| ▲ | ajsnigrutin 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
> What the FCC does is important, but there needs to be a sense of proportionality. I am a ham radio user but I am not particularly bothered if my $30 DVD player has a few spurious emissions, as long as they aren’t egregious. I also don’t mind imperfect but cheap radios like Baofengs if they help get people into the hobby. It’s good to have a box of these to hand out in emergency situations! Can’t do that with Yaesus unless you’re made of money. I'm bothered when my neighbors turn on their christmas lights, and the whole 40 meter band is wiped out. Also baofengs are horrible all those regards: * spurious emissions (thus banned in quite a few countries) * useless in most emergencies (but preppers somehow buy them for some reason... probably due to youtubers shilling for them) * handing them out to whom exactly? You need a ham radio licence to use them, and i'm pretty sure every licenced ham has a radio and doesn't need handouts from others (unless we're talking about baofeng FRS/PMR radios, but somehow preppers never buy those) Also a yaesu ft65 costs around 100eur over here, you don't have to be made of money to afford a much better radio. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | iamnothere 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
You don’t actually need a license to use the ham bands in a true emergency. Where I’m at a Baofeng can hit the local repeaters just fine. I handed them out to my family when we had a major multiday communication outage (cellular and internet were down) and set them up to listen to the repeater. I told them if there’s a life threatening emergency they can transmit. It made everyone feel a little safer. While I personally have a better radio, they are great as cheap backups. | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | mothballed 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I'd wager Baofeng is the most common emergency radio. Baofeng or something equivalent is what people in the 3rd world have largely been able to actually afford and there in the rough that's actually what's being used. I recall Baofengish radios being the most commonly spotted ones in the Syrian Civil War. | |||||||||||||||||
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