[Coco] Ham Radio
jimcox at miba51.com
jimcox at miba51.com
Mon Nov 10 01:16:01 EST 2003
John:
Drop me a line some time, I'd like to learn more about
packet radio.
Jim
On Mon, 27 Oct 2003 17:12:55 -0800
"John Guin" <johnguin at hotmaill.com> wrote:
>Hello all,
>
>I was reading Jim Cox's mail about not pursuing ham radio
>work with the Coco
>in the Seattle/Bellevue area.
>
>I'm also a ham radio operator in the Seattle area, and
>have had antenna
>restrictions to deal with as well.
>
>Back when I had my packet radio set up, I used a 19" long
>antenna made from
>#12 wire and got reception and transmission good enough
>from West Seattle to
>the node closest to my condo - about 3 miles away. I
>used my old 2 meter
>handheld, and it worked very well. It only had one watt
>of transmitting
>power. That's all you need to get started on packet
>
>IIRC, there was actually a packet article or two in the
>Rainbow, but I'm not
>sure how useful the information would be. The packet
>modem does most of the
>work, though, so the easiest thing to do with a Coco now
>would be to use a
>terminal program to log data. Since the Coco uses a
>standard voltage on the
>serial port, it is not as hard to connect the modem as
>some other 8 bit
>machines (Commodore, I'm talking to you).
>
>Anyway, the point of this letter is not to let antenna
>restrictions keep you
>off the air. Unless you were wanting to get involved
>with Clover or some of
>the other low frequency modes, a really cheap "coat
>hanger" antenna sitting
>in a window is all you really need.
>
>73,
>John Guin
>KB7ZJW
>
>--
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>Coco at maltedmedia.com
>http://five.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/coco
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