I grew up on a CB radio. Sometimes I ride with my brother hauling logs to the mill, or hauling gravel to a jobsite. The CB culture is dead. At least around here.
I forget where I studied. Online on some pretest platform. Over and over. The most complicated thing for me was remembering the formula to calculate the "wavelength" literally of a radio wave. I.E. 10 meter, 70cm, etc.
A lot of it was pretty common sense. Like list an example of how to keep a 12 volt radio powered during a natural disaster when you dont have a generator? Attach it to a car battery. Simple.
How many amps at 12 volts is recognized as the minimum needed to be lethal to a person? 3. That puts things into perspective for ya. 36 watts can kill a person. Yikes.
Name is Ken. Call sign is wb8vyn. I grew up before CB radio. Years of work, study and practice, then a test before the FCC to make a transmitter and receiver from a box of random parts including the ability to send and receive Morse code. 5 words per minute up to 20 words per minute for the various license classes were required to become a ham. Then more work to stay current in both skill and knowledge, including public service.
It was a very prideful thing to a ham. You were an asset to your community, your country.
Over the years the requirements slipped. No longer was Morse code required, No longer was testing of skill and knowledge required, only a paper test by volunteers which could be fudged from a ready book of answers. Roger Beeps soon appeared, and vulgar language was popping up on local net works.
No longer was real work required to become a ham, thus the value of being a ham was diminished. No longer was being a ham an asset to neighbors and community's valuable.
Now for a few bucks anyone can use the spectrum which was so hard earned over generations.
The need is still there. Ordinary people still Need some one to be ready to provide communication during times of stress, disaster and emergency. That requires a knowledgeable sender and receiver who is ready, willing and able.
Known by those near by and distant. Reliable in times of need.
Be one of those.
wb8vyn k