Fee includes the manual, exam and workshops.
For further information please contact sarc@ve7sar.net
Myself, as with many hams, employment and family building put radio into the background only to come alive as the nest empties. This 25-year break opened my eyes to the huge differences; when I left transceivers were just coming in and being cautious of interference was between my station and the public. That has reversed.
With an identical antenna at both the transmit site and the receiving station, regardless of whether the antenna is an omni-directional or highly directional antenna, if it took 1 watt of Effective Radiated Power to talk to a station 1 mile/kilometre away, then applying the I.S. Law would mean you need 4 watts for 2 miles, 9 watts for 3 miles, 16 watts for 4 miles, 25 watts for 5 miles... 100 watts for 10 miles/kilometres away. So if you had 1000 watt ERP output to a no-gain antenna, that would only give you 31.625 miles – line of sight communications. But that does not take into consideration any propagation, reflections, or the fact that the receiver is generally a lot more sensitive to weak signals… This I.S. Law is saying, for a given amount of signal strength to remain the same at each of the distances above, that is what you’d have to increase the ERP [by distance squared] to accomplish this.
At the receive end, you can look at it this way; For a given [fixed] ERP at the transmit end, let’s say for example, 100 Watts; The strength of the signal at the receive antenna would be ¼ of that at 2 miles distant [25 watts] , 1/9th of that at 3 miles [11.1 watts], 1/16th [6.25 watts] at 4 miles, 1/25th at 5 miles [4 watts], 1/100th at 10 miles [1 watt], 1/1000th at 31.625 miles [100 milliwatts]… ad infinitum… Celebrating 5 Years of Holiday Spirit on the Air Now with an AI-Powered Award System! As the Christmas season approaches, radio amateurs...