Links?
Yea, lazy here busting my ass on computers all week..
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from a ways back on this thread:
A few resources I've been using to study for the technician license:
Older (third edition) of the ARRL manual:
http://w2sbp.weebly.com/uploads/6/5/...nse_manual.pdf
Very concise study guide:
https://www.kb6nu.com/wp-content/upl...guide-v1-1.pdf
Practice Exams (free registration required):
http://arrlexamreview.appspot.com/index.html
And other practice exam / study site (free registration required):
https://hamstudy.org/
This is the video I watched.
https://youtu.be/RGluTpM7_K8
Took practice tests off of hamstudy.org and hamexam.org
For you more experienced folks: Do reasonably decent antennas exist that could be used for a 25w radio on a truck that aren't tall? I have considered putting a radio in the truck, but dont want to deal with a whip that will get screwed up in a car wash.
There is a certain image that people with 25W HAM radios in their vehicles have, and "car wash" isn't it.
I've been researching antennas for my truck too, and I have pretty much settled on a fender mount like this one.
I've been thinking about two of these, actually, one for each side of the truck. One to run the 25W 2M/70cm? HAM Radio Antenna on, and one (on the other side) to run a CB Radio Antenna to. Both Antennas, plus power, can then be run through the firewall to the actual radio mount, which I am thinking of doing on the center of my dash/console using a bracket like this one.
The only other one I am considering is one that mounts behind the third brake light, but as you say, that makes for a mighty tall antenna.
-John
I'm struggling with antenna mounting (on the cheap) with my Dodge.
I have a fender bracket on the driver side for my cb antenna now, but they don't make a mirror copy for the passenger side.
My 3D logic is not very good, but can't you just turn the bracket around and voila, it mounts on the passenger side?
-John