The History Behind Ham Radio
The Things No One
Told You.
Step inside the Ham Radio Wayback Machine.
Great stories. Real intel. Zero homework.
No spam · No homework · Unsubscribe any time
HAM RADIO WAYBACK MACHINE · hamradiowayback.com
Lock in $0.99 a month for life.
Window closes June 1st.
After June 1st the price goes to $1.99 a week.
Both memberships do the same thing: they keep ham radio history alive. You’re not buying a newsletter — you’re supporting the operators, storytellers, and community builders who make this hobby what it is. Every subscription goes directly toward publishing, research, and growing the service for every ham who comes after you.
A Starbucks Grande runs $3.75 — about $0.94 a week just for the coffee.
Our Founding Member price is $0.99 for the entire month.
The coffee’s gone in ten minutes. The Wayback Machine sticks around.
Funny thing — our service costs 73% less than a Starbucks.
And if you know what 73 means, you already know you’re home.
What this actually is
Ham radio is a people hobby.
We tell the people stories.
Here’s something most people miss about amateur radio: it was never really about the technology. The rigs, the antennas, the propagation charts — those are just the tools. The point was always the person on the other end of the contact.
The Ham Radio Wayback Machine tells the human side of the hobby. The stories behind the inventions. The rivalries, the breakthroughs, the moments where someone picked up a microphone and changed the world. The kind of story that makes you put down your coffee and say “I didn’t know that.”
We also track the used radio market — because knowing whether a listing is a deal or a trap is genuinely useful. But we present it the same way we tell stories: clearly, conversationally, and without making your brain hurt.
Education through entertainment. That’s the whole idea.
If it feels like homework, it doesn’t ship.
Every issue includes
Every issue. Every week. Always worth it.
01 — The Story
People First
Every issue leads with a human story — the people, decisions, and moments behind the hobby. History told like a conversation, not a lecture.
02 — The Intel
The HRG Signal Report
Real used radio pricing — interpreted, not just listed. Low, typical, high — and what it actually means before you buy or sell.
03 — The Fun Part
Signal Check
One question. Three choices. Ham radio history trivia that takes thirty seconds and wins arguments at the hamfest. No studying required.

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