Tinks Radio Page

Hi, this is me standing next to a full functioned radio remote of my own design on one of the highest peaks in the Santa Maria Valley. My interest in radio is really a subset of my more general interest in electronics. It was the magic of radio in my pre-teen years that really got me started in the electronics hobby and my career as an electrical engineer. As a child, and still occasionally as an adult, I used to listen to far off broadcasts on AM radio late at night. Later on, I became a Ham Radio operator I could carry on the interest to the next level and actually do the transmitting as well as receiving.

Over the years, I have involved myself in many facets of radio. I am still active in some radio related pursuits to this day, and I hope to chronicle those on this page in the future. I have managed to talk to all 50 states, and proudly hold the ARRL Worked All States (WAS) award. Over the years I became proficient at T-Hunting (Radio Direction Finding), Morse Code, and building, designing, and repairing all sorts of radio equipment and antennas. I even played with Amateur Television and built a couple repeaters and other clandestine equipment that I will not mention here.

My desire to make even better equipment pushed me to teaching myself electronics. I eventually went on to get the degree in college, but it was my interest in radio that really drove me, and by the time I got to college I was pretty bored with the material because I knew it already.

There were several generations since the '20s of kids that cut their teeth on radio and went on to make a career out of electronics that started from tinkering with Ham Radio. Ham radio used to be considered on the cutting edge of technology with the advancements they would bring to the radio art. Hams were also looked upon fondly for the unique ability they had to provide communications during a disaster when nobody else could. Ham radio was strongly endorsed by the Boy Scouts and merit badges available for Morse Code.

Sadly, I think ham radio has seen it best days. I suspect that , at least in the United States, it will virtually disappear from lack of interest after my generation becomes mostly silent keys (deceased). The reasons for this are many. I think the greatest threat is computers. I think computers appeal to the same part of the personality that radios used to. Computers are more flashy though, more accessible, can perform all kinds of utilitarian functions, and are now in most schools and homes already. A kid does not have to con his parents into buying one, or at least not as much as he would for radio equipment.

Computers do not require metal structures on the roof (antennas) that annoy neighbors. Computers don't come through the neighbors radios, phones, and TVs. Most newer neighborhoods these days virtually outlaw the ham radio hobby because the CC&Rs (Conditions, Covenants, and Restrictions) forbid outside antennas. Almost all of the American manufacturers of equipment have disappeared or got out of the Ham sector. Many of the Ham stores are drying up because of mail order competition. I am a fierce capitalist and I sympathize, but the lack of a place for youngsters to gravitate to and seek advice from Elmers (mentors) is sad. I guess I caught the tail end of this phenomenon, and thinking back on the help I got as a child is like looking a Norman Rockwell paintings of a bygone era.

Most new recruits to the hobby are non technical, and I am not complaining about that. In the era of microprocessors and surface mounted components, building your own equipment is ridiculous when a new radio is many times less expensive than you could buy the parts for. Of course you can build some of the accessories still, but a minority seem to anymore. Most people have become "appliance operators". The actual test to become an amateur has been watered down to the point of simplicity, you can get some class licenses without Morse Code, the FCC does not even administer the tests anymore, and all the questions and answers are published and available for $5.00 There have been some dirty scandals where licenses have been bought and sold without any test being taken.

It is getting more and more difficult to interest people in radio. Why should anybody put the expense and effort in the radio hobby when computers can do seemingly so much more, and all the new software is made to hold your hand and be utilized with a minimum of effort? You can talk to people with your computer on the internet through email or chat rooms, and even with voice if you buy one of the internet phone programs. With a computer you don't have to get licensed, wait for the right sunspot and ionospheric conditions, put up with static, or share frequencies. With the increasing reliability and coverage, as well as declining costs of cellular phones, I think the final nail is being pounded in Ham Radios coffin.

I think this decline in ham radio is a symptom of a bigger situation in America, that I hope to cover on my politics page later. Life in this country, in the era of push button technology and the high expectaions we have for technology to make life easier for us has had an impact on us. I think people have become soft and less willing to put effort in worthwhile things when there is a technologically synthesized substitute. When I was a boy, I remember hearing phrases like "Yankee inginuity", "American know how" , and "adversity builds character". I believe that modern technology and conveniences have allowed most of the newer generation to avoid any of the adversity that builds character. We are rapidly becoming a "service economy" where nobody builds or designs anything, rather we shuffle the paperwork while I sell you insurance, you deliver my pizza, and your daughter is a stock broker and your son details cars for a living.

I really have no solutions. I would not trade in my computer or other modern conveniences for the back breaking work of a farm boy. It is just sad to see the dissolution of an institution in front of your eyes like ham radio that has had such a positive impact on this country and your own personal life. The majority of my acquaintances have come from radio, as well as my profession. Even my nickname Tinkyr came from the fact that I was a tinkerer. I don't think the virtual world of software provides the same ability that radio does to pick up a soldering iron and make things work and gather and intuitive understanding of electronics.

I am not a hypocrite in this manner, and I am working on some very interesting cutting edge applications of ham radio that I hope to display here in the near future. If all goes right, you will even be able to change the frequency and listen to a ham radio in the Los Angeles area right from this page. If you have a license, you may even be able to talk on it (How is that for an incentive? ).

In closing, I hope that I am wrong about the above, and I welcome your efforts to cheer me up and disproving my point of view in email. I have received quite a few comments on this page, and I will start posting them. Click here here to see them. If you have a comment on the content of this page, click here. I will post all relevent opinions

73, Tink