you mention that you dont even need a course now to get a liscense? when did that cahnge. do you know of where to get contact information on courses/ liscensing. are there any active open clubs in calgary? i am in for taking a course. waht frequency do you recomend. any recomendations on equipment?
Well, like most government exams, there is no need to take the course. BUT I highly recommend taking a course, or pickup the study guide and go through it to prepare for the exam.
Cost for the exam from Industry Canada is $25, you can pick your callsign, and its yours for life.
http://www.rac.ca/acl/There are a few clubs/organizations in Calgary.
http://joomla.caraham.orghttp://members.shaw.ca/wildrosenetworkSouthern Alberta
http://saralink.caCentral and Northern Alberta
http://www.caarc.cahttp://narc.netThe Calgary Amateur Radio Association (CARA) typically runs a ham course in the fall and spring. Cost is like a hundred bucks, includes the study guide and your exam cost, plus a years membership.
There are two types of license: (OK, well 3)
Basic - Which allows you privileges in the 30 Mhz and up frequencies.
Basic Plus - Score over 80% on the basic exam, and you also get privileges below 30Mhz, or HF, or Shortwave.
Advanced - Allows you to operate your own repeater, have a club callsign, and a few other things. Need Basic first.
Industry Canada only recognizes a 5 words per minute morse code proficiency test. I think. I'm likely wrong on that.
Frequencies depend on who/what/when/where/how you are trying to communicate.
Every repeater must be licensed, and have a callsign. Its input and output frequencies must be carefully arranged and set. BUT a 2m or VHF repeater in High River *can* have the same freq's as a repeater in in Fort McMurray. Since a vhf signal at that frequency cannot interfere over such a great distance. Likely, no; possible, maybe.
For wheeling around Calgary, I have a 2m VHF mobile radio, capable of 75watts of output, and a 5/8 wave antenna. I carry a list of repeater freq's with me at all times. If I'm in the bush, I can get into a repeater. Even if I have to drive to the top of a hill, I can hit a repeater. From there, I can either dial Emergency Services, if that repeater has a phone patch. Or simply ask for someone listening to pass 3rd party traffic to Emergency Services for me. There is almost always someone listening!
As for equipment. That all depends on what you feel you want/need; and how much you are willing to spend.
Equipment goes from about $200 to $15,000; just for a radio!
Antenna's can get pricey, or you can homebrew. Quality coaxial can get pricey too. It all depends if you want to use it as a hobby, or as a last ditch means of communication.
Obviously, spending a bucketload of cash on a radio setup, only to have it sit gathering dust, hardwired into a 4x4; has limited uses.
Even a handheld radio, with a decent antenna, with you standing on top of a hill, can get pretty far out reception.