I'm just curious where everyone came from?
I come from a moderate electronics background. I went to BOCES for a technical education for 2 years, and got a cert, than went to college at Bryant and Statton for "Technical Electronics" which was basically a 2 year degree in circuit design/troubleshooting. I did a couple local jobs in the field and quickly discovered this was no good for any kind of money, but neat education as a hobby. My buddy Kube (KD2GOE) had a couple of CB radios in High School, and I had one too with a huge antenna mounted to my house on a tower. We didn't really know what we were doing then though, and I never really had much luck....and probably burned out the finals in a couple radios....lol
So I went into IT/Communications. I havent really messed with component level stuff in 11 or 12 years.....totally lost interest, and forgot knowledge.
My dad used to fix electronics on a component level for a living, and my grandpa who was/is a ham was an engineer.... Grandpa is getting up into his 90's though and looking to unload some stuff as he's slowing down, so he hooked me up with his vintage Drake TR7. My same buddy from before (KD2GOE) is becoming a serious RF head, so he's been trying to get me back into CB for a few years....and the last year or so "ham". I tried a couple CB radios and antennas, but am having best luck with my grandpas stuff so far. My buddy is sorta getting me interested in it all over again. I just passed my tech and general and am waiting for my license.
What I think is really cool about the hobby is that you can build stuff, and see it work yourself. Simple stuff. I mean we did this stuff 45 years ago to talk to the guys on the moon....way before microprocessors and silicon valley...its been around even before that. Most people would say it's obsolete, but computers and internet have made the knowledge more available, and combining computers/networking with oldschool radio is cool....Its like discovering the dawn of wifi all over again by yourself. I'm particularly interested in rtty and sstv and sending pics and data. If you know what you're doing you can MacGiver anything, even with old gear. Math has meaning in the real world again. Things you do really matter on a physical level, and some seriously scientific stuff is happening.....It's just neat.
I don't know, I ramble. Anyways, I'm a noob still, and my name is Matt. I'm 32 yrs old in Buffalo NY. Getting more interested the more I read.
I come from a moderate electronics background. I went to BOCES for a technical education for 2 years, and got a cert, than went to college at Bryant and Statton for "Technical Electronics" which was basically a 2 year degree in circuit design/troubleshooting. I did a couple local jobs in the field and quickly discovered this was no good for any kind of money, but neat education as a hobby. My buddy Kube (KD2GOE) had a couple of CB radios in High School, and I had one too with a huge antenna mounted to my house on a tower. We didn't really know what we were doing then though, and I never really had much luck....and probably burned out the finals in a couple radios....lol
So I went into IT/Communications. I havent really messed with component level stuff in 11 or 12 years.....totally lost interest, and forgot knowledge.
My dad used to fix electronics on a component level for a living, and my grandpa who was/is a ham was an engineer.... Grandpa is getting up into his 90's though and looking to unload some stuff as he's slowing down, so he hooked me up with his vintage Drake TR7. My same buddy from before (KD2GOE) is becoming a serious RF head, so he's been trying to get me back into CB for a few years....and the last year or so "ham". I tried a couple CB radios and antennas, but am having best luck with my grandpas stuff so far. My buddy is sorta getting me interested in it all over again. I just passed my tech and general and am waiting for my license.
What I think is really cool about the hobby is that you can build stuff, and see it work yourself. Simple stuff. I mean we did this stuff 45 years ago to talk to the guys on the moon....way before microprocessors and silicon valley...its been around even before that. Most people would say it's obsolete, but computers and internet have made the knowledge more available, and combining computers/networking with oldschool radio is cool....Its like discovering the dawn of wifi all over again by yourself. I'm particularly interested in rtty and sstv and sending pics and data. If you know what you're doing you can MacGiver anything, even with old gear. Math has meaning in the real world again. Things you do really matter on a physical level, and some seriously scientific stuff is happening.....It's just neat.
I don't know, I ramble. Anyways, I'm a noob still, and my name is Matt. I'm 32 yrs old in Buffalo NY. Getting more interested the more I read.
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