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HamCram Info

Learn how to get your Amateur Radio license — or upgrade from Technician Class to General Class — in just one day!

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HamCram Dates

Get a Ham license in just one day—or upgrade from Tech to General—at our HamCram study session and testing events.

In 2012:

Jan 28
Mar 24
May 26
July 28
Sep 22
Nov 17 (Third Saturday)

It is likely we will do others, but those are what we have scheduled right now. We are happy to do additional HamCrams for groups.

If you need testing, contact us. We can usually arrange testing within 24 hours.

For more information, use this form. To register, click here.

HamCram Fee Notice

The $30 HamCram participant fee is allocated $22 for the HamCram study session and $8 for the FCC license examination, if taken together. The FCC examination alone is $15.

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Dear Readers: I have been so busy organizing emergency communications, working with clubs, doing my “day job,” and getting repeaters on-the-air that I have been very remiss in posting to the blogs. I am going to try to get on a weekly posting schedule going forward. Thanks!

Entries in ARTS (1)

Monday
Aug102009

Useless Features? Yaesu's ARTS and WIRES

If there is a single radio feature that gets people in trouble more than Yaesu’s WIRES, I don’t know what it is.

WIRES is a proprietary Echolink-like system for connecting repeaters that relies on a single Touch Tone sent at the beginning of every transmission. While the Touch Tone is being transmitted and for a beat afterwards the mic is muted.

This results in a transmission where the first few words are cut off—and you may or may not actually hear the sure-giveaway Touch Tone. If someone has a Yaesu radio, you tell them to key-up and start counting, and the audio cuts in at two or three, then WIRES has been turned on by mistake.

This is a common enough error that most of the time I can diagnose and help get it fixed over-the-air. So can most long-time Yaesu customers. But, why should we have to?

WIRES seems to be used by precisely no one in the U.S.

Yaesu should remove WIRES from all future units and promise to sin no more.

Likewise with ARTS, a transponder system that theoretically will tell users if they are close enough (or too far away) to communicate simplex.

Fine enough, but it only works with other Yaesu radios and is obnoxious to non-users sharing the frequency.

Again, precisely no one seems to actually use ARTS and it, too, should be relegated to the scrap heap of good, but failed, ideas.

Or am I missing something?