HAM Radio 101 
			
 			
			Everybody loves a cheerleader, right?  Not if you’re in the heat of a highly competitive Amateur Radio contest! Cheerleading describes the practice of a station or group of stations actively […]
			
		 
	  
	
		
                
                
		
			HAM Radio 101 
			
 			
			What is QRM…and why do so many Ham Radio abbreviations start with Q? Let’s answer the latter first. Original Q Codes (45 abbreviations beginning with the letter Q) were developed […]
			
		 
	  
	
		
                
                
		
			HAM Radio 101 
			
 			
			The band edge generally refers to the lowest (or highest) frequency in the band where one can legally operate within the limits of his/her license. For U.S. operators, for example, […]
			
		 
	  
	
		
                
                
		
			HAM Radio 101 
			
 			
			An increasingly common array of four vertical antennas arranged in a square that is electronically steered in four, switchable directions. Once used mostly as transmit antennas, particularly on lower frequencies […]
			
		 
	  
	
		
                
                
		
			HAM Radio 101 
			
 			
			When a Ham concludes a transmission or meet-and-greet by saying “73,” he or she is honoring a tradition that goes back to the early days of telegraph communications. Western Union […]
			
		 
	  
	
		
                
                
		
			HAM Radio 101 
			
 			
			Here’s a phrase that pops up in the fine print of many Ham Radio contest rules. It means a geographic requirement for groups of stations jointly submitting their scores as […]
			
		 
	  
	
		
                
                
		
			HAM Radio 101 
			
 			
			Editor’s Note: CW? SWR? QRM?  Yes, Amateur Radio has its own lingo–and we’ll cover that unique terminology in our daily Word of the Day column. We’re kicking off our Word […]