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412 lines
37 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3505
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Title: HPR3505: A DX with Hotel Bravo 9 Hotel November Tango
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3505/hpr3505.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 00:42:10
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 355 for Friday the 7th of January 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, at the X-Width Hotel Bravo 9th Hotel November Tango and this
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part of the series, HAM Radio, it is hosted by Benir and is about 48 minutes long and
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carries a clean flag. The summary is, can be a 7K and Benir HB9H&D talk about getting your HAM
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tickets in Switzerland.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today we are going to do one in the HAM Radio series. No, we're not talking about bacon.
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We're talking about amateur radio, HAMs, dramatic actors, HAMs, see how funny that is.
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Radio as in, it's about moving on the airwaves unlike Hacker Public Radio, which is more about
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moving ones and zeros via an RSS feed, but I digress. In this series, I want to interview various
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different people around the world and various different regions about getting their exams.
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What's an exam you ask? Well, in order to be able to transmit, not receive, in most countries,
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local, curiosity, wills apply, in order to be able to transmit, you need a license from
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your local government, whoever that happens to be. And in order to do that, you need to prove
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a level of competency and you need to pass an exam. Now, the exam varies from country to country
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and the idea of this series is we will talk to people who ideally have recently done the exam
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and we'll talk to them about the requirements of passing that exam. And joining me this evening
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live from Switzerland is a good friend Benny. Benny, how are you doing? Hi, yeah, I'm absolutely fine.
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But I think for today, we should introduce me as Hotel Bravo 9 Hotel November Tango,
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because that's my call sign I got a month ago. I just passed the exam at the beginning of October
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and got my fresh call sign like on the 28th of October, I think.
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So, now you, you're what's your call sign again with me again?
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Hotel Bravo 9 Hotel November Tango. Now, somebody listening to that outside of here
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might not be able to, might be able to derive some information about the call sign,
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because they're supposed to be unique globally. And in order to do that, the first part of the
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call sign is typically allocated to a particular region. So, is that the HB part?
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Well, yeah, in this case, basically the HB 9 is the country part, but it's only HB which
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relates to Switzerland and the 9 relates to the level of the exam I took. So we have two different
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types of call signs, which is an HB 3, which is the zero entry level exam and HB 9, which is the
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set exam. I'll let you explain what what's up this. And we also, this is not strictly correct,
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because there is also HB 0 and HB 0 is Lichtenstein, so that's not Switzerland.
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So, let's cover some of the stuff there. For example, my call sign is P8, about a 7k kilo
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echo in November. P8 is the French for Peve, which is lowlands, which describes the Netherlands.
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And the 7 is the current block that they're allocating. There's within the Netherlands, when we
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talk about that, you will find out more information about that. And typically the last three letters or
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two letters, depending on the region, identify the amateur in question. So the last three digits are
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your unique, are unique to you. Is that correct? Yes, exactly. In Switzerland, we just get random
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digits. Actually, they just follow the alphabet. So the only way to get a two digit or two letter
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sign is to be a amateur association. Then you can also choose the name. There is, for example,
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well, for example, the local, the local association here is HB 9 CF. So that's, I don't think they
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chose to CF, but it's just a two letter, two letter call sign, or after DHB 9 at least.
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Okay, excellent. So you were mentioning that there are two level of exams. If you're from the US,
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you might be aware that there are three different levels. And in UK, there's also three different levels.
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So in, but in the Netherlands, there is only two. There's a novice and entry level. So what's
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it like there? You mentioned there's a lower level and a higher level that is equivalent to the
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sub. Yes, I think the way you explain it is in the Netherlands, it's more or less the same thing.
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It's a novice exam where you are limited to certain frequencies and a certain level of power.
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So you're not, on most frequencies, you're allowed to send with 100 watts or on some you're allowed
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to send with 50 watts with the entry level or in novice exam. And then there is the septic
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equivalent, which is the HB 9 exam, where you can use all the frequencies and the maximum power
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that is that is allowed by law in Switzerland, which also depends on the, on the frequency.
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So the frequencies tend to be divided up and correcting your every monitor. I,
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I am very new time to radio as well. And if I make any mistakes, please correct me
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in ideally by doing, you know, the show or joining us to, to improve this HB radio series.
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So our goal here is to try and encourage people to do the exams so that they will pass.
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So Benny, why didn't you just, you went straight and did the sept one. So the sept exam is a harmonized
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exam around the European Union and beyond. The European region, I guess, would be a word.
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And what it means is that it facilitates if you want to come to the Netherlands, for example,
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you could use PA forward slash HB 9, HNT forward slash PP. So you could still use your own call
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sign, but you would prefrex it with the local country that you're in. And one thing I noticed
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about ham radio is they're very much into knowing where you are. And it struck me as odd when I
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started, but then in order to know about propagation and distance location is a very big thing in
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ham radio. So is that kind of, does that give an idea of what the sept thing is?
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Yeah, I think that's a pretty good explanation. Well, at least for the limited knowledge I have.
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I mean, I think it's a European thing, right? So it's basically valid in most European countries
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and some other countries that have agreements with European countries. But you can't just go
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anywhere on the planet and use your call sign. So you have to check whether either you're
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in the sept area or you check whether your country or the country you're traveling to allows
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people from your country to use your call sign. If it doesn't, then you can't use your call sign.
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So I'll do another show about sept or if somebody wants to ping me about doing another show or
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wants to submit a show about sept, we can do that and go into details. But for now, it's like a harmonized
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harmonized exam, exam that says, well, if you've got a sept equivalent in Switzerland,
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then you can come to Ireland and you can broadcast there. And that actually allowed me to
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to get a call. If you permanently move to another country within the sept region, you can then
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swap your call sign. But that's that's something for another show.
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You didn't have to take another exam. So you didn't just swap the call. All right.
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All right. Yeah. And you don't actually swap it. You get another call sign. So I have
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got, sorry, just one second. Actually, I've got my
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ham license in front of me to make sure that I always remember my call sign during this show. So
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yeah, you haven't, I haven't actually used a radio ever as such due to long complicated
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reasons, which I'll go into in another show. But so the idea with the sept licenses is that
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the idea I think with a whole ham radio licensing per region is that it tells other
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administrations, the minimum level that you're asked, that you're competent enough to be able
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to operate in that particular region. Would you agree with that statement?
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Well, it's a statement that this is the goal of the sept license, or is the statement that
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the sept license achieves this goal? Because I agree with the fact that this is the goal of the
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license. But considering the exam, I took, I'm not fully convinced that the exam I took showed
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a certain level of competence. And you could, you could do the exam by just learning a lot of
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questions by heart. And that's it without, without knowing anything about about electronics or
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radios. So my other call sign, the call sign that I earned was G5 Ken, so
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a golf 5 kilo echo in November. And that's a G is a great Britain, I presume. And the five
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series is assigned to full amateur licenses. So in the UK, they have foundation, intermediate
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full. And again, there's different restrictions placed on you until you get the full license. But
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then that's equivalent to a PA 7 in the Netherlands. And then of course, equivalent to a HB, HB9,
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HB9, yes. So, but it also means that if you're going to, for example, America on an on an
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expedition or something and want to bring you radio, even though the might not recognize your
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certificate, they, it carries a certain amount of weight with it, the making licensing easier
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for you, I imagine. And I would also say that the purpose of the licensing in general is
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to set a minimum level of knowledge that if you're aiming a technical talk at people that are
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amateur radio enthusiasts, that you know everybody should know this amount of stuff. That's,
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that's at least what I got coming from the exam. Would you agree? You seem to disagree with that
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given the Swiss exam. I don't disagree. I think if you put some effort into actually learning the
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stuff you take the exam on, it's definitely easier to pass the exam. And of course, then you have
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a certain level of knowledge that you, that you trained. So, but I think it would be possible to pass
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the Swiss exam by just learning questions by hard or, or learning patterns of question solving
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by hard. But, I don't think, I don't think a lot of people do this. I think because most people who
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take the, the ham radio exam are genuinely interested in, in radios and ham radio. So, I think,
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well, for most people, it works. So, what was the, are all the exam questions published?
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And can you tell me about the exam process? So, can you say, can you just tell me,
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somebody knows nothing about amateur radio, the living in Switzerland, where did the start?
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Well, let's say, I, I pretty much did this because my, that the main reason why I got into this is
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my brother told me, well, I'm, he did, he did this spring, he did the novice exam. And he told me,
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well, I want to do the full exam, I want to do the set license. And I need someone to,
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to learn with, or to train with me. So, would you do the license with me? So, I just agreed,
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without knowing what it, what I got myself into. And I, basically, I downloaded a program,
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which is called ham trainer, which is sadly a Windows software, which I ran with wine, it worked
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with wine. So, it's fine. And it has a database of, it's not, it's a database of the published
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questions, but it's a database of published questions from earlier exams. And those questions are
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very close to the actual questions that were asked in the exam. So, very close as in, they just swap
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numbers. And, and basically the hope that the pattern you have to use to solve the question is
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exactly the same as the pattern you used in, in one of the questions you, you trained. Of course,
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it's, it's a database of like a couple of hundred, we're like 500, 600 questions. So, it's a lot to
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learn by heart, but it can, I think it can be done. Yeah, we build up the familiarity.
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And that's something I found quite interesting is that it varies from location to location.
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In the Netherlands, for example, the exams while being done in Dutch, obviously, are also
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the exam papers are published afterwards. So, you can download every exam that has been
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passed in the past. So, that's a good thing. The bad thing is, you're required, it might
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be a bad thing for you, Benny, giving you a profession, it might, they don't publish the formulas
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that you, you'd be expected to know when you need to remember them. Whereas in the UK,
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the questions are kept secret. And they, but you do get a formula sheet that you can refer to.
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You, you don't know, it doesn't tell you what the formula is, it just gives you, here's the formula
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and you need to be able to apply it. Well, I think it, I'm not sure whether this is fully
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correct, but because I didn't check all the sources of the documents I got from my brothers.
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So, I think most of them are from, as with ham associations and not official documents from
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the state, but you do get, you do get exam questions and answers. Like, it's not, I think it's
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not all the previous exams, but it's like a set of example questions and example answers,
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but it's just, it's just giving you the answer. It's mostly not giving you the,
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the full solution. It's just like, well, the answer is this number and that's it. And then for
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for the exam, you're allowed to bring a formula book and they're, they're formula books published
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by different associations in Switzerland. And if you use one of those formula books,
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some, they're not allowed to put full solutions into the book, but in my opinion, some of the
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formulas they put in there are very close to, to full solutions. Basically, you just, you just
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replace the letters with numbers and that's it. You don't have to understand the thing you're
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doing. Well, you have to know how to type it into calculator, but that's it. So, this formula is
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for this type of question. I don't know what this type of question is.
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Yeah, even, even for questions with different steps of calculation, like, what, where you have to
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have, well, I don't, I don't remember. There was like a thing was for, I never mind. It was,
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but like, it required several steps of calculation and they just gave
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every step for this exact case from, from the, from the example exam question. And they even did
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this for three different questions, which basically required the exact same formulas, but sometimes
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you had to transform the formula mathematically a little bit in a different way than in the other.
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You had to solve for, for another value than in the other question. So, they gave,
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in the formula book, they gave both versions of the question. And then, of course, in the exam,
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it would be one of the two versions of the question, another third one you wouldn't expect.
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Okay. Did you have, do you, I know we were talking about a lot of exam questions that were
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related to maths, but I found that, did you find that there were a lot of other questions about
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safety and about looking up the band plans and stuff like that? What, what, what was the breakdown
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of questions? Well, actually, it's what the exam has two parts. It's, it's, each part
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is 20 questions, but the first part is significantly shorter, time wise. And, and also,
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you don't have to calculate anything. The first part is just regulations and, and safely, mainly,
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like, safety regulations and frequencies you're allowed to use or looking up frequencies.
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And the second part is more the technical part. So, it's basically, it's, it's 20 questions
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each for each part, but the first part, the regulations part was only, I think, 20 or 30 minutes.
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And the second part was 75 minutes, I think. But in both cases, you would never need
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to full time. So, I was, I was on with the first part in, in five minutes, and with the second
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part, like in, in 15 or maybe 20 minutes. And I went through all the questions twice.
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Did you, what did you do to prepare for your exams?
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Basically, I took a laptop on holiday with the ham radio trainer. And that's more or less
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all I did. Yeah. I had a couple of sessions. Sorry. You didn't follow any courses. You didn't do any.
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Well, yeah, there was, there is a book. Yeah, that's true. There is a book geared towards the
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German exams, but the theory, the theory contained in the books is pretty much what you need for
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your Swiss exams. You just, you don't, you don't go through the example questions in the book,
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because they're geared towards a German exam, or quite different from, from the Swiss question.
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So, basically, I went through some of the theory, the first, the first, like half of the book.
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And then went on to, to learn, to train questions. And whenever something occurred that I didn't
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understand, and that I wanted to know more about, I, I read up on this specific topic. And then
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I did a few sessions with my brother, but we basically did exactly the same thing. We just went
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through questions, we didn't understand. And then either one of us did understand the question
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and explained it to, to the other one, or we went on to look up the information we needed.
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So, I'm not sure whether this is the best way to do this. It's definitely a good way to pass
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exam, but maybe not the best way to gain knowledge. Yeah, I'm looking here at the,
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at what they, or SGB, the Radio Society of Great Britain have, under their license, under their
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set license, they have license contributions and radio stations for the nature of radio,
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types of licenses and call signs. You need to, you're supposed to know about operators and
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supervision, nest, operators inspection falls down, attended and all control operations,
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how set and international things works, how to look for information in the license schedule.
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Then there's the technical aspects in section two, which is the fundamental theory, information
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about power, reactive components, AC theory, digital signals, transformers, tune circuits,
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arrangements, semiconductor devices, cell power, cells and power supplies. Then section three
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is transmitters and receivers. So we have transmitters, transmitter concepts, transmitter
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architectures, oscillators, oscillators, sorry, frequency multipliers, microphone amplifiers,
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of multilers, RF power amplifiers, transmitter interference, receiver concepts, super-hats,
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super-hatsural dying concepts, RF amplifiers, external pre-ampifiers, demodulation,
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automatically in control, SGR trim, its measures in receivers, transceiver, and then feeders,
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an antenna section where feeders balance types of antennas, standing waves, antenna machining,
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its radio propagation key concepts ionosphere, sorry section five is propagation, so
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radio propagation key concepts ionosphere, phf and above, other features,
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then section six is EMC electromagnetic compatibility, EMC concepts source of interference on
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their effects, roots of entry, filtering and remedial measures, station design and
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antenna placement of general principles, station design and antenna placements for mobile
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installations, social aspects and testing, then section seven is operating practices and procedures,
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which has good operating practices, procedures, band plans, special events, and section eight is
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safety, electricity, working with RF, lightning, working with mobile and portable, section nine is
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measurement of construction, so measurement itself, then decibels, then components, and that's it,
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so how does if that's the set license in the UK, how does that compare with what you have to study?
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I would say most of the topics were covered in our license two, maybe not the part about
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how ham radio is organized or the practical part, so I wouldn't I wouldn't get any questions about
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how to set up a antenna or how the social structure of the ham radio associations of Switzerland is,
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I wouldn't even know what to say the first time I'm holding a radio because it's everything is
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very theoretical, I know all the I know all the Q codes but I don't have when I took the exam I didn't
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have a single example how to use one of the codes, I knew what they what they meant but I basically
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didn't know how you would actually mention one of those codes on the radio, if this, if you.
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Yeah exactly, I don't think passing the exam is sufficient to make you a ham, it gives you a
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lot of solutions, I think it's quite similar to the analogy I have on my own head is like an IRC
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channel you don't just barge in and start talking, you sit there and knock for a while and
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have a listen and then kind of introduce yourself very delicately and then yeah it's a little
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different in the world for that region. I imagine having been a complete ham to radio virgin here
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now, so I'm desperately trying to look up the set syllabus, I imagine it must be somewhere if all
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the other ham to radio stations or amateur radio organizations are basing their minimum requirements
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of the interpretation of what a set license is then it must be available somewhere.
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I mean most of the of the regulations part is I would imagine very very country specific because
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there are different regulations and also the safety part in what I'm not sure in other countries
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but in what's around the safety part was covered in regulations, so it wasn't like if you want to put
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an antenna on your roof, what do you have to do to do this safely? It was more like if you put
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an antenna on your roof, what's the regulations are there to make sure you do this in a safe way,
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so yeah basically. I mean the result is exactly the same thing but it's not like practical knowledge,
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it's more like well this is what the law says and that's what you have to do.
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Yeah exactly it's taking consideration of this one. When I was doing my exam
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there were a few tricky questions where they were asking two things at the same time
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about remote operation or and the remote operation was one of the things but they coupled that
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in with the so they get the call signs of various different people and asked was this person
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allowed to transmit over there so it required understanding the call signs and the required
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it required knowing two pieces of information that you were given admittedly but you
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needed to be able to consolidate that. Are the questions phrased like that or are they just
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quite clear you know what do you do in the bus? You have an antenna and you want to mount us
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is it safe to do so? No I think I think some of some of them in the Swiss exam are
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well some of them you have to especially in the regulation section you have to read the question
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closely and think about what they mean that the most well in my opinion quite picky example
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for this is they had a question where they said well during a connection how often do you have to
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transmit your call sign and then the two of the answers were one was well at the beginning
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and then every 10 minutes and the other answer was every 10 minutes and the correct answer was
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every 10 minutes because the question stated during a connection and not yeah exactly at the
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beginning of a connection right so the of course at the beginning part is correct at the beginning
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of every connection you have to transmit your call sign but since the question said there is
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already a standing connection this wasn't correct answer yeah and that is primarily why I didn't
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want to do the exam in the Netherlands because my level of you really do need to understand the
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language to a native that of a native in order to be able to pass the exam and they say that's not
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a trick question personally I think it is yeah well with this example question I just gave I
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I think it's a trick question it's yeah just doesn't trick question it doesn't make sense in
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any other way to ask this I mean especially considering that one one of the other example questions
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was when you make a connection how often do you have to transmit the call sign and then the correct
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answer is at the beginning and then every 10 minutes because they just in the question it says
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you make the connection it's not already there so look it's absolutely tracking people into
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picking the wrong answer correct and that's an important point to to make about the exams that
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at least I felt was that it doesn't matter at the end of the day if you pass you're going to pass
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if you you know you might get you might get you barely scripted through and then become the
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best amateur radio antenna maker in the entire world the thing is just to get your license and
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from then on you don't take it away that is a question do they take your license away what are
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the licensing requirements in Switzerland do you need to pay for your license do you need to renew it
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well basically there are two things that are different so I have to have to look this up
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what what I've got two basically good two papers one is just the paper that says I did the exam
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and this is the one they can't take away again so when when you pass the exam you get the paper well
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you can you pass the exam and you can get a license whenever you like and then as soon as you get
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this you apply for a license and the license is valid for one year and you pay a certain amount
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every year you want to keep the license and if you if you don't pay anymore if you don't want
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a license anymore you're not allowed to to use the ham right you frequencies anymore but they won't
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give away your call sign ever well I don't know whatever means yeah but so if you if you like 10
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years later if you decide well I want to get into ham right you again you will get your old
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call sign you had 10 years to go you will get it back and you don't need to reabuck for the exam
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no that the exam you took is still valid you just have to apply for another license which you will
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obviously get because you passed the exam like 10 or more years ago yeah okay very good that is
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actually another interesting point you mentioned at the beginning that you need a license to
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transmit on ham frequencies actually in Switzerland you need a license to listen to ham radio
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it's not there is no there is no exam involved it's a license you you just get from from the
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authorities but you have to get a license to be allowed to listen to ham frequencies
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how how could they ever possibly know it's got no idea i'm not sure it's not not a lot
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not a lot but i mean i think the main point is the main point is you're not allowed to
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own a device that can receive ham frequencies without this license so i think i think when you
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when you buy when you buy a device you have to prove that you have this license
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actually i'm not sure i'm not sure whether i should tell this here publicly but a friend of mine
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actually bought radios he ordered radios from china which were designed to send and receive
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on ham frequencies and actually the authorities turned up at his door to check for his license
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and he sadly he didn't have a license so he had to hand in the devices
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oh that's not hard so it's definitely worth getting a license before you buy something
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also if you if you try to buy a second hand device in Switzerland you will all the seller will
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always always ask for your license because the authorities and check well he's it's basically
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his duty to check your license otherwise he's not allowed to sell you the device and he can be
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sued for selling the device to someone who doesn't have a ham radio license even even if you sell
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the device privately oh cool that's that good information to know and that is that is again here even
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though you've got a separate license it doesn't mean that i can humble into Switzerland for example
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and just set up my rate i need to obey whatever the laws are in Switzerland as a visitor which means
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i need to read the ban plans i need to read the licenses i need to it's a lot less paperwork than
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if i was coming from america or somewhere but there's still a on onus upon you that not only do you
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need to obey the terms of your own license in the country that issued it but you also need to
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obey the license terms of the country that you're in yeah absolutely so main thing is not the panic
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the second thing is why did you get involved why did you want to get an amateur radio license
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this is probably the first question i should have asked but maybe by the end of this series i'll have
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it down well i basically more or less already answered this question because i never planned to get
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into ham radio and never um basically wanted to do this it was just my brother fault he just
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told me well i want to someone to train with with me and i was like well all right let's do it
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it's basically the story behind this is my brother and i used to work in the same place
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but then i quit and now we don't see each other as often as we did and then we then we tried to use
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some of the of the radius of work and frequencies you can use freely but he wouldn't get through to my
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place on those frequencies or at least with with the power that's allowed and that's another reason
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he told me to get into ham radio to be able to talk to him and now he can we can talk to each other
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on on the radio yeah um well telephones are boring no okay i mean
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yeah i was also told there is this thing called the internet or something yeah yeah i'm
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it um still i think it's boring it's it's a lot more fun standing at the window because that's
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the only place i have enough reception to get to understand my brother and and talk to my brother
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using crappy crappy audio and sometimes not understanding him because some interference is
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just fun yeah i i think ask a hundred hands while they get into ham radio and you'll have 200
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answers very good what else do you think we should be asking in this uh you know go ahead
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well the other thing it's it's not the reason why i got into ham radio but it's something my brother
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used to convince me to get into ham radio he told me about sota which is summits on air so i'm
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i'm a mountain climber and i like getting on top of summits and this is basically the
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combination of this and ham radio so you that it's a game where you climb a mountain and then you have
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a thing you have to make four connections direct connections so not that we're not that we're a
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repeater to different people from from the peak so then the peak counts as activated for you and you
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get points for for the peak so i i i i would imagine this is not something people in the net the
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lens are in too but it does exist on this remote the climbers exist there's rumors that people have
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managed to climb a hundred two hundred meter mountains over there there was there was a story in
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Switzerland about how hundreds of years ago Switzerland didn't have mountains but a lot of tulips
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and the Netherlands have mountains but Switzerland didn't want the tulips and Netherlands the Netherlands
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didn't want the mountains so they just swapped yeah so what else should we be asking in a series
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like this what else would people be interested in knowing anything i think one thing that's
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worth mentioning you you mentioned it shortly in a question is that even though i even though i
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didn't attend any courses i just trained the questions it might still be worth getting
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finding an association that offers of offers preparation courses for for the exams
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maybe not not even mainly to prepare for the exam but to get to know people and to get inside
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information i mean one of the reasons why this worked out for me that well is my brother did one
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of those courses for the novice exam and he got a lot of inside information and a lot of documents
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he shared with me it would have been a lot harder to to do the exam with basically just training
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with the ham radio trainer and reading a book because you don't get all this this inside information so
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if you want to at least in Switzerland i would imagine it's the same in other countries if you
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want to pass the exam in Switzerland it's a lot easier if you get into contact with your local
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association or other local harms just find a way to talk to people and they will also have access
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to equipment and they can there's at least in my license there's the ability to have
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you know not people knew people ought to student on license people to exchange greetings so you
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get a feel for how a radio is set up so part of the reason i happened even used a radio yet is
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because i feel i happened on that and i once locked down as over again i'll nib over to my
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my almer so to speak and have him basically helped me with my first contact and setting up
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radio and setting up setting up stop making sure the radio that i do have doesn't emit
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um spurious on few spurious frequencies and that i'm following logging stuff that i need to log
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et cetera et cetera et cetera so yes good advice get involved with the club good advice go to a
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go to a training course if you can find out and that yeah actually is uh sorry go ahead
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over yeah i wasn't i wasn't just going to agree nothing else super uh it's a good
|
|
a good overview of how we're going to continue with the series so if you're in another country
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and have done the exam recently the last i said four to five years um can you get in touch with us
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please and we'll use at least the experience that we've had of doing this
|
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um interview with Benny here about um interviewing you and finding out about your country you
|
|
find out more about various different aspects of amateur radio because eventually what i would like
|
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to do is uh take the set license um the requirements of the syllabus there if i can never find it
|
|
and if it is available for public use then go through each of the items and cover each of those
|
|
items as a show so that you're never going to be able to get everything from HPR even if we did
|
|
all the shows because the individual requirements in the country differ so as you said um Benny
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there you would need to know locally that you're not even allowed to buy a radio prior to having
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|
a license that's something you need to know by attending the course reading the local information
|
|
so that's what we're trying to get out here there will be links in the show notes uh Benny's already
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provided them to me uh for how uh uh for what what what have you sent me well basically those are
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links to most of the things i mentioned during this um this episode it's the official links to the
|
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regulations from the authorities it's there is a link to the to the documents containing the
|
|
example questions there is a link to the ham radio trainer there's this windows um
|
|
applications application that works fine in wine uh well there is actually one sorry i have to
|
|
mention this there is one thing that didn't work in wine and this was font so the omega sign for
|
|
for resistance didn't work and the beta for for transistors for for the um what do you call it um
|
|
what's the English word what do what do transistors do um i'm probably going to amplify yeah so
|
|
the rate of amplification exactly that's it um and at the beginning i wasn't able to do to answer
|
|
any of the questions regarding um transistors because i just didn't know what the the black box
|
|
meant there because the the application just showed a little the well the box you always get if
|
|
a letter isn't contained in a font contained in a font so yeah but apart from this when i
|
|
figured this out it was what's easy to do very good and i think there is also a link to a
|
|
this german book i mentioned which covers the theory for the german exam and there you don't have to
|
|
purchase a book it basically exists online so the link the link goes to the online and i think
|
|
in germany you have to know that it's somehow called level e and level a and level e is what we
|
|
call novice or hb3 and level a is the hb9 so i call it is so is the novice level what i'm
|
|
alpha is the whole absence yes and the books the books uh based on each other so there is no way i
|
|
at the beginning i tried to read the book for the septic exam and it didn't work because it's based
|
|
on the other books so you have to you have to go through both books and what else yeah
|
|
yeah i think that's about it for for the links yeah with the sept thing they have harmonized the
|
|
full level but they have not harmonized they um enter the next level so some countries only
|
|
have two levels some countries have three and they're wanting to introduce three levels
|
|
this is my understanding that they are wanting to introduce the three levels so the first one
|
|
is done and the second one some countries will recognize novice in it but by written permission
|
|
so it's not close to the website and enter your search it's you need to contact them and then
|
|
they will they may on certain circumstances allow you to operate temporarily in a
|
|
way so it's no one task yeah i think now that you mentioned this just something came to my mind
|
|
i think that's just something i heard and it's not like confirmed confirmed information but i heard
|
|
that they are going to change how the exam works by the end of this year so whatever i told you
|
|
might not be correct by the end of the year so that's another reason why you have to get into touch
|
|
with with local hams and talk to them because you you never know what changes they introduce to
|
|
licensing yeah okay Benny thank you very much for taking the time to do this and it's a good start
|
|
to the to the series again if you've done your amateur radio exam in the last five years
|
|
please get in touch and even if you're busy with the process at the moment that's absolutely fine
|
|
please also get in touch so we can ask you what it's like in your area anything else you want
|
|
out yeah that's fine thank you for for doing the show and if you ever need if you ever need a co-host
|
|
for another ham radio show just just let me know even even if i'm unable to
|
|
provide some information i can still ask like stupid questions or something like this
|
|
excellent thanks Benny and tune in okay thank you for another exciting adventure here on Hacker
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public radio
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