Amateur radio hobbyists
enjoy communicating
Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 11/3/07
(STAFF PHOTO: TIM MCCARTHY) At his amateur, or
ham, radio station in his Berkeley home is Edward A. Picciuti,
who joined the Holiday City Amateur Radio Club in 2005 and now is club vice
president. "There are no strict parameters," he says of amateur
radio. "You get hand work. You get brain work. It's free-form."
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BY BOBBI SEIDEL
STAFF WRITER
For
53 years, Larry Puccio has been able to speak with
people from across the nation or from around the world without picking up a
telephone or leaving his house.
All
the
The
hobby — which a neighbor taught him when he was growing up in
"There's
a group of fellows I talk to every morning," Puccio
says. "One fellow I went to high school with."
Puccio also has been president for three years of
Holiday City Amateur Radio Club in
When
not on the radio, Puccio plays the piano, the organ
and the vibraphone. He leads a prostate cancer support group at
Most
of all, Puccio enjoys sharing his knowledge of
amateur radio.
"He's
my Elmer — somebody who goes beyond the call of duty helping someone who knows diddley (about ham radio). He educates them," says
Edward A. Picciuti, club vice president, who joined
the club in 2005 and spends about an hour a day on the radio.
"Elmer
is the name of a person. It's been used ever since amateur radio started, about
100 years ago," Puccio says.
"Ham"
is a term used by early wireless telegraph operators for poor operators. When
amateur operators later began using the same wavelengths as commercial or
government stations, often jamming them, they were called "hams."
Amateurs adopted the term, whose original meaning no longer applies, according
to the American Radio Relay League, the national association for amateur radio.
Picciuti became involved with ham radio for several
reasons.
"He
didn't want his brain to fizzle. All his life, he's learned new things —
raising bees, selling lemon ice on a truck," says his wife of 52 years,
Helen, with whom he moved five years ago to
Picciuti, who collects coins, has a vegetable garden,
flies model airplanes and is an avid Internet user, says he thought ham radio
was an interesting hobby.
"The
other night, I was talking to someone on the
He
likes the people he's met in the club and and on the
radio, too.
"It's
nothing but gentle people, men and women, no cursing. It's a place where you
can go and don't have to worry about anything other than people who want to
talk or be listened to. Everyone helps everyone," says Picciuti,
who retired in 1988 as a chief inspector of commercial electronic devices.
Club
members also help the public.
"Almost
all of us are service-oriented. We belong to the Amateur Radio Emergency
Service," says Pucciuti, who also belongs to the
Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network. "If the power goes out, cell
phones die, electricity is gone, most of us have
auxiliary power. Larry has a generator. I have batteries. We can talk across
the street or across the world."
"If
there's an emergency, and they have to evacuate, we're all certified to go to
the shelters and set up communications with the (American) Red Cross," Puccio says.
Using
a ham radio means studying, taking tests and obtaining a license — issued by
the FCC in the
The
higher the grade, the more bands, or groups of frequencies, someone can use to
communicate, Puccio says.
Every
nation has a specific call letter, Puccio says. In
the
"That
identifies you," Puccio says, adding that call
letters are listed in a database.
Generally,
people go on the air and use an international acronymn
that says they're calling at random.
"Anybody
that hears you will call back if they want to talk to you," Puccio says.
Conversations
cover everything from radio equipment to the strength of someone's signal to
personal information.
"English
is the universal language for ham radio," says Puccio,
who also speaks Spanish and Italian. But most of his conversations are in Morse
Code, he says.
"I
use voice only," Picciuti says. "I'm terrible
at Morse Code."
"We
also have video. It's hooked up to the radio. It sends live pictures, moving
pictures, or still pictures," Puccio says.
Operators
must keep a log of calls, the frequencies they were on, and more information.
Both
men find amateur radio to be as challenging as it is interesting.
Many
operators build their own equipment — radios, antennaes,
tuners, Pucciuti says. Operators can win awards — for
contacting someone in every state in the nation, for example — from the relay
league, they say.
"For
young people, it can be an entry into the electronics field. Lots of operators
go into electrical engineering, into the space program," Puccio says. "In fact, many of the astronauts are ham
radio operators."
Bobbi
Seidel:(732) 643-4043 or bobbi@app.com