![]() ![]() ![]() Edits will go thru the review Approval process.ĭo not submit a product review critiquing another review or reviewer. You can add to or update/edit your existing review's content including the Rating and Time Owned with the Edit button on the right side of the review text body. ![]() Multiple reviews of the same product by one person will unfairly bias/skew the product average rating numbers. Reviews are limited to one review per product for each reviewer. No obscenities, discriminatory, abusive, or other content not suitable in public or for younger readers.ĭon't review home brewed equipment or home-brew copies of commercially made products. If using an anonymous eHam user ID for submitting reviews there has been a court ruling regarding identity disclosure of writers of false reviews. Reviews only stating "Its great"or "Terrible product" are not helpful without more information why its great or terrible. Mixing reviews together of both products and companies/customer service results in product Rating numbers/Stars that do not reflect a valid Rating of the actual product.Ī review should provide useful relevant opinions of a product. The correct venue for these reviews is the eHam Community Forum "Company Reviews". The product reviews is not the correct place for reviews of customer service or companies/dealers/manufacturers. The reviews are not a Forum for two-way exchanges, product inquiries, general discussions, complaints, help requests, product repairs or modifications, or customer service issues. Products to be reviewed typically should be tangible ham radio related items such as radios, antennas, towers, test equipment, feedlines, etc.ĮHam's Product Reviews are intended to provide an opportunity to share an opinion, positive or negative, of a commercially available ham radio-related product or service.Ī valid product review is one where you have experience or knowledge of the product that you would like to share with others. If your new review has not been Approved after several days you can assume that it was found to not be within the product review T's&C's shown below during screening. Before adding a new product use the "Search" tool on reviews Home page to determine if that product already exists in a category.Ĥ. The delay can vary from minutes to a day or more.ģ. The delay is for new review screening and approval. There's a delay before newly submitted reviews are Approved and posted in eHam's reviews. eHam's Product Reviews are a database of ham radio related products and services personal opinions.Ģ. ![]() Really hits home as to how hard our forefathers had to work to preserve our rights and the fascinating services they provided in both good times and bad, all while helping to pioneer and improve wireless communications.ġ. Gives you a real sense of where wireless stood during the evolution of industry, automobiles, wars, aviation, world exploration etc etc. I also really enjoyed how it lays out the evolution of wireless communications in parallel to other world events. Don't get me wrong, this book is not hardcore technical, but things are explained in a conversational manner in way that someone not into electronics could understand. We all know about spark gap, but do you know how they received those signals ? I didn't. It opened my eyes to how things got started with wireless. This will be one of the finest books in your ham radio library. Pricey by ham book standards, but worth it. This is a serious book, along the lines of a college history text, probably because it is. It is unfair to criticize this to a great degree since the two world wars, advances in technology, and the pull of business and politics certainly shaped the way in which amateur radio evolved. If I have any complaints about the book is much of the personality and day-to-day events in amateur radio are subordinated by the overarching world events. I'm not sure I understand what a social history is, but the book seems to capture the culture of the amateur radio environment as I knew it in the 1950s. The book is self described as a social history. I grew up in the amateur radio fraternity beginning in 1955 studying and learning from some of these pioneers. Ensor administered my Novice exam when I was age 13, but he refused to administer the Technician class as he didn't think it was a proper avenue for me to pursue. I knew them both as did almost any youngster who grew up in Olathe, Kansas between 1920 to the 60s. I was intrigued by this book since on the cover was my high school industrial arts teacher, Mr. ![]()
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