Subj : Re: Wannbe HAM To : Tony Langdon From : Joe Delahaye Date : Fri Sep 16 2016 09:18 am Re: Re: Wannbe HAM By: Tony Langdon to Joe Delahaye on Fri Sep 16 2016 18:41:00 JD>> then they gave us Side Band. A lot of us stayed on USB, and of JD>> course some of us just happened to get into the lower end of 10 JD>> meter . I TL> Here, they gave us UHF, then 18 channels of AM/SSB with a unique band TL> plan, and finally American style 40 channels AM/SSB. Originally it was 23 channels. When the 40 channel sets came in, it became illegal to sell the older sets. Not sure why. JD>> ran a very successful net for a few years, but only on the legal JD>> channels. Things died down, in the late 80s here. During all this JD>> time, I was trying to get my Ham license, but kept failing to get JD>> the required wpm in CW. Needed 12 at that time. Tried three times, JD>> and then they came in with No-Code, and I got my Basic Licence. JD>> Last change they made I got grandfathered in to HF TL> A bunch of us in the sticks used to hang out on both bands. Having 2 bands TL> at our disposal, we were able to setup ad-hoc links manually (speaker to TL> microphone!), and cover quite a wide area. Took a little thinking who had TL> to transmit on which band for the links to work (UHF simplex and 27 MHz TL> SSB), but it was quite effective for linking wide areas without a TL> traditional repeater. Igineuity We used to practice CW on Sideband --- SBBSecho 3.00-Win32 * Origin: The Lions Den BBS, Trenton, On, CDN (1:249/303) .