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hpr_transcripts/hpr1280.txt
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Episode: 1280
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Title: HPR1280: Homemade Antennas for OTA Hi-Def TV
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1280/hpr1280.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 22:51:19
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---
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This is John Culp in Louisiana and in this episode I'm going to talk about home made antennas
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for watching TV.
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I got into making antennas four or five years ago and it was because we got a new TV.
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What we had done a few years before we got the new TV, we had actually cut the cable which
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is something that a lot of people are talking about nowadays.
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We cut off Cox cable because they had messed with the channel lineup and pushed all the
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good channels up into the higher numbers where we would have to pay a higher rate every
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month to be able to access the channels we like so we thought, forget it.
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We're not going to do it anymore, we just stopped having cable.
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And under the old analog broadcasts we simply got bad reception for many of the channels.
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Some of them came in okay but most of them were not very good.
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Well when the transmission of TV signals changed over to digital and we got an HTTV I was amazed
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at how good the quality was of the reception.
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Basically either you get everything or you get nothing with digital TV.
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If you get a signal at all usually you can see it perfectly but once it drops out you
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get like a blue screen.
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So it's either all or nothing there was never any fuzziness really.
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Sometimes you get little squares where the signal is kind of breaking up but if you get
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a good signal you can get great TV.
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Now the problem I had was the antenna that I had was a store bought one that was actually
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a powered FM slash TV antenna and it would get some channels but not all of them.
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I started looking around for other antennas and reading reviews of them on Amazon and things
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like this and basically it looked like every antenna somebody said it worked great and
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somebody said it was terrible and that you shouldn't waste your money on it.
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And in one of those customer reviews a guy mentioned that the so-called coat hanger antenna
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actually worked better than any of the ones he had bought before.
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Now I had never heard of the coat hanger antenna and so I looked up coat hanger antenna and
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very quickly found a video on YouTube where a guy showed you how you could make your own
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antenna using just a bunch of coat hangers and a board and some fasteners.
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And so I thought we'll shoot I'm not going to spend any more money on one of these store
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bought antennas if they're all going to have the same failings.
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So I tried the coat hanger antenna and it worked pretty well.
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It worked about as well as the store bought one and it depended on where I put it in the
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room like if I could put it close to the window it would work better and put it up higher
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it would work better and so forth.
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So the next thing I did to try to improve the reception was put the thing up in the attic
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because everyone says one of the main principles of getting good reception with an antenna is
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the higher it is the better reception you're going to get.
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So I think I already had a cable from the previous owner of the house he had run antenna
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cables up to the attic or something anyway I got a cable to run up to the attic and I
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mounted the antenna up there and plugged it into my TV and it was much better.
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It still wasn't perfect but it was much better.
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So I started researching a bit more and found another design for the antenna.
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By the way the coat hanger antenna is done in what's called a bow tie design where essentially
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you have a set of eight whiskers, normally the antenna geeks call them whiskers where they're
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like v-shaped pieces of wire that are mounted in a certain pattern and then they've got
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other pieces of wire that connect them all together and crossover and stuff.
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And to those you have to attach a little doodead called a ballon B-A-L-U-N I'm going to
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put a link in the show notes to show you what that is but it's also called a UHF-VHF matching
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transformer and that is the thing that you plug your coax cable into.
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You attach the two little ends of the ballon to the two long pieces of wire on your antenna
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and that's what gives you the reception.
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So I started searching around for ways to improve the reception of the antennas and I found
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a great website where the guys were talking about a completely different design of antenna
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that was called the Gray Hoverman antenna.
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It's named after some guys I guess, Gray and Hoverman I think I will link to the page
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in the show notes, excuse me.
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But the Gray Hoverman antenna designs were made way back in the 50s and 60s I think and
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some antenna enthusiasts have revived that the designs and actually licensed them with
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a GPLV3 license so that the open source nut in me liked that a lot and so I tried the
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Gray Hoverman and it was great.
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It's a really good strong reception for the channels in the middle range of the American
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spectrum.
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I apologize, I really don't know how this stuff would work in other countries but over
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here the Gray Hoverman design was very strong for channels say 13 and above all the
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way up into the 50s and 60s.
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But it didn't get one of the main channels we have here, our CBS affiliate is channel
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10 and that kind of fell out of the spectrum of the antenna so I still looked further to
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try and find a solution to that.
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And the way I finally got channel 10 and the other channels was to go back to the bow
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tie design but use better materials and a slightly different specs on the whiskers.
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I used instead of code hangers, I used copper wire and copper is a much better conductor
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anyway and I guess the thicker the better but I found the best wire in terms of shapeability
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and durability, the compromise between those two factors was number 8 copper wire.
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I've used number 6 as well but it's a little bit harder to work with because it's thicker.
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Number 8 copper is great for making these antennas.
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So I use number 8 copper wire for all of the pieces.
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Now this requires you to go into your pocket a little bit.
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With the code hanger antenna you can probably just go in your closet and find some hangers
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and make your antenna almost for nothing.
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For the copper I had to go to the home improvement store and pay, I don't know, 60 cents
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a foot or something like that but still the entire antenna and that one with the 10 inch
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whiskers I think it required about 20 feet of copper.
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And so you're looking at a $10 to $15 investment on the antenna which is still less than most
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of the antennas cost if you buy them at the store.
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But I made the 10 inch whiskers, I used good copper wire and I mounted them to a board and
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this time I mounted the antenna on the outside of my house.
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What I did was I took the cable that had been cut from cocks and rerouted it going to
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the other end of the house where I knew it would be facing the antennas, sorry the transmitters
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for our area.
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By the way when you're doing this you really need to check a website called tvfool.com because
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they have great information about where the transmitters are in your area so that you
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know which direction to point your antenna.
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So I rerouted the cable from cocks to the other end of the house and mounted my new antenna
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under the soffit there and was amazed at the quality of reception I got.
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So it's great I get all of the channels except one from that antenna.
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So we've got most of our transmitters are in one area around here and then there's a
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single channel the NBC affiliate that's in the complete opposite direction almost 50 miles
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away.
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So that channel I could not pick up with the antenna on the side of the house.
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So what I did was I made a gray hoverman antenna and stuck it in the attic facing directly
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at the one transmitter that I was not picking up with the other antenna and then I used
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a joiner or you could call it a splitter I guess they can serve either purpose but I used
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a splitter or a joiner and ran each of the antennas into that and then so on one side
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of the splitter there are two inputs where I think what most people do with this is they'll
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take their single cable signal and split it to two different TVs but what I did was took
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two antenna signals and joined them to go to one TV signal.
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So I joined the two TVs antennas and then plugged the single cable out of that into the
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TV and now I get all of the channels.
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So that's my solution.
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Now one other thing that I've done to make the TV more accessible because we only have
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a single TV in the house and most of the time my kids are watching it if anyone is watching
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it and they don't watch much over the air TV they mostly watch Netflix.
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We do have a Netflix subscription and we have a Roku that streams that to the TV.
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I watch over the air stuff for sports on the weekends and the spouse and I like to watch
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a couple of shows on public television but we don't use a whole lot of over the air TV.
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But since there is only one TV and if the kids are watching something at the same time
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I want to watch a sporting event or something that's going on I got a network TV tuner.
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I looked into all kinds of tuners for computers and you can get these help page USB tuners
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you can get PCI slot tuner cards and things like that and I looked at all of those but I was
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not sure whether they were going to be Linux compatible and I found in the process of searching
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that you can get a network TV tuner and I got one called the HD home run and it's been
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great.
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I've got a dedicated antenna in the attic that is feeding the HD home run and it is plugged
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into a cat5 connection it's on the hard wire connection on my network and so what this
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means is that any computer on your network can watch live over the air TV from that network
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tuner and it's pretty cool I can watch it on my laptop while the kids are watching whatever
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they're watching on the main TV I can just watch over the air TV on the laptop or any
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other thing.
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The Silicon dust company that makes the HD home run has source code for the Linux configuration
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setup.
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There's a couple of little things that you can use to configure the tuner for Linux and
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those packages are available from the manufacturer's website and you can also get at least
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some of it in the Debian repository and with the HD home run you can also use XBMC or
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Myth TV or things like that so it's really really great.
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So if you wanted to make your own TV tuner antenna then you really don't need all that
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much stuff you need enough wire to make the elements whichever style you want to make.
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The gray hoverman requires about 10 feet of copper wire the bow tie style requires a little
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bit more depending on how long you make the whiskers.
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7 inches is the recommended length on many websites I made mine 10 inches on the one
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that does the best for me.
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You also need the UHF matching transformer called the ballon you need some fasteners to fasten
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the elements to a board and you need a board to mount it on and maybe most important you
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need a good place to put it.
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If you have your own home then you can probably get it into the attic or somewhere up high.
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Some of the guys who are real enthusiasts for homemade antennas will have these massive
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towers out in their yard where they will hoist their antennas way way up high to get really
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good reception.
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I don't have anything like that I'm pretty low budget.
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Let's see.
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I think that's about all I wanted to say about it.
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I definitely encourage you to try this out if you like the shows that are on your local
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over-the-air channels and have always just watched those channels on cable and are thinking
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about cutting the cable subscription.
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This is maybe something that could help you decide and besides that it's really fun.
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It's fun to make one of these antennas because it really is almost foolproof that they're
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so easy to make and they always work at least a little bit and then you can adjust them.
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My laptop just talked to me over there using bladder sorry for that interruption there.
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You can adjust the performance of that based on what kind of materials you use and the
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placement of the thing.
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Anyway, have fun with it.
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Have good hacking fun and I will talk to you later about something else.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio, those aren't.
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