Shortwave: The Warlord's Radio

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  • Опубликовано: 16 июл 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @manwichsandwich
    @manwichsandwich Год назад +944

    Most people just need to understand that 99% of the usefulness of a radio of any kind is intelligence and information gathering. Gathering. Meaning just listening. Not much of a need to key that mic in a lot of situations. Just like the other parts of life, you are way better off listening than you are talking. Every time you key that mic you are putting a target on your back.

    • @allmyhobbiesareexpensive2676
      @allmyhobbiesareexpensive2676 Год назад +55

      There is some merit to your argument but it's not universal, if everyone listens and no one talks then all is silence.

    • @stephenvsawyer
      @stephenvsawyer Год назад +18

      And this is why I bought an Eton Executive Elite rather than a handheld ham radio. I prefer listening anyway.

    • @manwichsandwich
      @manwichsandwich Год назад +10

      @@allmyhobbiesareexpensive2676 let them get the target. There will always be people who talk.

    • @kevinmichael2219
      @kevinmichael2219 Год назад

      ⁰0

    • @kevinmichael2219
      @kevinmichael2219 Год назад

      0l0p⁰00

  • @dolphadomian4762
    @dolphadomian4762 Год назад +640

    “Channel your inner warlord” should be daily advice

    • @SuperCulverin
      @SuperCulverin Год назад +40

      I prefer to think of myself as a "Crime Lord" rather than a warlord, because use of force is counterproductive.
      I deal in unregulated food. If you're hungry, I can probably find you some illegal food.

    • @garrysekelli6776
      @garrysekelli6776 Год назад +17

      Reminds me mostly of 1920s china when the rugged and diverse land was ruled by numerous warlords and diverging clans. Probably crazier than the american west.

    • @UNcommonSenseAUS
      @UNcommonSenseAUS Год назад +11

      @@SuperCulverin raw milk etc ?

    • @garynew9637
      @garynew9637 Год назад +6

      I want this on a t shirt!

    • @SuperCulverin
      @SuperCulverin Год назад +26

      @UN-common Sense AUS
      My wife cooks our milk. But yeah, that's the idea. Milk, eggs, beef, pork, chicken and preserved fruits. All produced locally, without any taxes or inspections.

  • @joemac1290
    @joemac1290 Год назад +103

    This is a great presentation. I am glad somebody is actually explaining Radio Communications instead of trying to sell an $800 handheld radio.
    In my opinion, 99% of the ham radio videos on RUclips are for operators who already "know" a lot about ham radio. This is why non-hams watch those videos and they cant comprehend a single word those people are saying.
    I think this channel has the great potential to change the future of ham radio.

    • @rayjones463
      @rayjones463 Год назад +2

      just have every one in your group get bofang handies and then get them programmed the same then all you have to do is move through the memery channels to get em to work

  • @tibbs3112
    @tibbs3112 Год назад +110

    Loved the middle earth map for comms scheduling. It was a nice touch.

  • @michaelabraham9177
    @michaelabraham9177 Год назад +191

    I know nothing about ham radio. I did spend years training in the military immediately post cold war. The training I've received regarding radios over the years was significant. We hung antennas in trees, set em up on poles, mounted them to vehicles, etc. Training under soviet threat doctrine we moved a lot. With the tech the soviets had back in the day they could triangulate a radio operators position in seconds. Field artillery, jamming, and what have you could be targeted on that position in seconds to minutes. Shoot, move, and communicate was the order of the day. Since then I've also deployed to various theaters overseas. Technology has changed significantly in just 20+ years. I've been out for in excess of 10 now. Our guys could, and did listen to all the transmissions sent out by the militant groups in our area. The only real protections modern insurgent groups really have imo is the amount of resources they'll have available to devote in your direction. The amount of movement you can do, and how fast, etc. You could string your own landlines in fixed positions. These can't be intercepted as far as I'm aware. Use directional antennas. You can find out how to make these in publically available field manuals. Those are harder to detect. Use preset locations where your antennas are setup using materials your prepared to abandon. Roll in, hook up antenna, send message, grab radio, go. Leave antenna. Don't communicate at all for long periods. Use lots of keywords in voice communications. Use every tech advantage you got to shorten your communications. Your ideas on sending txt or pictures is great. Pictures not as much. Its the 21st century, could you use drones as repeater stations? Send it up, burst your message, grab drone, go. Use existing infrastructure, tap into existing phone lines strung out for miles already. If there is no power that's another option for communications with improvised, or surplus field phones. Depending upon the state of urban areas, there could be plenty of camouflage, cover, and concealment available there. Use, or modify existing power lines, or phone lines for house to house communication, op (observation post), etc. The imagination goes on, and on. By the time we've got abandoned urban areas, and can freely utilize existing infrastructure there's gonna be a lot of unprepared dead people, and the survivors probably won't need my advice, or will have forgotten it. Also anything a person can wargame in their mind can be countered by an equally imaginative opponent, and you really cannot plan what happens when shtf. Every scenario you've imagined with the aid of your 10 besties will be different than you imagined. After the 1st shot, rocket, zombie attack happens its all adlib with the resources you and your theoretical demonic enemy have to throw at each other. The one thing I hated about using radios in mountainous terrain was how the mountains themselves severely limited your commo. You couldn't talk to the guy a half kilometer away, but you and the guy 20 klicks away could talk all day. If your in an area where your antenna can talk to anyone your also in a spot that's got great line of sight to all bad guys and field artillery. So you try to hide in the valleys where they have to use high quadrant elevation to drop things on you, but move your antennas as far away as is possible with as much cammo as you can do. Mountains just suck, and after you've been climbing up and down and running around for an entire week with no sleep there's no amount of physical fitness in the world that seems adequate.

    • @jharris0341
      @jharris0341 Год назад +15

      Outstanding perspective.

    • @tunnelrabbit2625
      @tunnelrabbit2625 Год назад +17

      Thanks for the real world advice. Excellent. Include terrain masking, remote radio transmission on directional antennas using field phones, 'disposable' low power repeaters and low power techniques for RX/TX, and NVIS propagation that can be nearly impossible to DF. Also, get to know your mountainous terrain and using it effectively for propagation (refracting and reflecting), and masking, is a mostly underappreciated advantage.

    • @tacticalmattfoley
      @tacticalmattfoley Год назад +18

      Thanks for taking the time to type this info. Much appreciated. Using drones as a repeater station is a darn good idea.

    • @umbra6772
      @umbra6772 Год назад +9

      Thank you for giving me a perspective into my own thoughts. I'm glad I'm not the only one who aknowledged this. A polite society is an armed society is all I can say

    • @ausentenoparlamento6704
      @ausentenoparlamento6704 Год назад +14

      One of the few times where a wall of text is indeed necessary. Thank you só much for the perspective.

  • @allenshepard7992
    @allenshepard7992 Год назад +168

    Note @ 7:27 - "The knock on the door for being a HAM" That happened during WW-II. Although HAMs were tolerated for training Morse code radiomen, they were shut down during world war two. Many call signs were lost and old timers were given new call signs.
    Also, Some cities in California now want HAM to pay to co-locate antennas. Two local Emergency operations managers have come back with "The after hurricane report from Florida opened with "We did not think we needed HAM operators since we have cell phones, mobile data and Starlink satellites. We were wrong. We needed too many people in too many places. HAMs could travel by bike"
    NOTE: MARS mods may not be bad. NEVER use a police frequency. I'd rather use a military or GMRS to call for help after a fire, gun shot, explosion. I expect to be prosecuted for using a police freq.
    NOTE: SDR allows people to see how active a wide band of frequencies. "Waterfall" option can even help spot code vs speach vs FSK.
    I keep a CB. Why? Its what others have. Use for intel gathering and monitoring. Do not forget NOAA radio & FM to have some music after a long day. Good stress reliver.

    • @mtnboyjohn9353
      @mtnboyjohn9353 Год назад +15

      Having CB is like getting information from many truckers traveling in several different directions. It has great potential for good intell.

    • @thebugg333
      @thebugg333 Год назад +11

      @@mtnboyjohn9353 Not to forget that an open HF rig can communicate on the CB band.

    • @jfv65
      @jfv65 Год назад +10

      Back in WW2 our country was occupied by the nazi's and our government-in-excile was located in London, UK. Together with the UK army they kept in contact and coordinated resistance groups in the Netherlands. The resistance also helped coördinate repatriation of downed aviators or receiving and repatriating British spies going in or coming out of nazi-occupied territory. Getting intelligence in and out of nazi occupied territory in the proces.
      But the nazi's were hunting down these radio transmitters and the people using them. They had vans with directional antennas running around the area to do triangulation. Many of those radio amateurs were caught and shot by the nazi's.

    • @allenshepard7992
      @allenshepard7992 Год назад +2

      @@jfv65 Thanks for the history. Trying to find transmitters tie up men and supplies.
      I guess the messages also help keep up moral.

    • @danieltaylor6253
      @danieltaylor6253 4 месяца назад

      ​@jfv65 are you polish?

  • @anonpers0n
    @anonpers0n Год назад +96

    I am a very experienced long distance hiker/backpacker who spends most of my time in Appalachian mountains, far more then 10,000 miles of back-country travel, there are very very few humans who could carry 100 lbs 12 miles in a day while bush whacking up and down mountains, i couldn't, on a trail sure but not truely bushwhacking. the difference between walking 20 miles down a road or even trail and walking 5 in the back country will blow minds, this spring i took a been there done that army ranger with me for a hike, on trail was fine but when i took him on a bushwhack for about a mile he said it was the hardest thing he had ever done.
    every yuear i challenge myself to bushwhack a new peak that trails do not reach and every year I am amazed at how hard it is, how sketchy travel without a path can be, how hard it is to get gear through the thickest and steepest of terrain

    • @echo5delta
      @echo5delta Год назад +22

      Or just take away someone’s boots/shoes and they are worthless! I think that’s overlooked for someone’s cache is an extra pair of footwear. Mountain miles are a lot different from bottomland. The southern Appalachian is like a triple-canopy rainforest in the summer!

    • @BearBig70
      @BearBig70 Год назад +7

      You made me tired just explaining it!😜
      Did you ever check out the Missing 411 series with David Paulidus? Very trippy stuff...

    • @AA-gj3kt
      @AA-gj3kt Год назад +9

      There's nothing like breaking brush as the point man!
      👍👍

    • @firstnamelastname6216
      @firstnamelastname6216 Год назад +2

      @@BearBig70 dude... for real tho, what tf has been/is going on out in all those places, those "clusters"??!! I seriously think it's something otherworldly/multidimensional... Idk... it's nuts fr. 👍✌

    • @BearBig70
      @BearBig70 Год назад +2

      @@firstnamelastname6216 I concur. So much more to Godsworld than we could possibly understand. I simply keep an open mind, and take in all the info. David is doing a great job highlighting it, and when hiking, I take his suggestions seriously. The suggestions are something one would want in a lofe or death situation anyways. Can't hurt.👍

  • @rdsmith334
    @rdsmith334 Год назад +329

    As an unlicensed someone that’s been trying to learn about some of this stuff, from a relatively closed community, THANK YOU for this.

    • @martinsonofwar395
      @martinsonofwar395 Год назад +38

      Not sure where you're at, but in the US many hams would be willing to show you and talk your ear off. You just need to find a local club

    • @tubeguy4066
      @tubeguy4066 Год назад +90

      @@martinsonofwar395 Only if you are licensed. They are snitches otherwise

    • @mikemcdonald5147
      @mikemcdonald5147 Год назад +44

      get your license. youre already on a million govt list. you can use a po box if you dont want to use your home address and you really do learn by doing and practicing. you dont know what you dont know. theres alot more involved than just turning on the radio and pushing the talk button.

    • @LarsLarsen77
      @LarsLarsen77 Год назад +9

      @@tubeguy4066 You don't have to talk to them on the radio, there are local ham radio clubs that meet in person. They teach you how to pass the licensing test, so they HAVE to talk to people who aren't licensed all the time.

    • @LarsLarsen77
      @LarsLarsen77 Год назад +6

      @@tubeguy4066 You don't have to talk to them on the radio, there are local ham radio clubs that meet in person. They teach you how to pass the licensing test, so they HAVE to talk to people who aren't licensed all the time.

  • @echo5delta
    @echo5delta Год назад +71

    MARS-gram’s were awesome to get while deployed before e-mail was mass available especially in the marines. I didn’t get an email address until 2004!

  • @prisonerofthehighway1059
    @prisonerofthehighway1059 Год назад +43

    Depending on your operational area and what your needs are, don’t discount the humble CB radio. If you can get your antenna high enough, they have 10-20 miles of range and don’t require much power. If you’re planning to ally with like minded neighbors, being able to communicate is as easy as making a trip to your local truck stop.

    • @LarsLarsen77
      @LarsLarsen77 Год назад +9

      Also, lots of local neighborhood watch organizations have started using GMRS radios.

    • @LarsLarsen77
      @LarsLarsen77 Год назад +3

      Also, lots of local neighborhood watch organizations have started using GMRS radios.

    • @maxrockatanksyOG
      @maxrockatanksyOG Год назад +6

      I have had skip at times, allowing me to talk from Central Qld to Alice Springs and sometimes as far as Weipa (in the same state as me).
      Australia for context

    • @jplacido9999
      @jplacido9999 Год назад +5

      For good range, use CB SSB radios. Big differance....
      In SHTF situations ONLY:
      out of regular CB band (26 MHz) for tactical comms and CB 40 channels for inteligence gathering...

  • @Povilaz
    @Povilaz Год назад +81

    I find shortwave radio's fascinating. I have been interested in them ever since I was 7 years old, just messing around with one. Being able to tune into a station from *thousands* if not *tens of thousands* of kilometers away is still a mind boggling concept even today.

    • @Lman4271
      @Lman4271 Год назад

      That's how I became an amature!... it's interesting stuff through and through! When you know stuff, you can do stuff. Check out ham radio crash course, Mr Carlsons lab and soldersmoke! There is something powerful in being able to talk around the world on a device you figured out how to cobble together!

    • @bobbader4789
      @bobbader4789 3 месяца назад

  • @OH8STN
    @OH8STN Год назад +15

    We are not all narrow-minded a-holes. Great discussion!

    • @perrytheplatypus7403
      @perrytheplatypus7403 Год назад +3

      Love your channel too. I’ve learned a lot from you.

    • @thatkajunguy8029
      @thatkajunguy8029 Год назад +2

      Hey man, long time no talk. Hope all is well in your part of the world

    • @OH8STN
      @OH8STN Год назад +2

      @@perrytheplatypus7403 thanks 👍

  • @Andrew--S
    @Andrew--S Год назад +17

    “Let’s see Paul Allen’s SALUTE report”
    That meme always cracks me up

  • @Supermanrs
    @Supermanrs Год назад +33

    As a fellow ham this is an amazing video. And have been trying to tell people this for years. Comms are super important.

    • @jasonodette8607
      @jasonodette8607 Год назад +2

      I second that as a Ham myself 👍 Old school social networking through Radio waves. I saw K8MRD in the video.

  • @wxfield
    @wxfield Год назад +28

    Hams and Physical Fitness..almost pee'd myself laughing. I can't think of one time where a ham-meetup didn't involve a never-ending buffet of some variety.

  • @ThePracticalPatriot
    @ThePracticalPatriot Год назад +34

    Dude, take this to the next level. Start offering classes. I would pay.

    • @oscarbear7498
      @oscarbear7498 Год назад +6

      There's enough here to start a whole school

    • @parkercushingable
      @parkercushingable Год назад +7

      This video got me down a rabbit hole of ham radio, there's a ton of good channels talking about at least the features but not with the insight and worldview that S2 has.

    • @unclebenny9028
      @unclebenny9028 Год назад +4

      Ham Radio Crash Course HRCC on YT has a class...

    • @ThePracticalPatriot
      @ThePracticalPatriot Год назад +2

      @@unclebenny9028 Plenty of HAM channels. I'm talking about intelligence trade craft etc....There's 20 guys down at the local Radio Club that can teach you that stuff.....running a safe house? How many guys you know with that skill set?

    • @brandonwardlow4246
      @brandonwardlow4246 Год назад +1

      As would I. I feel like I’m drinking from a firehose with these videos. I want to learn soooo bad. But I need some kind of classes to educate me. Then I need to acquire the equipment and setup a network.

  • @miked7728
    @miked7728 Год назад +10

    I don't know how it took me so long to discover your channel. I have found a new thing to be obsessed about. Thank you.

  • @navyman8903
    @navyman8903 Год назад +43

    Excellent video as always, and I'm pretty dumb on communications stuff, so this was excellent information for me.

  • @daveweese9856
    @daveweese9856 Год назад +46

    this is the type of technical information that can really save lives in the future and help our people survive .. may God help good triumph over evil in this world..

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Год назад +3

      And we all need to realize just how grave a threat humanity faces. The Great Deceiver has reached out through his minions and seized much of the planet. Go with God

    • @crypto-radio8186
      @crypto-radio8186 Год назад

      He is a idiot! He knows nothing about Mil-Spec Radios-The AN/PRC-117F Multiband/Multimission Radio, currently in use by all the U.S. military services, is a 30-to-512 MHz-band radio that incorporates several different software-defined waveforms, such as SINCGARS, HaveQuick, and old Type 1 encryption modes.

    • @sillybirdy1994
      @sillybirdy1994 Год назад

      Who are you wanting to fight? What?

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Год назад

      @@sillybirdy1994 You are part of a war whether you want to be or not. They are coming for you

  • @behxld750
    @behxld750 Год назад +22

    i was a radio operator in the marines. i definitely felt that carrying a PRC on 8 hr patrols daily. GET YOUR BODIES PREPARED GENTS. much more difficult over long distances/rough terrain than you would think.

  • @TheTrinityDawn117
    @TheTrinityDawn117 Год назад +76

    Excellent summary of *useful* information about HF in the current times.

    • @garrysekelli6776
      @garrysekelli6776 Год назад +3

      Hydrofluoric acid?

    • @andrewom679
      @andrewom679 Год назад +4

      @@garrysekelli6776 I suppose it depends on what message you are trying to communicate.

    • @SuperCulverin
      @SuperCulverin Год назад +1

      @Garry Sekelli
      High Frequency

    • @crypto-radio8186
      @crypto-radio8186 Год назад

      Apparently you don't know Useless Childish RUclips Scammers from Real Military Mil-Spec factual reality.

  • @schweinhund7966
    @schweinhund7966 Год назад +5

    This is a hidden gem, with thought provoking concepts… the narrator has strong suggestions of a prior life in the realm of 18E.

  • @kennymonty8206
    @kennymonty8206 Год назад +7

    The subject of communications has been on my mind for a few years now. This was the best information I've seen and heard on the subject, by yards. Outstanding. Even though I had enormous gaps in understanding, you kept bringing it back so I could kind of follow along as a new guy. Thanks a lot for that.

  • @mikemandell132
    @mikemandell132 Год назад +14

    I am regularly involved in much of this for emcomm. I was in Navy then Army MARS for several years. I can add to almost everything mentioned here. Let me add one thing... DStar works (and is legal at 6khz bandwidth)on HF. It's not encrypted but also not easily decoded by others and it is freaky clear in HF. Works on NVIS. I have talked to hams from here in PA to Idaho, Florida, Carolinas, etc just as clear as FM VHF . Several radios can do this. Sort of unique as other digital voice modes are too wide to be legal in HF... Assuming you're still abiding by the rules.

  • @felurianmasters4369
    @felurianmasters4369 Год назад +17

    I'm really a fan of making the vehicle a mobile station. I'm new to ham so searching info found you. Its really alarming the state of the world, and with wartime lurking, we really should be considering staying in touch with events.

  • @Dan-gg8fk
    @Dan-gg8fk Год назад +3

    This fine video is spot on regarding portable operations in both regular and extreme emergency conditions. I gave up the ham shack thing twenty years ago and and now operate entirely out of my backpack. Features are a 5 to 100 watt radio in all modes, 60 watt solar panel, lifepo4 batteries, and all the finest and smallest accessories. The antenna is a portable 2m to 40 m (144 mhz - 7 mhz) in vertical, horizontal and NVIS configurations. I have operated from many countries and remote locations using this system.

  • @DJTheMetalheadMercenary
    @DJTheMetalheadMercenary Год назад +9

    Excellent schooling once again S2 crew, thank you so much for sharing the craft, awesome stuff.

  • @thumb-ugly7518
    @thumb-ugly7518 Год назад +1

    I’m not sure which is more impressive; the presentation composition, or that smooth ass outro. Thanks again to the entire team.

  • @ImperiumLibertas
    @ImperiumLibertas Год назад +11

    Mesh networking is something that should also be looked into. Long range low bandwidth networks interlacing high bandwidth local nodes is a game changer.

    • @khlorghaal
      @khlorghaal Год назад +2

      with internet protocol support its the ultimate solution

    • @seetheious9879
      @seetheious9879 Год назад

      He has a video on it.

    • @ImperiumLibertas
      @ImperiumLibertas Год назад

      ​@@khlorghaal TCP-IP is not a low bandwidth protocol unfortunately. Although there are many protocols that work well in low bandwidth situations.

    • @khlorghaal
      @khlorghaal Год назад

      @@ImperiumLibertas itll have tradeoffs, but will still work, the goal is compatability with extant systems more than efficiency
      you can have the most useful and ideal system but it wont mean much if it needs special-built applications

    • @EPYCMX
      @EPYCMX 8 месяцев назад

      LoRa Meshtastic, we should promote it...

  • @SuperCulverin
    @SuperCulverin Год назад +123

    Discretely gaining practical experience with this in the US is incredibly difficult, since HAM operators will gleefully DF you and rat you out to the enforcers. F'ing collaborators.
    And yeah, you can get a license for it; but registration is the first step to confiscation.
    Wouldn't it be better to DX and bounce?

    • @lancerutherford3933
      @lancerutherford3933 Год назад

      Who has been convicted of it. Not many. It more fear lingering, but the HF community of full of fudds, they are killing their own hobby.

    • @sandpebbles
      @sandpebbles Год назад +27

      Most Ham operators are very patriotic awake people and understand the situation and during a communist take over/globalist reset would not rat out freedom fighters.

    • @tianchi4423
      @tianchi4423 Год назад +36

      My experience is if youre using the repeaters, they'll DF you and rat you.

    • @SuperCulverin
      @SuperCulverin Год назад +62

      @sandpebbles
      Most people would not understand that they're snitching on American patriots. They're just complying with authority, as they have always done.
      The best way to communicate is to encapsulate your message into normal communications traffic. Done correctly, message recipients will understand, but idle listeners will not suspect that a coded message has been transmitted. This gets easier when the "listener" is a computer program, coded to look for certain words, patterns and phrases.

    • @martinsonofwar395
      @martinsonofwar395 Год назад

      @@SuperCulverin if you want to tx on a limited spectrum, get that ham license. If not, deal with it. A majority of non-licenced tards will cause interference, have zero knowledge of proper etiquette, and be a general nuisance to everyone who took the time to learn and get the license

  • @Francois_Dupont
    @Francois_Dupont Год назад +2

    thank you very much for this video!
    it was a bit too late for me since it searched around for years and spend hundreds of hours trying different things and modes. you confirmed alot of things i discovered by myself.

  • @HamRadioCrashCourse
    @HamRadioCrashCourse Год назад +18

    Familiar broll I saw in there 😜
    Good video. I think there were some criticisms that didn’t account for the realities in say military comms. Most aren’t running high speed/low-drag hf and the sat comm systems requires massive crew to staff.
    All the recommendations you gave on modes was great though. The 705 in particular with the image transmission is valuable once you tether to a phone for image transfer for sending.
    I didn’t hear you mention encoded words and one time pads? The most simple and brute force encryption methods that done require special gear.

    • @S2Underground
      @S2Underground  Год назад +6

      Nice, thanks for watching! Yeah, we get our B roll from news clips, so we end up recycling a lot 🤣 Current military comms is certainly a larger topic, especially when talking military HF stuff. Mesh networking, ALE, and other "modes" are definitely a huge piece of the puzzle that we didn't mention. And yeah we have an instructional video on One-Time Pads that shows the potential; one-time pads would work great with winlink emails in an emergency situation.

  • @huwhitecavebeast1972
    @huwhitecavebeast1972 Год назад +34

    You should do a video on logistics, like how to set up so that you will have food etc. If you are running around in the hills, you gotta have a way to feed yourself while hunted.

    • @tacticalmattfoley
      @tacticalmattfoley Год назад +6

      There are books on edible plants. There are videos on this very channel which will answer your question.

    • @yamatodamashii1179
      @yamatodamashii1179 Год назад +1

      You eat bugs. Traps are obvious you’re there. Some game can injure you and need too much calories. You’re request is really too broad…

    • @vitogriffin8902
      @vitogriffin8902 Год назад +1

      They have a playlists on logistics and a recommended reading list.

    • @michaeltubbs4606
      @michaeltubbs4606 Год назад +2

      Pre-positioned cache sites.

    • @kennymonty8206
      @kennymonty8206 Год назад +6

      You could do what every hunter, trapper, trader, sailor, and even Louis & Clark and Co. did. Learn to produce lots of 19th Century style Salt Pork, (not to be confused with the stuff sold under that name in the local grocery stores). The stuff keeps a really long time and you can bury it in caches and mark it on your map. If it weren't for salt pork, there probably wouldn't be a United States of America.

  • @turboprint3d
    @turboprint3d Год назад +40

    I have been working on a Lora meshtastic network in my area for friends and family to communicate , currently it's just for fun but if it's even half set up if things go sideways it could be useful

    • @firstnamelastname6216
      @firstnamelastname6216 Год назад +2

      Is it very vulnerable to tracking(triangulating or w/e), and can it be used on the move? Just curious, I think I'll look into it. 👍✌

    • @turboprint3d
      @turboprint3d Год назад +3

      @@firstnamelastname6216 I'm not an expert , however it's bosted that meshtastic is encrypted , then week point would be the Bluetooth connection , witch can be avoided with direct wires . It's decently small but has a limited range of around 500m in suburban areas. Depending on location they use different frequencys and have different ranges accordingly. My plan is to make up some solar powered nodes that I plant on houses or in the bush maybe to increase the effective range . It's all open source and can be tweeked if one has the knowhow . I have a few videos on the lora one assably and setup and one testing some antennas .

    • @ohhladz
      @ohhladz Год назад +3

      @@firstnamelastname6216 I've heard that most meshatatsic devices work on the same frequency as traffic lights which can make it hard to df in urban environments, other than that I think it'd be relatively the same, haven't tested it out, but it's what I've heard.

    • @monkman369
      @monkman369 Год назад +1

      @@firstnamelastname6216 depends but not really because it uses frequencies that are very common to many devices people already use. Therefore making it hard to differentiate from something like a wireless home phone or something else making noise.

  • @theboogiebutcher3898
    @theboogiebutcher3898 Год назад +2

    Top notch content per usual! Ty so much. Send all of these updates to my peeps! 💚

  • @V9bct7
    @V9bct7 Год назад +3

    Your channel is amazing. Thanks for all your hard work. The info you put out is top notch

  • @dieselstruck
    @dieselstruck Год назад +22

    These "Training" exercises by the Ham Radio community, are played out in contest type environments usually, Like POTA, IOTA, SOTA, Field Day, etc. There's should be a type of "war" type of event organized, these would really get hams out there and planning war or conflict based rules for contests. Select multiple points and place scenarios simulated (Jamming as it's illegal) and real type of challenges. this could be "gamified" and could work. Maybe even like a type of RPG card game, set random situations, etc.

    • @diligentsun1154
      @diligentsun1154 Год назад +4

      do the current contest events make spaces for support elements, who are unskilled at radio operations?
      the wartime scenario seems like a good way to practice the coordination.
      how could one, who seeks Understanding, make oneself available, one wonders?

    • @dieselstruck
      @dieselstruck Год назад

      @@diligentsun1154 For the first question, yes. Everyone is welcome. There are sides to it where someone without much skills and a little bit of guidance can participate, also you do not need a license to listen. Listening and learning to decode what's coming trough is integral to radio comms and very valuable. You can receive satellite images, listen to sattelite communications, receive images from the International Space station, there's a ton of stuff you can do without a license and just listening. Also, you can do 3rd party comms with a licensed ham. You can speak and communicate with their supervision.
      I personally would love to participate on this. But no rules or setting exists for this right now. I would love to participate developing rules and "Game plans" if other ham radio enthusiasts would join in. There a re many here in YT.
      For the third, the local club. If you got questions, they will talk for hours.

    • @diligentsun1154
      @diligentsun1154 Год назад +2

      @@dieselstruck that's awesome!
      thanks for the information.
      i wish I'd paid more attention, the first time around, but the Heat of youth disrupted the focus.
      there's something to be said for calming down, with age.
      Be Well

    • @DavidPrObooMBer
      @DavidPrObooMBer Год назад +7

      Rf wargames sound hella fun. Jamming... Gotta do what you gotta do. Like purposfully breaking a leg before a hike... Fk that.
      Place the high priority, jammable objects in no man lands, for an example.

    • @UNcommonSenseAUS
      @UNcommonSenseAUS Год назад

      @@dieselstruck "the international space station" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @timdurkin5305
    @timdurkin5305 Год назад +20

    would love to see more outdoor appropriate, manpack, non-chinese type radios on the ham market that are more affordable than some of the Codan/Harris/Barrett/Thales options

    • @rayoflight62
      @rayoflight62 Год назад

      A radio must have two IF stages for double seperetherodyne conversion. Those Chinese VHF /UHF radios use a single wide band RF stage, and a SDR concoction which is an homodyne at all effects. A bit of noise kills the radio link when you use those baofeng and the like...

    • @listen_to_the_wizard321
      @listen_to_the_wizard321 9 месяцев назад

      Dude it blows my mind how the market hasn't provided something like this. It feels intentional.

  • @klippyfpv3045
    @klippyfpv3045 Год назад

    Best video I’ve seen in a long time , explained perfect , I’m going to share with family and friends ! You rock !

  • @Raao1
    @Raao1 Год назад +1

    Your presentation skills are really good, the way that you structure and laid out the topic is very academic.

  • @laurisjones
    @laurisjones Год назад +8

    Tbh, I get the notifications here so I can go watch on lbry. Seems worth it to say that in a video about comms.

  • @diligentsun1154
    @diligentsun1154 Год назад +12

    there's A LOT of ground to cover, with regard to even understanding the basics of Radio.
    times like these make the dummies among us, wish we'd paid more attention, when it's was easier to comprehend.

  • @thed8229
    @thed8229 Год назад +1

    Amazingly well put together presentation. Shared heavily.

  • @UraNiUmXXpLoSiVez
    @UraNiUmXXpLoSiVez Год назад +2

    Once again appreciate the work you guys do

  • @mikehagan4320
    @mikehagan4320 Год назад +3

    You paint people interested in radio with a Broad Brush. But your Explanation of radio is the Easiest I have found.
    Best Wishes! M.H.

  • @stefanovicigor
    @stefanovicigor Год назад +6

    This escalated quickly! Too much to learn

  • @NukaVaultReadiness
    @NukaVaultReadiness 3 месяца назад +2

    This was one of the best videos I have watched regarding shortwave radio.
    Bravo and thank you!
    73s!

  • @horsetrainingresources
    @horsetrainingresources Год назад

    Excellent! We’ll prepared and presented. Thanks for all your effort on this.

  • @Damitsall
    @Damitsall Год назад +8

    Remember, FIGHT IN THE SHADE.

  • @wotan_nightshade
    @wotan_nightshade Год назад +3

    This is an amazing video and I'm glad I found this channel

  • @RoamingWhispers
    @RoamingWhispers 7 месяцев назад +1

    Man… I hope your friends appreciate the value you bring to the table.

  • @AR15andGOD
    @AR15andGOD Год назад +1

    WOW I need to get a radio. I didn't know about all this stuff, and the things it lets you do seem pretty amazing. Especially the picture transmitting and just the thought of being able to send things out

  • @mdouble100
    @mdouble100 Год назад +7

    I'm a Canadian HAM with a strong interest in off-grid comms. I appreciate your video because it touches on a range of important topics which are ear and dear to me. In a world of media censorship the so-called knock on the door scenario is less theoretical than I suspect most HAM's understand. The ability of the government to change the rule in a heartbeat was recently demonstrated when the government of Canada enacted the Emergency Act to quell the Canadian Truckers protest. This single demonstration of government power not only provided a clear illustration of how quickly the amateur radio operating environment can change but also how the population can become divided in their opinions on a single issue. Fear and propaganda are used in a variety of ways to turn friends against each other in a divide and conquer campaign. Today's amateur radio hobbyists may be tomorrow's enemy of the state virtually overnight. It is impossible to say who can you really trust without sounding paranoid but it is now the central question to ask when considering the kinds of operating you discuss. Adherents to the rule book will first to report anyone they deem to be an enemy operative after the hammer falls on legal comms. To borrow a well trodden phrase, keeps your friends close and your enemies closer when considering off-grid comms. After all comms gear is only the smallest part of a much larger equation. Thanks for bringing all this into shaper focus. It is a very important topic.

    • @tangobayus
      @tangobayus Год назад +1

      In the US, if you want to transmit on things like 20-40-80 just do the work to get the General. But you can do a lot at Technician level.

    • @mmpiforall5913
      @mmpiforall5913 Год назад +1

      Yup, Marvin see my post.......

    • @cmerton
      @cmerton Год назад

      Seek psychiatric assistance immediately.

  • @hamsandwich4451
    @hamsandwich4451 Год назад +7

    Ham Radio Outlet will professionally MARS mod any new radio you buy for $30. You void the manufacturers warranty but who cares. You can participate in natl guard civillian radio checks too. They have back ups for their backups for their backups. Learn from their training be part of a solution yours, theirs, ours.

  • @TheWildSide369
    @TheWildSide369 10 месяцев назад +1

    This video is pure gold. The type of information I wanted since I started this hobbie 3 months ago. As an electronic engineer always wanted to learn more about those long range communications. Here in Colombia in the 90s always was curious how the communications of FARC guerrilla were so fluid all about this full of mountains country. Army still didn’t have any digital comms system and they were listening one to each other all the time.

  • @n9go
    @n9go Год назад

    Excellent video.
    Being an amateur operator myself, it's nice to see a video highlighting issues and current strengths of shortwave communication and the amateur radio side.
    In the Army I repair tactical ground radios (I.E. Manpacks, vehicle amplifiers, and other tactical radios), these radios have frequency ranges that are, for the RT-1523 series, between 30.000-87.975 MHz. MARS modification would allow amateurs or really anybody that would need to, the ability to communicate with military forces in an emergency or otherwise warfare situation. The RT-1523 radio transmitter only has a high power output of ~5W and that limits how far your signal can actually propagate and be heard from. Even with this, the ability to transmit on every frequency your transceiver is designed for is extremely helpful in an emergency I would say. The amateur radio portions of the bands allocated by the FCC are always filled and I think during an emergency they'd be lit up hotter than on Field Day. Having the extra space to transmit outside of the current bands would allow for easier communication, data transmission, and operational planning to be carried out more efficiently.

  • @brotherbrovet1881
    @brotherbrovet1881 Год назад +4

    @S2 Underground, MARS volunteers during the Vietnam War would connect US Soldiers in Vietnam with their families in the states for personal communication.

    • @doncarlton4858
      @doncarlton4858 Год назад +1

      And the main reason MARS died was the fact that most service members now have ready access to the internet to communicate with loved ones.

  • @JerryWick
    @JerryWick Год назад +3

    As a extra class operator, this was a great video. Thank you

  • @Endorfen2011
    @Endorfen2011 Год назад

    Thanks for the awesome video. Great topic, imagery, commentary and object theorizing.

  • @peterkemp8633
    @peterkemp8633 Год назад +1

    Awesome video as always, informative, interesting and educational. Thankyou, the comments section here is fantastic too. All the best for everyone

  • @commonmanhomestead
    @commonmanhomestead Год назад +5

    I've been a ham radio operator for 3 years I've mainly focused on uhf,vhf ptt and 40 meter tap tap tap all things I've tried in this vain has been very difficult with very little information or help to be found. The closest thing I have found close to what your talking about is packet radio not ideal but works well after you put the reps in to figure it out the concepts and hard ware you just mentioned are new to me I would definitely like to learn more about it I guess I'm going to have to rewatch this video so I can take notes to make research easier thank you for the information

    • @bhenry3550
      @bhenry3550 Год назад

      In some situations the internet will be up and accessible.. by radio link .
      Many modes can go from handheld or base station radio to internet and back out to radio .
      Also some WiFi frequencies are in the ham bands and there are MESH networks using these .
      Makes comms look very common in a sea of WiFi .
      Don't forget small directional antennas ( beam Yagi ) that extend range and are narrow in detectable area .
      Since " someone " is always listening or capable of doing so the best advice given is to use words/phrases that are more meaningful to only those who know the meaning.
      Of course those talking about Sigint are absolutely correct in that merely sending signals tells a lot about sender and especially about any particles communicating with each other .
      Like S2 calling Audi Ence , come in .
      This is Audi Ence to S2 ,
      don't be obvious .
      Large Male Sibling is ever auditory aware .
      52
      K

  • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
    @Embassy_of_Jupiter Год назад +34

    If you can send messages, you can send encrypted messages... You just need to do it manually through a secondary app.

  • @TheWatchMker
    @TheWatchMker 9 месяцев назад +1

    After your ghost network video, I decided to buy an icom-705 and then found this video trying to learn about it. Super awesome info in this, thank you amigo.

  • @jeepdriver7603
    @jeepdriver7603 Год назад +1

    Awesome presentation. Thank you.

  • @user-hz4zy2df8z
    @user-hz4zy2df8z Год назад +4

    Dave Canterberry has recently taken up the ham qrp ops. Good vids.

  • @CrotalusHH
    @CrotalusHH Год назад +5

    The National Traffic System operates almost all day passing radiograms. MARS is almost always represented.

  • @peebreezy5015
    @peebreezy5015 Год назад +2

    Another amazing video. Got a sdr scanner and am looking at hf radios now.

  • @ifell3
    @ifell3 Год назад

    Got to love this channel, it's none stop full of information 🙂

  • @SamtheoriginalClassic
    @SamtheoriginalClassic Год назад +3

    I love this stuff!

  • @oliverallen5324
    @oliverallen5324 Год назад +17

    S2, what I've learned since the Covid Atrocity, is that knowing a lot yourself is only one part. The other part is the ability to teach others and bring them to a level of competence. Thank you for everything you and the S2 Underground are doing.

    • @HK-qj4im
      @HK-qj4im Год назад

      👏👏👏

    • @EvertG8086
      @EvertG8086 7 месяцев назад +1

      Whats this "Covid Atrocity"?

  • @rexromana
    @rexromana Год назад +1

    Good timing, I just ordered a radio recently

  • @Drebin211
    @Drebin211 2 месяца назад

    Inspiring stuff brother! Ive been learning alot about radio, its somewhat confusing but you make it much easier and its quite a fun hobby. Hopefully we won't need it in an apocalypse scenario but it will be useful either way and of course we should be prepared to weather any storms. Ill be setup for Ghostnet this week.

  • @theov3rmind
    @theov3rmind Год назад +12

    They can't knock at your door if you never transmit from your home.

    • @SavageAirguns
      @SavageAirguns Год назад +6

      They can because if you're a REGISTERED HAM operator... then they got your information and can find your home easily. Now if you are unregistered and never transmit from home, then you're correct.

    • @aaron5632018
      @aaron5632018 Год назад +1

      Ohh but they can

    • @theov3rmind
      @theov3rmind Год назад

      @@SavageAirguns I'm probably not registered =)

    • @theov3rmind
      @theov3rmind Год назад +1

      @@aaron5632018 ...I know.... but people need a little hope.

    • @aaron5632018
      @aaron5632018 Год назад

      @@theov3rmind lol some “ Hopium”,
      I never smoked it …

  • @deepbludude4697
    @deepbludude4697 Год назад +5

    Id love to have my own commo guy again, jeez its always been so overwhelming to get my head around the deep side of this fn magic. Thanks excellent overview again.

  • @Knockface
    @Knockface Год назад

    Excellent information. Another great video!

  • @RandyM5
    @RandyM5 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for these very helpful updates.

  • @Marinobay
    @Marinobay Год назад +4

    I’ve tried to get the wife and kid onboard with ham radios in case we get screwed by a hurricane as we live in west Florida. Both of them aren’t interested in learning it for right now. I actually tried GoTenna, and it was okay in the line of sight coms. I finally broke down and got myself a Garmin Inreach explorer plus and pay for a few satellite messages a month and free quick replies. I think if you are in public safety and need to stay in touch no matter what-just use the Garmin. Now I have to get wife and kid the Inreach minis. Clicks and clans can use cheap Beofangs. I wish we could hide somehow in Florida too. It’s hot and nowhere to escape.

    • @jimwagner6260
      @jimwagner6260 Год назад +2

      Keep small boats even if you are inland. You never know.

  • @tubeguy4066
    @tubeguy4066 Год назад +6

    Remember in Doctor Strangelove when the military is told to confiscate all the HAM radios? I remember

    • @josephroach711
      @josephroach711 Год назад +1

      I remember why I only drink distilled water and pure grain alcohol.

    • @aaron5632018
      @aaron5632018 Год назад +1

      Pepperidge Farm remembers

  • @neiltolman3182
    @neiltolman3182 Год назад +1

    Best of the best. Thank you!

  • @billseward2274
    @billseward2274 Год назад

    Highly valuable stuff right here. Thanks.

  • @capnpicard6146
    @capnpicard6146 Год назад +7

    Lmao love the map of middle earth. Its not exactly lore friendly but still better than Amazon's new show.

  • @ImbuedBeard
    @ImbuedBeard Год назад +62

    Notification squad roll up.

    • @RussKrug01
      @RussKrug01 Год назад +2

      Wouldn't miss it

    • @NeverMetTheGuy
      @NeverMetTheGuy Год назад +3

      Bitchass RUclips didn't tell me shit. But fortunately I find it an hour later accidentally. Still a W.

    • @firstnamelastname6216
      @firstnamelastname6216 Год назад +1

      Better late than never!!! 👍

  • @thatkajunguy8029
    @thatkajunguy8029 Год назад +1

    This video is like you've been inside my head.. Comms aren't as sexy as run and gun but realistically more important in the real world, atleastfor now......
    I live in the really deep south and last year Hurricane Ida came along and beat us up pretty good. Power was out for month, lines were down and broken all that stuff you deal with after a major hurricane running over you. Present day emergency ham communications are at best tiring and often muddled along .
    I've been interested in real world communications for a long time and good information is hard to come by, every ham I know wants to sit in his shack/room and scan frequencies . Club meetings are going out to eat and an occasional trip to visit another club, field days are sitting at the fire station drinking sodas and making contacts. I was about to give up on my quest and here's this video, please continue this, a series on this topic would be much appreciated...

  • @AkiataSkirata
    @AkiataSkirata Год назад +1

    Excellent video. Thank you.

  • @drewtronics7406
    @drewtronics7406 Год назад +4

    Been a ham for 30 years. Never thought about domestic wartime, on the run comms, and I should have before now. Thanks.

    • @macgyver5108
      @macgyver5108 Год назад +2

      Things have been a bit too cushy and comfortable for close to 70 years to think otherwise.

  • @MikeMcDonough-ki4rbc
    @MikeMcDonough-ki4rbc Год назад +3

    Encryption of text can be done using software like GPG, then sent on most data modes. Illegal under normal circumstances but technically possible.

  • @Sugarsail1
    @Sugarsail1 Год назад

    Fantastic content and analysis man. Subbed

  • @alanbryant8245
    @alanbryant8245 8 месяцев назад

    Mentioned before, and it is 70 plus years old experience, but WWII Australian Coast Watchers we’re the gold standard of radio reconnaissance for many years. Including many of the concerns, and precautions mentioned here: radio detection,constant movement,equipment weight ect. Lonely Vigil by Walter Lord is an excellent book which goes into all aspects.⚓️

  • @jeepdriver7603
    @jeepdriver7603 Год назад +3

    I think you make a good point - make the comms fit the need, not just have comms and think it will be appropriate to what needs to get done.

  • @burnsfrank3556
    @burnsfrank3556 Год назад +3

    Shortwave is the only feasible technology for the long distance communication for thousands of kms or tens of thousands of Km without any relay stations, which is available to human beings.Internet heavily relies on relay station, such as cables or satelites.

  • @Christoph1888
    @Christoph1888 Год назад

    Thanks for the Chapters.

  • @rayoflight62
    @rayoflight62 Год назад +1

    Last time I heard a TTY signal (FSK modulation) was 1990. It were news agencies broadcasting flash news.
    And it required a radio with SSB, a TTY decoder that I built, and a computer to display the text. And it was at the incredible speed of 75 baud!
    When I begun, I used a single 12AX7 in superreactive circuit that receive and transmit at the same time. HF Comms properly made require lot of experience and knowledge of antenna theory. In the wild, an antenna tuner and a miniature wind power generator are worth their weight in gold...

  • @Roland14d
    @Roland14d Год назад +5

    Clarification: EXTREMELY ERRATIC MOBILITY is a defense. Mobility alone just means you moving to an ambush.

  • @claraallen12
    @claraallen12 Год назад +17

    well,' heading for the hills.'..may be a thing of the past. You would be surprised how little space there is left to 'bug out ' to, maybe hiding in plain sight is an alternative?

    • @tubeguy4066
      @tubeguy4066 Год назад +5

      Hide in the National Parks. You are taking your chances with whatever is out there, but no one will find you

    • @jharris0341
      @jharris0341 Год назад +5

      My thoughts exactly. Every door you open or fence that you hop belongs to someone. Plus, I kinda feel like I need to stay and help people.

    • @jermasbiggestfan7796
      @jermasbiggestfan7796 Год назад +2

      Yeah, this isn't Afghanistan.

    • @LarsLarsen77
      @LarsLarsen77 Год назад

      @@tubeguy4066 Have you BEEN to the national parks? They're ALREADY full of people, and nothing has hit the fan yet.

    • @LarsLarsen77
      @LarsLarsen77 Год назад

      @@tubeguy4066 Have you BEEN to the national parks? They're ALREADY full of people, and nothing has hit the fan yet.

  • @garynew9637
    @garynew9637 Год назад

    Those memes you flicked through are on point and funny.

  • @DawidKellerman
    @DawidKellerman Год назад +1

    Love your of topic excursions to explain stuff! I live in the "3rd world" and appreciate your all encompassing, uplifting message for all !

  • @g0dh8r
    @g0dh8r Год назад +9

    I'm thinking IR protection would be a serious consideration if one wants to avoid detection, along with sigsec, opsec, camo, etc.

    • @echo5delta
      @echo5delta Год назад +6

      He did a video about that 2 months ago. Good stuff!

    • @DavidPrObooMBer
      @DavidPrObooMBer Год назад +4

      Been discussed in previous videos.

  • @Manco65
    @Manco65 Год назад +31

    Thank you for bringing up the issues. Every time in the past I've asked a HF radio operator how much range he'd get if the repeat antennas went down. I'd get either a blank stare or a sputtering"that'll never happen" reply.🙄

    • @SuperCulverin
      @SuperCulverin Год назад +10

      Most of the HAMs I've met are 100% dependent upon hitting a nearby repeater, and have effectively no simplex capabilities. They're also now using internet apps to stream directly from the repeater, and any transmitter they have is just an SDR (software defined radio) connected to a PC.

    • @BFD378
      @BFD378 Год назад +9

      Are y'all referring to HF, or VHF? Because vhf is good for local & use repeaters (same with uhf. HF can go around the world without repeaters, but due to wavelength isn't great for local communication.

    • @syntaxerrorsix3137
      @syntaxerrorsix3137 Год назад +10

      HF users aren't using repeaters. That's more VHF/UHF.

    • @martinsonofwar395
      @martinsonofwar395 Год назад

      If you're attempting to use repeaters on HF, then you have more issues with your brain than your hardware

    • @Czech6ix
      @Czech6ix Год назад +7

      If you're talking to HF operators, and you ask that question about "repeat antennas"...and you get those replies, you're not talking to HF operators. I don't know who you're talking to, but definitely not HF folks.

  • @DontDoDaylight
    @DontDoDaylight Год назад +1

    Thanks once again

  • @jan_harald
    @jan_harald 7 месяцев назад +1

    a seriously underappreciated in-development thing is Reticulum, which can work over radio, or anything else