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trying to get my technician license, where do i even start

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so ive been interested in ham radio for a while now, my neighbor has a big antenna setup and it got me curious. i looked it up and apparently you have to take a test to get a license which i didnt realize. i dont really know anyone who does this hobby so im kind of going in blind here.

is there like a standard way people study for the technician exam or is it just memorizing the question pool? i downloaded something called hamstudy but im not sure if thats the main thing people use or if theres better options. also how hard is the test actually, like if you dont have any electronics background does that put you way behind

sorry if this is a dumb question im just not sure where to start

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not a dumb question at all, everyone starts somewhere. hamstudy is honestly one of the best free resources out there so you picked a good one right off the bat. the way most people do it is just grind the practice exams until youre consistently hitting like 85% or better and then go take the real thing. the actual pool of questions is public so what youre practicing is literally whats going to be on the test, just randomized.

as for electronics background, i mean it helps a tiny bit for understanding WHY some answers are correct but you absolutely dont need it to pass. a lot of the tech exam is regulations and operating procedures anyway, not circuit theory. i studied maybe two weeks casually in the evenings and passed with only a couple wrong. the harder part honestly is just finding a test session near you, check the arrl website for that or sometimes local clubs post them. speaking of which, finding a local club before you even take the test isnt a bad idea, some of them run free study sessions

I passed mine like 3 months ago so pretty fresh on this. I used hamstudy and also the Gordon West technician book which my uncle had laying around. The book was fine but honestly hamstudy alone probably wouldve been enough. Just do the practice tests over and over, like seriously just keep doing them. I think I took maybe 40 or 50 practice exams before I felt ready and ended up only missing 3 on the real one. 35 questions total and you need 26 right so the margin is actually not that bad.

one thing nobody told me is bring a calculator to the session even though you probably wont need it, there are like 2 or 3 math questions about frequencies or something and its nice to have just in case. also the volunteer examiners are super friendly, i was nervous walking in but it felt totally low pressure

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