Update metadata and transcripts upto mid November 2025
This commit is contained in:
103
hpr_transcripts/hpr4488.txt
Normal file
103
hpr_transcripts/hpr4488.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,103 @@
|
||||
Episode: 4488
|
||||
Title: HPR4488: Cheap Yellow Display Project Part 2: What is the problem?
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4488/hpr4488.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-11-22 14:57:03
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4488 for Wednesday 15 October 2025.
|
||||
Today's show is entitled, Cheap Yellow Display Project Part 2.
|
||||
What is the problem?
|
||||
It is hosted by Trey, and is about 6 minutes long.
|
||||
It carries a clean flag.
|
||||
The summary is, delving into the problem I want to solve using my cheap yellow display.
|
||||
Hello again, this is Trey.
|
||||
This is Part 2 in my cheap yellow display project series.
|
||||
You can find Part 1 in Episode 4472.
|
||||
We previously left our handy hero, learning about the technology of the cheap yellow display,
|
||||
but without a compelling reason to begin using one.
|
||||
As we rejoin the topic, it was Winter Field Day 2025, that would be January 25th and 26th.
|
||||
Winter Field Day is actually two days, but yeah, January 25th and January 26th, 2025.
|
||||
Winter Field Day is an annual event where amateur radio operators from around the world
|
||||
gather some portable radio equipment and set up somewhere away from their normal
|
||||
base of operations.
|
||||
It is designed to encourage operators to practice their emergency preparedness skills in unfavorable
|
||||
weather.
|
||||
Usually, they will run their equipment using batteries or generators.
|
||||
I chose this day because I knew there would be a good amount of radio traffic.
|
||||
I had just finished tuning my first handmade, inverted V dipole antenna for use on the
|
||||
10 meter amateur radio bands.
|
||||
These bands span 28 megahertz all the way up to 29.7 megahertz.
|
||||
I had the antenna connected to a 10 meter amateur transceiver to listen in on the radio traffic.
|
||||
Yes, I will include pictures of the antenna in the show notes.
|
||||
Scanning through the lower end of the band resulted in receiving a number of very strong
|
||||
continuous wave signals.
|
||||
This wave is abbreviated CW or Charlie Whiskey in amateur radio circles, and it stands
|
||||
for Morse code signals transmitted over radio frequencies.
|
||||
The tones indicating dots and dashes of Morse code were clearly audible through the radio
|
||||
speaker.
|
||||
Wait, stop time out.
|
||||
I can hear you shouting as you listen.
|
||||
This is supposed to be a discussion of the ESP32 cheap yellow display.
|
||||
What does this have to do with amateur radio?
|
||||
You know what?
|
||||
You are absolutely right.
|
||||
Now hold your horses and we will get there.
|
||||
I barely learned Morse code as a child, and I used it a bit as an aviator in the 90s.
|
||||
Well, when flying, I was always able to reference a visual representation of the Morse code beside
|
||||
the actual letters for navigational aids and other things that I was using to Morse
|
||||
code to identify, but that's neither here nor there.
|
||||
The point of it is I never really became proficient.
|
||||
Shortly after Winter Field Day 2025, I began taking lessons on Morse code with the goal
|
||||
of becoming proficient at both sending and receiving Morse code around 20 words per minute.
|
||||
This training may be the topic for another episode in a different series, maybe.
|
||||
We'll see.
|
||||
We'll see how my skills progress.
|
||||
Anyways, I scanned further up the band, and I also identified some digital transmissions.
|
||||
They sound like noise, sometimes like modems, other things like that.
|
||||
I'm guessing what I heard was FT8, and further up the band I heard voice transmissions.
|
||||
So my antenna was working, at least for receiving.
|
||||
Now I've been a radio operator for a while.
|
||||
A little back history.
|
||||
I've had an amateur radio license since 2016, and I quickly progressed all the way up
|
||||
to an extra class, which gives me permission to use all the amateur radio frequencies that
|
||||
are allowed within the United States on the high frequency HF, very high frequency VHF,
|
||||
and ultra high frequency UHF bands.
|
||||
However, to this point, I have only actually operated on the VHF and UHF bands, and have
|
||||
done so using mobile and handheld transceivers.
|
||||
I inherited some HF equipment from a close friend who went silent key in 2023, and I was only
|
||||
now trying to use it.
|
||||
You can learn more about my friend, and about the term silent key, in episode HPR 3922,
|
||||
with a link in the show notes.
|
||||
Alright, back to field day.
|
||||
There was far too much traffic, and it was way too intimidating for me to even consider
|
||||
making my first attempt at transmitting on the HF bands.
|
||||
Nope, no sir.
|
||||
This would have to wait until later.
|
||||
But I didn't need to determine how well my antenna would transmit.
|
||||
I began to ponder my options.
|
||||
I really did not want to talk to anyone until I listened to some more QSOs, and I could
|
||||
implement proper radio practices.
|
||||
Now the term QSO, that's QSO Quebec Sierra Oscar, is the amateur radio term for radio
|
||||
conversations.
|
||||
Anyways, I also have no interest in digital modes yet.
|
||||
And I like the simplicity of voice and CW, so there I am back at Morse code again.
|
||||
What if, what if there was a way that I could transmit a signal in Morse code and get
|
||||
reliable feedback on signal propagation without the need to try to reply to any responses?
|
||||
Now for this to work, it would need to be accurate and repeatable and properly structured
|
||||
in timed Morse code transmission.
|
||||
And it's way more than my training at the point of this recording, or even at the point
|
||||
where this was happening, more than my training could can accomplish.
|
||||
So this is something to think about, and think about, and think about.
|
||||
Alright, enough thinking.
|
||||
Tune into the next episode in the series to learn where these thoughts led me and how
|
||||
in the world this all relates back to my cheap yellow display project.
|
||||
Goodbye.
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, and Hacker Public Radio does work.
|
||||
Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording podcasts, click on our contribute link to find out how
|
||||
easy it really is.
|
||||
The hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive
|
||||
and our syncs.net.
|
||||
On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
|
||||
License.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user