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E-raamat: Ham and Shortwave Radio for the Electronics Hobbyist

  • Formaat: 320 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Oct-2014
  • Kirjastus: McGraw-Hill Professional
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780071832922
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  • Formaat: 320 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Oct-2014
  • Kirjastus: McGraw-Hill Professional
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780071832922
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Provides instructions for setting up and operating a personal ham radio station, with additional information on how to listen using shortwave without a ham radio license.

Get up and running as a ham radio operator—or just listen in on the shortwave bands!

Ham and Shortwave Radio for the Electronics Hobbyist shows you, step by step, how to set up and operate your own ham radio station. It’s also perfect for those interested in shortwave listening, without getting a ham radio license. This practical guide covers communications modes, assigned frequency ranges in the United States, details on fixed, mobile, and portable ham stations, antennas, and much more. Ham radio will work even when the Internet and other utilities fail. So get on the air and keep the lines of communication open in any situation!

Inside, you’ll find out all about:

  • Radio waves and how they travel
  • Shortwave and allwave listening
  • Communications modes for ham radio operators, including using the Internet as a supplement
  • Ham radio licenses and assigned frequency ranges (bands) used in the United States
  • Wave-propagation characteristics and tips on the bands best suited for use at different times of the day, year, and sunspot cycle
  • Selecting and installing equipment for fixed ham radio stations
  • Setting up mobile and portable ham radio stations
  • Antennas and transmission lines for various frequencies and station types
  • How to operate your station using popular voice and digital modes
  • Schematic symbols and Q signals for ham radio operators
Introduction xiii
1 Hobby Radio: A Technical Overview
1(40)
Shortwave Radio
1(2)
Amateur (Ham) Radio
3(3)
Citizens Band (CB) Radio
6(2)
Electromagnetic Fields
8(2)
Radio Wave Propagation
10(6)
Morse Code and Radioteletype
16(2)
Voices on Waves
18(8)
Receiver Fundamentals
26(4)
Predetector Stages
30(2)
Detectors
32(5)
Exotic Communications Methods
37(4)
2 Shortwave and Allwave Listening
41(34)
How I Got into SWL
41(3)
Shortwave Broadcast Bands
44(10)
Sunspots and Shortwave Radio
54(3)
Longwave Radio
57(8)
Dirty Electricity
65(7)
Which Radio's for You?
72(3)
3 Ham Radio Communications Modes
75(34)
Morse Code
75(4)
Radioteletype
79(4)
Phase-Shift Keying
83(5)
Multiple-Frequency-Shift Keying
88(3)
Amateur Teleprinting over Radio
91(2)
Packet Radio
93(3)
Single Sideband
96(4)
Frequency Modulation
100(3)
Images and Video
103(6)
4 Ham Radio Licenses and Frequencies
109(30)
Today's License Classes
109(3)
Discontinued License Classes
112(1)
160 Meters
113(2)
80 Meters
115(3)
60 Meters
118(1)
40 Meters
119(3)
30 Meters
122(1)
20 Meters
123(1)
17 Meters
124(2)
15 Meters
126(2)
12 Meters
128(2)
10 Meters
130(2)
6 Meters
132(2)
2 Meters
134(1)
Beyond 2 Meters
135(4)
5 Fixed Ham Stations
139(38)
Where Will You Put Your Rig?
139(7)
The "Main Radio"
146(6)
Peripheral Equipment
152(6)
Utility-Operated Power Supplies
158(7)
Small Backup Generators
165(5)
Noise, Noise, Noise!
170(7)
6 Mobile and Portable Ham Stations
177(20)
Mobile Band Options
177(5)
Mobile Power Options
182(2)
Portable Band Options
184(6)
Portable Power Options
190(3)
Stay Safe!
193(4)
7 Ham Antenna Primer
197(30)
Radiation Resistance
197(2)
Half-Wave Antennas
199(2)
Quarter-Wave Verticals
201(2)
Loops
203(2)
Ground Systems
205(2)
Gain and Directivity
207(3)
Phased Arrays
210(2)
Parasitic Arrays
212(2)
Antennas for UHF and Microwave Frequencies
214(3)
Transmission Lines
217(7)
Stay Safe!
224(3)
8 Ham Operating Basics
227(30)
Listen, Listen, Listen!
227(2)
Don't Be a Lid!
229(1)
Signal Reporting
230(2)
Operating in SSB
232(6)
Operating in FM
238(2)
Operating in CW
240(6)
Operating in Non-CW Text Modes
246(1)
Contesting
247(3)
Working DX
250(3)
Rag Chewing
253(1)
Operating with QRP
254(2)
Emergency Preparedness
256(1)
Appendix A Schematic Symbols 257(16)
Appendix B Q Signals for Ham Radio 273(4)
Appendix C Ten-Code Signals for CB Radio 277(4)
Appendix D Ten-Code Signals for Police and Emergency Personnel 281(6)
Suggested Additional Reading 287(2)
Index 289
Stan Gibilisco is a professional technical writer who specializes in books on electronics and science topics. He is the author of The Encyclopedia of Electronics, The McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Personal Computing, and The Illustrated Dictionary of Electronics, as well as over 20 other technical books. His published works have won numerous awards. The Encyclopedia of Electronics was chosen a "Best Reference Book of the 1980s" by the American Library Association, which also named his McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Personal Computing a "Best Reference of 1996."