Las Vegas Ham Radio

Las Vegas Ham Radio Sin City Repeater Group, Inc. — Las Vegas’s most active ham radio repeaters. Built on contribution, not dues. 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Most repeaters are quiet.

AllStar, P25, high-performance. Ours aren't. This is what an active system looks like. An online resource for hams living and visiting Las Vegas and all of Southern Nevada.

The end of an era...
06/22/2026

The end of an era...

It's the end of an era for longwave broadcasting 📡

This coming Saturday 27th June at 01:00 BST, the BBC's Radio 4 Longwave service will permanently shut down.

The iconic transmitters at Droitwich, Westerglen and Burghead will fall silent after nearly a century of longwave transmission, closing a significant chapter in RF history.

Though we are saying goodbye to this iconic service, the spirit of Amateur radio and DXing continues to evolve, and we as radio tech manufacturers are always striving to provide equipment that keeps the hobby moving forward.

Follow this link for more info: https://www.bbc.co.uk/reception/work-warning/news/radio4lw

Happy Father’s Day from the Sin City Repeater Group, Inc.Today, we recognize the dads, grandfathers, mentors, Elmers, an...
06/21/2026

Happy Father’s Day from the Sin City Repeater Group, Inc.

Today, we recognize the dads, grandfathers, mentors, Elmers, and radio operators who pass along more than a hobby. They pass along patience, service, technical curiosity, discipline, and the joy of making the next contact.

From the shack to the repeater, amateur radio has always been about connection.

The Sin City Repeater Group, Inc. is now accepting members. Join a serious, growing amateur radio club serving Southern Nevada.

Learn more and apply today at www.SinCityRepeaters.com

06/07/2026
Today, we pause in prayerful remembrance of the fallen heroes who gave everything for our freedom.From all of us at Sin ...
05/25/2026

Today, we pause in prayerful remembrance of the fallen heroes who gave everything for our freedom.

From all of us at Sin City Repeater Group, Inc., may this Memorial Day be a day of prayer, gratitude, and remembrance for those who made the ultimate sacrifice in service to our nation.

"Who more than self their country loved, and mercy more than life."

We honor their sacrifice. We will never forget.

From a follower…
05/15/2026

From a follower…

7 Area QSO Party runs from 1300Z May 2 to 0700Z May 3. Are you participating?
05/02/2026

7 Area QSO Party runs from 1300Z May 2 to 0700Z May 3. Are you participating?

Use this form to submit your Cabrillo-formatted log for the 7th Call Area QSO Party for log checking. The form software will briefly check your log submission for proper format and completeness before forwarding it to the contest sponsor.

Ain’t this the truth?
05/01/2026

Ain’t this the truth?

They called the frequencies “worthless.” Hams proved them dead wrong — and then had to fight to keep them. 📻⚡

In the early 1920s, the airwaves were the wild west.

Commercial broadcasters were gobbling up the radio spectrum. Government regulators were getting desperate. And amateur radio operators — the hams — were in the crosshairs.

The “solution”? Push the amateurs into the shortwave frequencies above 1,500 kHz. The frequencies widely considered impractical. The ones the big commercial stations had no interest in — yet.

Big mistake.

While the giants were hammering the lower bands with 200,000-watt transmitters, hams were quietly experimenting on shortwave with rigs running 100 watts or less — and making contacts across the Atlantic.

They didn’t just survive in the underestimated spectrum. They proved its value to the entire world.

And as shortwave’s power became undeniable, demand for those same frequencies grew fast — including from the very commercial and government users who had ignored them.

But hams weren’t giving them up without a fight.

The ARRL and the newly formed IARU (International Amateur Radio Union, founded 1925) showed up at the 1927 International Radiotelegraph Conference in Washington D.C. and fought for every kilohertz. 70 nations sent representatives. The pressure on amateurs was enormous.

When the smoke cleared, hams had secured internationally recognized allocations across 160, 80, 40, 20, and 10 meters — the same HF bands that define amateur radio to this day.

The Federal Radio Commission, defending those allocations against commercial challenges, acknowledged it plainly: hams had demonstrated the value of these frequencies — only to have commercial interests move in to claim them.

Hams find the gold. Hams fight to keep it.

That’s not ancient history. That’s the DNA of this hobby.

Every time you key up on 40 meters, 20 meters, or 10 meters — you’re operating on frequencies that a generation of hams refused to give up.

Will this be another piece of ham radio vaporware, or something actually coming? Who's going to Dayton? Sound off below.
04/22/2026

Will this be another piece of ham radio vaporware, or something actually coming? Who's going to Dayton? Sound off below.

If you’re coming to Dayton Hamvention this year…

You may want to stop by our booth.

Just saying.

Address

Paradise, NV

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