Q&A for How to Call CQ on Amateur Radio

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  • Question
    When I was in the service, an amateur radio operator on-board our ship would facilitate calls home with the following statements: "This is WA2PQX. C.Q. stateside, C.Q. stateside, C.Q. stateside. Kilo C, Kilo C, Kilo C." There was other chatter, but I cannot remember it. What did this mean?
    Nick Stokes
    Community Answer
    This means that WA2PQX want only stations in the lower 48, and in this case WA2PQX only wants people in his own country (USA).
  • Question
    How do I answer a call on a radio station?
    Nick Stokes
    Community Answer
    First, listen to the station calling and see if they're looking for something specific, like a continent, country (USA or K, W, or N), state (Florida or FL), or call area 0 thru 9. Then, you call them and wait 5 to 10 seconds for them to call back. If they call any letter or number in your callsign, then you call back with your callsign slower and clearer. Then, you give basic information like a signal report and location (nearest big city). After that, you can either chat or part ways and find someone else to call.
  • Question
    Should I use "Radio Check" instead? I expect someone to reply to me with his callsign and QTH after I initiate a radio check?
    Community Answer
    You can, although it is more common on repeaters, whereas on shortwave (HF) calling CQ and answering someone else's CQ are the common methods used.
  • Question
    What does CQ stand for? Abbreviation for what?
    Nick Stokes
    Community Answer
    CQ stands for the French word meaning "security" or "pay attention." It means that a station operator is looking for someone to talk to, chase DX (often as CQ DX) or respond for testing/checking their setup. For example, "CQ CQ CQ, this is (insert call letters twice) calling CQ on (the band you're on) and listening."
  • Question
    What is the proper way to call a specific call sign?
    Nick Stokes
    Community Answer
    Proper etiquette is typically their call first then yours. As for phonetics, people use the aviation standard by default, or you can also come up with your own (as long as there is no swearing).
  • Question
    what does "cq pot" mean?
    Nick Stokes
    Community Answer
    You probably mean CQ POTA. POTA stands for "parks on the air" or hams at various state or national parks around the world. Each park has a serial number with the country's prefix preceding it. For example, a park in the USA will be something like K-12345 with each park having it own number. Canada would be something like VE-12345.
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