thanks for looking them over and giving me your opinion. I really appreciate that. I guess it's back to your original links, unless someone else has a different book they would like to recommend? I am open to any and all suggestions. I would really like to do this right....the first time.I can't really comment on this one except to say covering all 3 classes of license in one book with the test pools changing every 4 years is a tall order.
Just looking at the sample they provide, it looks like some good info upfront about the process of getting licensed but otherwise looks like a "teach the test" book.
I'm not sure this is going to help any more than a manual with a good glossary.
This is a good reference/overview but not really a license manual.
Like I said in the FAQ, I like the ARRL manual (which is usually what formal training teaches from) or the Gordon West license manual (and I lean towards the Gordon West manuals).
http://www.amazon.com/ARRL-Ham-Radio-License-Manual/dp/1625950136
http://www.amazon.com/Technician-2014-18-Element-License-Preparation/dp/0945053797
Double check you are getting the manual for the current pool whatever way you go.
Free study guide for tech exam:
http://www.kb6nu.com/study-guides/
Can you start a gnu?It looks like we've reached the end of this thread.
Can you start a gnu?
I doubt that, but i am guessing I just learned what the "." meansIt looks like we've reached the end of this thread.
I doubt that, but i am guessing I just learned what the "." means
I was saying that is the guide I am using but did not find it/me relevant to the conversation. Still learning. My pro-95 scanner picks up absolutely no ham conversations and my neighbors are wondering why I am sitting on my roof.
I watched the movie "Frequency" the other night for the first time. I noticed the radio they were using in the movie was a Heathkit SB-301 unless I read it wrong. The problem with that is the SB-301 is a receiver and requires a separate transmitter. Oh well...
I watched the movie "Frequency" the other night for the first time. I noticed the radio they were using in the movie was a Heathkit SB-301 unless I read it wrong. The problem with that is the SB-301 is a receiver and requires a separate transmitter. Oh well...
So you know you need a separate transmitter to speak to dead people, how?
Free study guide for tech exam:
http://www.kb6nu.com/study-guides/
He wasn't dead....it was a phenomenon that allowed him to talk to his son in the future. The Aurora must have bent the time space continuum.
If he wasn't dead then why didn't he just pick up the phone in the present?