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With regard to the thread about influential books getting young people
fired up about space, I followed another road. It would have been great to have HAM radio aboard the Skylab, but despite Owen Garriott's attempts to do so, it was flagged as superfluous by mission planners. Today, we know how decisive amateur radio has been in supporting Astronauts and Cosmonauts while on orbit. My interest in space history was always fired, going back to the launch of Sputnik, but my friend's old man was an engineer for Sperry and a HAM to boot. This was intriguing in it's own right, and when the Soviets had beepers aboard those early satellites, that started me along the way. I picked up a radio license just so I could monitor and participate in conversations between the OSCAR's, the shuttle flights, and MIR. Today the ARRL has granted me a satellite station in my classroom so my sixth graders can participate as well. Amateur radio puts the space missions within reach, and I urge others to look into getting licensed. Who else in the group is a licensed ham? RDG N1MDZ |
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![]() RDG wrote: Today, we know how decisive amateur radio has been in supporting Astronauts and Cosmonauts while on orbit. Could you go into more detail on this? Has it been useful in just crew to family, friends, and radio hobbyist communications, or has it also served some mission-critical functions? Pat |
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On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 16:42:06 -0400, RDG wrote:
Who else in the group is a licensed ham? ....When code is dropped in favor of a somewhat beefed-up theory & applications exam for all classes except for Advanced & AE, and voice privs are given for all classes from Novice up under 30MHz, then I'll finally get my license. OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
#4
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![]() ...When code is dropped in favor of a somewhat beefed-up theory & applications exam for all classes except for Advanced & AE, and voice privs are given for all classes from Novice up under 30MHz, then I'll finally get my license. OM I believe thats pretty much whats occured.The number of licensed HAMS was dropping a lot. So for that and other reasons code is out, except for advanced extra licenses. Not a ham myself I do attend hamfests and have friends and realtives who are licensed. They had little choice too few hams and their frequency allocations would be sapped up in a heartbeat |
#5
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OM, hope to see you licensed soon. The code is no longer required for
the Technician license, which allows you to work most of the hamsats, including ISS. 5 wpm code allows you to jump to the General class, which includes all the HF frequencies as well. 10 wpm puts you at the Amateur Extra level, which many still go to, although I won't go beyond my General. The code is still a die-hard method of communicating, actively used in moonbounce, but digital modes are what the satellite ops are using, along with FM voice. RDG |
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![]() Could you go into more detail on this? Has it been useful in just crew to family, friends, and radio hobbyist communications, or has it also served some mission-critical functions? Pat Pat, may I suggest you look at a copy of "Dragonfly", which chronicles the story of Astronauts aboard MIR. When things got really bad aboard the space station, the Russians usurped all comm time, arguably for good reasons, and the Astros got iced out. 2 meter ham operators became the connection for the Astronaut aboard and Houston as well as his home (Jerry Linnenger, I think). He ferried his data to Earth via a Ham operator on the California coast. By the time he cross the continent, messages had been sent back up to him. RDG |
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![]() RDG wrote: Pat, may I suggest you look at a copy of "Dragonfly", which chronicles the story of Astronauts aboard MIR. When things got really bad aboard the space station, the Russians usurped all comm time, arguably for good reasons, and the Astros got iced out. Got a copy; will reread it regarding that aspect...by the way- the Oscar satellites fall well within the purview of this group's charter- do you have any data and specifics regarding their construction, cost, capabilities, and operational flight history? I saw a news report once of parts of them being purchased from the local Walmart and Radio Shack- now _that's_ better, faster, and cheaper if I ever heard of it. This would be a fascinating topic for discussion. Pat |
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On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 21:46:05 -0400, RDG wrote:
OM, hope to see you licensed soon. The code is no longer required for the Technician license, which allows you to work most of the hamsats, including ISS. 5 wpm code allows you to jump to the General class, which includes all the HF frequencies as well. 10 wpm puts you at the Amateur Extra level, which many still go to, although I won't go beyond my General. ....In order: 1) 5wpm is *still* a waste of time. From my own scans of the HF bands, very little code is heard these days. In fact, in December of last year, just for ****s and grins I fired up the old Knight R100A - after I reseated two tubes and the BFO XTAL *again* - and scanned the world. I found exactly *one* CW QSO, and it didn't last very long. The Japs dropped the code reqs years ago, and the rest of the world should follow suit. If anything, code should be the delimiter between General and Adv/AE levels. 2) General is 5?? Since when? AE is 10wpm? When the hell did it drop down from the unachievable 20wpm?? If that's the case, what did Advanced drop down to from the 13 it used to be? The code is still a die-hard method of communicating, actively used in moonbounce, but digital modes are what the satellite ops are using, along with FM voice. ....Don't get me wrong: CW's a great thing to know how to do, especially since it's the one sure-fire way of getting data past post-atomic interference. But it's kept more people out of Ham radio than the theory exams, and I've seen more than my share of examiners who'll deliberately throw curveballs in their exams to make applicants fail in hopes they'll go practice harder before trying again. That's why some of the examiner friends I palled around with in the 80's secretly gave applicants the option to either pass the code or pass the General exam without a code test to get a Novice or Technician license. Pretty much all of the applicants took the theory-only option gladly. ....Now, as to why with friends like that I didn't go for the license back then, it was a manner of principle - I want code reqs abolished, period - and the fact that I didn't have any room whatsoever for any rigs or antennas, and I *hate* working QRP ops :-P OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 00:07:49 -0500, Pat Flannery
wrote: Got a copy; will reread it regarding that aspect...by the way- the Oscar satellites fall well within the purview of this group's charter- do you have any data and specifics regarding their construction, cost, capabilities, and operational flight history? ....Tons of links. After you've checked out Mark Wade's page on the OSCARs, check out these others: http://www.friends-partners.ru/partn...raft/oscar.htm http://www.spacetoday.org/Satellites...atsBasics.html http://www.amsat.org/amsat/sats/n7hpr/satsum.html http://www.infoage.org/p-06Oscar.html http://www.mindspring.com/~n2wwd/html/catalog_info.html http://www.amsat.org/ http://www.qsl.net/ky4ky/tom0305.htm http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/clivew/oscar11.htm http://www.heavens-above.com/amateursats.asp http://www.uk.amsat.org/ http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~ptitze/amsatvk/ http://www.r-clarke.org.uk/satdata1.htm http://www.w9gm.com/Satellite_1.html OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
#10
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"Pat Flannery" wrote in message
... RDG wrote: Pat, may I suggest you look at a copy of "Dragonfly", which chronicles the story of Astronauts aboard MIR. When things got really bad aboard the space station, the Russians usurped all comm time, arguably for good reasons, and the Astros got iced out. Got a copy; will reread it regarding that aspect...by the way- the Oscar satellites fall well within the purview of this group's charter- do you have any data and specifics regarding their construction, cost, capabilities, and operational flight history? I saw a news report once of parts of them being purchased from the local Walmart and Radio Shack- now _that's_ better, faster, and cheaper if I ever heard of it. This would be a fascinating topic for discussion. Pat Yes and Yes. G. Beat W9GB AMSAT-NA and AMSAT-UK |
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