Emergency Communications – Talking Points Outline

Purpose of Discussion

  • Explore practical, realistic emergency communications

  • Focus on what the average ham operator can do

  • Serve as a springboard for future emcomm discussions

  • Not a survival fantasy or gear showcase


Core Principle

Listening is more important than transmitting

  • Situational awareness comes first

  • Information > airtime

  • Talk only when there is a clear need


Baseline Monitoring Equipment

  • Battery-powered AM/FM broadcast radio

  • Shortwave receiver (highly recommended)

  • Police / public safety scanner with battery capability

  • Goal: understand local and regional conditions


Assumed Scenario (for discussion)

  • Grid down: electricity, cellular, and internet unavailable

  • People advised to stay in place

  • Cause is irrelevant; focus is communications response


Amateur Radio Bands – Likely Reality

VHF / UHF

  • Most hams go to:

    • Favorite repeater first

    • Known simplex if repeater is down

  • Generally organized, efficient exchanges

  • Unlicensed operators are a nuisance but limited on simplex

HF

  • Likely chaotic

  • High power stations dominating frequencies

  • Listening more valuable than transmitting

  • Long-distance help is limited in practical value

Potential “Quieter” Bands

  • 6 meters

  • 220 MHz

  • Less congestion due to limited radio availability

  • 900 MHz may be active but still useful


Non-Ham Bands (GMRS / FRS / CB / MURS)

  • Expect heavy congestion, especially in populated areas

  • High power, poor operating practices, illegal modes

  • PL tones reduce what you hear—not what interferes

  • Better for monitoring than coordinated traffic


Organized Prepper Networks

  • AMRRON (American Redoubt Radio Operators Network)

  • Multi-band concept:

    • CB Channel 3

    • MURS Channel 3

    • FRS Channel 3

    • 146.420 MHz simplex

  • Worth studying for planning concepts

  • Reference: HF Underground


LPI Communications (Low Probability of Intercept)

  • Focus on:

    • Low power

    • Uncommon frequencies

    • Simple modes

  • Example:

    • 47 MHz legacy walkie-talkie frequencies

    • Legal, quiet, largely ignored

  • Emphasizes discretion over range


FCC Rules Reminder

  • Illegal transmissions only permitted in life-threatening emergencies

  • Saving a life = permissible

  • Convenience or curiosity = not permissible


Meshtastic (Open Discussion Topic)

  • Mesh networking potential

  • Unknown traffic capacity in large-scale emergencies

  • Invite subject-matter input


Power Is the Limiting Factor

  • Radios are useless without power

  • Consider:

    • Battery banks (LiFePO₄)

    • Powerpole adapters

    • Buck/boost converters

    • Silent power options

  • Generators may not always be desirable


Key Takeaways

  • No single radio or band “saves the world”

  • Planning and awareness matter more than gear

  • Flexibility beats perfection

  • Listening is survival