Subj : Re: Wannbe HAM To : Joe Delahaye From : Tony Langdon Date : Sat Sep 17 2016 08:07 am -=> Joe Delahaye wrote to Tony Langdon <=- 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. JD> Originally it was 23 channels. When the 40 channel sets came in, it JD> became illegal to sell the older sets. Not sure why. Australia had this unique 18 channel setup. It only lasted a couple of years though, before we went 40 channels. 2 of the old channels weren't in the 40 channels, so people would hide away on "Aussie 3" or "Aussie 7", away from everyone else, as only the old 18 channel sets could go there. 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. JD> Igineuity We used to practice CW on Sideband Yes, it was ingenious, and it worked really well. We'd chat for an hour or more, away from the masses on the repeater across an area well beyond normal local range. I think we covered distances up to 100km that way. I was one of the stations with both bands, who was capable of relaying traffic. :) .... 24 hours in a day, 24 beers in a case. Coincidence? --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49 * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410) .