I was going to ask where you volunteer, but you posted that. I’ve been wanting to volunteer in scouting by introducing amateur radio to kids.
I’m not suggesting anything illegal. I think we’re having a misunderstanding based on the different ways this works in the US vs Australia? I’ve edited my question to clarify I’m in the US, where “public service” (being communications support for primarily bike and foot races, where I live) does indeed happen on the amateur VHF/UHF bands.
This is who I volunteer with, for context: hpsnc.org
propter_hog@hexbear.net 1 day ago
vk6flab@lemmy.radio 1 day ago
Based on your updated question, I’d go with cheap and nasty. The radio will be subjected to abuse and the cheaper it is, the less you’ll cry when someone drops it, as opposed to having a Yeasuu handheld, or mobile base station dropping on the floor.
The other thing to consider is that you can purchase a several dozen cheap Chinese radios and drop one on the floor every month for the next few years and still spend less money than buying a Yaesu FTX-1F Portable when it becomes available.
There’s debate about Baofeng vs Wouxun, buy one of each and see what you like. The Baeofengs are cheap and sometimes hard to program, the Wouxun is more of a robust radio, but you might not need it.
Consider for example what happens when it rains.
We tested a whole bunch of radios during our hamfest in 2023, report is here: github.com/vk6flab/rhp
K3LOE@lemmy.radio 3 hours ago
Cool study, good report! Lots of interesting things there, including the variability of the Baofengs.
Yes, seems like the consensus here is towards a separate bruiser that’s not too precious.