Transcript detail
Loading...
Public transcript context with linked callsigns, related nets, and analysis metadata.
Transcript
Public transcript text
I really enjoyed watching Starship Integrated Flight Test 10 take off and have a very, very successful mission even with some of the flaps melting on the, and that skirt, partial skirt blowout on the Starship. It completed everything right down to that breaking before going into the water. And I think they said the blowing up at the end was intentional to keep the, so it would sink instead of float around all day or for long periods, and them having to sink it afterward anyways. So, the same with the booster, I guess. They do that deliberately. I don't know why they wouldn't recover it and try to examine it to see how it behaves, but they're very, very nervous about mine. Anyways, now on to the question after I break. Okay, the question. How and why did I get into ham radio? Well, it was, yeah, it was Chris Campsola's fault, W4CEC. I was complaining to him about when we travel out west, the lack of cell powers and wanting to be able to communicate, so he suggested ham radio. And so, I started studying and I passed my, with the help of some good materials from ARRL and hamstudy.org, and a class that Chris was conducting, I got my technician's license. Then, I come along and I find out that repeaters are also rather scarcer than hen's teeth out west. So, then he said, well, you go general and you start with HF. So, October of that year, same year, April, October, I did the same thing. Got the materials, studied, took the test, and got my general. And then, 2021, ARRL, FCC announced they were going to start charging 35 bucks for licensing. So, I said, hmm, maybe I better go ahead and do this. So, I studied, got the book studied, and did everything I needed to upgrade to amateur extra. And of course, my license, I dived into it, you know, head first and then, because I did have a somewhat technical background at 26 years in the Army and the field I was in. I dealt with radios and things like that. So, phonetic alphabet was absolutely no problem. Some of the concepts, not a problem. Just the, had to do the rules and all that other stuff. And of course, some of the math was, really took some work. And so, that's, essentially, that's how I got into it was just technical. I always, I kind of wanted to, I found out that one of my uncles was an amateur. I don't know his call sign. He passed away a long time ago. I never even saw his equipment that I recall. Because I was quite young at the time. And so, I don't ever remember seeing his amateur radio equipment. But it would have been nice. Let me break for a second.
Explore