Thursday, July 9, 2026

50 years amateurradio, my radio life in chronological order

Not the exact model I had, but similair
    Well I started to write this post in 2016 (it was 40 years of radio for me) but never finished it since it takes a lot of time to get all the pictures and find en remember what to publish. So actually it already is year 50 of radio experimenting for me. It will be quite a long post since there is a lot to tell about the radio hobby which started for me in....

1976: Got my first transistor radio (Erres) from my dad. Listening to radio Luxemburg a lot. "The great 208"...I remember when I got it the telescopic antenna was broken. My dad and I went to a household utility repair (a shop called Musters) at the corner of the street to have it repaired. Had a lot of fun listening till far into the eighties with this small radio.




1979:  I saw the use of Walky Talkies in the Dutch TV series Q&Q in 1974. Since then the only thing I wished was a set of Walky Talkies on my birthday. It took years before I finally could get my parents that far to give it to me. I think I did drive them crazy about it. Remembering it was hard to get en they were very expensive. But finally we found a shop that sold them. I believe my dad payed over 100 dutch guilders for the pair which was an enormous amount of money at that time. My first encounter with radiotransmission.




On the picture one of the Yoko GW-128 talkies I still have. The other one is long gone. Bought around 1979 it is 47 years old but still working. It had one channel (14) with separate transmit and receive crystals. Later on I bought sets of crystals for channel 1 and 22 for both so we could talk more quietly. The distance it covers was only about 100 meters, not much but it was so much fun. I didn't have many friends that were interested so most of my talks and early experiments were with my dad.



Not mine, but at least it looked like this
1981: Bought a second hand Stentor FM transmitter for the 3m band  from a guy at school. It should transmit 5W but I think the powertransistor (MRF237?) was broken after all. I really did not know about SWR or an antenna and used an old car telescopic antenna. This one was used to get some (dutch language) music on the air, very populair and so illigal. Transmission was only a few 100 meters. At least my neighbour did hear me on the radio he told me personally ;-) When you are young everything that you did illigally was of course a thrill. As a teenager you had to find your boundaries...



1983: My first CB radio (Stabo XF2200) bought second hand for the amount of 75 dutch guilders (yes, before the euro). Lots of trouble speaking through the mike. I was afraid of talking to unknown people. So I listened out for a while. I saw one on the Jutberg radio rally years ago and I might buy one again in the future just for nostalgic reasons. Still have the original microphone though....Back in '83 a friend who was interested in CB actually talked for the first time with my radio and since he didn't know what to say when they asked something in CB lingo I took over the mike and gone was my fear...


1984: The DX virus hit me! The first time I actually heard French, German, Austrian and Italian stations on FM CB. At that time there were some serious stations in the neighbourhood talking to German stations on a regular basis. Listening to that I found it most intriguing, I wanted to do that myself. Took me some effort and a lot of errors before I could make a reasonable QSO. Difficult times I remember, sharing your adres over the air to exchange QSL, a miracle I've received so many over the years. Now it simply is a matter of sharing your e-mail adres and you can exchange report and even photos/video via the internet. The QSL card on the picture is my very first DX card, although the German island Juist is not that far away for me it was DX. The card itself doesn't mention the date but the poststamp on the envelope is at 13-2-1984.


1986: I bought my first serious SSB rig (Rystl CB4082). After having modified legal radios for twice the channels and 10 times the original power. Remember that it was not easy to obtain a SSB radio in those years. There was no internet and it was illigal for shops to sell these radios at that time. So you had to find someone that had taken this radios back from a trip to the USA. Other illigal AM/FM radios were a Montgomery Ward 680 and a Colt 444 (recently bought another one on a hamradio fair). SSB was used by several other stations around me especially from the island Schiermonnikoog to communicate over longer distances as normally could be done on the legal FM.



1987: My first real DX with the USA, something I always dreamed of. A contact with a american CBer, the CB inventor country. You read books, you see movies (Handle With Care, Smokey and the Bandit) but actually making a real first contact with the USA over the air with CB is a experience you'll never forget. At the time I used a Lafayette 1200FM and a 100W amplifier.








1988: My first directional antenna. A 3 element spitfire CB beam. Still it was difficult to make contacts with the USA. I used 12W SSB or less again because of interference caused at the  , but after all the spitfire might be not the most efficient antenna.....I found out a few years later. Fun story: I called Japan on a certain channel after I heard they had to be active there. There was one station replying, who was a real 59. It was a well known CB DXer from....New Zealand (41AT118 / ZL1AAO) Afterwards I made many contacts to New Zealand on their 40 channels in the 26MHz part of the 11m band.

Antennas around 1988


Originally the spitfire had a hairpin match which I changed myself to a gammamatch. It didn't make the antenna better.


1990: My first radio contest (The White Rhino international DX contest) on CB and it was not in 24 or 48 hours. This one lasts a whole month. During the first week of the contest my 3 element 11m spitfire beam was destroyed by a large storm. Luckely I just finished a HB9CV antenna for a good friend. We agreed I would try the antenna in the contest that month to see if it was working and afterwards we would fit it in his tower. The difference with the 3 element spitfire was huge. The HB9CV might be smaller but was much better on both DX and local contacts. I remember I had a 4 S-point signal increase at some stations. Actually I made several other HB9CVs for my CB buddies after the contest and kept a HB9CV in my mast for years after.

My 1990 DX-station with to the left of the radios a QSL card from Mozambique.



1991: Illigal transmissions attract radio police. My SSB equipment confiscated! I remember it well, I was home alone (still living with my parents at that time). The doorbell rang and when I opened 2 men identified themselves as police and special illigal radio detection. They confiscated my almost new President Jackson (black model). I could keep the mike and other things. When they asked if I had a license to use the Jackson of course I answered it was a stupid question as there is no license to use a multichannel CB SSB radio with 40W output in the Netherlands. Anyway, the fine was 250 dutch guilders (approx 100 euro equivalent) and for a student a lot of money. You can't compare it with todays fines which can get you a bill of several thousands of euros. What they didn't know I was on air again within a week using a borrowed Jackson from a school friend.

1991 DX-station with another Jackson.




1992: Continued with transmissions but this time on CB packetradio, legally. 2 stations on air on CB. Propagation was not that good anymore and I decided to not use SSB for a few years. The risk was too high and there were other things on my mind. A good alternative was packetradio which was just a upcoming thing on CB radio and getting very populair. It brought me a lot of fun and the first time I used a computer in the radioshack. Legal radios: Danita 640 and Midland Alan 48 amongst them. Antenna: Antron A-99. Packetmodem TNC2cNL 1200bd.


1987 QSL card from Odinn


1995: DX fever was there again. I moved out of my parents house and moved to a rented house. Still had a CB station up and running for packet radio and when I received some QRM from AM/SSB stations I decided to listen on the famous 555 with my Grundig short wave radio. The first station I heard was Odinn 27AT106. Wow, I spoke with Odinn already in 1987... Some people reading this will know him as TF1MSN (SK 2025) these days as he also obtained a HAM radio license just like me and was very active on the HAM bands. Of course we met several times on the HAM bands as well years later. Bought another SSB CB radio and worked another 100 DXCC. In total about 250 DXCC on CB.

PDL2 and a homemade 6 el. logcell yagi


1997: Another visit from the radio police, they just confiscated a illigal radio station in my street and were curious about the big antennas on my tower. I told them I was a SWL. They couldn't find any illigal equipment though (I was warned before by one of my neighbours) so nothing lost. I just bought some 900MHz CB illigal equipment that month which I quickly sold. It made me decide to get a license in case I would have expensive radio equipment at home. I was already saving for a IC-706 MK2G and didn't want to loose a very expensive HF transceiver.

1998 shack in another house.
1998: Hold the novice license PD1AKZ and was only active on UHF/VHF. Bought my first dualband VHF/UHF Alinco DJ-5G handheld which I still own. Experimenting a lot with RTTY, PSK, APRS, Packetradio including packetradio to (via) the ISS and working FM sats.

1999: Hold the tech license PE4BAS, active on 6m SSB as well. Bought my first HF set capable of doing 6m SSB as well, the Icom IC-706 MK II G. I remember some first 6m DX well, it was with JY9NX from Jordan on SSB. I also heard USA on SSB at that time but was not able to make a QSO.


2003: Access to HF, full license. HF DX started again now on the HF amateurbands. No antenna available at that time. I was off air actually for 3 years. Made some contacts on my dualband HT, but you can't call that really active. I moved again and bought a house across the street and got to know my wife. So other things were more important besides a radiohobby. One memorable activation was making contacts from a hotair balloon as PE4BAS/AM.




2006: First time on HF. First contest on the amateurbands (ARRL DX contest). I got married the year before. After we partly rebuild my first own(ed) house I finally had a tower and antenna ready. Using a Diamond CP-6 on 16m asl as a DX antenna. I also had the homemade 6 element logcell 10m/11m yagi in the tower in 2007/2008.


2008: Together with my wife we bought another house in another village (Roodeschool).  After moving I started this blog which became part of my hobby. My wife encouraged me to setup a emergency station till I had time to rebuilt the shack and tower (it would take 10 years!). Main antennas became a homemade multiband vertical at 9m asl and a 84m horizontal loop in winter. On 6m/10m I had a multiband vertical and HB9CV on a second emergency mast on 6m asl.

2008 radioshack



Lineair loaded vertical with 
CG3000 autotuner

2009My first appearance on WSPR and JT65A. Little could I know that these digital modes would become a turning point in HAM radio for many.

2012: My first appearance on JT9. Many contacts worldwide were made. Most amazing to be heard on the other side of the world sometimes using only 5W from a Yaesu FT-817.

2013: After a lot of work I finally have a real radioshack again.

2015: First appearance on the 60m band. I became my favorite DX band for the next years...


2016: Worked 100DXCC within 79 days QRP 5 Watt only, a milestone...used the Yaesu FT-817 and horizontal loop.

2017: First appearance on FT8. Not as sensitive as JT9 and JT65 but much faster. Little did I know this mode still grows in popularity these days.

Finally have my tower up again. I took down the emergency masts. Various antennas have been mounted in the mast as well as using the mast as radiator. Main antenna is a so called doublet as inverted-V at 12m apex.




2019: Bought my second HF set capable of HF, 6m and 4m all mode. The Icom IC-7300.

2020: Built a 6m/4m dualband beam and my first appearance on 70MHz. Working more as 30 DXCC on 4m (70MHz) only that year.

2023: Seriously started to learn CW (morsecode). Because I believe you need to know it as a radioamateur. 

2025: Active in contests with a new call PA6G. Of course I keep my own call for "normal" QSOs.

2026: I finally crossed the 300 DXCC "mark" 

I might update this post in time...




1 comment:

Hartmut Luedtke said...

Dear Bas,

thank you very much for this wonderful account of your journey in the world of amateur radio. I recognised myself in some of the little anecdotes you shared. We both enjoy a truly wonderful hobby, and I am delighted to be getting to know you.

73 Ham, DB6LL