enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. American Radio Relay League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Radio_Relay_League

    The American Radio Relay League (ARRL) is the largest membership association of amateur radio enthusiasts in the United States. ARRL is a non-profit organization and was co-founded on April 6, 1914, by Hiram Percy Maxim and Clarence D. Tuska of Hartford, Connecticut .

  3. National Traffic System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Traffic_System

    The NTS as it exists today was first outlined by George Hart, W1NJM (died 24 March 2013) in "New National Traffic Plan: ARRL Maps New Traffic Organization for All Amateurs" as part of the September 1949 issue of QST. While traffic passing between amateur radio operators was nothing new, Hart's system extended coverage of traffic capability in a ...

  4. Maidenhead Locator System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maidenhead_Locator_System

    ARRL World Grid Locator Atlas. Newington, CT: American Radio Relay League. 2007. Containing all 32,400 Maidenhead Locator Squares; IARU Locator of Europe. Potters Bar, UK: Radio Society of Great Britain. 1984. IARU Locator of Western Europe. Potters Bar, UK: Radio Society of Great Britain. 1985. (scale 1:2,000,000) ARRL Amateur Radio Map of ...

  5. Amateur radio operating award - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio_operating_award

    Many amateurs also enjoy setting up and contacting special event stations. Set up to commemorate special occurrences, they often issue distinctive QSLs or certificates. . Some use unusual prefixes, such as the call signs with "96" that amateurs in the US State of Georgia could use during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, [1] or the OO prefix used by Belgian amateurs in 2005 to commemorate their ...

  6. Contact (amateur radio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_(amateur_radio)

    An All-Time New One (ATNO) [2] is an operator's contact with an amateur station that they have never worked before on any band or mode. [3] [4] Many amateurs will send QSL cards to stations they have worked. [5] Computer-based logging software, such as the American Radio Relay League's Logbook of the World, can also be used for logging contacts ...

  7. QRP operation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QRP_operation

    VOACAP simulation of propagation against distance, comparing effective radiations of 1 watt (top) and 99 Watts (bottom).. The practice of operating with low power was popularized as early as 1924, with a variety of reports, editorials and articles published in U.S. amateur radio magazines and journals that encouraged amateurs to lower power output, both for purposes of experimentation, and for ...

  8. Amateur radio propagation beacon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio_propagation...

    IARU Region 1 is encouraging individual beacons to move to 50.4 MHz to 50.5 MHz. [4] [5] In the United States, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) only permits unattended 6-meter beacon stations to operate between 50.060 and 50.080 MHz. [6] Amateur beacons at 50 MHz have also been used as signal sources for academic propagation research [7]

  9. ARRL Radiogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARRL_Radiogram

    An ARRL radiogram is an instance of formal written message traffic routed by a network of amateur radio operators through traffic nets, called the National Traffic System (NTS). It is a plaintext message, along with relevant metadata (headers), that is placed into a traffic net by an amateur radio operator.