Do any BCP ham radio/ pilots here know how effective of a backup VHF/UHF ham radio equipment can be in Alaska? I was particularly wondering what it's like in Alaska's Northern and Western areas? Here is a list of some of the amateur radio VHF/UHF repeater stations in Alaska which can "hear" a signal and then retransmit it on a second offset frequency.
http://www.artscipub.com/repeaters/search/index.asp?state=Alaska
I was reading an older thread about Satellite phones in Alaska ( Iridium vs other systems), and how there are sometimes issues with dropped calls, access, costs, etc.
https://www.backcountrypilot.org/forum/sat-phones-in-alaska-15224.
Ham radio of course can not be used for commercial purposes, and I am not suggesting one use it in place of say an Iridium system to save a few bucks. Rather, I was curious in case one had a " situation " arise and that expensive commercial SAT phone you own or rent is not doing what it is supposed to. Things do happen. A tiny ham radio transceiver with 50 watts FM output on 144 Mhz. into a small foldable light weight portable wire Yagi antenna aimed at a repeater on a mountain 50-100 miles away seems very doable.
Just wondering.
