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Before yesterdayCasey's Place – N5CSU

Surfing the Airwaves

By: richcasey
8 March 2024 at 21:16

I’ve been fascinated with radio since I was a kid. When the first satellite, Sputnik 1, was launched in 1957, I sat in front of a big old console radio that had shortwave bands trying to figure out how I could hear the signal. I never found Sputnik’s β€œbeep-beep” but I did hear a lot of other interesting things.

I was fascinated with stations coming in over the airwaves, and spent hours listening to the BBC, Voice of America, Radio Moscow and even the Voice of Cuba. I would send reception reports to these stations and get unique postcards back, which we called QSL cards. Β 

My first QSL cards were from CHU Canada and WWV in Boulder, both time signal stations that transmit 24 hours a day. I still have those cards and it gives me a kick every time I see them.

I was fortunate to attend a high school that had a very active ham club. Back then, you had to pass the Morse code test and a very easy multiple-choice exam to receive a one-year nonrenewable Morse Code only Novice license. Our classes were held in the Language Lab after school. I quickly got my license.

The FCC rules were a little bizarre back then. Within a year, you had to pass a test to upgrade to a higher-class license. I upgraded in my tenth month to become a Technician class licensee, and quickly put together a Heathkit ham transceiver that allowed me to plug in a microphone and talk on the radio. And I’ve been doing that ever since.

I upgraded my license to General Class in 1976, which gave me access to many worldwide radio bands. Then, in 2014, I finally passed the highest-level license, Extra Class, in my fiftieth year as a ham.

This summer, I’ll have had a license for 60 years and I’m still just as fascinated with all things radio. Nowadays a lot of it is digital, with computers, the Internet and radios all connected in unique and interesting ways. I feel lucky to have found a hobby that has kept me interested my whole life!

My Weather Station on Apple Watch

By: richcasey
27 January 2024 at 16:05

Weather tracking has been a hobby of mine since childhood, and I’ve owned many weather stations over the years from Peet Brothers to Davis to now, happily, Ambient Weather.

One thing I’ve been looking for is a way to view my weather station stats on my Apple Watch. Thanks to a tip on a Weather Facebook group, I now have it! The myPWS app is working great.

In the first photo, the lower right temp is my weather station, while the upper right is my current location. Click on the lower right, and you see more scrollable info.

Apple Watch

myPWS scrollable display

Back on the Net: dits and bits

By: richcasey
4 January 2024 at 05:24

It’s been quite a while since I updated this blog, so a great time to post an update on some projects and interesting items I’ve bumped into on the Internet.

First, an update on a concept called White Rock Hams that we started over three years ago with a mention on this blog. It’s since turned into a real club with many activities and a pretty good following with over 30 members. We’re using groups.io for all of our messages and files, and hamclubonline.comΒ for official club stuff. Both of these tools have been extremely useful in keeping members informed and active. You can follow all of our exploits at wa5wrl.orgΒ which is the vanity call sign we were able to snag from the FCC.

In Internet news, I am just about ready to pull the plug on Twitter. I was a very early adopter personally and helped get my Fortune 500 employer back then on board. Since Musk has taken it over, it’s become quite a dumpster fire and I’m not sure how much longer I can stand it.

I’m spending more of my time now on Mastodon. I like that it’s federated and non-centralized. Sort of feels more like the way the Internet was supposed to be in the first place. It’s not owned and run by a tight group of billionaires. If you’d like to join us, take a look at joinmastodon.org. Scroll though the servers and pick an interesting one, or just use mastodon.social like many folks do. You’ll find a lot to like, including authors you’ve probably seen previously on Twitter. And, if you’re a ham, choose mastodon.radio! Don’t sweat about the server choice, though, since they all connect together. Once you’re on, you can find me at @n5csu.

I’m getting a kick out of my hamclock running on a little inovato computer. This device has become a must-have for active hams that use the high frequency bands.

I’d like to give a shout out to the website blogs.radio, a great place to find updated blogs by ham radio operators.

That’s about it for now. I’m composing this using Word on my iPad via microphone for the first time, then pasting into WordPress. It’s so much better than my two finger typing.

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