Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Sunday, December 17, 2023
Make Your Own SDR Software! And, "Analog Man" by Joe Walsh of the Eagles (WB6ACU)
Friday, December 15, 2023
Check out the Hyderabad, India Hamfest! LARC-6
Thursday, December 14, 2023
Mythbuster Video for the Lamakaan Amateur Radio Club of Hyderabad, India
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
Super Solar Storms May Not Be So Rare
Around 11:30 p.m. on Feb. 4, 1872, the sky above Jacobabad suddenly brightened, as if a portal to heaven had opened. A passerby watched in amazement and terror, while a pet dog became motionless, then trembled. The godly glow morphed, from red to bright blue to deep violet, until morning.
Electric communication cables mysteriously glitched in the Mediterranean, around Lisbon and Gibraltar, London and India. Confused telegraph operators in Cairo reported issues in sending messages to Khartoum. One incoming message asked what was the big red glow on the horizon — a fire or a faraway explosion?
This of course reminded me of the event that I witnessed as a teenager in New York in 1972:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2009/09/carrington-flares-aurora-where-were-you.html
That post has resulted in a steady stream of comments, mostly from non-hams. Apparently people remember seeing the event, then search the web for clues as to what it was. Google brings them to that post on the SolderSmoke Daily News. The comments are usually along the lines of, "Wow! I saw it too!" Very cool.
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
Help! Bill Needs Computer/Website/DNS Help!
Some SolderSmoke fans have noticed that many links to earlier podcasts (and other things) have disappeared from the SolderSmoke Daily News blog. This is my fault. I am trying to correct it, but have been having a tough time. This is definitely a problem that is outside my analog, discrete component comfort zone.
The host is Bluehost. They also are the DNS host. This morning I wrote to them explaining the problem:
-- For many years I have had a website on Bluehost called soldersmoke.com. On this website I stored many (around 250) .mp3 files, a .rss. and other important files.
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
The Beginning of MY Radio Life...
-- April 27, 1973. Novice Ticket becomes effective. WN2QHL. Age 14.
-- July 19, 1973. First contact (with Elmer WN2NEC). Age 14.
-- February 1 and 2 1973. A grumpy old-timer calls -- during the Novice Roundup! -- to tell me that I'm putting harmonics onto the 20 meter band. I get scared and go off the air. Geez! I probably just needed to retune the tank circuit. Age 15.
-- February 23, 1974. I go back on the air with a DX-100. Age 15.
-- March 5, 1974. I take the General Class exam at the FCC office in New York City. I pass. Age 15.
-- April 11, 1974. I buy the Drake 2-B from WN2NEC. This revolutionizes my radio life. Fifteen meter contacts become possible. Age 15.
-- April 13, 1974. I work ZL2ACP on 15 meter CW. I wake up my parents to tell them. Age 15.
-- April 21, 1974. END OF NOVICE OPERATION. Apparently we were still working under a one year limitation on Novice operation. Could the expiration date have been marked on the license?
At this point the FCC screwed up and sent me a Technician License instead of a General Class License. My father got on the phone to Gettysburg and straightened this out. Thanks Dad. So I was only a Technician for a few weeks.
-- April 9, 1974. General Class License effective. I become WB2QHL, a man of substance. Age 15.
-- May-June 1974. I acquire a Heathkit HW-32A 20 meter SSB transceiver from the Crystal Radio Club. But I have to build the power supply from an old TV. Somehow, I survive. Age 15.
-- June 11, 1974. First contact with the HW-32A. Age 15.
-- November 9, 1974. Last contact with the HW-32A . Age 16.
-- March 15, 1975. First contact with my Hallicrafters HT-37. Age 16.
Saturday, December 2, 2023
"My Radio My Life" A Film about Radio Enthusiasts
My Radio My Life | Trailer | 4K from Makarand Waikar on Vimeo.
Wow! VU2DTR is presenting a film about radio made by her mom VU2RBI. They are showing it in Bethesda, Maryland today.
Trailer above, summary below: This looks really great. I hope we can see the whole film on-line soon!
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Set in the 21st century, the film revisits the golden era of radio in, when it was the dominant, popular, and only source of entertainment, news, and knowledge.
Being a medium that is heard across national borders, the radio has been instrumental in expanding horizons and enriching the lives of generations. Besides giving companionship to individuals, the radio brought families together and inspired people to make life choices.
Radio continues to enthrall people with its evolving nature and the sentiments associated with it.
Thursday, November 30, 2023
Other Workshops: Mission to Jupiter's Icy Moons: The Making of JUICE: The Full Movie
I wonder how the procedures we see in this film compare to the famed spacecraft-building procedures of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. But just remember: When it came time to launch the Webb Space Telescope, NASA opted to launch from the ESA facility in French Guiana. Their Ariane rocket apparently had a better success rate than ours. But it did seem to me that they did discover problems with some of the instruments in the thermal phase of the "shake and bake" but then corrected them without re-running the thermal tests. Was that a violation of test principles?
Watching this movie makes me really want to take out my small telescope and aim it at Jupiter (which is now high in our evening sky).
We see a lot of "soul" built into this new machine: the inclusion in the spacecraft of a copy of pages from Galileo's Starry Messenger and the names of those involved in the project, and the selection of the faring logo from a children's contest, for example. Yaryna, the young Ukrainian artist who drew the logo at age 8, even mentions "soul" in her remarks.
Godspeed, JUICE!