of all, doing good? Tom? Well, you know,

you know, we got this broadcast stuff here. That HAM stuff is really pretty good though. Yeah, I love that stuff. Some guys have us set up almost just like this, big microphones and everything they can. Really I think it's big. Hey, I gotta tell you this is one thing that I was telling you earlier that I came to know a little bit about it back in the late seventies early eighties, and some fellas had some HAM equipment. They said, he got to come out to the house and

check this out. Like by golly, right there on the desktop, they had everything they needed. They had the antenna up the side of the house and they are broadcasting people all over the place. Where's the farthest you ever yet Australia is probably the furthest that's like low over seventeen thousand miles. Wow, that's it. That's quite a reach. Yeah. Now tell us what does HAM stand for? Well, ham is kind of a term. I kind of forget how it came about, but you know amateur radio and HAM

is kind of like hamming it up, So that's what. So people on the radio were kind of hamming it up and they still do today. They still do today. It's really amazing because before the Internet, this was like the cool thing. This is how you talk to people from around the world. Right. I got licensed in the early eighties. I was thirteen when I got my first license. Wow. So we had to go down to Oklahoma City to take a test and at that time we had Morse Code requirements,

so you had to do most code. Now since then, what are the requirements now for HAM operators? Do you need to do? You need that? You do not need Morse Code anymore? There are. They used to have like five licenses now the down to three, the Technician, the general, and the extra class. So you still have to have license license and each UH license as you go up the ranks gives you more space and more bandwidth to operate on. Very good, you know, I was.

I was telling Paul that it was the hurricanes really Implorida where I really got to see how this really works. First of all, it's a lot of fun. But second of all, when the stuff hits the fan, a lot of people rely on you guys and gals who are Ham operators because sometimes you're the only signal, You're the only communication going out right and down Louisiana.

It took a couple of days to get communication restored. So yeah, so we're down there or people a HAM radio operature down there passing traffic from the Red Cross and and so forth to you know, give our companies and reports of damage in different areas and also welfare checks on people and things like that. My goodness sakes, it comes into extra handy. Now we've got a we got a pretty cool thing coming out what tomorrow, yep, what's

going on? Well tomorrow is what we call field Day and it's the fourth Saturday of June, so this is the ninetieth annual Field Day, so it's pretty cool. We will be out there at Johnstone Park. We're setting up some radios and antennas and then about one o'clock in the afternoon, it's when everything starts, and that's when everybody's when the radio waves get busy. There's people calling people, and the idea is trying to make as many contacts as

you can in the next two days. Now we will be offering Saturday. We won't be offering Sunday, Bill, Okay. So Saturday is going to be a real good time for people young and old alike to come out and witnesses. It's a lot of fun, it really is. Yeah, there's there's a lot of youth in the program too. There's what they call youth on the air, so there are youth on the air groups across the US and across the world, so there's a lot of youth into it too.

My goodness sakes, now you're telling me. Yeah, Actually, he picked up a signal on the little island of Fiji out in the middle of the water, out in the middle of nowhere. Yeah, that's kind of That was a real surprise. It's one of those rare bands that opened up at this time of year, and I was able to get that through and I was like, wow, Fiji, it's hard enough to get to California.

Now there's something cool that HAM operators are doing right now. It almost sounds like a contest where you're you're going to national parks and broadcasting kind of remotely. Yeah. They actually started that in twenty seventeen as a year long contest, so going on. Yeah and yeah, so it's like this is so great, let's just keep it going. And they've taken all the like state of the national parks and wildlife management areas and people just take their radios out

there. Each one is assigned a number, and so you could say I'm at Park Kadesh, you know, went to before, and people track that on a website. They can track all the parks that they've contacted, all the parks that you've activated. They call it activating the park. And then you just go out there and have fun and my contacts. Now it's not

as big a equipment load as it used to be. Used to take a pretty good sized hunker, your desk, a little corner room in your house, but the remote capability it kind of fits in a something about the size of a like a suit. You have a small suitcase. Yeah, I've got I've just got this one radio. Now that it's probably about eight inches long, about three in four inches tall, three inches deep, like a lunch box. Yea, yeah, you just throw it in your backpack and

throw an antenta in there. It actually has an antenna tuner in it, so if you're frequent, if your antenna is not tuned quite where it needs to be, it'll kind of account for that, and then people might contacts. I talked to someone on a wire that's like I think the wires about thirty two foot long. We had only five foot off the ground and the radio is only putting out about three and a half wats And I contacted somebody on that. You go, yeah, it was in a different space.

I forget the state now. But this morning I talked to see a Morse code contact with a guy in Virginia at a park. Oh my, So you know, this is some of the things you're gonna learn about Saturday at Saturday at one at Johnstone Park and it's Ham Radio Field Day activation. And it'd be nice because I know what's gonna happen. You're gonna have young and old alike. You're gonna have youngsters going wow, look at that, wow, listen to this, and then the ulsters are just gonna smile and say,

yeah, ain't that cool? Yeah I can I can always just see that out there. Yeah. We've got a couple of guys that they're just wizards at the Morse Code. So oh yeah, they can just listen to They didn't have to write it down. They so it comes through so fast

they can just pick it out. Oh wow, that's amazing. I was telling Paul that when I first became a broadcaster nineteen one hundred and seventy five, boy, that sounds like a long time ago that broadcasters used to have a license to broadcast, and you used to have to go to an FCC field office and take a task to get certified. I did that. I was I couldn't even drive a car. But a lot of that, some

of that stuff in the middle was things with Morse Code. Had know a little bit about that, and we had to know a little bit more of ship to shore radio than I could ever imagine. And then they made us do sos with flags. And I'm thinking, I'm a radio guy. I'm gonna be a cornball playing rock and roll music on the radio. What am I gonna do with flags? I asked the fellow, I guess it's the proper After it was over with, after the test, he said, I

you only missed one. I said, yeah, what's the business with the flags? He says, the war? It just never got rid of that part. But yours is quite different because it has things to do with frequency, you know, in different ratios, and you know, phasings and things like that, a lot of math. There's a lot of math into it. If you you know, you can get it as deep as you want to. So you know, if you don't want to do that, you don't have to. But I'll be a surface guy. Right. You can

go buy a cheap radio and antenna. It's already been tuned and put on the air, you know. But you know, the main thing is just getting on the air and just using the radio, just having fun communicating with people. Tell you what, Paul, We're gonna take a quick break for our sponsorshare tall Grass Motors in artle More Kneecam Funeral Home, and then we're gonna talk a little bit more about what we can expect tomorrow at the activation

day for him radio operators. We'll be right back. Time to start thinking about a new car. But the thought of dealing with the large dealerships is just too intimidating, too confusing. There is an easier way, tall Grass Motors. Tall Grass Motors doesn't play all the confusing games a large dealerships play. Tall Grass Motors has continually been voted Bartlesville's best used car dealer year after year. Go buy tall Grass Motors today and enjoy looking at over sixty used

cars, trucks, and SUVs all price to save you money. Tall Grass Motors Highway seventy five North in Bartlesville. Pre needs are completely transferable in the United States from funeral home to funeral home, and in Oklahoma that's especially true

without any penalty at all. For instance, if you decide you're going to retire and move to another state, and you find a funeral home that you're comfortable with elsewhere, you can take that already set up free need that you have at funeral home A and transfer it to a funeral home being there's no problem doing that. Tim Howell, Arnold Moore and Knee Camp Funeral Home.

Sixty seventy years ago, Bob Farmer died Joe business owner now Joe business owner hung a sign that said close for the funeral of Bob Farmer back at three pm. Hung it on his door, closed his door. No one would steal that sign. He would go to the funeral, as with many of Bob's friends. Now, if you're a grandson, you have to have proof that Grandpa died so you can get paid for that day of leave. I've said it a hundred times. Death is an inconvenience to twenty first century America.

But it's not at Arnold Moore and knee Camp Funeral Home. It'll be all right. We'll walk through this together. Arnold Moore and knee Camp Funeral Home, seven ten Dewey Bartels Event. We'll walk through this together. Welcome back to our community connection. We're talking to Paul Ready. He's a vice president here with the Bartaswelle Amateur Radio Club. We're going to have the Ham

Radio Field Day activation at Johnstone Park and that'll be one o'clock tomorrow. Now, in earlier before we got on the air, you kind of had a real cool celebrity encounter on Ham Radio. Tell us about that. Yeah, there was interestingly the last man standing, you know, Tim Allen. Yeah, that they had featured a Hammer Radio station there on the set and sometimes

they had that in the show. And Tim Allen is actually licensed and when he went and got his license, and that was a functioning hammerdio station. So I thought that was a prop. No, it's not a prop,

not just a prop. It was actually a fresh deal. So when they started, when they were about to end the show, they had about a week long or look it over, a week long special event where they had stations all across the US that if you made contact with them, you could submit and get a card and they sent back a autograph photograph of the of the crew and all the stations that you worked. And I was able to work all of them except for the actual station on the studio. Oh but

it's pretty dark, good though. Yeah, And so that's cool. I've got that photo at home. That is nice, really cool to see what kind of funny you can have. And you can find out more about it. So tell us once again about the big activation day tomorrow. Okay, so a field day being down Johnstone Park at the pavilion further in, so it's not the one and along the road by the way MCA, it's the one further in and we'll be starting operations at one o'clock. Alrighty be there

and bring a friend because it's a lot of fun to share. Yeah, all right, hey, thanks for being with us today. Well, by the way, do you have a Facebook page or anything like that. Well, our website's part of the Ville Amateur Radioclub dot com, so it's one of the longest rails you'll ever type in. But if you just type in Bartlesville Amateur Radio and search for it, you'll find find us and then from there we've got links to Facebook page. Oh wonderful. Well, great,

Hey, thanks for taking time to visit with us today. I'm glad to be here. Good luck tomorrow, and bring lots of water. It's gonna be a little warm. Thank you.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android