Monday, September 01, 2008

Sorry...I've Been on 2M FM Again

I was looking out the window the other day and noticed that my wire HF antenna is laying on the ground. Hmmm, probably doesn't radiate very well that way. But if I put a long, lossy coaxial cable in line, the SWR will still be good at the transmitter. And I can tell my buddies that it works just fine because "I can work everyone that I hear." (What a dumb thing to say :-)

This made me realize that most of my ham radio activity lately has been on 2-Meter FM. Actually it has been on 2M and 70cm FM, as I tend to lump these two activities together. These days, my VHF/UHF FM rigs have at least 146 MHz and 440 MHz in them (FT-7800, FT-8900, etc.). I cruise down the road and flip on the rig, talk to the locals, talk to the XYL, etc. It is just too easy and too convenient. It fits the mobile lifestyle, whether it means operating a mobile rig in the car or grabbing an HT to take along on a business trip. (I used to run HF and SSB VHF mobile but found that the rigs were rarely used, so I removed the gear from my vehicle.)

Of course, I need to apologize to the rest of the ham community for this failure to act according to accepted social norms. You know how it is...Real Hams operate HF, weak-signal VHF, microwaves, etc......almost anything that is not 2M FM. Every so often I hear that comment about "well, those techs just hang out on 2M FM," implying that those guys are permanently stuck in ham radio middle school, unable to graduate to the next level. Or sometimes the FM operators are referred to as having "shacks on the belt" which are dependent on the "box on the hill." The main message is that 2M FM is just too easy, too plug-n-play, too much like an appliance....too convenient. We certainly can't have that!

Don't get me wrong...I enjoy HF, DXing, contesting, digital modes, almost anything to do with amateur radio. That's the cool thing about the hobby...so many bands, so many modes. One of my favorite activities is operating the major VHF contests. (I've even been known to work a few CW contacts.) But on a day-to-day basis 2M FM just seems to fit in better.

Some people call 2M FM the Utility Mode, because it is the mode that gets the job done. Last week, we had a weather net activated to track thunderstorms and a few tornadoes. Did this happen on 40M? I don't think so. Two meters carried the load. Where do most of the ARES and RACES nets meet? Two meters. How is most public service communications handled? Two meter FM. Even some hard core HF DX enthusiasts are known to flip over to 2M FM to tell their buddies that the DXpedition to a rare country is on the air. It is the Utility Mode.

Over the weekend, I was driving through the mountains and heard an aeronautical mobile working stations simplex on 146.52 MHz...lots of fun. Another time, I heard a station calling about 80 miles away (I was in a high spot) and I had the pleasure of making that contact....again, on 2M FM. A few weeks ago, I operated in the Colorado 14er Event from the summit of Pikes Peak. Since many of the mountaintop stations had hiked up, the most popular mode of the day was (you guessed it) 2M FM.

So sorry, I have been hanging out on 2M FM. I'll try to get that HF antenna back in the air one of these days.

73, Bob K0NR

3 Comments:

Blogger Spiny Norman said...

Bob,

I really enjoyed the article. Couldn't agree with you more.

Spiny Norman W9DAZ

7:16 PM, September 19, 2008  
Blogger SelectArrow said...

2M is a good place to be IMHO. I'm trying to encourage hams to monitor 146.52 more often (especially with our current world situation). It's a good way to meet w/hams who are close by and great for all of us to know someone is listening. Of course I also support making contact on 6.52 and then talking on another allocated simplex freq.

I think I'll bring up the idea at our next ARES meeting.

Bill - k7wce

2:07 PM, September 30, 2008  
Blogger bobw k0nr said...

Thanks for the comments!

I had previously posted some thoughts on the use of 146.52 MHz here: http://www.k0nr.com/blog/2008/02/use-of-14652-mhz.html

5:19 PM, September 30, 2008  

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