• JackbyDev
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    1 month ago

    Folks, if you’re interested in this hobby I highly suggest you start studying for your technician license right now on hamstudy.org. it’s a great site and free. You can use it as a guest if you don’t want to make an account. The reason I say this is because it can take a few weeks to find a place to take your exam and then get your license. The waiting period sucks. Especially when you want to get into it right away.

    Just listening is free and requires no license.

    The exam is ~$15 depending on where you take it. The FCC fee is $35. The license lasts 10 years.

    Some entry level radios I think are good enough to just mess around with before seeing if you want to dump more money into the hobby are:

    • Baofeng UV-5R. ~$20. The original cheap handheld. You’ll see folks shit on it, but that’s about it’s overall quality, not quality for the price. Obviously a $100 radio will be better. It’s good enough for seeing if you want to pursue the hobby though.
    • Tidradio TD-H3. ~$30. Came out this year I think. It’s basically the UV-5R on steroids. It can receive way more frequencies and be programmed over Bluetooth. The Bluetooth programming app is annoying to use but it’s still a nice feature. Supposedly it can be programmed via USB C but I couldn’t get this to work. Other people have. It could be that all the USB C cords I have are power only.
    • Quansheng UV-K5. ~$30. Also known as UV-K6 and UV-K5(8). They’re only cosmetic differences. I personally haven’t used this. The thing that makes this cool is that the firmware can be flashed with custom firmware! I know there are a lot of techies here on Lemmy so this might be a cool one to get.

    Most of these come with accessories. Most of them are garbage. The longer antennas are nice. The programming cable is very important. Once you get one they seem to work with everything. You really need one, especially if the custom firmware on UV-K6 interests you. There is a program called CHIRP that lets you program them. It’s very useful.

    • shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zipOP
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      1 month ago

      What I find unfortunate is that it seems a lot of amateur radio software, especially for like the DMR radios, are all windows only, and I am exclusively a Linux user.

      • JackbyDev
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        1 month ago

        I don’t have a lot of experience but I was able to get Baofeng’s GT-18 programming software working and programming on wine. If I was already an experienced wine user it would’ve been easier. It’s the first time I dove in. Even the serial programming worked fine, I just had to see which /dev/ was linked to which COM. Still, native Linux (or CHIRP support) would be better.

      • Krzd@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I don’t remember how I did it, but I could swear that I got chirp to run on Mint

        • gnu@lemmy.zip
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          1 month ago

          Chirp ran fine on Linux when I needed it to program a UV-5R a year or two back - was provided in a flatpak then but looks like they use a Python wheel file now.