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when do you actually ID on a net vs just checking in — confused about the rules

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ok so ive been checking into my local 2m net for a few months now and i think i understand the basic flow but im still fuzzy on when exactly you're supposed to give your callsign. like i know you have to ID every 10 minutes and at the end of a transmission but in a net context does that mean every single time you talk, even if its just a quick 'copy that, 73' type reply? the net control seems to say his call pretty much every time he speaks but some of the other guys only say their call at the start and end of their longer exchanges.

also separate but related question — is there a standard way to break into a net if you have traffic or need to ask something? i tried saying 'break' once and it felt like i did it wrong based on how people reacted, or maybe i imagined that. been doing a lot of reading but honestly the practical stuff is hard to learn without just asking people who actually run nets.

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The 10 minute rule is a legal minimum, not a target — in practice on a net most people ID every transmission just because it keeps things clean and net control can track who said what. Short replies are a bit of a gray area honestly but the habit of always giving your call is a good one to build even if strictly speaking a two second acknowledgment might not technically require it.

On the breaking in thing — yeah 'break' can come across a bit abrupt depending on the net. A lot of local nets prefer you just wait for a pause and say something like '[your call] with traffic' or '[your call] please' so net control knows you want in without sounding like an emergency. Some nets have their own procedures for this so worth asking your net control directly after the net closes, most of them are happy to walk newer folks through it. The fact that you're even thinking about this stuff puts you ahead of a lot of people who just wing it.

same thing tripped me up when i first started checking in lol. what helped me was just listening to the net a few times without checking in and paying attention to how the experienced guys handled transitions. also some nets post their procedures on a club website or hand out a script at the meetings if your club does in-person stuff. the 'break' thing varies a lot by region too i think, i've heard it used totally normally on some nets and on others it really does seem reserved for urgent stuff

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