an upcoming hack club ysws
Get funded to earn your amateur radio licence. Build antennas. Talk to the ISS. Ship real radio projects and earn a UV-5R or UV-K5. RSVP to make this happen!
What is CQ?
CQ (short for "seek you/contacting you") is a You Ship, We Ship project. Study for your amateur radio licence, and we will fund the exam fees, get you a handheld radio (choose between a UV-5R and a UV-K5), and support your radio projects like building your own antenna.
Pass your licence exam and choose between a Baofeng UV-5R or a Quansheng UVK5 handheld radio, on us.
Design and build your own antennas. We fund the parts so you can experiment with Yagis, dipoles, and more.
The International Space Station has an amateur radio repeater. With the right setup, you can hear and talk through it.
Got a radio project idea? We provide funding for parts, SDRs, and whatever you need to make it happen.
The cool part
The ISS has a cross-band amateur radio repeater onboard. It listens on 145.990 MHz FM with a 67.0 Hz CTCSS tone, and retransmits on 437.800 MHz FM.
You can listen to it with just a simple handheld radio and hear other amateur radio operators transmitting through it. You get way better reception with a bigger antenna or a Yagi.
This recording was made using about $20 in parts for a homemade yagi antenna and a $22 SDR (Software Defined Radio):
Audio received from ISS repeater on 437.810 MHz, May 2026
International Space Station
Getting licenced
CQ covers your exam and licence fees. Here is what licensing looks like in different countries. Know how it works in yours? DM @ruben to add it.
The exam is free by law. After passing you pay for:
Both are required before you can legally transmit.
Two exam tiers available:
Exam fee: 100 INR. Licence fee: 1,000 INR (20yr) or 2,000 INR (lifetime).
Official portalKnow how amateur radio licensing works where you live? Help us fill in the gaps.
DM @ruben on SlackJoin CQ, get funded, earn your licence, and start transmitting.
RSVP for CQQuestions
Amateur (ham) radio is a hobby where licenced operators use radio equipment to communicate. It covers everything from chatting with people across the world to bouncing signals off the moon or the ISS.
Nope. CQ is designed for complete beginners. We will help you study for the exam and provide resources to learn at your own pace.
Exam fees, licence application costs, a handheld radio (UV-5R or UV-K5) on passing, and parts for projects like building your own antenna.
Yes. Listening to amateur radio frequencies is perfectly legal everywhere. You only need a licence to transmit (send signals).
After you pass your licence exam, you can choose between a Baofeng UV-5R and a UV-K5. Both are solid handheld radios that work great for beginners.
Yes! CQ is open to everyone. Licensing requirements vary by country. Check the licensing section above.