Things I Wish I Knew When I Was a Young Radio Artisan
(This is an updated repost from my previous blog, The K3NG Report. Occasionally I will repost notable articles that are of a timeless nature. Reduce, reuse, recycle as they say.)
With antennas, it’s not about the feet and inches (or meters), think in terms of wavelength.
Don’t worry about the orientation of a dipole when it’s less than a half wavelength above ground.
In multi-multi contesting and big gun DXing it’s often more a battle of bank accounts than operator skill.
You’re going to go through several phases in your radio artisan career. Don’t spend too much money until you’re sure you like the phase you’re in.
Don’t gauge your success by the number of awards you have on the wall.
Your money is better spent initially in antennas than amplifiers. When you have the best antenna your budget and lot will accommodate, then go for an amplifier.
There are good CBers and bad CBers. More amateurs than you think got started on CB.
Don’t be nervous.
There are jackasses in amateur radio. You cannot identify them by license class, age, years licensed, call area, operating mode, education, or income.
When the bands are open any goofy antenna will make contacts. People will think this makes a goofy little antenna a good antenna. Not so.
The perception of amateur radio that the general public holds is much different from the perception within amateur radio. We’re in a strange, esoteric and sometimes archaic hobby that most of the world doesn’t understand. Welcome to our secret society.
It’s not that extra one or two dB that makes the difference, it’s the first 50 dB that really matters.
Girls actually dig letters written in Morse code while you’re dating.
Save your money and buy a crank up or tilt-down tower.
Six meters.
You can operate anywhere you live, no matter what the restrictions. About any piece of metal can be loaded up with a tuner.
You buy an HF quad only once.
Low SWR doesn’t mean it’s a good antenna. Dummy loads have a low SWR.
Don’t get your start on 2 meter repeaters.
It’s not difficult to become a proficient operator. It’s listening and learning that people often find difficult. You need to listen to what others who are successful do.
Ladder line.
Homebrew it, even if you’re not some master electronics designer. When building equipment, don’t worry about not being a EE or building the perfect circuit. Don’t bother making printed circuit boards, you can build just about anything you want Manhattan style. Experiment. You will learn more from your building failures than your successes.
Don’t fall in love with one brand of radio. 
Don’t limit yourself to one mode.
Join a club. Do what is fun and what you want to do in the club. As soon as others tell you what you should be doing, it’s time to leave. When being involved in a club feels more like a chore, get out. If the club is on life support and you can’t revive it in three years, pull the plug. Move on. Don’t look back.
QRP isn’t difficult. It requires persistence and patience….and knowing when to go QRO or when to QSY.
Life’s too short to argue with enlighten people who say life is too short for QRP.
If you are in a club you don’t like and you want to leave that club to create a new or rival club, list on a piece of paper why you don’t like that club. This list is why you shouldn’t start a new club.
Don’t do CW because you want to impress others.
Get an ARRL life membership (or whatever your national amateur radio organization is) as soon as you can afford it. Don’t worry, you will get angry at ARRL at some point, but you’ll save money on the magazine subscription. (And ARRL is about the only reason amateur radio is still around in the US.)
It’s never what you don’t know that bites you, it’s what you don’t know you don’t know that gets you into trouble.
Walk away when you need to.
In amateur radio do what you like, like what you do.
You’re in a great hobby for life.
9 Responses to “Things I Wish I Knew When I Was a Young Radio Artisan”
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What i have seen of the uk Amateur Radio users, i am thinking about going back to CB.at least they do not look down their noses at new members.
i started on CB be fore it was legal and we had a lot of fun , but then they made it legal then people all went off and the kids got on there and that was that.
Nice piece!
The only amendment I would add is that although I agree life is not too short for QRP it is for using QSL bureaus.
73,
GB
Everyone has opinions.
A fascinating and much appreciated insight to the subtleties (and crudities) of Amateur Radio… As a newcomer to the hobby (which I dreamed about as a child, but could not afford due to family circumstance), I will print a copy of Anthony K3NG’s report, and frame it for display in my shack. 10/10
THE MAIN THING IS ENJOY WHAT HF MODES YOU LIKE BEST .
I TRYED PSK31 AND ENJOY IT .
CW IS A LOT OF FUN AS WELL AS SSB .
PAY JAMMERS NO MIND , IGNORE THEM .
BUILD YOURSELF AN ANTENNA AND SEE REALLY HOW EASY IT WAS .
I CANT AFFORD A TOWER SO I BUILD WIRE ANTENNAS WITH GAIN .
I HOPE TO TALK WITH YOU SOMEWHERE ON THE HF BANDS .
I ALSO ENJOY APRS , GIVE IT A TRY .
73 , CHUCK , N4UED
On the conrary, with antennas, it is all about height.
“On the conrary, with antennas, it is all about height”
If you higher is better, one can apply that general rule to VHF and UHF antennas, but not HF. Case in point: NVIS antennas.
That should have read “If you mean higher is better…”
Great thoughts !! The thing that has struck me about amateur radio over these last 50+ years is that it attracts good people. I know that there are exceptions, I have just never come in contact with them. Even when W2OY (sk) would call “CQ CQ, No Lids, Kids, School Bus Riders or Space Cadets need answer, No “K” calls, no phoneys, save your electric and save my Lid filter, W2OY standing by for Class A Operators Only”. I would would call him and have a great conversation. He knew I was a Lid, a Kid and a School Bus Rider, but it did not matter I guess. Sometimes we have to drill down to the core ! Thanks for the site.
73, Larry, W9QR