A Commitment to Amateur Radio

The Club maintains two repeaters in Beaufort County North Carolina providing full 2m coverage. The repeaters are backed up by generators. The infrastructure is free to any licensed user and available to the public under life threatening circumstances.***

Dave W3DET Summer Field Day

A Passion for All Things Radio

Contesting, DX, POTA, & Community Support

Meeting

Monthly Meeting
Programs

Support

Find an Elmer
Antenna Parties

Testing

Licensing

Fellowship

Wednesday Breakfast, Christmas Party
Annual multi-county and Club Cookout

Parks on the Air

Amateur Radio’s latest rage!

Visit POTA

Contesting

Summer and Winter Field Day

An Array of Resources

Whether you are into the technical aspects of radio, prepping or community service the Club offers a dazzling array of resources to get started or expand your knowledge base.

Working Across All Modes

  • Members regularly work
    • CW
    • Phone
  • Additionally many members work digital
    • Satellite
    • Packet
    • FT 8

General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) Operators, welcome!

PICTURED RIGHT Scott K4IBX Homebrew Rig used to contact the International Space Station

Working with Youth

  • Radio and Emergency Preparedness Merit Badge Instruction.
  • Other educational opportunities

PICTURED LEFT Gary NG9T and Troop 21 at Field Day

“When all else fails, ham radio works”
American Radio Relay League

Interested in Ham Radio?

Visit ARRL

https://www.arrl.org/

Join 100+ subscribers

Stay in the loop with Pamlico Amateur Radio Club

*** Under FCC regulations, especially in dire emergencies where human life or property is at immediate risk, unlicensed individuals are permitted to use amateur radio frequencies to call for help. This is covered under Part 97 of the FCC rules, specifically Section 97.403, which states that any station may be used to communicate an emergency or distress message when no other means of communication are available. This does not mean that unlicensed individuals can use these frequencies for routine or non-emergency communications, but in true emergency situations, they are allowed to transmit to seek assistance.