Links to
Favorite Places
Parma
Radio Club Serving the
Cleveland, Oh.area for over 50 years the PRC is
one of the oldest clubs in town. This site
provides many Amateur Radio Links.
E-Bay.Com
This is a direct link to
the Amateur radio auction site. Its a virtual
hamfest everyday!
This great site offers an abundacnce of free
animated graphics for webpages. Check them out!
Hey come on guys. Send me some mail. It
only takes two minutes to say Hi and that you saw
my page.
Activities
10 Meter Dx
2Meter nets
40Meter Soapbox Net (Christian Net on
7.234+ or - , Sundays 4-7pm Eastern
CW QSO's
anytime mostly on 40M & 15M.
You are visitor number since 11/13/99
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KC8IOO
member
ARRL
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That's me at the
controls of my Kenwood TS-520.
humor is great
medicine, so pass it around. I
"borrowed" this from K9GDT
- Last
month, my XYL said shed leave me if
I didnt give up ham radio.
Over.
- Q: How
many DXers does it take to change a light
bulb?
A: All of them. One to change it and the
rest to argue about whether it counts as
a light bulb. - Ward N0AX
Junk:
Stuff we throw away. Stuff: Junk we keep.
- Jim
Marrone
My favorite Boatanchor bumper
stickers...
Save Heavy
Metal-Recycle a Hammarlund or
National!
No glass, No
class!
73,88 and 6146!
Real radios glow
in the dark!
I brake for
hamfests!
If you have to
ask, "What's a
boatanchor?", you won't
understand the answer!
The Beat
Frequency Generation.
Honk if you Love
Sliderule Dials.
807's for
everyone!
Amateur Radio
Humor Links-Enjoy!
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Biography
My earliest
exposure(Hi) to radio was tuning my family's
beautiful, Telefunken, multi-band short-wave
radio when I was only about six years old. Oh,
how I wish I still had that radio!
Discovered
a photo of the radio, a Telefunken Opus 7, what a
beauty!
I sat spellbound
listening to the great receiver. A huge variety
of signals pouring out of its responsive, full
range speakers; strange voices, queer noises,
chirps, transmissions, beautiful music, and even
Amateur radio operators, filled my hungry young
ears.
Dad was a radio
operator during W.W.II, and later in the 60's he
earned his Amateur ticket. Back then the FCC
tested applicants, not with easy multiple choice
tests like today. He passed and set about
building a Heathkit DX60. Together (He did most
of the work) we built a GR64 receiver. Oh how I
treasure those memories.
Many years have
passed but I finally set about studying for a
ticket. I passed the Novice 10/02/97 and upgraded
to General on 6/22/98. There are so many
dimensions to amateur radio. I see why its a
lifetime hobby.
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