Emails by HF Radio(RCC notes on the use of AIRMAIL - WINLINK - SAILMAIL) |
This note has been prepared by Richard Clifford for members of the RCC. It is reproduced here with his kind permission.
How to receive emails using HF radio |
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| There are two methods for sending and receiving emails using a laptop and an SSB radio. One used by several members is SailMail (membership fee is about $250 pa) but another, which is only available to radio amateurs (Hams) is Winlink and is free. Both require the same messaging programme called Airmail which can be downloaded for free. Both have daily time limits on the air. Winlink is about 30 mins, which is a large number of emails. SailMail is about 10 minutes. The advantage of Winlink is that it has about 35 stations called PMBOs dotted around the world. SailMail currently has 14 stations. Airmail is a messaging programme (similar to Outlook) specially designed to connection to HF radio. Airmail is a 32-bit programme which runs under
windows-95, 98, NT 2000 or XP. It requires a modem known as a TNC . The best (only?) is made by SCS and is the PTC-IIex or IIpro Pactor 2/3 modems. NB: the Pactor 2 is slower than the Pactor 3.
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Other uses of the Pactor/TNC |
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With the Fax receiving programme you can get
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With the Fax receiving programme you can get
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Some notes |
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| Airmail is licensed without charge to the amateur radio community and thanks to some dedicated people around the world there are a large number of stations. Winlink cannot be used for pecuniary communications or for any business communications including handling your investments! Sailmail can be used for business. The SailMail Association is a non-profit association of yacht owners that operates and maintains a network of private coast stations in the Maritime Mobile Radio Service. The Association provides radioprinter (e.g. Internet email) communications for its members on a cooperative basis, in order to meet the private business and operational needs of the members' yachts. The SailMail Richard Clifford 6 April 2004 |
Association provides worldwide coverage through the operation of 14 stations in North America, Hawaii, Australia, Southeast Asia, South Africa and Europe.Sailmail uses the same Pactor technology as the ham radio system, and supports Pactor-1 and Pactor-2 (although the latter is strongly recommended). Airmail can be configured for either ham or Sailmail operation, or both. With the addition of a Sailmail configuration file, the same copy of Airmail can provide service for both the ham radio and Sailmail systems. This allows Sailmail to be used for business-related messages which are not permitted on the ham bands, as well in countries where ham radio third-party traffic is not permitted. For more information on joining the SailMail Association, see the SailMail website at www.sailmail.com
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