VOM QSL Cards
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Sometimes the QSL card will contain an image, perhaps of something associated with the operator's home town. QSL cards are very important to the Radio Amateur since they confirm that a QSO took place and are used as proof when applying for a Ham Award |
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Callsign
A callsign is a unique designation for a radio or television station. Callsigns are formal, semi-permanent, and issued by a nation's telecommunication agency. Informal
designations are also used for some services, especially broadcast radio,
but strictly speaking these are not callsigns and there is no
guarantee that they are unique. Tactical designators or identifiers (often
called tactical callsigns) also fall into this category. Each
country has a set of alphabetic or numeric International
Telecommunication Union-designated prefixes
with which their callsigns must begin. For example:
Amateur
radio callsigns Radio frequency
Radio
frequency, or RF, is a carrier, or alternating
current with or without a signal, at a frequency that can radiate, or
propagate, if not shielded. Such frequencies account for the following
parts of the electromagnetic spectrum: Very
low frequency
VLF: 3-30 kHz Low
frequency
LF: 30-300 kHz Medium
frequency
MF: 300-3000 kHz High
frequency
HF: 3-30 MHz Very
high frequency
VHF: 30-300 MHz Ultra
high frequency
UHF: 300-3000 MHz Super
high frequency
SHF: 3-30 GHz Extremely
high frequency
EHF: 30-300 GHz Note:
above 300 GHz, the absorption of electromagnetic radiation by Earth's
atmosphere is so great that the atmosphere is effectively opaque to higher
frequencies of electromagnetic radiation, until the atmosphere becomes
transparent again in the so-called infrared and optical window freqency
ranges. Analog
signals that are not RF include IF (intermediate frequency) and AF (audio
frequency, 20-20000 Hz). Electrical
connectors designed to work at radio frequencies are known as RF connectors.
RF is also the name of a standard audio/video connector, also called BNC
(BayoNet Connector). Named
Frequency Bands
Mode of transmission
In the radio frequencies used by the worldwide Ham Radio, are used some particular modes. A mode, is a special kind of radio wave modulation. The
modulation process, is an electronic process, in which the information
(like voice for example) is "mixed" to the carrier (the radio
wave) and then, after more electronic processes, sent to the antenna for
the transmitting. Of
course there is a reverse process, useful to extract from the radio wave
the desired information. If
the information is a simple human voice, we may use the following modes:
If
the information is a digital datas, then the modes may be:
There
are also other modes, like the SSTV (Slow Scan TV), FAX (the same as the
usual Faxes, but sent via radio), the TCP/IP over radio, and more. To
hear or decode a particular mode, of course the receiver and the transmitter
must use the same mode. Elsewere it is impossible to exchange the information
between two radio (or TV) stations. The
RST code is used by Radio Amateurs to exchange signal reports. The
"R" stands for "Readability" and is
measured on a scale of 1, (barely readable) to 5 (Perfectly readable).
The
"S" stands for "Strength" and is measured
on a scale of 1, (very weak signal) to 9 (very strong signal). The
"T" stands for "Tone" and is measured
on a scale of 1, (very poor tone) to 9 (perfect tone). Tone is used only
used in morse code and digimode transmissions and is therefore omitted
during voice operations. An
example RST report for a voice contact would be "59",
usually pronounced "five and nine," and symbolises a perfectly
readable and very strong signal. Info from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
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