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Series

Works by American Radio Relay League

The ARRL Ham Radio License Manual (2014) 112 copies, 1 review
The Radio amateur's handbook (1943) 102 copies, 1 review
ARRL Operating Manual (2012) 49 copies, 1 review
The ARRL Operating Manual (2019) 48 copies
Arrl Tech Q & A (1997) 27 copies
The ARRL Handbook for Radio Amateurs 1994 (1993) 23 copies, 1 review
The radio amateur's license manual (1953) 20 copies, 1 review
ARRL's Hands-On Radio Experiments Volume 3 (2018) 19 copies, 1 review
Storm Spotting and Amateur Radio (2010) 19 copies, 1 review
ARRL's General Q&A (2015) 16 copies
Antenna Compendium Volume 7 (2002) 14 copies
ARES Field Resources Manual (2005) 11 copies
ARRL's Extra Q&A (2012) 11 copies
ARRL's Tech Q & A (2014) 11 copies
Antenna Compendium Volume 3 (1992) 11 copies
Radios to Go! (2012) 8 copies
More Qrp Power (2006) 7 copies
ARRL'S Vintage Radio (2004) 5 copies
ARRL Field Day Log (2012) 3 copies
A R R L Antenna Book (1974) 3 copies
Arrl's General Q & A (2004) 3 copies
GPS and Amateur Radio (2007) 3 copies
ARRL DXCC List (2009) 1 copy
Microwave Update 2005 (2005) 1 copy
QST May 2013 1 copy
QST July 2011 (2011) 1 copy
Novice Notes: The Book (1989) 1 copy
Fifty Years of ARRL (1965) 1 copy

Tagged

amateur (15) amateur radio (296) American Radio Relay League (ARRL) (16) antenna (18) antennas (65) ARRL (116) communications (12) construction (15) DIY (13) electronics (120) engineering (18) ham (32) ham radio (265) handbook (17) how-to (15) Journals (ARRL) (22) Kindle (13) no ISBN (16) non-fiction (40) paperback (13) QEX (19) QST (12) radio (230) reference (44) science (14) technical (26) technology (14) theory (13) to-read (35) VRCMCT (13)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
American Radio Relay League
Gender
n/a
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

21 reviews
I finally finished reading this manual, but only after using "HAMTestOnline" to prepare for (and pass! Hurray!) the Technician's exam. This particular edition became outdated in 2014. I think I got it in 2011 or 2012. I got about three chapters in at which point I was convinced it was intimidating--the thought that I needed to understand all that it contains enough to pass an exam, and I lost momentum, picking the book up less and less frequently. I intended to get back to it, but people had show more told me there were better, easier ways to study for the exam. The aforementioned online subscription prepared me in less than one month's time, although that was by heeding it's advise to study at least an hour daily from the time started to the time of taking the exam....but back to this manual. It contains all of the test questions and describes all points in great detail. At the end there are also very helpful chapters that assist in helping determine the most appropriate equipment based on the motive for HAM operation/participation. The book is now outdated mostly only because the test questions were changed in 2014. They will change again this year, 2018. I plan to keep this on hand as a reference tool all the same, because getting the answers right on the exam doesn't always mean fully understanding the concepts and I expect I will want to revisit issues as I encounter them. show less
This is a complicated and often confusing subject. I've read about it several times and still got things wrong. This book worked for me.

It starts with theory, then practice, then recommendations. In each part, it deals with AC electrical safety grounds, lightning grounds, and RF "grounds". Dealing with RF fields is as much about bonding the local equipment grounds as it is about a single ground point. In some sense, it is about having your equipment not be antennas, or at least all be part show more of the same antenna with the same RF voltages.

Anyway, an essential book for both safety and better operation of your transmitters and recievers.
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Doesn't exactly keep you on the edge of your seat wondering what will happen, but it did help me pass the level 2 HAM exam on radio electronics and use, so now I can play with the big kids on the high frequencies (no longer limited to VHF AND UHF). This wasn't the only tool I used to pass the test though, and I may owe more (or at least as much) thanks to "HamTestOnline" and a 3 part YouTube series of videos based on this book (Ham Radio 2.0: Episode 66 - General License Training Class). But show more yeah, probably wouldn't have passed the test without this. (The description of this, based on the ISBN I entered says it's good up until 2011. I read the 8th edition, copyright 2015-2017. Information is good until June 30, 2019.) show less
I read large parts of this manual, not because of an interest in ham radio, but for its fascinating technical and organizational chapters.

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Statistics

Works
370
Members
3,005
Popularity
#8,491
Rating
4.0
Reviews
21
ISBNs
231
Favorited
4

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