Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
160
hpr_transcripts/hpr2357.txt
Normal file
160
hpr_transcripts/hpr2357.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,160 @@
|
||||
Episode: 2357
|
||||
Title: HPR2357: Air Soft Mini Howto
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2357/hpr2357.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 01:38:55
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is HPR episode 2,357 entitled Airsoft Minute How-To.
|
||||
It is hosted by Opera Nero R and is about 14 minutes long and can remain an explicit flag.
|
||||
The summary is, I talk about my current setup for Airsoft and how we should all have hobbies.
|
||||
This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
|
||||
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
|
||||
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Hello again, this is Roman Crady, but another heck of a radio in my car, so apologize
|
||||
for the audio.
|
||||
What I'm going to talk about today is it's a blazing 92 degrees with a lot of humidity here in
|
||||
Atlanta, Georgia, but I'm actually headed to an indoor Airsoft arena.
|
||||
So if any of you have ever heard of it, that's what I'm going to be talking about today.
|
||||
If you've ever done paintball before or anything like that, it's basically the same thing
|
||||
with your shooting little plastic BBs.
|
||||
It's a form of exercise, so if you're not that all that interested, this probably isn't the
|
||||
best podcast for you, but only you guys in background of where I'm at the past four years with this
|
||||
type of activity. So I was actually started out. I looked online about four years ago in some change.
|
||||
My nephew had a birthday party at an Airsoft place, and I'd never heard of Airsoft before.
|
||||
I think I had seen people with Airsoft guns, but I'd never really known anything about it.
|
||||
I didn't know how it worked or anything like that. So it's essentially like a BB gun that shoots
|
||||
plastic BBs, and it's an alternative to paintball. So the first thing I'll say is it's like paintball,
|
||||
it's very good exercise. You're running around. You're doing a lot of squats, so if you've never
|
||||
done paintball or Airsoft before, you should go and try at least one time to do one of the other,
|
||||
because it is extremely good for your legs to do squats and things like that. You're running
|
||||
around a lot, and there's a lot of, you know, in some cases, a lot of even adrenaline when you're
|
||||
trying to get to different objectives and things like that. So it started out as just hanging out
|
||||
with my nephew and doing his birthday party, and I thought, you know, this is really good exercise.
|
||||
It's outdoor, in some cases, the arena that I was at was an outdoor arena.
|
||||
Everybody was nice and friendly, but, you know, I'm fairly old now. I'm 36, 37, and I'm the old
|
||||
guy, you know, the old guy there now, but a bunch of kids there, mostly kids, not a lot of females
|
||||
there. It doesn't, it's not that all that attractive to females, but what I will say is the reason
|
||||
I lapsed on to it is because it's a really good form of exercise. I found it kind of fun and
|
||||
exciting to shoot and people and get objectives and things like that, and he also enjoyed it too,
|
||||
so I brought him out, and I thought it was something to get him out of the house too.
|
||||
So I quickly realized that, you know, the rental guns were expensive, and, you know, by the time you
|
||||
rent a $50 rental, then a $25 helmet, and whatever like that, you could pick up a gun on Craigslist,
|
||||
and even if it only worked once, you basically, once or twice, you basically get your money back.
|
||||
So I will say don't go by a brand new gun, don't do any of that crazy stuff.
|
||||
Go on Craigslist, find some rich, rich guy that bought his kid a bunch of gear, and you test it out,
|
||||
make sure it shoots the charge of the battery, and all that stuff, and before you purchase it.
|
||||
So I'll get into kind of the technical aspects of it, as far as cost goes, and what type of gear you
|
||||
would need. For my gear, I had one gun, I had initially purchased one gun, and I got lucky,
|
||||
it was an ICS gun with a split gearbox, meaning it's kind of fancy, and I purchased it for 150,
|
||||
I got the gun, U.S., 150 U.S., I got the gun, a bunch of bullets, basically a mask, and
|
||||
some clips, and additional clips. So we're probably looking at close to, I don't know, 400 retail,
|
||||
if not six or seven, or 800 retail. So you never want to buy this stuff new, unless you're,
|
||||
unless you really are that interested, or really want to start from scratch and everything. So
|
||||
that was my first purchase. I actually had him take off, you know, I think it was initially
|
||||
$200 or $200 or something, and I had him take off $50, because I had to do some fixing with it.
|
||||
So there's two main types of guns currently. There's other types that I won't mention,
|
||||
but the main one is just the regular gear box, which means you have a motor attached to most,
|
||||
in most cases, inside of the handle of the gun, and then you have a gear, like a primary gear,
|
||||
and then like another gear, and then a third gear, and then those three gears together will pull back
|
||||
a little piston that's on a spring, and then that of course fills up with air, and then that
|
||||
has like a little o-ring over the top of a, it's for your clip, and you put in the clip, and it
|
||||
shoots the plastic BB out. So that's technically how it works. When you do take a gear box apart,
|
||||
it's kind of an art form to get the gear shims, there's shims that go in between each gear box,
|
||||
and it's kind of can get complicated. So if you ever take one apart, you need to make sure that
|
||||
you put the shims back in the right order. I haven't had a very good success with that, like I get
|
||||
as it, again, it's kind of an art form, so it'll probably take you two or three gear boxes to go
|
||||
through to get the shims right and understand what it feels like, and sounds like when your gun is
|
||||
firing properly, and the gears are all aligned properly. So that's a bit of work. You can actually
|
||||
get out of all that just by buying a new gear box for 30 bucks and be done with it.
|
||||
So anyways, it's a, that's kind of the technical end of it. The other piece of it is
|
||||
the the air-based guns where it's all air-based. So you have a pipe that goes into a paintball gun type
|
||||
of tank, which I think are actually the same exact tanks if not the same exact regulators,
|
||||
and you have regulators just like you do when you scuba dive, but there are different sizes
|
||||
and different connections and all that stuff. So you have to fortunately have to drive somewhere
|
||||
to get air in some cases if the place you're going to doesn't have air. The reason these are more
|
||||
popular is because they're fancier and more expensive. They're about the same type of upkeep
|
||||
more or less. I've had two gear box guns and my first gun is my workhorse, the second one I had,
|
||||
I dropped and it shattered into million pieces. So I figured my two, I bought two used guns, I guess
|
||||
all pay full price for a new one. So I went all out and spent ready to give this amount of money
|
||||
on an HPA gun or a what they'll call a polar star or an air-powered game or an air-powered gun.
|
||||
So I've gotten to that recently, probably in the past couple of months. It's a little
|
||||
quite a bit more expensive, probably twice as expensive as your gear box setups,
|
||||
but it fires good and fires fast and that's technically what it's about. A lot of the arenas
|
||||
will have your normal stuff like a paintball place. You'll have a ref and you'll have you'll have a
|
||||
of course the players you'll have different objectives. It's an honor system so you know you're
|
||||
playing with a bunch of kids so honestly I don't really care a whole lot. I don't complain a whole
|
||||
lot. I'm usually doing enough just to defend myself if someone is playing unfairly. I'll try to
|
||||
defend myself and you know it's usually they're worried against mine if it's a big group or
|
||||
something like that, but for me I haven't had that many problems except with this particular arena
|
||||
that's close to my house and that's why I'm driving farther to get to a more nice or more friendly
|
||||
type of arena. But the objectives are fun. You'll run out of energy pretty quick. You want to stay
|
||||
hydrated just like any other activity. The community's great. Most people want to help you or help you
|
||||
fix your gun and it can get expensive to charge or to have people retail people fix your guns.
|
||||
So I would try to advise against trying to have maybe the first couple of times you figure your
|
||||
gun out. You pay somebody to get a part and look at it and watch the videos and stuff like that. But
|
||||
oftentimes these places have teenagers working on your gear and you know honestly I wouldn't want
|
||||
somebody working on my quite expensive gun that doesn't know anything about or may or may not
|
||||
know anything about my gun or how it works or maybe they just don't care. So there's not a whole
|
||||
lot of good engineers that work on guns in that regard. So there's a lot of people that play
|
||||
that will help you understand what's wrong and maybe help you fix it. So it can get fairly
|
||||
complicated fairly quickly and that's why I brought this up because it's kind of a it's kind of
|
||||
a hacking thing. It's kind of a if you're kind of a tinker you're always putting something on the
|
||||
gun or modifying something or setting up some kind of protective making some kind of new protective
|
||||
gear. To that end I wear two of the whatever sweat shirt things whatever they call them cool shirts.
|
||||
Mainly I wear two because one is not enough not enough layers because it hurts pretty well and
|
||||
you can actually get scars on your hands and arms if you get shot on your arms and hands directly.
|
||||
So be mindful of that. You can go and get shot and bleed and have your arm bleed but if you don't
|
||||
take care of it and put like neospore on it with one of those little circular band aids you're
|
||||
going to end up getting a getting a in seven miles your destination will be on the right.
|
||||
I don't know why the audio went off there.
|
||||
Anyways the you had to kind of wear the right gear and wear long sleeves traditionally.
|
||||
I bought some paintball gloves or paintball elbow pads or griefs basically
|
||||
that if you do get shot in the arms it's not going to bleed. That was the biggest thing for me was
|
||||
getting shot in the arms and not paying attention and having little white marks. I probably have
|
||||
four or five white marks on each one of my arms and then I realized that I need some more protection
|
||||
outside of you know a couple of layers of clothing for for that. So that's how much it can hurt.
|
||||
I've actually gotten shot on my thumb and my thumb has got kind of a permanent
|
||||
damage on my thumb knuckle so you want to wear kind of full-size gloves. The canyx gloves are
|
||||
actually pretty good. You can usually find some some other types that are that are
|
||||
got good ratings on Amazon for whatever type of gear you're looking for. I wouldn't buy it retail.
|
||||
I would buy everything offline. That's about it. It's fun. I've been doing it for four years.
|
||||
I've just left an arena because they've got a little bit too much commercialized and
|
||||
a little their refs kind of a revolving door. Their referees don't really understand
|
||||
how to control the groups and teams and things. So I'd left an arena but outside of that I have a blast
|
||||
when I go this the place I'm heading towards is an indoor and actually indoor place that's
|
||||
going to be pretty ridiculously hot. So it's really good exercise. You run around. Some of these
|
||||
places have huge outdoor fields where you get shot and you go respond. It's going to take you
|
||||
five minutes to respond because you have to walk back all the way. So in that regard that's
|
||||
pretty much all I can say. I haven't had any problems with this new gun that I bought that I
|
||||
spent a bunch of money on. I've probably been out four or five times for close to six hours each
|
||||
and I haven't had any issues. You'll want to bring snacks and things like that. Plenty of liquids
|
||||
and if you can go with friends or sign up with the team that's always fine. If you can't find an arena
|
||||
you can actually start one kind of a shadow arena where maybe there's a park nearby or maybe
|
||||
there's an open area near maybe a company or a sometimes you can go in the back of office complexes
|
||||
or places that are open or close during the weekend right. Big office buildings and office
|
||||
complexes are are good places to do kind of that type of activity and then when they kick you out
|
||||
you can just go online and form up somewhere else based on based on whatever else is going on
|
||||
in that area. So you don't actually have to go to an airsoft arena you can create your own
|
||||
you know community neon something like meet up and meet up that way with your with your friends
|
||||
if there's no where else you're out in the sticks and there's no where else you have to meet up.
|
||||
I think that's it I've talked about you know the exercise that's the main part gets you out of
|
||||
that house get you exercising get you thinking about something besides computers to find a hobby
|
||||
and that's one thing I'll say is if anybody listening if all you do is computers and all you do is
|
||||
technology and screens and internet and TV and whatever that's not necessarily a hobby it has
|
||||
to be something that hopefully gets you outside and out of the house and and gets you involved
|
||||
with the community. So try to find a hobby and that hobby for me was fish and some other
|
||||
couple of things but here lately it's just been the airsoft stuff because I don't get a whole
|
||||
lot of exercise like most of the people in this field of security and peers. Anyways I hope
|
||||
to help somebody out and I apologize for the audio but I just don't get a whole lot of time to
|
||||
sit in silence in this in this life that I've chosen. All right have a great one.
|
||||
And submit submit a podcast that too.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contributing to find out how easy it
|
||||
really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dog Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show please email
|
||||
the host directly leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself
|
||||
on this otherwise status. Today's show is released on the Creative Commons
|
||||
Attribution ShareLife 3.0 License.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user