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Alright, yeah, no problem. I've got the first one I bought here in the station here in the house, and then the second one for the net travels with a spare mic because this one here in the house doesn't need one, because I've got the SM7B Sure on a boom. So yeah, alright, but just know that I have it if you ever do need it, just in case. Alright, and you're speaking of Ryan N7WAA, of course. Alright, you have a great day there, Dan, and say hi to you and hope for risk is going to be okay. Alright, let's go to Mike, and Mike, I'm sorry, BL7 I think was in your call sign somewhere. I don't know what I did. I temporarily lost control of my hand and my mouth and my brain, so come on back and hey, good morning, Mike. How are you? Give me your call sign again, would you? Yeah, good morning all. Call sign is Kilo Mike 7 Bravo Lima Romeo. Hope everyone had a great weekend. It was action packed from a sporting perspective. I spent most of the weekend working on antennas for my base station. I just recently set up, recently got licensed, and I'm in the latter stages of setting up my home station, and I'm trying to find an antenna that works. I've tried a number of them. I've tried a couple of Greg Mieren's performer and challenger antennas. That didn't seem to work real great. This weekend I tried a Coastal 20 and a 29-foot random wire antenna that I got out of Salty Walt's cookbook. That worked okay, a little bit better, but not great. So I have a 4010, I think it's an N-Fed from Palomar Engineers. I just got to figure out how to get 30 feet up in this western red cedar to set an anchor. I think I'm probably going to hire somebody to do that, and hopefully that will be the ticket. I spent most of the weekend building antennas and test driving them. Back to Ned.
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