Michael Linder

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QBlitz, MorseFleet and FunkPilot — When AI Meets Ham Radio Training

2026-03-19 #Blog | #HamRadio | #AI | #Learning

The oeradio.at toolbox keeps growing. This time it’s the learning and training tier — tools to help you get better at the hobby, or at least less embarrassed during a QSO.

The training tools

FunkPilot — the big one

FunkPilot is an AI-powered assistant for amateur radio operators. It can answer questions about band conditions, help with CQ phrasing, explain regulations, assist with SOTA/POTA planning, and more. Built on top of Claude via API, with the oeradio MCP server providing live ham radio data as context — band plans, repeater data, ICNIRP limits, you name it.

It’s essentially “what if you could ask an Elmer who never gets tired of questions and doesn’t give you a lecture about how QRP was better in 1987.”

The MCP Server

The OERadio MCP Server powers FunkPilot and can be used by other AI assistants. It makes all the ham radio calculators and data queryable by LLMs. If you want your own AI setup to know about Austrian repeaters or ICNIRP safety distances, this is how.

There’s a certain irony in using AI to help with a hobby that has plenty of established culture around self-sufficiency and figuring things out yourself. But if the alternative is spending 20 minutes searching through PDFs for a band plan detail, I’ll take the AI.

GitHub repos

QBlitz MorseFleet FunkPilot OERadio MCP Server PrefixPlay FirstContact