Around the world on April 18th, 3,000,000 amateur radio operators are taking to the airwaves to celebrate International Amateur Radio Day.
Throughout the day, Club members, as well as ham radio operators, will be on display and discussing amateur radio. Reviews of the station's operation capabilities and discussing amateur radio operators' interests, public service roles, and club participation will all be included in the discussion, from local parades to natural disasters.
Ham Radio is extremely popular because you don't need a cell phone network or the Internet to communicate, and it's not necessary to use Ham Radio. During a disaster where regular communication channels fail, operators are particularly critical. After their command center was destroyed during the 9/11 disaster, the Amateur Radio Service kept New York City agencies in touch with each other, for example. During Hurricane Katrina, where all other communications failed, Ham radio also came to the rescue.
Amateur Radio experimenters were among the first to discover that the short wave spectrum, rather than being a wasteland, could promote worldwide propagation.
Amateur radio operators are called "ham radio" operators by the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), according to the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), for a reason, amateur radio operators are called "ham radio" operators: for a reason.
The first wireless operators were landline telegraphers who left their offices to go to sea or to man the coastal stations. They took with them their language and a portion of their older occupation's heritage.
Every station in those early days occupied the entire spectrum with its broad spark signal. The increasingly numerous amateur operators, government stations, ships, coastal stations, and the increasingly numerous amateur operators all competed for time and signal supremacy in each other's receivers.
Many of the amateur stations were very popular. Two amateurs, who live together in a nearby town, could effectively block all other operations in the area.
"hams" would be used to describe the ham radio interference by frustrated commercial operators. Amateurs, who were perhaps unaware of the true meaning of the word, picked it up and applied it to themselves. The original meaning has completely disappeared as the years have passed.
How to observe
In honor of World Amateur Radio Day, radio amateurs or HAM radio operators around the world take to the airwaves every April 18.
To post on social media, use the hashtag #InternationalAmateurRadioDay.
History
The International Amateur Radio Union was established in Paris on this day in 1925. World Amateur Radio Day is the day when the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) Member-Societies can demonstrate our services to the public and foster global friendship with other Amateurs around the world.