Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Tue, 15 Apr 1997 19:27:10 -0500 (CDT)
From:      Jim Bryant <jbryant@argus>
To:        kgor@inetspace.com (Kent S. Gordon)
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: question about X.25 drivers
Message-ID:  <199704160027.TAA12436@argus>
In-Reply-To: <199704151916.OAA00697@chess.inetspace.com> from "Kent S. Gordon" at Apr 15, 97 02:16:39 pm

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
In reply:
> >>>>> "jbryant" == Jim Bryant <jbryant@argus> writes:
>     > almost everyone on this list could probably get the capability
>     > for a few hundred dollars [one-time cost] and a day or two of
>     > studying for the license...  nodes exist in almost every major
>     > city on the planet, as well as the arctic, antarctic, every
>     > ocean, countless satellites, as well as a certain manned space
>     > station, not to mention the radio backbones which criss cross
>     > BFE in almost every country on the planet [except maybe
>     > N. Korea], even where phone service is nonexistant...

> Could you suggest a couple of possible pieces of equipment and what to
> study ( and information sources) if someone was interested in doing
> this.  I looked at www.arrl.org.  Is the technician class license the
> correct one ( I would prefer not to have to relearn morse code)?
> What is the best way to find other local people doing packet radio?

any 2-meter (144-148MHz) or 70cm (420-450MHz) FM radio will do.  i use
a radio-shack htx-202 for my packet stuff.  it regularly goes on sale
for $199, 0.5W and 6 watts out, any decent antenna [i use a 3/4"
copper j-pole, it'll handle at least 5kW, about $25 or make one
yourself], a power supply helps... i use a kpc-3+ from kantronics -
slow, but usable...  total cost for above, shrink-wrapped, under $400,
even less used...

your local radio shack sells a q&a book called "Technician No-Code"
for around $10...  No-Code limits you to 50MHz to infinity using any
standard or experimental mode of operation [cw, ssb, fm, fstv, data,
spread-spectrum, etc] with a 1.5kW power limitation [hmmmm... i wanna
bounce FreeBSD AX.25 off the moon]...  you still have to have code for
HF [the good stuff]...

check your local ham club, or listen on a scanner, or get the license
and ask on the air for what local frequencies to use for data, and
where/when testing sessions take place, you don't have to go to the
FCC field office to take the test anymore...

again, another source of packet/Spread-spectrum data mode info is:

	www.tapr.org

jim
-- 
All opinions expressed are mine, if you   | "I will not be pushed, stamped,
think otherwise, then go jump into turbid | briefed, debriefed, indexed, or
radioactive waters and yell WAHOO !!!     | numbered!" - #1, "The Prisoner"
 jbryant@tfs.net - KC5VDJ 2M, 70cm, KPC-3+ - kc5vdj@wv0t.#neks.ks.usa.noam



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?199704160027.TAA12436>