radiotech wrote:Hi Guys,
I have booked myself in for the Foundation Exam.
Booked in Jan-Mar (not sure of the exact date yet)
Can anybody tell me what it requires of me? I've read the book 6 times now.
I don't intend to use the bands for transmitting, at this stage I am only looking to use a scanner to monitor the bands. It's mainly just to pass the test, and to obtain a callsign for the future. I want to get more involved with the "radio" hobby in as many practical ways as possible.
Thanks all, cheers!

Far be it for any of us to question why you want a licence - the more the merrier I reckon!
But of course you don't
need a licence if all you want to do is listen. You could save yourself the time, effort and cost
The fun part comes in transmitting

. Once you've got your licence, you'll be tempted to hit the PTT every once in a while, I bet
Anyhow, I see your profile says you're in Victoria, so I'm not sure what the courses are like over there, but I did mine through Ham College here in Perth and it was a very good course. What I describe below is all my experiences - it may be similar or completely different in Victoria depending on who's running the courses over there.
The instructors went into plenty of detail about what's in the Foundation manual, plus other bits and pieces that aren't in the manual but are handy to know about anyway.
There's opportunities to practice on HF and VHF, talking on the radio to a volunteer not at the training centre. And as well as the powerpoint presentations, there's practical instruction on things like testing an antenna lead for continuity using a multimeter, that sort of thing.
It's certainly possible to just pass the exam without having done a course, but doing the course is half the fun
On the exam day, you get to sit a multi-choice exam paper, then if you pass that you move on to an on-air conversation using VHF or HF and an oral / practical quiz.
The whole examination process - the theory, the oral quiz and the on-air QSO - took about an hour or so.
Then comes the most stressful part of the whole process - filling out all the damn forms that ACMA require... There's hundreds of the little buggers!!! (OK maybe that's a very slight exaggeration!

)