Ham Resources
The links below provide only KEY information or sites that are useful to nearly all hams
Local repeaters including essential information such as type, frequency, offset and tone. A comprehensive list can be found at https://www.augustaham.net
QRZ is a free comprehensive web site containing a wide variety of tools useful to every ham. Every US ham has a prospective web site derived from FCC records. After registering you can personize the page. Other features include news, forums, swapmeet (buy/sell) and practice exams.
Club Log is a free (donation requested) online database with a suite of powerful tools supporting active DXers worldwide. Once registered you generate personal reports, showing which DXCC countries you have worked and/or confirmed, when you first worked them, which ones you still need, and which are the most likely to QSL. Clublog has 1099.7 million log entries, 77,468 users and 116,975 callsigns.
Free simple marketplace web site for buying, selling and trading everything ham radio. Postings are organized by category. Registration required to post ad.
SCHAMSWAP is dedicated to local amateur radio operators who are primarily interested in buying and selling amateur radio equipment but discussions of other subjects of interest (Antennas, DX, Contesting, etc) are encouraged as well. This group is based in the Columbia, South Carolina area and membership is restricted to SC and border cities (Augusta, Charlotte, etc). YOU MUST BE A LICENSED AMATEUR RADIO OPERATOR LIVING IN THE ABOVE AREAS. YOU MUST INCLUDE YOUR CALL AND HOME CITY WHEN APPLYING FOR MEMBERSHIP.
A daily Morse code challenge. You have 21 tries to guess the word, which will be played out loud in Morse code. Playback speed starts at 40 words per minute (WPM), which is pretty fast, but don’t worry! Every three tries, the speed decreases by 5 WPM. You are granted one guess every time you play the word. Play the word again if you need to keep guessing.
History of the Car Radio – It’s an almost universal experience: People get in the car and turn on their favorite music. But the first car radio wasn’t sold until 1922. And at first, radios in cars weren’t a popular feature. In 1930, laws were proposed in Massachusetts and Missouri that would ban automobile radios, and a poll in 1934 found that 56% of people thought car radios were a dangerous distraction. However by, 1946, around nine million cars had a radio installed in them.
Excellent 25 minute video introduction to the world of ham radio produced by the Montana Public Broadcasting System.