My hat is off to Mike for getting Josh on to talk about his field of expertise. It shows genuine care for getting good information out to your viewers.
@@RenaissanceThinkinghe doesn’t look like that on his channel. He got a hair and outfit change for sure. Make him look more manly for the people on this channel scared of any man that doesn’t look like testosterone.
This type of SHTF material is completely the most un-sexy content that most of us want. However, I think it is probably the MOST important stuff we should know. I do appreciate how FieldCraft supports and pushes this stuff. Great job crew.
I got started in Radio when Josh was on the channel years ago. I have my General, soon to be Extra, and I'm the Public Information Officer for my local club now. Great collaboration!
For my friends in Japan during the Fukushima disaster, being able to listen to get information was their a most important resource. Understanding this, I’ve picked up a Uiden bcd160dn scanner. It runs forever on two AA NiCad batteries and I carry four extra. If I need to talk, then I get my transmitting radio out.
In addition, I also make sure to have a battery pack for the radio that takes replaceable batteries, like AAs, with spare batteries. And, of course, a cigarette lighter 12V connection for the radio. Neither of those are that expensive. But the Wilderness Protocol is a fantastic thing of which many folks are not aware, so I appreciate you for all the information in this video!!! 73 de BJ, KM4RB
@@k6usy Sure, if that stuff is available and compact enough to carry, but it can be out the price range for some people (especially to get in sizes easy to carry). I was just suggesting some budget friendly options. I happen to have a fold up panel with soloar charger and battery banks which I use and SOMETIMES carry depending on the situation. If I have my HT I ALWAYS have the spare battery pack with the AA batteries with me as the easiest (to carry) and quickest (to switch to) backup power. For my larger radios, especially the HF ones, then I'll probably be running off the solar setup anyway.
Right on. The Wilderness Protocol is fantastic. I think that maybe with the reach of Fieldcrafts channel we’ll get to see more people take up their radio when they head to the field. Here in Utah, there just aren’t enough people carrying radios when afield.
Thanks! In particular I learned about the USB charging cable as an option. That will be perfect for the pairs of radios I put in all my go bags, as most other battery solutions were not great there, either being not easily recharged in the field, very expensive, or both. It'll be nice to be able to tie into my existing systems for solar recharging batter banks.
Josh is the man! So stoked you guys teamed up! Both of your channels have been integral to building my everyday "ready for anything" knowledge for years now. I'm going to be integrating some of this into my own channel. Keep up the good work boys!
Very good solid simple info! Nice job. I also like the idea of keeping a spare battery or 2 which are cheap, light and last a while for the Baofengs. Then keep them under your clothes next to your body in cold weather to keep them from getting zapped.
The difference in lighting between Josh’s channel and fieldcraft is kinda funny to me. On fieldcraft, the lighting is harsh and dramatic vs on HRCC the lighting is very even and bright. Love it. This is an awesome collaboration!
Thanks for the info. I watched the Emergency Communications for Your Home video a couple days ago and decided it is something I can, and need to do. So I am getting started. Thanks from me and my family.
I realize that this response is a few weeks old but if you watch any of the videos on the Ham Radio Crash Course, Josh has an affiliate link to his Amazon store. Many of the requested items are there.
Don't forget a good solar power station and panel. If your radio is usb-c capable it's easy to plug in to the usb port on the power station and recharge your radio.
@@stevenwilkinson8373 and run your USB lights and charge your phone and my Pecron E600LFP at 1200 Watts can even run my coffee maker. Here in AZ. solar is a pretty good way to go.
The power bank is the solution I went with. In 2024, there should be no reason for the newer HTs to not use USB charging. I have officially decided to no longer buy any HTs that do not natively charge via USB and plan on selling off ones that do not. USB battery banks are so versatile and many things now-a-days recharge or run off of USB. People often have one on them when out of the house. Big 3 of ham radios (esp Yaesu): get with the times.
I know antennas are an important part of comms. Let’s cover this in more detail. What antenna is appropriate for mobile communication to give us the best range and quality?
I just found out how important it is to have a way to change your radio batteries. I either left my radio on or it got turned on accidentally, it is a uv-5r. I had everything but the proper cord. Batteries going now to C port charging good idea.
And always make sure you have a way to charge your radios of some kind foldable solar panel or something in that realm. Also I'm sure your going to cover a general coverage radio options is a must for bug out grid down times great content Josh keep it up sir de W9US.
It would be sweet if you had some form of editable document for the card so that we can get on and change out anything that we need and it is ready to print
Hello Josh, Do you know of any "willing" Elmers in San Antonio, TX? Thank you in advance for any guidance you can give me. I appreciate all of the information and skills that you share with us.
As we have learned, radio in an emergency is really your "C" or "E" with your PACE plan. So if you are at this point, you are really embracing the suck and made some poor decisions before that got you here. I would scan the entire band looking for any traffic, then start calling out on known repeaters first, then move to 146.58 (the backcountry channel) with emergency PL tone, then to 146.52. Knowing that topography means everything on these frequencies, it's time to improve your position if you are in a hole. Since your family or loved ones also know your plan, you have designated frequency, timeline, and comms windows to fall back on. HT batteries, if kept warm, last quite a while; you may expire before your batteries do, waiting three hours to transmit. Depending on your circumstances, burn the batteries as needed to scan for traffic and make calls on known frequencies. No sense in dying of thirst with a full canteen of water.
So I’ve seen advertisements for “rapid radios” which seem to be easy to operate vs a hand held hamm radio. Could you please advise on which is preferred for bug out and what I should be looking into? Thank you
I have a small CB and VERY minimal experience, hopefully you cover those too and not just the insanely expensive ones Lol 🙏 EDIT-just watched this, I see I was right!! Thanks Josh, really thought us Josh’s had to stick together Lol any suggestions on where to sell a pinky?? Pretty sure those hand holds are expensive, right? 🤷♂️
Josh, what are the difficulties of building a radio rescue network of survival enthusiasts across North America? Unified standards, the system is flexible and scalable, and can be transmitted across the ocean with the help of Starlink
Looking for that charging cord for the baofeng uv5r . It looked like you plugged it in your mic port or something, the only thing I found like that it only plugs into an extended battery for the baofeng
Correct. The UV5R does not have a charging port. The extended batteries do have a USB charger that plugs into the side of the battery. You'll like the extended battery anyway.
I'd recommend watching Josh's Ham Radio Crash Course videos on you tube regarding the baofeng radios. He's got multiple videos covering all the basics and programming etc.
No I didn't...the radio does not appear to have a power port. I have to assume the actual charging base would have to be fed via USB.... @@anonymous_friend
I have a Baofeng radio I need to learn how to program, the GF is interested in a radio too because our cell towers failed a few years back during a hurricane.
Ham radio crash course channel on you tube. Josh has multiple videos on programming with chirp and manually if you choose to. Very easy after you do it a couple times.
Being new to all this there are many things I do not understand, one of them concerns the call frequency you gave as146.520. Isn't this outside the GMRS frequency range? How is this possible?
@Josh @Hamradiocrashcourse Dumb question are the time of day windows always on a local time zone, or would they be zulu time, so everyone is always listening at the same time everywhere????
In regarding getting licensed, what good is it when everything goes out and now your stuck in a Blackout scenario. Meaning when all hell breaks lose and there isn’t the normal grid on, what would getting licensed benefit you other than to use it currently? It seems like a waste of money to get the license when you’re practicing for a worst case scenario. Just looking for opinions as I’m not going in either direction rather trying to get context of why. Thank you
My hat is off to Mike for getting Josh on to talk about his field of expertise. It shows genuine care for getting good information out to your viewers.
Josh it's so awesome you're working with Fieldcraft!
Thank You....Nice to see you with Fieldcraft....The right man in the right place for the right job.!
I take it Josh is now part of the team now he's wearing a flannel shirt 😁
Yeah. He is looking like a wooly mountain man.... now!
They made him wear it after giving him a swirly.
Boogaloo boys in Hawaiian shirts - old and busted.
Flannel daddies - the new hotness.
Pretty sure Josh has been part of the "family" for about 2 years now.
@@RenaissanceThinkinghe doesn’t look like that on his channel. He got a hair and outfit change for sure. Make him look more manly for the people on this channel scared of any man that doesn’t look like testosterone.
This type of SHTF material is completely the most un-sexy content that most of us want. However, I think it is probably the MOST important stuff we should know. I do appreciate how FieldCraft supports and pushes this stuff. Great job crew.
I got started in Radio when Josh was on the channel years ago. I have my General, soon to be Extra, and I'm the Public Information Officer for my local club now. Great collaboration!
For my friends in Japan during the Fukushima disaster, being able to listen to get information was their a most important resource. Understanding this, I’ve picked up a Uiden bcd160dn scanner. It runs forever on two AA NiCad batteries and I carry four extra. If I need to talk, then I get my transmitting radio out.
Good to have Josh on board.
An excellent teacher of fundamentals and only going to get better with time.
In addition, I also make sure to have a battery pack for the radio that takes replaceable batteries, like AAs, with spare batteries. And, of course, a cigarette lighter 12V connection for the radio. Neither of those are that expensive. But the Wilderness Protocol is a fantastic thing of which many folks are not aware, so I appreciate you for all the information in this video!!! 73 de BJ, KM4RB
One thing to remember about the AA battery packs is that your transmit power will be greatly reduced from what the factory battery puts out
@@stevenwilkinson8373 That is true, but at least it's still transmitting!!
I would rather have a portable solar panel and spare batteries for the radio instead of having to carry around AA batteries.
@@k6usy Sure, if that stuff is available and compact enough to carry, but it can be out the price range for some people (especially to get in sizes easy to carry). I was just suggesting some budget friendly options. I happen to have a fold up panel with soloar charger and battery banks which I use and SOMETIMES carry depending on the situation. If I have my HT I ALWAYS have the spare battery pack with the AA batteries with me as the easiest (to carry) and quickest (to switch to) backup power. For my larger radios, especially the HF ones, then I'll probably be running off the solar setup anyway.
Can you make that card available???
would love the card too
Same
I think they are a perk of his patreon
Great Video Josh! I first started my journey in comms on your channel. Glad to see you here with Fieldcraft
I appreciate your involvement with FieldCraft.
Thank you for the informational videos you provide. I just got my Tech license thanks to your videos!
Right on. The Wilderness Protocol is fantastic. I think that maybe with the reach of Fieldcrafts channel we’ll get to see more people take up their radio when they head to the field. Here in Utah, there just aren’t enough people carrying radios when afield.
Keep up the great work guys!! Love your show
Thanks Josh and great meeting you at the Fieldcraft HQ for the Commo conference.
Keep up the great work Josh. Love that you are with Fieldcraft!
Love it that you joined up with FieldCraft Josh. Both your channels "knock it out of the park."
Thanks! In particular I learned about the USB charging cable as an option. That will be perfect for the pairs of radios I put in all my go bags, as most other battery solutions were not great there, either being not easily recharged in the field, very expensive, or both. It'll be nice to be able to tie into my existing systems for solar recharging batter banks.
More like this! Love Josh and Fieldcraft
Josh is so cool to have you with mike on the channel, I missed you on Orlando hamcation maybe next year. 73
Awesome vid. Been watching Josh for 4 years now. Finally getting my butt in gear to get my general, and using his vids to help study.
Josh is the man! So stoked you guys teamed up! Both of your channels have been integral to building my everyday "ready for anything" knowledge for years now. I'm going to be integrating some of this into my own channel. Keep up the good work boys!
Thank you Josh.
Very good solid simple info! Nice job.
I also like the idea of keeping a spare battery or 2 which are cheap, light and last a while for the Baofengs. Then keep them under your clothes next to your body in cold weather to keep them from getting zapped.
The difference in lighting between Josh’s channel and fieldcraft is kinda funny to me. On fieldcraft, the lighting is harsh and dramatic vs on HRCC the lighting is very even and bright. Love it. This is an awesome collaboration!
Josh is a great addition to FieldCraft Survival.
Thank you - any chance you could provide a link for your frequency card.
Thank you, Josh!
Thanks for the info. I watched the Emergency Communications for Your Home video a couple days ago and decided it is something I can, and need to do. So I am getting started. Thanks from me and my family.
I’d love to see links for purchase of all the items mentioned like the antenna, bnc connector etc. Thank you for the info you provided.
I realize that this response is a few weeks old but if you watch any of the videos on the Ham Radio Crash Course, Josh has an affiliate link to his Amazon store. Many of the requested items are there.
@@45auto thank you. I have found his channel and purchased many of the items he has highlighted. Thank you for your great content. Keep it coming.
Don't forget a good solar power station and panel. If your radio is usb-c capable it's easy to plug in to the usb port on the power station and recharge your radio.
They’ll also charge your power pack
@@stevenwilkinson8373 and run your USB lights and charge your phone and my Pecron E600LFP at 1200 Watts can even run my coffee maker. Here in AZ. solar is a pretty good way to go.
Great video Josh. Could you please post a link for the power bank and up converter cable you are using?
The power bank is the solution I went with. In 2024, there should be no reason for the newer HTs to not use USB charging. I have officially decided to no longer buy any HTs that do not natively charge via USB and plan on selling off ones that do not. USB battery banks are so versatile and many things now-a-days recharge or run off of USB. People often have one on them when out of the house.
Big 3 of ham radios (esp Yaesu): get with the times.
you need to show us one of these comm plan cards with this Wilderness Protocol and dive in to this a little more
I know antennas are an important part of comms. Let’s cover this in more detail. What antenna is appropriate for mobile communication to give us the best range and quality?
One that is specifically matched to the frequency band that your radio uses. The bigger the better, and the higher up the better.
Very cool info.
Thanks!
How does one go about getting one of those Yaesu and/or Baofeng laminated Wilderness Protocol cards?
Well done Josh! Thank you for the info.
I just found out how important it is to have a way to change your radio batteries. I either left my radio on or it got turned on accidentally, it is a uv-5r. I had everything but the proper cord. Batteries going now to C port charging good idea.
That was a really good basic beginner orientation. Nice work! Thank you.
Can you post a video of what goes on your info cards
Good stuff Josh! Love the collab!
Where can we get one of those cards would be very helpful
Heck yeah Josh! Thanks for the info.
Do you have a copy of the card you show here as an example?
Is that card available anywhere?
I like to carry USB-C cables that supply 12v to my HT for charging. You just have to make sure that the USB-C port on your power bank can output 12v.
This is fantastic information. Would you happen to have a version of the wilderness protocol card you use for download as an example?
Nice video, do you have more info on the radios and accessories like the orange whip antenna? Thxs.
Great video and very informative.
And always make sure you have a way to charge your radios of some kind foldable solar panel or something in that realm. Also I'm sure your going to cover a general coverage radio options is a must for bug out grid down times great content Josh keep it up sir de W9US.
Thanks, Josh. I consider HRCC to be my one stop for everything comms.
cool. so what info is in this card? do u have a template brah?
wwill be staying tuned. ive ben thinking about getting a ham setup lately, so this is definitely interesting
I hope this collaboration series continues. Josh is the Radio Guru in the Amateur Radio world. I watch a lot of his stuff.
Thanks Josh 👊🏻
Where do I find the paper note you showed?
Thanks Josh. Do you have a copy of the cheat sheet available?
It would be sweet if you had some form of editable document for the card so that we can get on and change out anything that we need and it is ready to print
Does that antenna add a lot of receiving power to a UV-5R? Do you have a good sourcing place?
Do you have links to that antenna and then also the magnetic mount and cable. I have a baofeng handheld.
Coax? BNC connector? GMRS? FRS? DAPHUQ?
Is a copy of the card info available?
Any recs on a radio/walkie?
Thanks for this, ai have a boefeng could I charge it via cigarette lighter that has a usb attachment port on it. Enjoyed this thanks again.
Is that 7:00 AM UTC or Local?
Where can we get an example of that comms card?
Thanks Josh Support Mike and you. It's in God's hands. Praying 🙏. Your body's.
Josh always has interesting practical suggestion.
Hello Josh,
Do you know of any "willing" Elmers in
San Antonio, TX?
Thank you in advance for any guidance you can give me.
I appreciate all of the information and skills that you share with us.
As we have learned, radio in an emergency is really your "C" or "E" with your PACE plan. So if you are at this point, you are really embracing the suck and made some poor decisions before that got you here. I would scan the entire band looking for any traffic, then start calling out on known repeaters first, then move to 146.58 (the backcountry channel) with emergency PL tone, then to 146.52. Knowing that topography means everything on these frequencies, it's time to improve your position if you are in a hole. Since your family or loved ones also know your plan, you have designated frequency, timeline, and comms windows to fall back on. HT batteries, if kept warm, last quite a while; you may expire before your batteries do, waiting three hours to transmit. Depending on your circumstances, burn the batteries as needed to scan for traffic and make calls on known frequencies. No sense in dying of thirst with a full canteen of water.
So I’ve seen advertisements for “rapid radios” which seem to be easy to operate vs a hand held hamm radio. Could you please advise on which is preferred for bug out and what I should be looking into? Thank you
Where do you find that USB charging cable
Great video guys
Hello, which is the best handheld radio from Yaesu?
How many times can a Baofeng HT battery be recharged ?
Many times, but I've never seen anyone actually attempt to see how many.
I suppose it depends on its cell(s). A LifePo4 is said to take 2000 charges! But I only recharge when my batteries are low to dead!
Any chance you could post a link to that nifty little note card???
Josh @HRCC, mention the adventure frequency too next time!
I have a small CB and VERY minimal experience, hopefully you cover those too and not just the insanely expensive ones Lol 🙏 EDIT-just watched this, I see I was right!! Thanks Josh, really thought us Josh’s had to stick together Lol any suggestions on where to sell a pinky?? Pretty sure those hand holds are expensive, right? 🤷♂️
Got a link for that card
You should zoom in the card so we can take a snapshot!
I don't have a ham radio license. Which 2-way radios or walkie-talkies do you recommend?
What is the brand/model of the antenna on your HT? N9UU
Maybe you can link those products for all the people to see?
Josh, what are the difficulties of building a radio rescue network of survival enthusiasts across North America? Unified standards, the system is flexible and scalable, and can be transmitted across the ocean with the help of Starlink
Looking for that charging cord for the baofeng uv5r . It looked like you plugged it in your mic port or something, the only thing I found like that it only plugs into an extended battery for the baofeng
Correct. The UV5R does not have a charging port. The extended batteries do have a USB charger that plugs into the side of the battery. You'll like the extended battery anyway.
Also that radio he's holding in this video is a Yaesu Japanese radio. Not the baofeng.
I'd recommend watching Josh's Ham Radio Crash Course videos on you tube regarding the baofeng radios. He's got multiple videos covering all the basics and programming etc.
@@native82 I noticed that but just thought he said it worked for baofeng as well or at least there was one like that
@@native82 I'll definitely check them out
I have an FT-65R and Need a part number for that Yaesu USB power cable
Did you find the cable?
No I didn't...the radio does not appear to have a power port. I have to assume the actual charging base would have to be fed via USB.... @@anonymous_friend
what do you suggest for 2 radios for me and my son to comm if needed in emergency?
Is thier a website that we can go to in order to print off or get an example of what you have on the card?
I have a Baofeng radio I need to learn how to program, the GF is interested in a radio too because our cell towers failed a few years back during a hurricane.
Ham radio crash course channel on you tube. Josh has multiple videos on programming with chirp and manually if you choose to. Very easy after you do it a couple times.
Great Job (as always)
Apologies? But how about solar chargers for such radios and or cell phones? Do You have a favorite company? Many thanks!
Being new to all this there are many things I do not understand, one of them concerns the call frequency you gave as146.520. Isn't this outside the GMRS frequency range? How is this possible?
PDF for the card?
@Josh @Hamradiocrashcourse Dumb question are the time of day windows always on a local time zone, or would they be zulu time, so everyone is always listening at the same time everywhere????
Josh can you give me a link for the cable to charge my Yaesu?
Life hack get UV5R extended battery that takes usb charging cable . I use this cable to also power my FT5DR out in field . I can APRS all I want
Does anyone have a link to the usb 12v/5v cord?
In regarding getting licensed, what good is it when everything goes out and now your stuck in a
Blackout scenario. Meaning when all hell breaks lose and there isn’t the normal grid on, what would getting licensed benefit you other than to use it currently? It seems like a waste of money to get the license when you’re practicing for a worst case scenario. Just looking for opinions as I’m not going in either direction rather trying to get context of why. Thank you