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N2EY July 2nd 04 11:40 AM

In article , (Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/1/2004 6:32 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article , Mike Coslo writes:

N2EY wrote:


I couldn't blame him...I thought (think) the stuff sucks.


It has one use, in my book: If a dishwasher gets stains from hard water, just
fill the soap dispenser with Tang and run it with no dishes inside.

Couldn't build more Saturns, as the tooling is gone, as well as the
supply path.


So we'd have to rebuild the tooling and supply systems in order to build the
rockets. Which could take longer than it did the first time.


I'd certainly hope that engineering skills and contruction methodology
hadn't REGRESSED in the last four decades! =) Who's running this thing,
anyway? Ex-Army radio clerks ?


It's not about regression; it's about not keeping facilities that aren't being
used.

As enormous as Saturn Vs were, they were just adequate for the job. That's a
good thing.


If you get even one pound more of thrust MORE than what you "need", then
that's ALL you

all you what?

Well, that leaves the field wide open. Some would have us believe that
we would be better to spend the money feeding the world's poor. Of
course, then you end up with a lot of fat poor people that will continue
eating your food until you run out, then you can starve along with 'em! 8^)


Or the money could be spent teaching the world's poor how not to be poor.
The old "give a man a fish" thing.


That ain't a happening thng.

You know what I was so "impressed" with while overseas doing the things
Lennie says I didn't do...?!?!

There were American "missionaries" trying to impose thier religion and
moral values on people supposedly too poor to eat or even buy a Bible...(you
see thier kids on "Feed The Children" commercials...

BUT...They always seemed to have money to buy AK47's and ammunition.

Go figure...

Those people don't want help. There are plenty of other people who do.

Today there is no such need or competition.


Just wait 5 years.

More like 20


The last years of the Soviet system were examples of what happens to a
society wherein competion and individual initiative are stripped from people.


Nope. It's about rewards.

The basic flaw in any collectivist system is that people are expected to work
hard and take risks but are not rewarded for successfully doing so. The old
saying

"From each according to his ability, to each according to his need"

is true but incomplete.

Here's the complete version:

"In a society where rewards are distributed by the rule 'From each according to
his ability, to each according to his need', the end result will be very little
ability and an enormous amount of need."

The Russians found out the hard way. The Chinese learned, but they also
learned how to keep people repressed and doing what they want them to do.


It is interesting to note that when many Chinese speak of "freedom" and
"democracy", what those words mean to them are economic freedom and a free
market system.

That is
the take away I get from the SpaceShipOne effort. By comparison, the
Rutan effort is almost easy.


I would not say "easy". And the SS1 effort has decades of experience and
data behind it. X-15 did not.


Exactly. And "composites"...And computing power 1000 fold greater than
what Apollo had...


More like a million fold...

So if they can do it for less money, and private money at that, why should
we spend billions of tax dollars on it?


"SpaceShip" 1 barely went suborbital.


That's as high as X-15 ever went.

It will take a LOT more investment
capital before we see any of Burt's stuff on orbit!


How much more?

Ahh, now we are getting close to what I think you are trying to say. As
much as I enjoy the martian rovers, and as excited as I get about their
discoveries, and in general, all the wonderful things that we get from
the unmanned side of space exploration, if the basic purpose isn't to
put people somewhere - I don't support it.


Why not? The machines can do things humans cannot. The cost is less. The
machines can stay for a long time and don;t have to come back.


The machines can't fix them selves enroute or on-site.


So you build more reliable machines. Learning how to do that is an earthbound
benefit of a space program!

Many human ills cannot be self-repaired, either.

Look at Cassini-Huygens - more than 7 years in space and performing perfectly.

One key to reliability is simplicity. A manned probe needs additional layers of
complexity because it has to include life support and systems to return home.

I am willing to bet that the Brit's "Beagle 2" mission burnt up on
entering the Martian atmosphere.


Why? What data supports that?

Maybe had it been a manned mission, the
1/10th of a degree attitude adjustment necessary to PREVENT it could have
been made.


Doubtful. The machines are faster and more accurate at such tasks than humans.

AND, as we see from Hubble, they aren't taking care of the toys we are
giving them now.


Because the money isn't there.

The Hubble deserves to live out it's full lifetime.

At the end of it's useful life, it should be visited by a shuttle,
packed up, and returned to earth to take an honored place in the
Smithsonian Air and Space museum. Getting to see THAT would give me
goosebumps and get me all excited. And what's more, it helps cement my
support for all of this. The people at NASA should be concerned that
ubergeeks like me don't support them at this time.


It could also serve as a testbed for the effects of space on the hardware -
all
of it. How many meteorite holes, how much radiation damage, etc? Simulation
is
fine but imagine being able to study, in detail, something that spent years
in space.


How many other massive spaceborne telescopes have we had on orbit?


There are some smaller ones but none like Hubble.

These things also serve as testbeds. We tend to think of the space
program as being "old" since were in our 3rd generation with it. It's not.
It's still well within "infancy"


That's why I say that if it's useful life is over, go get it, bring it back to
earth and study it. See what failed and figure out why.

I think we are so confused between our fantasy perception of space
travel
(ie: Star Trek et al, Babylon 5, etc) and the reality (barely crawling at
this
point) that we have these grossly overinflated ideas of how these systems
OUGHT to "last" or "work".

I'm not confused at all. Some folks, however, think that because humans went
from Kitty Hawk to supersonic flight in less than half a century, and from
there to the Sea of Tranquility in another quarter century, that such progres
would continue on a linear path. It doesn't.

Once upon a time, we built the thing. It was important enough to take
the risks and send it into space.


Even though it was known that the optics were defective.


But they were able to compensate for that.


Why not do it right the first time?

It got there - it had problems. We considered it important enough to go
back into space and repair it. That was a technological triumph by the
way. It turned that ugly duckling into a a beautiful swan of optical
imaging.


They *knew* the lense wasn't right. Why it was launched is a classic case of
"not my job". That lesson is a valuable one.


We felt it was important enough to send servicing missions to.
Now "we" don't any more. At one time, we were going to retrieve it, but
now it is too "dangerous" to even do a maintenance run on it.


Answer: Robots.


How does man learn to do these things in space if we send machines to
try and do it?


Why should humans take unreasonable risks to do what can be done by machines?

And how do we "teach" a machine to do something if we ourselves don't
already know how it should be done?


It's done all the time. Look at the newest fly-by-wire military aircraft like
the joint services fighter. Its aerodynamically characteristics are such that a
human pilot cannot fly it directly - takes too many corrections in too little
time. But a computer can fly it directly.

The human pilot tells the computer what he/she wants the plane to do and the
computer figures out how to move the control surfaces to make that happen.

More important, most car accidents are caused or exacerbated by human error.
People not wearing seat belts, driving too fast, driving while impaired,

etc.
By comparison, the shuttle failures were caused by equipment troubles that
the crew could do nothing about.


Oh?


Yep.

Could the Columbia crew have gone EVA and fixed the busted shuttle tiles with
what was onboard that last mission?

They were engineering errors if we patently accept the investigation's
reports. The errors were due to a failure of the people making the decisons.


In the case of Challenger, yes.

Thiokol said "go" after being coerced by NASA people to let Challenger
fly. Coerced by men...not robots.


Yep. Men from Reagan;s White House....

Boom.

There had been issues raised over the foam on the external tank being
able
to come loose, but again cooler heads didn't get a chance to prevail.

One "suggestion" that had been laid out years ago was that a "once-over"
EVA be done to the Shuttle prior to re-entry in order to make sure no
external
damage was done.

It was suggested that thios would place the crew at too much risk.


There's also the fact that a lot of flaws could not be fixed. If the Columbia
crew had lnown there was a problem with foam damage, could they have fixed it?

The idea of a small "ROV" be built for the same purpose was made..

"Too much time and money".

I'll bet a bunch of MIT kids could have designed the thing as a class
project for less than a mil...


Designed, maybe. Built, tested and certified for manned space flight? No.

Compare that against the loss we suffered.


Exactly. The humans made a wrong decision. Even though they were professionals,
they messed up.

But part of the problem is the basic design of the STS itself. The
people-carrying orbiter sits alongside the fuel tank and SRBs, not atop the
rocket as was done in Apollo and its predecessors. There's no "escape tower",
as was done in those earlier systems. And the reentry heat shield is exposed to
the elements from long before the flight to the very end, where in previous
systems (particularly Apollo) it was protected by other modules until reentry.
(Of course there's a downside - once assembled to the SM, the Apollo CM
heatshield could not be inspected.)

Actually, I don't think there is a way to solve those problems.


The ones on earth? I disagree!


Me too.

I was once told that there are not really any "problems"...Just
solutions awaiting implementation!


Standard HR BS.

The facts a

Some problems have no solution. ("What is the exact value of pi expressed as
the ratio of two integers?).
Some problems have a theoretical solution but it cannot be found in practice
(Traveling salesman problem)
Some problems have realizable solutions.

I'm old enough to remember when the phrase "reaching for the moon" meant
someone was trying to do that which could not be done. Yet it was done.


Yep. I believe we will one day find outr how to go light speed or
better.
It's just a matter of time, money and effort.


No, it isn't.

At this point we do not know if such travel is possible.

It may be that there are as-yet-undiscovered principles of physics that would
make such travel possible.

It also may be that the very nature of the universe makes such travel by humans
completely impossible.

As it stands right now, our knowledge of physics says it cannot be done. Not a
matter of better rockets or materials - it's the very nature of the universe
that is the limit. Of course that knowledge could change! But at the present
time, human travel at or beyond the speed of light is *not* a matter of money
or effort; it's a matter of physical reality. Basic relativity physics, IOW.

And as Hans says so well:

"Reality does not care what you believe"

There was a time when it was seriously argued that some men had to be
enslaved,
either literally or economically, because nobody would voluntarily do those
jobs. That problem was solved.


Yep..We just look the other way at the border once in a while! =)


By saying that, even humorosly, you're saying you believe some people have to
be enslaved economically.

There was a time when it was seriously argued that women could not be
allowed
to vote because it would cause all kinds of problems. Turned out not to be a
problem.


That's a matter of opinion.

Several political pundits have said that a lot of the "vote" that went
to Bill Clinton did so because some segment of women voters thought
he was more
handsome than President Bush, and thought that his rhetoric on women's
"issues" was "sweet".


And who are these "pundits"?

What is their data?

Most of all, even if their claim is true, how is it any different from:

Men who won't vote for a black person?
Men who won't vote for a Roman Catholic? Or a Jew?
Men who won't vote for a person from a certain place or region?
Men who won't vote for someone because they "feel" he "cannot be trusted"?

There was a time when it was considered impossible to teach most children to
read and write because their work was 'needed' in the farms, mills and
factories.


Obviously it's still true.


No, it isn't.

A very large part of our imports from India and Pakistan are made by
kids.


That may be - but we don't have to import those things. There was a time when
the USA was, for all intents and purposes, self-sufficient in all or at least
most necessary industries. That could be true again if we wanted it to be.

If we're not their, and it isn't humans there, maybe it's just time to
sit down and watch the history channel. We might see a story about us
there some day.

What's all the rush? Space has been there for a lot longer than we have, and
will be there long after we are gone. We can take our time and do it in a
planned way, or rush headlong and wastefully, and accomplish little.


Yes...it will still be there...but I for one am very disappointed that
after four decades of manned space travel, we still haven't done a darned
thing
to REALLY start exploring "space"...!


We haven't? I say we have!

It seems some people are confused between their fantasy perception of space
travel (ie: Star Trek et al, Babylon 5, etc) and the reality to the point that
they have grossly overinflated ideas of how these systems ought work.

73 de Jim, N2EY



William July 2nd 04 03:40 PM

(Len Over 21) wrote in message ...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for

truth
From:
(Len Over 21)
Date: 6/26/2004 1:52 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:


Nursie work in aerospace? Or just spaced out?


Nursie looney? [looney rhyme w/Clooney, ER hero...]


Nursie disconnect dots, tell tales of coincidence of time nursie
got first car? Nursie not happy?


Nurise automotive expert? Nursie are radio god, superior to all
inferiors (those not in hum radio)?


Nursie be maverick gremlin? Have a pint'o at happy hour? Need
trip Vegas to tell all about radio? Must be. Nursie know all, hate
many. Not good. Vein ready for pop. Vroom, vroom.


Shush, nursie, shush. Nursie not have mind neutralized, go into
parasitic oscillation, not good for final. Final at any time, vein
ready to pop.


Temper fry...

The following post was published by an allegedly college educated
"professional" engineer.

One who claims to have worked "in the aerospace industry".

No wonder NASA is down two shuttles.

Nursie have new personality! Weiner von Brawn.

Nursie big name aerospace, be purchasing agent at set-top box
maker less than half year. Very important. Knows all about
electronic engineering. Good job, Weiner!


He bwame shuttle disaster on you. He delerious.


Blame-tossing never-did-any-space-work nursie would have had
a total orgasm with early spaceflight days. So many go boom.
Nursie laff and laff at NASA folks, all dummies. Nursie feel very
smart when laffing at others. That pump up Weiner von Brawn.

Nursie know all about BPL, OFDM, technical stuff on method of
moments. Very schmardt. No sign of Comments on docket
04-37 from nursie. Nursie have depression too?

Docket 04-37 on the BPL NPRM now has 1,554 Comment on
ECFS. Many are multi-page filings (ARRL has 5 attachments,
ARINC has 3). Docket 03-104 on the BPL NOI is now at 6,108.
That's over 7500 filings on BPL alone.

Nursie and Jimmie wanna talk about space and economy, be
big gurus on What To Do. No talk about BPL. BPL gonna be
death of noise floor on HF if approved. Not matter. Nursie and
Jimmie live virtual lives on HF in here, be big shots with high
words on non-amateur subjects. Not understand. This not
private chat room for national politics, science, economics, or
space flight. Must figure that their extra class will work right on
through all QRM. Class will tell. Class dismissed.

Nursie got lots hate, angers, repeat lines often. Obsession by
nursie. Nursie can't do field day, must be on-line to hate, hate,
hate "enemy." Bad nursie, bad. Tsk.


He hate Dr. Soos. He no like Horton Who. He no like Whoville.
Million and million of kid in America grow up with Dr. Soos. But
noooo. He no like.


While not expecting to, I did get a chance to see the actual,
working Whoville vehicles made for the movie. Peterson Auto
Museum in L.A., just off Sunset Blvd close to La Brea. Four
floors of cars. Most interesting "Cars of the Stars" exhibit.
Three-four years ago.

Of course, not mentioning hum raddio will turn on the mean
diss and curse side, nursie and jimmie lecturing on newsgrope
subjects...while they go merrily on with politics, economics,
science, and spaceflight. :-)

He no like The Who. Who no like Who? Who?

Him, dat who.

Wonder what he think Jimmie Who?


Amazing wonder that the anglophile didn't mention "Dr. Who," a
so-called Sci-Fi series from the UK. Very tongue-in-cheek in
places but not science. Just fun. Jimmie no like?

Nursie not speak of BPL. BPL not aerospace where he
Dock-torr. (physics pun)


He wan turn me in to Da Athorities! He say he make call and cause
trouble. Like make threts. He forget dey close all insane psyllums
and people hap no place cept under bridge or stinky shelter. He mean
man and he forget histerry.

Hate people.


Obsessive-compulsive psychosis manifesting itself in rage and
sociopathy. [Psych 101 at El Camino for undergraduate
required engineering major credits in California of 1959] Nursie
gonna mention my wife on that, say I "cut-and-paste" from her
books. Wife only had MSci in Education then, would get MSci
in Social Work later, work for state of Illinois. Wife's old school
books destroyed by water damage while in storage in Washington
years ago. Nursie MUST diss wife if I write something. Nursie
fruitcake, all nuts with hate.

Nursie hate, hate, hate. Nursie angry. All posts must kill all
enemies. Destroy enemies. Way of hero hostile action ham.


He yell and yell alla time. He have sigh Kologee problem. He
speshally hate someone say that. Sorry.


Compulsive-obsessive psychosis syndrome known a long time.
Nursie need all kinds certificates and licenses to show proof of
that but still nutso to anybody else.

Not good PR for ham radio.

Temper fry...


Dip him in tempura batter. He almost done.


Don't think will work. Butter turn rancid on dipping. Bad taste.

Have bad taste of nursie in here. Not good. Ptui.

This not amateur radio subject. No problem. Only other hum
raddio talk is all about field day. Field day nice outing in park,
fun. Not emergency training if scheduled years in advance.
Real emergencies not scheduled.

Len


The idiot keeps trying to engage me. Apparently he doesn't know what
persona non grata is.

Len Over 21 July 2nd 04 08:52 PM

In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for

truth
From:
(Len Over 21)
Date: 6/26/2004 1:52 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:


Nursie work in aerospace? Or just spaced out?


Nursie looney? [looney rhyme w/Clooney, ER hero...]


Nursie disconnect dots, tell tales of coincidence of time nursie
got first car? Nursie not happy?


Nurise automotive expert? Nursie are radio god, superior to all
inferiors (those not in hum radio)?


Nursie be maverick gremlin? Have a pint'o at happy hour? Need
trip Vegas to tell all about radio? Must be. Nursie know all,

hate
many. Not good. Vein ready for pop. Vroom, vroom.


Shush, nursie, shush. Nursie not have mind neutralized, go into
parasitic oscillation, not good for final. Final at any time, vein
ready to pop.


Temper fry...

The following post was published by an allegedly college educated
"professional" engineer.

One who claims to have worked "in the aerospace industry".

No wonder NASA is down two shuttles.

Nursie have new personality! Weiner von Brawn.

Nursie big name aerospace, be purchasing agent at set-top box
maker less than half year. Very important. Knows all about
electronic engineering. Good job, Weiner!

He bwame shuttle disaster on you. He delerious.


Blame-tossing never-did-any-space-work nursie would have had
a total orgasm with early spaceflight days. So many go boom.
Nursie laff and laff at NASA folks, all dummies. Nursie feel very
smart when laffing at others. That pump up Weiner von Brawn.

Nursie know all about BPL, OFDM, technical stuff on method of
moments. Very schmardt. No sign of Comments on docket
04-37 from nursie. Nursie have depression too?

Docket 04-37 on the BPL NPRM now has 1,554 Comment on
ECFS. Many are multi-page filings (ARRL has 5 attachments,
ARINC has 3). Docket 03-104 on the BPL NOI is now at 6,108.
That's over 7500 filings on BPL alone.

Nursie and Jimmie wanna talk about space and economy, be
big gurus on What To Do. No talk about BPL. BPL gonna be
death of noise floor on HF if approved. Not matter. Nursie and
Jimmie live virtual lives on HF in here, be big shots with high
words on non-amateur subjects. Not understand. This not
private chat room for national politics, science, economics, or
space flight. Must figure that their extra class will work right on
through all QRM. Class will tell. Class dismissed.

Nursie got lots hate, angers, repeat lines often. Obsession by
nursie. Nursie can't do field day, must be on-line to hate, hate,
hate "enemy." Bad nursie, bad. Tsk.

He hate Dr. Soos. He no like Horton Who. He no like Whoville.
Million and million of kid in America grow up with Dr. Soos. But
noooo. He no like.


While not expecting to, I did get a chance to see the actual,
working Whoville vehicles made for the movie. Peterson Auto
Museum in L.A., just off Sunset Blvd close to La Brea. Four
floors of cars. Most interesting "Cars of the Stars" exhibit.
Three-four years ago.

Of course, not mentioning hum raddio will turn on the mean
diss and curse side, nursie and jimmie lecturing on newsgrope
subjects...while they go merrily on with politics, economics,
science, and spaceflight. :-)

He no like The Who. Who no like Who? Who?

Him, dat who.

Wonder what he think Jimmie Who?


Amazing wonder that the anglophile didn't mention "Dr. Who," a
so-called Sci-Fi series from the UK. Very tongue-in-cheek in
places but not science. Just fun. Jimmie no like?

Nursie not speak of BPL. BPL not aerospace where he
Dock-torr. (physics pun)

He wan turn me in to Da Athorities! He say he make call and cause
trouble. Like make threts. He forget dey close all insane psyllums
and people hap no place cept under bridge or stinky shelter. He mean
man and he forget histerry.

Hate people.


Obsessive-compulsive psychosis manifesting itself in rage and
sociopathy. [Psych 101 at El Camino for undergraduate
required engineering major credits in California of 1959] Nursie
gonna mention my wife on that, say I "cut-and-paste" from her
books. Wife only had MSci in Education then, would get MSci
in Social Work later, work for state of Illinois. Wife's old school
books destroyed by water damage while in storage in Washington
years ago. Nursie MUST diss wife if I write something. Nursie
fruitcake, all nuts with hate.

Nursie hate, hate, hate. Nursie angry. All posts must kill all
enemies. Destroy enemies. Way of hero hostile action ham.

He yell and yell alla time. He have sigh Kologee problem. He
speshally hate someone say that. Sorry.


Compulsive-obsessive psychosis syndrome known a long time.
Nursie need all kinds certificates and licenses to show proof of
that but still nutso to anybody else.

Not good PR for ham radio.

Temper fry...

Dip him in tempura batter. He almost done.


Don't think will work. Butter turn rancid on dipping. Bad taste.

Have bad taste of nursie in here. Not good. Ptui.

This not amateur radio subject. No problem. Only other hum
raddio talk is all about field day. Field day nice outing in park,
fun. Not emergency training if scheduled years in advance.
Real emergencies not scheduled.

Len


The idiot keeps trying to engage me. Apparently he doesn't know what
persona non grata is.




Len Over 21 July 2nd 04 10:33 PM

In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for

truth
From:
(Len Over 21)
Date: 6/26/2004 1:52 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:


Nursie work in aerospace? Or just spaced out?


Nursie looney? [looney rhyme w/Clooney, ER hero...]


Nursie disconnect dots, tell tales of coincidence of time nursie
got first car? Nursie not happy?


Nurise automotive expert? Nursie are radio god, superior to all
inferiors (those not in hum radio)?


Nursie be maverick gremlin? Have a pint'o at happy hour? Need
trip Vegas to tell all about radio? Must be. Nursie know all,

hate
many. Not good. Vein ready for pop. Vroom, vroom.


Shush, nursie, shush. Nursie not have mind neutralized, go into
parasitic oscillation, not good for final. Final at any time, vein
ready to pop.


Temper fry...

The following post was published by an allegedly college educated
"professional" engineer.

One who claims to have worked "in the aerospace industry".

No wonder NASA is down two shuttles.

Nursie have new personality! Weiner von Brawn.

Nursie big name aerospace, be purchasing agent at set-top box
maker less than half year. Very important. Knows all about
electronic engineering. Good job, Weiner!

He bwame shuttle disaster on you. He delerious.


Blame-tossing never-did-any-space-work nursie would have had
a total orgasm with early spaceflight days. So many go boom.
Nursie laff and laff at NASA folks, all dummies. Nursie feel very
smart when laffing at others. That pump up Weiner von Brawn.

Nursie know all about BPL, OFDM, technical stuff on method of
moments. Very schmardt. No sign of Comments on docket
04-37 from nursie. Nursie have depression too?

Docket 04-37 on the BPL NPRM now has 1,554 Comment on
ECFS. Many are multi-page filings (ARRL has 5 attachments,
ARINC has 3). Docket 03-104 on the BPL NOI is now at 6,108.
That's over 7500 filings on BPL alone.

Nursie and Jimmie wanna talk about space and economy, be
big gurus on What To Do. No talk about BPL. BPL gonna be
death of noise floor on HF if approved. Not matter. Nursie and
Jimmie live virtual lives on HF in here, be big shots with high
words on non-amateur subjects. Not understand. This not
private chat room for national politics, science, economics, or
space flight. Must figure that their extra class will work right on
through all QRM. Class will tell. Class dismissed.

Nursie got lots hate, angers, repeat lines often. Obsession by
nursie. Nursie can't do field day, must be on-line to hate, hate,
hate "enemy." Bad nursie, bad. Tsk.

He hate Dr. Soos. He no like Horton Who. He no like Whoville.
Million and million of kid in America grow up with Dr. Soos. But
noooo. He no like.


While not expecting to, I did get a chance to see the actual,
working Whoville vehicles made for the movie. Peterson Auto
Museum in L.A., just off Sunset Blvd close to La Brea. Four
floors of cars. Most interesting "Cars of the Stars" exhibit.
Three-four years ago.

Of course, not mentioning hum raddio will turn on the mean
diss and curse side, nursie and jimmie lecturing on newsgrope
subjects...while they go merrily on with politics, economics,
science, and spaceflight. :-)

He no like The Who. Who no like Who? Who?

Him, dat who.

Wonder what he think Jimmie Who?


Amazing wonder that the anglophile didn't mention "Dr. Who," a
so-called Sci-Fi series from the UK. Very tongue-in-cheek in
places but not science. Just fun. Jimmie no like?

Nursie not speak of BPL. BPL not aerospace where he
Dock-torr. (physics pun)

He wan turn me in to Da Athorities! He say he make call and cause
trouble. Like make threts. He forget dey close all insane psyllums
and people hap no place cept under bridge or stinky shelter. He mean
man and he forget histerry.

Hate people.


Obsessive-compulsive psychosis manifesting itself in rage and
sociopathy. [Psych 101 at El Camino for undergraduate
required engineering major credits in California of 1959] Nursie
gonna mention my wife on that, say I "cut-and-paste" from her
books. Wife only had MSci in Education then, would get MSci
in Social Work later, work for state of Illinois. Wife's old school
books destroyed by water damage while in storage in Washington
years ago. Nursie MUST diss wife if I write something. Nursie
fruitcake, all nuts with hate.

Nursie hate, hate, hate. Nursie angry. All posts must kill all
enemies. Destroy enemies. Way of hero hostile action ham.

He yell and yell alla time. He have sigh Kologee problem. He
speshally hate someone say that. Sorry.


Compulsive-obsessive psychosis syndrome known a long time.
Nursie need all kinds certificates and licenses to show proof of
that but still nutso to anybody else.

Not good PR for ham radio.

Temper fry...

Dip him in tempura batter. He almost done.


Don't think will work. Butter turn rancid on dipping. Bad taste.

Have bad taste of nursie in here. Not good. Ptui.

This not amateur radio subject. No problem. Only other hum
raddio talk is all about field day. Field day nice outing in park,
fun. Not emergency training if scheduled years in advance.
Real emergencies not scheduled.

Len


The idiot keeps trying to engage me. Apparently he doesn't know what
persona non grata is.


:-)

If it wasn't written up in QST it doesn't exist. QST over-emphasizes
the ham involvement of MARS and under-emphasizes the fact that
the U.S. Army started it in 1925 and now all three major military
service branches are involved in that Military Affiliate Radio System
as a self-standing radio system which MIGHT, but hardly ever does
for a fact, serve the long-existing regular military communications
facilities. [did QST every write up anything on the Grecial Firebolt
exercises? I don't think so but then I don't read enough ham-only
"technical" material]

Now, in this thread, there's much "learned" palaver on the wrongs
and wrongs of U.S. spaceflight efforts between the two participants
who haven't gotten much beyond the Popular Science write-ups.
The Cassini-Huygens probes are considered another outstanding
success but the critics are highly critical. [maybe because ham
radio isn't essential to such efforts?]

Meanwhile, BPL is the spectre on the ham horizon but nobody
seems very concerned. Either they can't think beyond their
personal fantasies or they think that "CW will get through?"
Some folks in here are so into the personal attack mode that
all they can do is carp and bark and toss snit at Cart Stevenson
for a mild rebuke against UPLC, a group that was arrogantly
snitting on amateur radio.



Mike Coslo July 3rd 04 02:14 AM

Steve Robeson K4CAP wrote:
Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/1/2004 6:32 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article , Mike Coslo writes:


N2EY wrote:



Ahh, but can you say the same for Tang flavored Teflon?


There was anembarrassing moment when a '60s era astronaut swore he'd never
drink the stuff ever again because of its GI tract effects on him. Trouble
was
he forgot he was on VOX...



I couldn't blame him...I thought (think) the stuff sucks.


Couldn't build more Saturns, as the tooling is gone, as well as the
supply path.


So we'd have to rebuild the tooling and supply systems in order to build the
rockets. Which could take longer than it did the first time.



I'd certainly hope that engineering skills and contruction methodology
hadn't REGRESSED in the last four decades! =) Who's running this thing,
anyway? Ex-Army radio clerks ?


The problem isn't regression, the problem is that there are parts on
the engine that simply aren't made any more. One small example is that
when I was on tour down at the cape, we could look inside one of the
monsters. I don't even know if lacing cable is made any more. That's
just one thing, There are a lot of other parts that just aren't made any
more. So while we could in principle make the things again, and the
engineering drawings exist, it just ain't that simple.

More the pity. The Saturn's were beautiful, muscular brutes, all the
more impressive that they were made around 40 years ago. We haven't
matched them yet.

Quick Q. THe fuel and oxidizer combo on the Saturns was a bit different
from the typical. What was it?


As enormous as Saturn Vs were, they were just adequate for the job. That's a
good thing.



If you get even one pound more of thrust MORE than what you "need", then
that's ALL you


Well, that leaves the field wide open. Some would have us believe that

we would be better to spend the money feeding the world's poor. Of
course, then you end up with a lot of fat poor people that will continue
eating your food until you run out, then you can starve along with 'em! 8^)


Or the money could be spent teaching the world's poor how not to be poor. The
old "give a man a fish" thing.



That ain't a happening thng.


Let us take the world's population and divide it into the gross global
product. You are correct, Steve, it isn't going to happen.


You know what I was so "impressed" with while overseas doing the things
Lennie says I didn't do...?!?!

There were American "missionaries" trying to impose thier religion and
moral values on people supposedly too poor to eat or even buy a Bible...(you
see thier kids on "Feed The Children" commercials...

BUT...They always seemed to have money to buy AK47's and ammunition.

Go figure...


Praise the ammunition and pass the Lord? 8^)


Today there is no such need or competition.

Just wait 5 years.


More like 20



The last years of the Soviet system were examples of what happens to a
society wherein competion and individual initiative are stripped from people.

The Russians found out the hard way. The Chinese learned, but they also
learned how to keep people repressed and doing what they want them to do.


Allowing people to accumulate wealth while suppressing their political
freedoms is an interesting trick.

BTW, China has just surpassed the US as an investment target. While we
still have people that rail on about an Ex president. Point is, get the
priorities straight, folks.

That is
the take away I get from the SpaceShipOne effort. By comparison, the
Rutan effort is almost easy.


I would not say "easy". And the SS1 effort has decades of experience and data
behind it. X-15 did not.



Exactly. And "composites"...And computing power 1000 fold greater than
what Apollo had...


So if they can do it for less money, and private money at that, why should we
spend billions of tax dollars on it?



"SpaceShip" 1 barely went suborbital. It will take a LOT more investment
capital before we see any of Burt's stuff on orbit!


Ahh, now we are getting close to what I think you are trying to say. As
much as I enjoy the martian rovers, and as excited as I get about their
discoveries, and in general, all the wonderful things that we get from
the unmanned side of space exploration, if the basic purpose isn't to
put people somewhere - I don't support it.


Why not? The machines can do things humans cannot. The cost is less. The
machines can stay for a long time and don;t have to come back.



The machines can't fix them selves enroute or on-site.


The machines are fascinating.

But they are a big so-what in the big picture. I feel excited when the
rovers do their thing and make discoveries, or when Cassini went into
orbit as planned, and started sending back imagery.

But So What?

I am willing to bet that the Brit's "Beagle 2" mission burnt up on
entering the Martian atmosphere. Maybe had it been a manned mission, the
1/10th of a degree attitude adjustment necessary to PREVENT it could have been
made.


AND, as we see from Hubble, they aren't taking care of the toys we are
giving them now.


Because the money isn't there.


The Hubble deserves to live out it's full lifetime.

At the end of it's useful life, it should be visited by a shuttle,
packed up, and returned to earth to take an honored place in the
Smithsonian Air and Space museum. Getting to see THAT would give me
goosebumps and get me all excited. And what's more, it helps cement my
support for all of this. The people at NASA should be concerned that
ubergeeks like me don't support them at this time.


It could also serve as a testbed for the effects of space on the hardware -
all
of it. How many meteorite holes, how much radiation damage, etc? Simulation
is
fine but imagine being able to study, in detail, something that spent years
in
space.



How many other massive spaceborne telescopes have we had on orbit?

These things also serve as testbeds. We tend to think of the space
program as being "old" since were in our 3rd generation with it. It's not.
It's still well within "infancy"

I think we are so confused between our fantasy perception of space travel
(ie: Star Trek et al, Babylon 5, etc) and the reality (barely crawling at this
point) that we have these grossly overinflated ideas of how these systems OUGHT
to "last" or "work".


Once upon a time, we built the thing. It was important enough to take
the risks and send it into space.


Even though it was known that the optics were defective.



But they were able to compensate for that.


It got there - it had problems. We considered it important enough to go
back into space and repair it. That was a technological triumph by the
way. It turned that ugly duckling into a a beautiful swan of optical
imaging.


They *knew* the lense wasn't right. Why it was launched is a classic case of
"not my job". That lesson is a valuable one.



We felt it was important enough to send servicing missions to.
Now "we" don't any more. At one time, we were going to retrieve it, but
now it is too "dangerous" to even do a maintenance run on it.


Answer: Robots.



How does man learn to do these things in space if we send machines to try
and do it?



And how do we "teach" a machine to do something if we ourselves don't
already know how it should be done?


Robots my rosy red! I Wanna go there!

The people that think all we should do is send robots into space really
really miss the point. It ain't about the robots, or about the science.
If it isn't people, it isn't interesting, and it won't get support.


More important, most car accidents are caused or exacerbated by human error.
People not wearing seat belts, driving too fast, driving while impaired, etc.
By comparison, the shuttle failures were caused by equipment troubles that
the crew could do nothing about.



Oh?

They were engineering errors if we patently accept the investigation's
reports. The errors were due to a failure of the people making the decisons.

Thiokol said "go" after being coerced by NASA people to let Challenger
fly. Coerced by men...not robots.


Boom.


And check out what became of the engineer that didn't want the thing to
fly, the what happened to the person that applied the pressure to launch.

Proof that the squeaky wheel gets the ax!

There had been issues raised over the foam on the external tank being able
to come loose, but again cooler heads didn't get a chance to prevail.

One "suggestion" that had been laid out years ago was that a "once-over"
EVA be done to the Shuttle prior to re-entry in order to make sure no external
damage was done.

It was suggested that thios would place the crew at too much risk.

The idea of a small "ROV" be built for the same purpose was made..

"Too much time and money".

I'll bet a bunch of MIT kids could have designed the thing as a class
project for less than a mil...Compare that against the loss we suffered.


Actually, I don't think there is a way to solve those problems.


The ones on earth? I disagree!



Me too.

I was once told that there are not really any "problems"...Just solutions
awaiting implementation!


So exactly how do we cure hunger, disease, poverty, and the fact that
there is a significant number of people that don't think any of the
above are a problem?


I'm old enough to remember when the phrase "reaching for the moon" meant
someone was trying to do that which could not be done. Yet it was done.



Yep. I believe we will one day find outr how to go light speed or better.
It's just a matter of time, money and effort.


Agreed.


There was a time when it was seriously argued that some men had to be
enslaved,
either literally or economically, because nobody would voluntarily do those
jobs. That problem was solved.



Yep..We just look the other way at the border once in a while! =)


There was a time when it was seriously argued that women could not be allowed
to vote because it would cause all kinds of problems. Turned out not to be a
problem.



That's a matter of opinion.

Several political pundits have said that a lot of the "vote" that went to
Bill Clinton did so because some segment of women voters thought he was more
handsome than President Bush, and thought that his rhetoric on women's "issues"
was "sweet".


There was a time when it was considered impossible to teach most children to
read and write because their work was 'needed' in the farms, mills and
factories.



Obviously it's still true.

A very large part of our imports from India and Pakistan are made by kids.


If we're not their, and it isn't humans there, maybe it's just time to
sit down and watch the history channel. We might see a story about us
there some day.


What's all the rush? Space has been there for a lot longer than we have, and
will be there long after we are gone. We can take our time and do it in a
planned way, or rush headlong and wastefully, and accomplish little.



Yes...it will still be there...but I for one am very disappointed that
after four decades of manned space travel, we still haven't done a darned thing
to REALLY start exploring "space"...!


I'm in a rush, and that is enough for me.

- Mike KB3EIA -


Mike Coslo July 3rd 04 02:39 AM

N2EY wrote:

In article , (Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:


Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/1/2004 6:32 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article , Mike Coslo writes:


N2EY wrote:



I couldn't blame him...I thought (think) the stuff sucks.



It has one use, in my book: If a dishwasher gets stains from hard water, just
fill the soap dispenser with Tang and run it with no dishes inside.


Couldn't build more Saturns, as the tooling is gone, as well as the
supply path.

So we'd have to rebuild the tooling and supply systems in order to build the
rockets. Which could take longer than it did the first time.


I'd certainly hope that engineering skills and contruction methodology
hadn't REGRESSED in the last four decades! =) Who's running this thing,
anyway? Ex-Army radio clerks ?



It's not about regression; it's about not keeping facilities that aren't being
used.

As enormous as Saturn Vs were, they were just adequate for the job. That's a
good thing.


If you get even one pound more of thrust MORE than what you "need", then
that's ALL you


all you what?


Well, that leaves the field wide open. Some would have us believe that

we would be better to spend the money feeding the world's poor. Of
course, then you end up with a lot of fat poor people that will continue
eating your food until you run out, then you can starve along with 'em! 8^)

Or the money could be spent teaching the world's poor how not to be poor.
The old "give a man a fish" thing.


That ain't a happening thng.

You know what I was so "impressed" with while overseas doing the things
Lennie says I didn't do...?!?!

There were American "missionaries" trying to impose thier religion and
moral values on people supposedly too poor to eat or even buy a Bible...(you
see thier kids on "Feed The Children" commercials...

BUT...They always seemed to have money to buy AK47's and ammunition.

Go figure...


Those people don't want help. There are plenty of other people who do.


Today there is no such need or competition.



Just wait 5 years.


More like 20


The last years of the Soviet system were examples of what happens to a
society wherein competion and individual initiative are stripped from people.



Nope. It's about rewards.

The basic flaw in any collectivist system is that people are expected to work
hard and take risks but are not rewarded for successfully doing so. The old
saying

"From each according to his ability, to each according to his need"

is true but incomplete.

Here's the complete version:

"In a society where rewards are distributed by the rule 'From each according to
his ability, to each according to his need', the end result will be very little
ability and an enormous amount of need."

The Russians found out the hard way. The Chinese learned, but they also
learned how to keep people repressed and doing what they want them to do.



It is interesting to note that when many Chinese speak of "freedom" and
"democracy", what those words mean to them are economic freedom and a free
market system.

That is
the take away I get from the SpaceShipOne effort. By comparison, the
Rutan effort is almost easy.

I would not say "easy". And the SS1 effort has decades of experience and
data behind it. X-15 did not.


Exactly. And "composites"...And computing power 1000 fold greater than
what Apollo had...



More like a million fold...


So if they can do it for less money, and private money at that, why should
we spend billions of tax dollars on it?


"SpaceShip" 1 barely went suborbital.



That's as high as X-15 ever went.


It will take a LOT more investment
capital before we see any of Burt's stuff on orbit!



How much more?


Not as much as some may think. The engines work, the ship works, if in
need of some design mods. A good deal more "oomph" is needed to get
something into orbit, as well as a likely ship redesign. But it'll happen.


Ahh, now we are getting close to what I think you are trying to say. As
much as I enjoy the martian rovers, and as excited as I get about their
discoveries, and in general, all the wonderful things that we get from
the unmanned side of space exploration, if the basic purpose isn't to
put people somewhere - I don't support it.

Why not? The machines can do things humans cannot. The cost is less. The
machines can stay for a long time and don;t have to come back.


The machines can't fix them selves enroute or on-site.



So you build more reliable machines. Learning how to do that is an earthbound
benefit of a space program!

Many human ills cannot be self-repaired, either.

Look at Cassini-Huygens - more than 7 years in space and performing perfectly.


An example of "old time NASA technology", definitely not "faster
better, cheaper"


One key to reliability is simplicity. A manned probe needs additional layers of
complexity because it has to include life support and systems to return home.


Yep, that's true you know what I'm gonna say next................. So
what?

I am willing to bet that the Brit's "Beagle 2" mission burnt up on
entering the Martian atmosphere.



Why? What data supports that?


Maybe had it been a manned mission, the
1/10th of a degree attitude adjustment necessary to PREVENT it could have
been made.



Doubtful. The machines are faster and more accurate at such tasks than humans.



But the humans can see something askew that teh computer may not. I
suspect that a human on board that one doomed Mars lander might have
seen that one set of instructions was in metric, and the other was not.
I work with computers every day. They really aren't that smart. They
will execute disastarous commands at accuracies far to several
insignificant digits

AND, as we see from Hubble, they aren't taking care of the toys we are
giving them now.

Because the money isn't there.


The Hubble deserves to live out it's full lifetime.

At the end of it's useful life, it should be visited by a shuttle,
packed up, and returned to earth to take an honored place in the
Smithsonian Air and Space museum. Getting to see THAT would give me
goosebumps and get me all excited. And what's more, it helps cement my
support for all of this. The people at NASA should be concerned that
ubergeeks like me don't support them at this time.

It could also serve as a testbed for the effects of space on the hardware -
all
of it. How many meteorite holes, how much radiation damage, etc? Simulation
is
fine but imagine being able to study, in detail, something that spent years
in space.


How many other massive spaceborne telescopes have we had on orbit?



There are some smaller ones but none like Hubble.


ahem....

These things also serve as testbeds. We tend to think of the space
program as being "old" since were in our 3rd generation with it. It's not.
It's still well within "infancy"



That's why I say that if it's useful life is over, go get it, bring it back to
earth and study it. See what failed and figure out why.

I think we are so confused between our fantasy perception of space
travel (ie: Star Trek et al, Babylon 5, etc) and the reality (barely crawling at
this point) that we have these grossly overinflated ideas of how these systems
OUGHT to "last" or "work".


I'm not confused at all. Some folks, however, think that because humans went
from Kitty Hawk to supersonic flight in less than half a century, and from
there to the Sea of Tranquility in another quarter century, that such progres
would continue on a linear path. It doesn't.


And waht we are embarking on now is not doing anything like that AT
ALL. We are going to become the Portugal of space, because we are too
darn precious.

Once upon a time, we built the thing. It was important enough to take
the risks and send it into space.

Even though it was known that the optics were defective.


But they were able to compensate for that.


Why not do it right the first time?


It got there - it had problems. We considered it important enough to go
back into space and repair it. That was a technological triumph by the
way. It turned that ugly duckling into a a beautiful swan of optical
imaging.

They *knew* the lense wasn't right. Why it was launched is a classic case of
"not my job". That lesson is a valuable one.


We felt it was important enough to send servicing missions to.
Now "we" don't any more. At one time, we were going to retrieve it, but
now it is too "dangerous" to even do a maintenance run on it.

Answer: Robots.


How does man learn to do these things in space if we send machines to
try and do it?



Why should humans take unreasonable risks to do what can be done by machines?


Boring....

It's related to whay I still play ice hockey at 50 years old, while
most of the people I know think I'm nuts for doing it.

Too many people are so afraid of dying that their lives are diminished
by the effort to stay safe. They refuse to take risks. "It's too
dangerous", "I have to buy a 6000 pound SUV because if I run into
someone, *I'll win*" Aren't you afraid of breaking something?" It's too
dangeraous to send people to space". It's too dangerous to do anything".
"Yada Yada Yada."


And how do we "teach" a machine to do something if we ourselves don't
already know how it should be done?



It's done all the time. Look at the newest fly-by-wire military aircraft like
the joint services fighter. Its aerodynamically characteristics are such that a
human pilot cannot fly it directly - takes too many corrections in too little
time. But a computer can fly it directly.

The human pilot tells the computer what he/she wants the plane to do and the
computer figures out how to move the control surfaces to make that happen.

More important, most car accidents are caused or exacerbated by human error.
People not wearing seat belts, driving too fast, driving while impaired,


etc.

By comparison, the shuttle failures were caused by equipment troubles that
the crew could do nothing about.


Oh?



Yep.


Could the Columbia crew have gone EVA and fixed the busted shuttle tiles with
what was onboard that last mission?

They were engineering errors if we patently accept the investigation's
reports. The errors were due to a failure of the people making the decisons.



In the case of Challenger, yes.


Thiokol said "go" after being coerced by NASA people to let Challenger
fly. Coerced by men...not robots.



Yep. Men from Reagan;s White House....

Boom.

There had been issues raised over the foam on the external tank being
able
to come loose, but again cooler heads didn't get a chance to prevail.

One "suggestion" that had been laid out years ago was that a "once-over"
EVA be done to the Shuttle prior to re-entry in order to make sure no
external
damage was done.

It was suggested that thios would place the crew at too much risk.



There's also the fact that a lot of flaws could not be fixed. If the Columbia
crew had lnown there was a problem with foam damage, could they have fixed it?


The idea of a small "ROV" be built for the same purpose was made..

"Too much time and money".

I'll bet a bunch of MIT kids could have designed the thing as a class
project for less than a mil...



Designed, maybe. Built, tested and certified for manned space flight? No.


Compare that against the loss we suffered.



Exactly. The humans made a wrong decision. Even though they were professionals,
they messed up.

But part of the problem is the basic design of the STS itself. The
people-carrying orbiter sits alongside the fuel tank and SRBs, not atop the
rocket as was done in Apollo and its predecessors. There's no "escape tower",
as was done in those earlier systems. And the reentry heat shield is exposed to
the elements from long before the flight to the very end, where in previous
systems (particularly Apollo) it was protected by other modules until reentry.
(Of course there's a downside - once assembled to the SM, the Apollo CM
heatshield could not be inspected.)

Actually, I don't think there is a way to solve those problems.

The ones on earth? I disagree!


Me too.

I was once told that there are not really any "problems"...Just
solutions awaiting implementation!



Standard HR BS.

The facts a

Some problems have no solution. ("What is the exact value of pi expressed as
the ratio of two integers?).
Some problems have a theoretical solution but it cannot be found in practice
(Traveling salesman problem)
Some problems have realizable solutions.


I'm old enough to remember when the phrase "reaching for the moon" meant
someone was trying to do that which could not be done. Yet it was done.


Yep. I believe we will one day find outr how to go light speed or
better.
It's just a matter of time, money and effort.



No, it isn't.

At this point we do not know if such travel is possible.

It may be that there are as-yet-undiscovered principles of physics that would
make such travel possible.

It also may be that the very nature of the universe makes such travel by humans
completely impossible.

As it stands right now, our knowledge of physics says it cannot be done. Not a
matter of better rockets or materials - it's the very nature of the universe
that is the limit. Of course that knowledge could change! But at the present
time, human travel at or beyond the speed of light is *not* a matter of money
or effort; it's a matter of physical reality. Basic relativity physics, IOW.

And as Hans says so well:

"Reality does not care what you believe"

There was a time when it was seriously argued that some men had to be
enslaved,
either literally or economically, because nobody would voluntarily do those
jobs. That problem was solved.


Yep..We just look the other way at the border once in a while! =)



By saying that, even humorosly, you're saying you believe some people have to
be enslaved economically.

There was a time when it was seriously argued that women could not be
allowed
to vote because it would cause all kinds of problems. Turned out not to be a
problem.


That's a matter of opinion.

Several political pundits have said that a lot of the "vote" that went
to Bill Clinton did so because some segment of women voters thought
he was more
handsome than President Bush, and thought that his rhetoric on women's
"issues" was "sweet".



And who are these "pundits"?

What is their data?

Most of all, even if their claim is true, how is it any different from:

Men who won't vote for a black person?
Men who won't vote for a Roman Catholic? Or a Jew?
Men who won't vote for a person from a certain place or region?
Men who won't vote for someone because they "feel" he "cannot be trusted"?

There was a time when it was considered impossible to teach most children to
read and write because their work was 'needed' in the farms, mills and
factories.


Obviously it's still true.



No, it isn't.

A very large part of our imports from India and Pakistan are made by
kids.



That may be - but we don't have to import those things. There was a time when
the USA was, for all intents and purposes, self-sufficient in all or at least
most necessary industries. That could be true again if we wanted it to be.


If we're not their, and it isn't humans there, maybe it's just time to
sit down and watch the history channel. We might see a story about us
there some day.


What's all the rush? Space has been there for a lot longer than we have, and
will be there long after we are gone. We can take our time and do it in a
planned way, or rush headlong and wastefully, and accomplish little.


Yes...it will still be there...but I for one am very disappointed that
after four decades of manned space travel, we still haven't done a darned
thing
to REALLY start exploring "space"...!



We haven't? I say we have!

It seems some people are confused between their fantasy perception of space
travel (ie: Star Trek et al, Babylon 5, etc) and the reality to the point that
they have grossly overinflated ideas of how these systems ought work.

73 de Jim, N2EY




Steve Robeson K4CAP July 3rd 04 11:38 AM

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/2/2004 5:40 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:


If you get even one pound more of thrust MORE than what you "need",

then
that's ALL you

all you what?


Oooooops!

"need"!

Sorry.

Steve, K4YZ








Steve Robeson K4CAP July 3rd 04 12:44 PM

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/2/2004 5:40 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:


Exactly. And "composites"...And computing power 1000 fold greater than
what Apollo had...


More like a million fold...

So if they can do it for less money, and private money at that, why should
we spend billions of tax dollars on it?


"SpaceShip" 1 barely went suborbital.


That's as high as X-15 ever went.


But other than to use it to demonstrate the VERY basic theories of
rudimentary manuevering in a near-vacuum, what did it do?

What can a sub-orbital ship hope to offer that aircraft operating at lower
altitudes don't alread offfer?

The machines can't fix them selves enroute or on-site.


So you build more reliable machines. Learning how to do that is an earthbound
benefit of a space program!


And if you're not "thre" to witness the failure and know what failed, how
do you fix it?

I am reminded of pilots returning and trying to relate thier perceptions
of problems, and how to fix them.

The communications gear was a no-brainer. AFCS (Automatic Flight COntrol
System) in the CH53 was very dynamic, even for the antiquated systems in the
older A models...Nothing substituted for getting on the bird and experiencing
the abnormal behaviour first had.

Many human ills cannot be self-repaired, either.


Any your point is...?!?!

Look at Cassini-Huygens - more than 7 years in space and performing
perfectly.


Uh huh...Against how many that never left the pad, or failed enroute?
Those "robot"

I am willing to bet that the Brit's "Beagle 2" mission burnt up on
entering the Martian atmosphere.


Why? What data supports that?


"................................................. .."

(sound of signal from probe after "re-entry")

Maybe had it been a manned mission, the
1/10th of a degree attitude adjustment necessary to PREVENT it could have
been made.


Doubtful. The machines are faster and more accurate at such tasks than
humans.


Not always.

Know why I carry my stethoscope at all times in the ER despite a plethora
of "non-invasive diagnostic devices"...?!?!

Because those "machines" are NOT always faster and more accurate than a
human. Nor do those machines have the ability to "filter out" the audible
ectopics that the human brain has.

How many other massive spaceborne telescopes have we had on orbit?


There are some smaller ones but none like Hubble.


I reiterate the adjective "massive"...! ! ! ! !


I'm not confused at all. Some folks, however, think that because humans went
from Kitty Hawk to supersonic flight in less than half a century, and from
there to the Sea of Tranquility in another quarter century, that such progres
would continue on a linear path. It doesn't.


Not linear, but certainly with a certain degree of advancement.

I for one don't see it happening.

The Cassini mission is great, but what new technology or methodolgy are we
using?

Once upon a time, we built the thing. It was important enough to take
the risks and send it into space.

Even though it was known that the optics were defective.


But they were able to compensate for that.


Why not do it right the first time?


How does anyone know what's "right" the first time until somenthing HAS
been tried, and either found to work "as advertised", or return to the drawing
board?

How does man learn to do these things in space if we send machines to
try and do it?


Why should humans take unreasonable risks to do what can be done by machines?


What's "unreasonable"...?!?!

I MIGHT contract hepatitis or HIV in my profession, despite "religious"
use of PPE and "Universal Precautions"...

So...Considering that, do Nurses and Physicians just thrown up their arms
and say "unreasonable risk" and quit?

I'd hope not.

And I'd hope we'd move manned space flight forward from LEO.

And how do we "teach" a machine to do something if we ourselves don't
already know how it should be done?


It's done all the time. Look at the newest fly-by-wire military aircraft like
the joint services fighter. Its aerodynamically characteristics are such that
a
human pilot cannot fly it directly - takes too many corrections in too little
time. But a computer can fly it directly.


Uh huh.

And how does the computer "know" what's an "unusual attitude" and correct
it?

How does the computer know the difference between that same "unusual
attitude" as a result of loss-of-control (needs to be corrected) or a desired
input (the pilot deems it necessary to be in that "unusual attitude")...?!?!

The human pilot tells the computer what he/she wants the plane to do and the
computer figures out how to move the control surfaces to make that happen.


Uh huh.

And what if the computer refuses to let the pilot do it?

And how does that computer "know" what to do?

My point in the last couple of paragraphs is that persons who KNOW how to
fly teach (program, in this case) the computer what it meeds ot know.

No machine to date, and to the best of my knowledge, has taken it upon
itself to "learn" somehting it wasn't programmed with. (Shades of "COLOSSUS:
The Forbin Project")

More important, most car accidents are caused or exacerbated by human

error.
People not wearing seat belts, driving too fast, driving while impaired,

etc.
By comparison, the shuttle failures were caused by equipment troubles that
the crew could do nothing about.


Oh?


Yep.

Could the Columbia crew have gone EVA and fixed the busted shuttle tiles with
what was onboard that last mission?


No, they couldn't. But we could have put emergency stores on an unmanned
flight to send to them, or they may have been able to "lifeboat" at ISS.

Those scenarios have been the subject of public discussion before.

"Human Risk" and cost are the only two reasons they've not done it in the
past.

It cost us dearly with Columbia. Imagine if we had just put one MMP on
board each shuttle for one 30-60 minute pre-reentry EVA for Columbia (obviously
it wasn't an issue with

They were engineering errors if we patently accept the investigation's
reports. The errors were due to a failure of the people making the decisons.


In the case of Challenger, yes.

Thiokol said "go" after being coerced by NASA people to let Challenger
fly. Coerced by men...not robots.


Yep. Men from Reagan;s White House....


Nope...Men from NASA.

It was suggested that thios would place the crew at too much risk.


There's also the fact that a lot of flaws could not be fixed. If the Columbia
crew had lnown there was a problem with foam damage, could they have fixed
it?


Probably not.

But in the long run they more than likely might have survived the mission.
Again, we could have put extra stores on an unmanned loft or got them to ISS
until another shuttle could get to them...

The idea of a small "ROV" be built for the same purpose was made..

"Too much time and money".

I'll bet a bunch of MIT kids could have designed the thing as a class
project for less than a mil...


Designed, maybe. Built, tested and certified for manned space flight? No.


Why?

They couldn't put a package together that NASA could adopt and
incorporate?

From where are current NASA "rocket scientists" gleaned anyway?

Compare that against the loss we suffered.


Exactly. The humans made a wrong decision. Even though they were
professionals,
they messed up.


Oooops.

And any one of them or all of them could have stepped off a curb into
on-coming traffic.

I was once told that there are not really any "problems"...Just
solutions awaiting implementation!


Standard HR BS.


Jiiiiiiimmmmmmmmmm........

The facts a

Some problems have no solution. ("What is the exact value of pi expressed as
the ratio of two integers?).


And in what PRACTICAL applications of formulas using "pi" have we NOT been
able to incorporate it to effective use?

Some problems have a theoretical solution but it cannot be found in practice
(Traveling salesman problem)


Where to find a clean bed, cheap meal and female company?

NO PROBLEM!

Some problems have realizable solutions.


Time and effort. That's all it takes. Many problems are great and no
EASY solution is at hand. (ie: curing the cold, cancer, HIV, getting Lennie and
Brain to act like adults...etc etc etc)

I believe we'll find cures. I believe man will travel at "warp speeds".
Not today...Not even tomorrow...but one day...

I'm old enough to remember when the phrase "reaching for the moon" meant
someone was trying to do that which could not be done. Yet it was done.


Yep. I believe we will one day find outr how to go light speed or
better.
It's just a matter of time, money and effort.


No, it isn't.

At this point we do not know if such travel is possible...(SNIP TO...)


As it stands right now, our knowledge of physics says it cannot be done.


Fifty years ago our knowledge of physics said that the sound barrier was a
tuffy...

Ten years before that our knowledge of physics suggested the detonation of
a nuclear device would cause the whole world to explode at once.

Even after the Wright Brothers submitted evidence that they had "flown",
reputable scientists of the age were saying manned flight, and certainly
PRACTICAL manned flight would never happen.

Not a matter of better rockets or materials - it's the very nature of the

universe
that is the limit. Of course that knowledge could change! But at the present
time, human travel at or beyond the speed of light is *not* a matter of money
or effort; it's a matter of physical reality. Basic relativity physics, IOW.

And as Hans says so well:

"Reality does not care what you believe"


So far, I'd say that the human imagination, when properly interfaced with
human ingenuity and dedication, has done a pretty good job of making things
"happen".

I'd sure like to google-up these comments 50 years from now and see just
how far we progressed, and then either see if they exceeded expectation, or if
not, why not.

There was a time when it was seriously argued that some men had to be
enslaved,
either literally or economically, because nobody would voluntarily do those
jobs. That problem was solved.


Yep..We just look the other way at the border once in a while! =)


By saying that, even humorosly, you're saying you believe some people have to
be enslaved economically.


They don't HAVE to, Jim.

Most of those people coming across the border certainly see it as a step
up...

Would you KNOWINGLY put your self at risk to do what THEY do to get here
if you thought you were going to be enslaved?

Those people are desperate and determined to make a better life for
themselves and thier families. If they peceived themselves as being
"enslaved", they'd not voluntarily submit them selves to it by the
hundreds-of-thousands every year.

There was a time when it was seriously argued that women could not be
allowed
to vote because it would cause all kinds of problems. Turned out not to be

a
problem.


That's a matter of opinion.

Several political pundits have said that a lot of the "vote" that went
to Bill Clinton did so because some segment of women voters thought
he was more
handsome than President Bush, and thought that his rhetoric on women's
"issues" was "sweet".


And who are these "pundits"?


Take your pick. Wanna start at the top with ABC's anchors and work your
way down to UPN? It was the regular topic of the news "magazines" back in 92,
96 and 2000.

What is their data?


Who knows? Who cares? There were women willing to be on-camera and
acknowledge that they voted, in part, based upon looks and perception of
Clinton as "pro-woman".

Too bad they didn't know "pro-woman" just meant he wasn't gay.

Most of all, even if their claim is true, how is it any different from:


Men who won't vote for a black person?
Men who won't vote for a Roman Catholic? Or a Jew?
Men who won't vote for a person from a certain place or region?
Men who won't vote for someone because they "feel" he "cannot be trusted"?


None at all.

Too bad that there isn't a test to determine voter competency, huh...?!?!

There was a time when it was considered impossible to teach most children

to
read and write because their work was 'needed' in the farms, mills and
factories.


Obviously it's still true.


No, it isn't.


Sure it is.

Not as much in the United States, anymore, but certainly in a great many
OTHER nations of the world.

A very large part of our imports from India and Pakistan are made by
kids.


That may be - but we don't have to import those things.


You're right...we don't "have" to...

But we do...

Yes...it will still be there...but I for one am very disappointed that
after four decades of manned space travel, we still haven't done a darned
thing
to REALLY start exploring "space"...!


We haven't? I say we have!


To the degree we we COULD be exploring it?

I say no. We COULD have been walking on Mars this past summer during the
Earth/Mars approach. It would have been the ideal time, we had more than
enough time to plan for it, and we had the inertia to get there.

73

Steve, K4YZ






Steve Robeson K4CAP July 3rd 04 01:04 PM

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: Mike Coslo
Date: 7/2/2004 8:14 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

Steve Robeson K4CAP wrote:
Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/1/2004 6:32 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article , Mike Coslo writes:


N2EY wrote:



Ahh, but can you say the same for Tang flavored Teflon?

There was anembarrassing moment when a '60s era astronaut swore he'd never
drink the stuff ever again because of its GI tract effects on him. Trouble
was
he forgot he was on VOX...



I couldn't blame him...I thought (think) the stuff sucks.


Couldn't build more Saturns, as the tooling is gone, as well as the
supply path.

So we'd have to rebuild the tooling and supply systems in order to build

the
rockets. Which could take longer than it did the first time.



I'd certainly hope that engineering skills and contruction methodology
hadn't REGRESSED in the last four decades! =) Who's running this thing,
anyway? Ex-Army radio clerks ?


The problem isn't regression, the problem is that there are parts on
the engine that simply aren't made any more. One small example is that
when I was on tour down at the cape, we could look inside one of the
monsters. I don't even know if lacing cable is made any more. That's
just one thing, There are a lot of other parts that just aren't made any
more. So while we could in principle make the things again, and the
engineering drawings exist, it just ain't that simple.

More the pity. The Saturn's were beautiful, muscular brutes, all the
more impressive that they were made around 40 years ago. We haven't
matched them yet.

Quick Q. THe fuel and oxidizer combo on the Saturns was a bit different


from the typical. What was it?


Hmmmmm....I am not sure what you're getting at, Mike....The F1-s on the
1st stage burned kero and LOX. The subsequent stages were liquid hydrogen and
LOX, as I recall....

There were American "missionaries" trying to impose thier religion and
moral values on people supposedly too poor to eat or even buy a

Bible...(you
see thier kids on "Feed The Children" commercials...

BUT...They always seemed to have money to buy AK47's and ammunition.

Go figure...


Praise the ammunition and pass the Lord? 8^)


Exactly. Lot's of hungry little brown people toting Mr. Kalishnakov's
pride and joy.

The Russians found out the hard way. The Chinese learned, but they

also
learned how to keep people repressed and doing what they want them to do.


Allowing people to accumulate wealth while suppressing their political
freedoms is an interesting trick.


Sure is...I guess if they are fat, dumb and up-to-thier necks in cheap,
pirated US goods, theya re content to leave well enough alone ! ! !

BTW, China has just surpassed the US as an investment target. While we
still have people that rail on about an Ex president. Point is, get the
priorities straight, folks.


You're asking a nation full of people who not only elected, but RE-elected
a known liar and womanizer to "..get the priorities straight..", Mike..?!?!

You're an even bigger optomist than I, my Friend! =)

And how do we "teach" a machine to do something if we ourselves don't
already know how it should be done?


Robots my rosy red! I Wanna go there!


ta-DAAAAAAAAH!

HUMAN SPIRIT OF EXPLORATION! ! ! ! ! !

I was once told that there are not really any "problems"...Just

solutions
awaiting implementation!


So exactly how do we cure hunger, disease, poverty, and the fact that
there is a significant number of people that don't think any of the
above are a problem?


It's not that it's NOT a problem for me, Mike...but rather that it's not
bad enough for those people to take the tools given them and dig their way out.

The "answer", in too many of these places is to shoot whoever they
perceive as being responsible for them being that way.

Then the guy who got shot seeks revenge...Then the other guys wants to get
back at him for having dared to retaliate for what was "clearly" a valid attack
in the first place....

Etc Etc Etc...............

I'm in a rush, and that is enough for me.


That's one of the few "benefits" of working the late shift...My "time off"
is during hours that I usually don't get disturbed!

73

Steve, K4YZ






Steve Robeson K4CAP July 3rd 04 01:42 PM

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: (William)
Date: 7/2/2004 9:40 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...


This not amateur radio subject. No problem. Only other hum
raddio talk is all about field day. Field day nice outing in park,
fun. Not emergency training if scheduled years in advance.
Real emergencies not scheduled.


Real emergencies are not scheduled.

Emergency training is.

To date, you are not a part of it at any level, scheduled or otherwise.

The idiot keeps trying to engage me. Apparently he doesn't know what
persona non grata is.


Am I an "idiot" for trying to "engage" you, or are you an idiot for trying
to LOOK like YOU are ignoring me all-the-while addressing my comments in the
third person?

There were 24 messages in the filter today. Only three directly addressed
real radio issues. The rest were back-and-forth banter between you and Lennie
IRT Yours Truly. None of the messages addressing radio issues were authored by
you, Brain.

There IS an idiot here, Brian, but it's NOT me.

Try again.

Steve, K4YZ






William July 3rd 04 02:20 PM

(Len Over 21) wrote in message ...
In article ,
(William) writes:

The idiot keeps trying to engage me. Apparently he doesn't know what
persona non grata is.


:-)

If it wasn't written up in QST it doesn't exist.


Then QST needs to run a series on Pariah Hams.

QST over-emphasizes
the ham involvement of MARS and under-emphasizes the fact that
the U.S. Army started it in 1925 and now all three major military
service branches are involved in that Military Affiliate Radio System
as a self-standing radio system which MIGHT, but hardly ever does
for a fact, serve the long-existing regular military communications
facilities.


"Sorry Hans, MARS IS Amateur Radio." Hi, hi!

[did QST every write up anything on the Grecial Firebolt
exercises? I don't think so but then I don't read enough ham-only
"technical" material]


My last QST lays there unread. Didn't renew membership.

Now, in this thread, there's much "learned" palaver on the wrongs
and wrongs of U.S. spaceflight efforts between the two participants
who haven't gotten much beyond the Popular Science write-ups.
The Cassini-Huygens probes are considered another outstanding
success but the critics are highly critical. [maybe because ham
radio isn't essential to such efforts?]


The world passes them by and they just shake their fists.

Meanwhile, BPL is the spectre on the ham horizon but nobody
seems very concerned. Either they can't think beyond their
personal fantasies or they think that "CW will get through?"


They'll switch to MCW on all HF. Don't care about noise floor.

Some folks in here are so into the personal attack mode that
all they can do is carp and bark and toss snit at Cart Stevenson
for a mild rebuke against UPLC, a group that was arrogantly
snitting on amateur radio.



They hate Carl. He had a rational argument concerning the retention
of code testing, and it found favor within the FCC. He doesn't
worship at the Altar of St. Hiram, so he's the antichrist to them. If
it were within their power, Carl would be tied to a stake and burned.
Luckily only one PCTA thinks he can get a government bureaucrat to do
his dirtywork. And he's nuts.

Len Over 21 July 3rd 04 08:44 PM

In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

The idiot keeps trying to engage me. Apparently he doesn't know what
persona non grata is.


:-)

If it wasn't written up in QST it doesn't exist.


Then QST needs to run a series on Pariah Hams.

QST over-emphasizes
the ham involvement of MARS and under-emphasizes the fact that
the U.S. Army started it in 1925 and now all three major military
service branches are involved in that Military Affiliate Radio System
as a self-standing radio system which MIGHT, but hardly ever does
for a fact, serve the long-existing regular military communications
facilities.


"Sorry Hans, MARS IS Amateur Radio." Hi, hi!

[did QST every write up anything on the Grecial Firebolt
exercises? I don't think so but then I don't read enough ham-only
"technical" material]


My last QST lays there unread. Didn't renew membership.

Now, in this thread, there's much "learned" palaver on the wrongs
and wrongs of U.S. spaceflight efforts between the two participants
who haven't gotten much beyond the Popular Science write-ups.
The Cassini-Huygens probes are considered another outstanding
success but the critics are highly critical. [maybe because ham
radio isn't essential to such efforts?]


The world passes them by and they just shake their fists.

Meanwhile, BPL is the spectre on the ham horizon but nobody
seems very concerned. Either they can't think beyond their
personal fantasies or they think that "CW will get through?"


They'll switch to MCW on all HF. Don't care about noise floor.

Some folks in here are so into the personal attack mode that
all they can do is carp and bark and toss snit at Cart Stevenson
for a mild rebuke against UPLC, a group that was arrogantly
snitting on amateur radio.



They hate Carl. He had a rational argument concerning the retention
of code testing, and it found favor within the FCC. He doesn't
worship at the Altar of St. Hiram, so he's the antichrist to them. If
it were within their power, Carl would be tied to a stake and burned.
Luckily only one PCTA thinks he can get a government bureaucrat to do
his dirtywork. And he's nuts.


This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len

Mike Coslo July 4th 04 12:57 AM



Steve Robeson K4CAP wrote:
Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: Mike Coslo
Date: 7/2/2004 8:14 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

Steve Robeson K4CAP wrote:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/1/2004 6:32 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article , Mike Coslo writes:



N2EY wrote:


Ahh, but can you say the same for Tang flavored Teflon?

There was anembarrassing moment when a '60s era astronaut swore he'd never
drink the stuff ever again because of its GI tract effects on him. Trouble
was
he forgot he was on VOX...


I couldn't blame him...I thought (think) the stuff sucks.



Couldn't build more Saturns, as the tooling is gone, as well as the
supply path.

So we'd have to rebuild the tooling and supply systems in order to build


the

rockets. Which could take longer than it did the first time.


I'd certainly hope that engineering skills and contruction methodology
hadn't REGRESSED in the last four decades! =) Who's running this thing,
anyway? Ex-Army radio clerks ?


The problem isn't regression, the problem is that there are parts on
the engine that simply aren't made any more. One small example is that
when I was on tour down at the cape, we could look inside one of the
monsters. I don't even know if lacing cable is made any more. That's
just one thing, There are a lot of other parts that just aren't made any
more. So while we could in principle make the things again, and the
engineering drawings exist, it just ain't that simple.

More the pity. The Saturn's were beautiful, muscular brutes, all the
more impressive that they were made around 40 years ago. We haven't
matched them yet.

Quick Q. THe fuel and oxidizer combo on the Saturns was a bit different



from the typical. What was it?


Hmmmmm....I am not sure what you're getting at, Mike....The F1-s on the
1st stage burned kero and LOX. The subsequent stages were liquid hydrogen and
LOX, as I recall....


You're correct It was just a question, an aside.


There were American "missionaries" trying to impose thier religion and
moral values on people supposedly too poor to eat or even buy a


Bible...(you

see thier kids on "Feed The Children" commercials...

BUT...They always seemed to have money to buy AK47's and ammunition.

Go figure...


Praise the ammunition and pass the Lord? 8^)



Exactly. Lot's of hungry little brown people toting Mr. Kalishnakov's
pride and joy.


The Russians found out the hard way. The Chinese learned, but they


also

learned how to keep people repressed and doing what they want them to do.


Allowing people to accumulate wealth while suppressing their political
freedoms is an interesting trick.



Sure is...I guess if they are fat, dumb and up-to-thier necks in cheap,
pirated US goods, theya re content to leave well enough alone ! ! !


BTW, China has just surpassed the US as an investment target. While we
still have people that rail on about an Ex president. Point is, get the
priorities straight, folks.



You're asking a nation full of people who not only elected, but RE-elected
a known liar and womanizer to "..get the priorities straight..", Mike..?!?!


The people that elected him twice aren't the ones complaining about
him. It's the people in power now. And last time I checked, while they
hold a substantial majority in the House, a majority in the senate, and
the Executive branch also, what I hear from most of the genre is whining
about him, Democrats and the Evil Liberal.

*That* is a tacit admission of incompetence. Yet they don't even
realize it. They are too busy blaming.

You're an even bigger optomist than I, my Friend! =)


Heh, I knew someone would eventually see that part of me!! ;^)




And how do we "teach" a machine to do something if we ourselves don't
already know how it should be done?


Robots my rosy red! I Wanna go there!



ta-DAAAAAAAAH!

HUMAN SPIRIT OF EXPLORATION! ! ! ! ! !


Yup. That's what it is all about AFAIAC.


I was once told that there are not really any "problems"...Just


solutions

awaiting implementation!


So exactly how do we cure hunger, disease, poverty, and the fact that
there is a significant number of people that don't think any of the
above are a problem?



It's not that it's NOT a problem for me, Mike...but rather that it's not
bad enough for those people to take the tools given them and dig their way out.

The "answer", in too many of these places is to shoot whoever they
perceive as being responsible for them being that way.

Then the guy who got shot seeks revenge...Then the other guys wants to get
back at him for having dared to retaliate for what was "clearly" a valid attack
in the first place....

Etc Etc Etc...............


The whole problem in the middle east was probably caused by someone
taking a dump in his neighbor's olive grove! ;^)

I'm in a rush, and that is enough for me.



That's one of the few "benefits" of working the late shift...My "time off"
is during hours that I usually don't get disturbed!


- Mike KB3EIA -


N2EY July 5th 04 02:53 AM

In article , (Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/2/2004 5:40 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:


So if they can do it for less money, and private money at that, why should
we spend billions of tax dollars on it?

"SpaceShip" 1 barely went suborbital.


That's as high as X-15 ever went.


But other than to use it to demonstrate the VERY basic theories of
rudimentary manuevering in a near-vacuum, what did it do?


SpaceShipOne or X-15?

What can a sub-orbital ship hope to offer that aircraft operating at
lower altitudes don't alread offfer?


Not much on their own. But such ships are the first step to low-cost manned
orbital missions. An X-15 flight cost far less than any Mercury mission, for
example.

The machines can't fix them selves enroute or on-site.


So you build more reliable machines. Learning how to do that is an
earthbound benefit of a space program!


And if you're not "thre" to witness the failure and know what failed, how
do you fix it?


Depends on the failure. Many failures give warnings via telemetry. Others show
up in simulation. For example, one of the Voyager scan platforms froze up, yet
was remotely fixed by analysis of an earthbound simulator.

I am reminded of pilots returning and trying to relate thier perceptions
of problems, and how to fix them.


Remember also pilots who never got back.

The communications gear was a no-brainer. AFCS (Automatic Flight
COntrol
System) in the CH53 was very dynamic, even for the antiquated systems in the
older A models...Nothing substituted for getting on the bird and experiencing
the abnormal behaviour first had.


But the CH53 was intended to be a human-piloted aircraft, used in a variety of
roles.

Many human ills cannot be self-repaired, either.


Any your point is...?!?!


That the risk must be balanced against the benefits.

Look at Cassini-Huygens - more than 7 years in space and performing
perfectly.


Uh huh...Against how many that never left the pad, or failed enroute?


Such as?

Would you rather humans not explore Mars, Venus or the outer gas-giant planets
at all until manned missions can be sent?

Those "robot"


Robot what?

I am willing to bet that the Brit's "Beagle 2" mission burnt up on
entering the Martian atmosphere.


Why? What data supports that?


"................................................. .."

(sound of signal from probe after "re-entry")


Burning up is only one of many explanations. The silence could also be caused
by:

- Some part of the reentry system failed that did *not* result in burn-up
(parachute didn't open, hard landing damage, etc.

- Some part of communications system failed

- Landing site anomalies

Maybe had it been a manned mission, the
1/10th of a degree attitude adjustment necessary to PREVENT it could have
been made.


Doubtful. The machines are faster and more accurate at such tasks than
humans.


Not always.


Can you think of an example?

Know why I carry my stethoscope at all times in the ER despite a
plethora of "non-invasive diagnostic devices"...?!?!

Because those "machines" are NOT always faster and more accurate than a
human. Nor do those machines have the ability to "filter out" the audible
ectopics that the human brain has.


That's good but the problem of reentry is completely different. Can you
estimate a 1/10th degree angle error better an faster than an automatic system
designed for the job? Particularly in 3 axes at spacecraft speeds?

How many other massive spaceborne telescopes have we had on orbit?


There are some smaller ones but none like Hubble.


I reiterate the adjective "massive"...! ! ! ! !


Hubble is unmanned. One of those robots. Its aiming accuracy is considerably
better than 1/10 of a degree, I think.

I'm not confused at all. Some folks, however, think that because humans went
from Kitty Hawk to supersonic flight in less than half a century, and from
there to the Sea of Tranquility in another quarter century, that such
progress would continue on a linear path. It doesn't.


Not linear, but certainly with a certain degree of advancement.


And we have lots of advancement.

I for one don't see it happening.

I do.

The Cassini mission is great, but what new technology or methodolgy are
we using?


Several:

- Cassini carries with it the probe Huygens.
- Cassini used gravitational boosts from other planets to get to Saturn years
faster than with rocket power alone.
- Cassini has smarter computers, better sensors, etc.

Once upon a time, we built the thing. It was important enough to take
the risks and send it into space.

Even though it was known that the optics were defective.

But they were able to compensate for that.


Why not do it right the first time?


How does anyone know what's "right" the first time until somenthing HAS
been tried, and either found to work "as advertised", or return to the
drawing board?


That's what engineering is all about.

How does man learn to do these things in space if we send machines to
try and do it?


Why should humans take unreasonable risks to do what can be done by
machines?


What's "unreasonable"...?!?!


1 in 75 chance of total loss of mission crew and equipment, I think.

I MIGHT contract hepatitis or HIV in my profession, despite "religious"
use of PPE and "Universal Precautions"...


Do you the chances of that are 1 in 75?

So...Considering that, do Nurses and Physicians just thrown up their arms
and say "unreasonable risk" and quit?

I'd hope not.


No - but what they have done is to increase the precautions taken - with *all*
patients. This costs more money and time, and reduces "productivity". But it's
necessary. And the risks are far less than 1 in 75.

And I'd hope we'd move manned space flight forward from LEO.


Me too.

And how do we "teach" a machine to do something if we ourselves don't
already know how it should be done?


It's done all the time. Look at the newest fly-by-wire military aircraft
like
the joint services fighter. Its aerodynamically characteristics are such
that
a
human pilot cannot fly it directly - takes too many corrections in too
little
time. But a computer can fly it directly.


Uh huh.


Absolutely true.

And how does the computer "know" what's an "unusual attitude" and
correct it?


How does the computer know the difference between that same "unusual
attitude" as a result of loss-of-control (needs to be corrected) or a desired
input (the pilot deems it necessary to be in that "unusual attitude")...?!?!


You misunderstand how those systems work. Their job is to figure out how to get
the plane to fly the way the human pilot wants it to.

The human pilot tells the computer what he/she wants the plane to do and the
computer figures out how to move the control surfaces to make that happen.


Uh huh.


Yep. Look it up.

And what if the computer refuses to let the pilot do it?


It doesn't happen.

If the computers fail badly enough, the pilot has to eject. There's no direct
mechanical link from the control stick and foot pedals to the aircraft control
surfaces. That's what fly-by-wire means.

And how does that computer "know" what to do?


Programming.

My point in the last couple of paragraphs is that persons who KNOW how
to fly teach (program, in this case) the computer what it meeds ot know.


And my point is that the computer does things the humans cannot. It makes an
unflyable plane flyable.

No machine to date, and to the best of my knowledge, has taken it upon
itself to "learn" somehting it wasn't programmed with. (Shades of "COLOSSUS:
The Forbin Project")


Not the point.

More important, most car accidents are caused or exacerbated by human
error.
People not wearing seat belts, driving too fast, driving while impaired,
etc.
By comparison, the shuttle failures were caused by equipment troubles that
the crew could do nothing about.

Oh?


Yep.

Could the Columbia crew have gone EVA and fixed the busted shuttle tiles
with what was onboard that last mission?


No, they couldn't. But we could have put emergency stores on an
unmanned
flight to send to them, or they may have been able to "lifeboat" at ISS.


Perhaps an unmanned supply mission could have been sent - that would be a job
for robots! But the orbits of Columbia and ISS were simply too different.

Those scenarios have been the subject of public discussion before.

"Human Risk" and cost are the only two reasons they've not done it in
the past.

It cost us dearly with Columbia. Imagine if we had just put one MMP on
board each shuttle for one 30-60 minute pre-reentry EVA for Columbia
(obviously it wasn't an issue with


With what?

Again, if the crew had done an EVA and seen the damage, they could not fix it
anyway.

They were engineering errors if we patently accept the investigation's
reports. The errors were due to a failure of the people making the

decisons.

In the case of Challenger, yes.

Thiokol said "go" after being coerced by NASA people to let Challenger
fly. Coerced by men...not robots.


Yep. Men from Reagan;s White House....


Nope...Men from NASA.


Who were pressured by Reagan's White House. Documented fact - the White House
wanted the "teacher in space" program to go. It had already been delayed. The
whole shuttle program was way behind schedule. But rather than admit that the
schedule was simply unrealistic. and should be revised, pressure to launch was
fed down the chain of command.

Try to remember what the mindset was back then. NASA had *never* lost *anyone*
in space before Challenger. The Apollo 1 fire, horrible as it was, did not
result from a rocket or reentry system failure. Apollo 13 got back safely. At
least some folks thought NASA was "overcautious".

It was suggested that thios would place the crew at too much risk.


There's also the fact that a lot of flaws could not be fixed. If the
Columbia
crew had lnown there was a problem with foam damage, could they have fixed
it?


Probably not.

But in the long run they more than likely might have survived the
mission.


How?

Again, we could have put extra stores on an unmanned loft or got them to ISS
until another shuttle could get to them...


See above.

The idea of a small "ROV" be built for the same purpose was made..

"Too much time and money".

I'll bet a bunch of MIT kids could have designed the thing as a class
project for less than a mil...


Designed, maybe. Built, tested and certified for manned space flight? No.


Why?


Because there's a lot of work to getting something actually built, tested, and
certified as safe to take into space. Particularly something new.

They couldn't put a package together that NASA could adopt and
incorporate?


Still has to meet the requirements. For example, if a component in the package
- *any* component - decides to outgas certain chemicals, all kinds of problems
can happen. So the components used all need to be certified and tested. And the
manufacturing and assembly processes need to be certified and tested. Look at
how long it takes to build and launch an OSCAR..

From where are current NASA "rocket scientists" gleaned anyway?


Lots of places.

Compare that against the loss we suffered.


Exactly. The humans made a wrong decision. Even though they were
professionals, they messed up.


Oooops.


Happens.

And any one of them or all of them could have stepped off a curb into
on-coming traffic.


But that would not have put other people's lives at risk - only their own.

I was once told that there are not really any "problems"...Just
solutions awaiting implementation!


Standard HR BS.


Jiiiiiiimmmmmmmmmm........


It's standard HR BS. That's a plain, simple fact. Nothing is ever difficult for
the person who doesn't have to do the work.

The facts a

Some problems have no solution. ("What is the exact value of pi expressed as
the ratio of two integers?).


And in what PRACTICAL applications of formulas using "pi" have we NOT
been able to incorporate it to effective use?


Not the point. All values of pi used by humans in real-world problems are
approximations.

Some problems have a theoretical solution but it cannot be found in practice
(Traveling salesman problem)


Where to find a clean bed, cheap meal and female company?

NO PROBLEM!


You don't know what the traveling salesman problem is, do you?

I'll explain it in another post.

Some problems have realizable solutions.


Time and effort. That's all it takes. Many problems are great and no
EASY solution is at hand. (ie: curing the cold, cancer, HIV,


These problems may or may not have complete solutions. For example, there may
be types of cancer that simply cannot be cured - but they may be preventable.

getting Lennie and Brain to act like adults...etc etc etc)


I repeat:

Some problems have no solution.

Some problems have a theoretical solution but it cannot be found in practice

I believe we'll find cures.


I do too. Or preventatives, which are even better. (I don;t think a true cure
for, say, polio was ever developed. But vaccines were)/

I believe man will travel at "warp speeds".


Perhaps humans will. But it may be simply impossible.

Not today...Not even tomorrow...but one day...


Only if it is possible. Reality does not care what you believe.

I'm old enough to remember when the phrase "reaching for the moon" meant
someone was trying to do that which could not be done. Yet it was done.

Yep. I believe we will one day find outr how to go light speed or
better.
It's just a matter of time, money and effort.


No, it isn't.

At this point we do not know if such travel is possible...(SNIP TO...)


As it stands right now, our knowledge of physics says it cannot be done.


Fifty years ago our knowledge of physics said that the sound barrier was
a tuffy...


No, it did not. Fifty years ago (1954) it had been broken many times.

Ten years before that our knowledge of physics suggested the detonation
of a nuclear device would cause the whole world to explode at once.


Not true.

Even after the Wright Brothers submitted evidence that they had "flown",
reputable scientists of the age were saying manned flight, and certainly
PRACTICAL manned flight would never happen.


Has anyone submitted evidence of humans traveling faster than light?

Not a matter of better rockets or materials - it's the very nature of the
universe
that is the limit. Of course that knowledge could change! But at the present
time, human travel at or beyond the speed of light is *not* a matter of
money
or effort; it's a matter of physical reality. Basic relativity physics, IOW.

And as Hans says so well:

"Reality does not care what you believe"


So far, I'd say that the human imagination, when properly interfaced
with
human ingenuity and dedication, has done a pretty good job of making things
"happen".


Only things that are possible. Bullets and V2 rockets broke the "sound barrier"
before the X-1 did. The question was not "could something go faster than sound"
but "how do you make an airplane that can do it?"

Nothing goes at light speed except light (in the broadest sense). Nothing with
a nonzero rest mass has been accelerated to or beyond light speed. Basic
relativity physics.

I'd sure like to google-up these comments 50 years from now and see just
how far we progressed, and then either see if they exceeded expectation, or
if not, why not.


You don't seem to understand the difference between knowing something is
possible and not knowing how to do it, and not knowing if something is possible
at all.

Specifically, the current knowledge of physics says that "warp speed" is simply
not possible because the universe isn't built to allow it.

There was a time when it was seriously argued that some men had to be
enslaved,
either literally or economically, because nobody would voluntarily do

those
jobs. That problem was solved.

Yep..We just look the other way at the border once in a while! =)


By saying that, even humorosly, you're saying you believe some people have
to be enslaved economically.


They don't HAVE to, Jim.


I know it. Do you?

Most of those people coming across the border certainly see it as a step
up...


Doesn't mean it's right.

Would you KNOWINGLY put your self at risk to do what THEY do to get here
if you thought you were going to be enslaved?


Doesn't mean it's right.

Those people are desperate and determined to make a better life for
themselves and thier families. If they peceived themselves as being
"enslaved", they'd not voluntarily submit them selves to it by the
hundreds-of-thousands every year.


All sorts of people took all sorts of risks to get to the USA.

There was a time when it was seriously argued that women could not be
allowed
to vote because it would cause all kinds of problems. Turned out not to be

a
problem.

That's a matter of opinion.

Several political pundits have said that a lot of the "vote" that went
to Bill Clinton did so because some segment of women voters thought
he was more
handsome than President Bush, and thought that his rhetoric on women's
"issues" was "sweet".


And who are these "pundits"?


Take your pick. Wanna start at the top with ABC's anchors and work your
way down to UPN? It was the regular topic of the news "magazines" back in
92, 96 and 2000.


Show us.

What is their data?


Who knows? Who cares?


I do.

There were women willing to be on-camera and
acknowledge that they voted, in part, based upon looks and perception of
Clinton as "pro-woman".


How many?

Too bad they didn't know "pro-woman" just meant he wasn't gay.


Means a lot more than that.

Most of all, even if their claim is true, how is it any different from:


Men who won't vote for a black person?
Men who won't vote for a Roman Catholic? Or a Jew?
Men who won't vote for a person from a certain place or region?
Men who won't vote for someone because they "feel" he "cannot be trusted"?


None at all.


Exactly.

Too bad that there isn't a test to determine voter competency,
huh...?!?!


There is. But it only applies to naturalized citizens.

There was a time when it was considered impossible to teach most children

to
read and write because their work was 'needed' in the farms, mills and
factories.

Obviously it's still true.


No, it isn't.


Sure it is.

Not as much in the United States, anymore, but certainly in a great many
OTHER nations of the world.


Only because they believe it to be true.

A very large part of our imports from India and Pakistan are made by
kids.


That may be - but we don't have to import those things.


You're right...we don't "have" to...

But we do...

Because too many people place low price above other considerations.

Yes...it will still be there...but I for one am very disappointed that
after four decades of manned space travel, we still haven't done a darned
thing
to REALLY start exploring "space"...!


We haven't? I say we have!


To the degree we we COULD be exploring it?


How much more of your money are you willing to spend?

I say no. We COULD have been walking on Mars this past summer during
the Earth/Mars approach.


How do you know?

It would have been the ideal time,


If you say that, you don't understand much about how such missions actually
work. Particularly the orbital mechanics of getting from here to there and
back.

we had more than
enough time to plan for it, and we had the inertia to get there.


Easy to say if you don't have to actually do it.

Tell us how big a manned Mars mission ship would have to be in order to get to
Mars and back, carrying all the supplies, spares and equipment needed. Or give
us an alternative scenario, such as sending supply ships on ahead to Martian
orbit - *with details*. Tell us how long the trip would be, and what the
relative planetary positions would be at the start, Martian landing, and
return.

Tell us how those who land on Mars would deal with the cold, wind, and dust.

Most of all tell us what it would all cost, and what we would do that could not
be done by robots.

73 de Jim, N2EY

N2EY July 5th 04 12:57 PM

In article , (Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 6/30/2004 7:13 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:


Then if we're not spending the money now with no more than we're doing

in
space, how could this make it any worse?


Because it diverts money, people, and attention away from solving those
problems. Which gets priority - space or surface transportation?


Why not both?


Not enough money.

The only difference here is that you're asking Joe Average to be ready
to
give up his/her SUV (or at least keep it garaged a lot more) and they don't
want to do it.


No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.

I've heard that same argument used to finish off Apollo.


By Nixon...


By COngress who pushed him to cancel it.


And he did it.

We KO'd Apollo, yet schools are (in your estimation) no better off.


That's not what I wrote.


Not in those exact words, but that's what you have been saying.


Not at all.

Do you think are schools are the best in the world?

And NASA is manhandling those school board members to the ground and
stealing the money from them?


No, but the Feds hand out unfunded mandates that the schools must meet. How
about this: Any Federal mandate must also carry with it funds to make them
happen?


Yes, they should carry the funds.

That's a start.

But "unfunded federal mandates" are not what are causing the problems
in ANY of the school districts around here.


Are you sure? If the feds require something that costs $$, the locals have to
pay for it. Takes money from other things.

I don't think so. Besides, why should defeating gay marriage cost taxpayers
any
money at all? Indeed, why should it be defeated - if gay people can get
'married' (in the legal sense), they'll pay more taxes because of the income
tax marriage penalty, thereby raising tax revenues.


Why, indeed.

Say, there's the money for your expanded space program!


Uh huh.


Why not?

It WAS a problem then. It's a worse one now.


Yep. Because four presidents since then did not make it a priority.


Because they weren't the one's without water to drink or bathe in, nor
will the Predident's be without transportation.


There you go.

Things are NOT so fine now, but not yet to disaster proportions, but
that
light at the end of the tunnel is NOT salvation! It's the on-coming

train!

What *are* you talking about?

Drought.


Where?


You have GOT to be KIDDING me, Jim...?!?!

No.

How about just about everything west of Little Rock and south of
Seattle?

Too many people using too much water, that's all.

Declining oil reserves.


Yep.

Internal security of our own borders.


That's because we play the game at both ends. On the one hand, we say we
want
security. On the other hand, we want the cheap immigrant labor and the money
tourists and students spend here.


We can still have tighter security and keep those cotton-pickers and
panty raiders coming, Jim...


Really? How do we separate the real students?

I wonder what they'd cost today to build? I wonder what the cost of

the
decaying cities will be when those cities can no longer sustain thier
populations, and the people go elsewhere to live?


Perhaps the bigger question is this: Why are so many people living in arid
areas? Why do they expect to live as if they are not in a desert?


Southern California wasn't that "arid" 50 years ago.


Yes, it was. What made Southern California possible - LA in particular - were
enormous irrigation projects. Most of them were at least partly federally
funded. Heck, the Colorado river no longer reaches the ocean - *all* of its
water is diverted.

The truth is that Southern California could not support its population if the
water wasn't brought from many miles away.

We will force the building of NEW infrastructure wherever these people
wind up, and the old cities will have to be refurbished somehow.


That's because people do not connect their lifestyles with the environmental
and resource costs.


Yet "they" blame it on "them" (the government) for not "doing something"
about it.


Because they think it's their "right", without considering their
responsibility.

Ultimately I think they will have to still build the plants that
should
ahve started in the 70's, and it will cost even more then.


And who will pay?


Who do you THINK will pay, Jim?

You drink water?


I live east of the Mississippi. I pay for the water systems here. Why should I
pay for SoCal's water too?

Like from 400MHZ to over 5GHZ.


Enough RF on a single frquency desenses the front end. That's all it takes.


I doubt that the military satellites are controlled on ONE discreet
frequency, Jim.


Doesn't matter. Say there's a broadband amplifier on the sat covering 400 to
2000 MHz. A strong-enough signal anywhere in that range will overload it and
none of the signals will get through.

When was the last time a CNG tanker or railroad tank car exploded at all?


Hmm?


Well, I still see the Manned Space Program as beiong over forty years
old,
and only 17 Americans have died in direct space flight operations or
preparations.


Out of how many that have flown?


Hmmmmmm.....

Six Mercury Flights: 6

Ten Gemini Flights: 20 (12 flights...Only 10 were manned)

17 Apollo flights: 51

Apollo Soyuz: 3

Skylab (3 msns) 9

Shuttle Missions: 560 (112 missions, average 5 persons per
mission)
_____
649 (give or take a couple)

Of course if you want to get REAL nit-picky, we can discount folks like
Storey Musgrave and others who have flown more than one, so we'll just give
you
the benefit of the doubt here and say 640.

That's less than 3 percent of the American manned space effort to date.
That means that over 97 percent of all American manned space missions are
successful.


That's not very good at all. Particularly given the enormous cost of a mission.


3 percent loss rate is about 1 in 33 - that's even worse than the 1 in 75 I
quoted.

And that doesn't take into account the crews shuttled to and from MIR.


The boosters for the Shuttle exploded once, we fixed that problem.

Then another problem surfaced. Is it really fixed?

This time it was FOD to the leading edges of the wings.

Not the same...certainly not "over and over".

Dead is dead. Two orbiters and their crews a total loss.

Yes. Dead is dead. They were tragedies, and we learned from them. I

do
not consider thier sacrifices as a "total loss".


"Total loss" meaning "no survivors and all equipment destroyed"


NOT a total loss as in "lesson learned and not repeated".


Has the problem which caused the Columbia loss really been fixed?

Do you know if we employed this pattern of "completely stop and
re-engieer
the problem" to the automobile, we wouldn't have over 50,000 a YEAR dead on
our highwyas...And most of them weren't doing a THING worthy of thier deaths,
Jim.

I know. I see a lot of them.


Compute the highway death rate compared to trips taken, miles driven, etc. It's
a lot lower than 1 in 75.

And *most* accidents are caused by driver error, not mechanical failure.

Just one example: How many accident victims do you see who would have lived, or
been significantly less injured, if they had used seat belts?

They never got there because they quit. They spent thier money
elsewhere.
It wasn't that they couldn't.


They couldn't do it in time.


And they STILL could have done it.


I don;t think so.

Only money and "priorities" stopped them. Too bad.


Why? If you're right, maybe they could have got there first.

If they land ONE man on the Moon in the next decade, that will be one
more
than WE have done in the last forty years ! ! !

So? The moon isn't ours.

The Gulf of Siddra isn't "ours" either yet we patrol it with a Carrier
Battle Group regularly.


You might ask why that is necessary.


I may ask why it ISN'T important to advance manned space technology
after all it's contributed to modern science.

The differene with the Moon is that anyone who can get there can make
use
of what ever resources they find there. If it isn't us, it will be someone
else. I would rather it BE us.


Me too but until there is some resource worth getting, there are better
things
to spend the money and resources on.


How do you know the resources aren't there until we get there and REALLY
explore? So far all we did was a "pit stop", got a few trinkets and baubels
and moved on.


Analysis of what was found showed nothing of commercial value in the rocks.

Then instead of tellingus what "can't" be done because of a lack of
funding, tell us what CAN be done WITH adequate funding...And money spent
SMARTLY, not just thrown into the pot and done with as you will.....


I'm telling you what is practical and what isn't. Blank-check spending isn't
practical.


If we don't even explore the OPTIONS, Jim, how will we ever know what's
practical?


How much more of your own money are you willing to spend?

Other people dream of doing great things. Engineers do them.

Engieneers do them when adequately funded!


How much has SpaceShipOne cost?


How far would SpaceShipOne have gotten if it wasn't bankrolled with
$25M...?!?!


Wasn't tax money, though. If a billionaire wants to bankroll a space mission,
no problem!

How far DID it get? High altitude research balloons do the same thing a
lot cheaper AND since the 1930's or 40's.


Your point?

DaVinci dreamed of a great many things that have only been made
practical
in the last 100 years...Because we spent the money on research to develop

the
materials to let the enginees make it happen!


DaVinci sketched vague ideas. It took a lot of time, work and development to
make real machines.


Uh huh.


Yep.

The "Voyager" was a vague idea on a napkin.


Then the engineers made it reality.

DaVinci's "vague ideas" were pretty detailed for the era. Imagine what
he
could ahve done had he had the materials with which to really do them.


His ideas were mostly junk. He didn't have the resources, period. Those who
actually did the things he sletched didn't need him;, they got to those ideas
on their own.

I am not "avoiding" anything Jim.


You're avoiding saying how many more tax dollars you're willing to pay.
That's
the bottom line. People are all for all sorts of things until it comes time
to
pay for them. Then they scream bloody murder about being ripped off.

I point blank said earlier that I didn't have all the answers.


Then understand that you can't have everything you want for free.


Who said free?


You did.

I am willing to see my taxes spent on a practical space program!


Are you willing to see your taxes raised to pay for it?

I just know that we are NOT doing ANYthing to move the program forward
today.


I disagree. The Mars rover missions are a great step forward.
Cassini/Huygens
is reaching Saturn - be prepared for a summer of wonders from the ringed
planet.


Pictures from a robot.


Yep. Great stuff. Advances modern science.

The same information that we've gained on prior fly-by's and with
terrestrial methods.


Not at all. Density waves in the rings - nobody saw that before.

The recent deployments only bear that out.

They prove the technology is no damn good. It's a spectrum polluter. It's
just plain stupid.

They proved that THIS method is a spectrum polluter.


The *concept* is just plain stupid. Did you see my post about the stormwater
ditch? That's what BPL is electrically equivalent to.

Can there NEVER be a development that might work?


Depends what you mean by "work". The systems do "work" in the sense that
they
transmit data from A to B. The problem is that they leak RF all over the
place
because the power lines are simply leaky at RF frequencies. They radiate.
It's
basic physics. Wires with RF in them radiate, and long unshileded wires way
up
in the air with HF in them radiate really well. Various forms of coding and
such simply don't fix the basic problem.

Now if someone wants to install shielded power lines and equipment, a BPL
system can work without interference. But such a system would cost more to
build than simply running new coax or fiber.


Yes, it will.

So the end result is that it's simply a bad idea in the first place.

73 de Jim, N2EY

William July 5th 04 10:57 PM

(Len Over 21) wrote in message ...


This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!


To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)


It's all just a matter of ego.

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.


Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.


Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)


They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len


Never knew the man, but he is legend.

Steve Robeson K4CAP July 6th 04 09:50 AM

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 7/5/2004 6:57 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From:
PAMNO (N2EY)
Date: 6/30/2004 7:13 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

In article ,

(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:


Then if we're not spending the money now with no more than we're doing
in
space, how could this make it any worse?

Because it diverts money, people, and attention away from solving those
problems. Which gets priority - space or surface transportation?


Why not both?


Not enough money.


Sure there is. It's just a matter of priorities.

The only difference here is that you're asking Joe Average to be ready
to
give up his/her SUV (or at least keep it garaged a lot more) and they don't
want to do it.


No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.


That's what I said, Jim...Joe Average doesn't want to give up his/her
SUV. To do so would be to take some responsibility for participating in
helping the enviroment.

Steve, K4YZ








Steve Robeson K4CAP July 6th 04 10:13 AM

Subject: BPL - UPLC -Repeat the lie three times and claim it for truth
From: (William)
Date: 7/5/2004 4:57 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...


This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!


To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?


If that message isn't a troll, I'd like to know what is.

"...radio brother"....?!?! Must be a DJ at an ethnic radio station.

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)


It's all just a matter of ego.


He was talking about you, Brain..."...fibs of thier exploits" sums you up
very nicely.

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.


Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.


It get's through if you know how to use it.

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.


Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.


ROTMFFLMMFAO!

LOOK WHO'S TALKING ABOUT WHO'S "REMAINING" IN THIS "SORRY" GROUP ! ! ! ! !


Brain..it's people like you and the Left Coast Scumbag who MAKE it sorry!

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)


They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.


Been there. Done that. Before I reached puberty.

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.


Never knew the man, but he is legend.


"Legend"...?!?! As in "T5/N0IMD"...?!?!

Steve, K4YZ








Len Over 21 July 6th 04 06:38 PM

In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...

This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!


To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?


Yes. What wasn't mentioned was the demand that non-amateur
radio hobbyists MUST drink from different fountains and use the
"special" restrooms. :-)

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)


It's all just a matter of ego.


NO!? Say it isn't so... :-)

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.


Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.


Right! That's why all the other radio services rely on morse! :-)

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.


Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.


Yes. Weiner von Brawn and his sidekick in PA. :-)

Isn't all so much fun to have a private "ham" chat room to talk all
about the space program, national economics, traveling salesmen,
the educational system, and other assorted "ham interest" items?

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)


They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.


If either one cancels their Popular Science subscription, we won't
know the answers to all those profound questions of "ham interest"
policy problems.

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len


Never knew the man, but he is legend.


...celebrated in song and story forever, the founder of the Service.
A real firecracker that put sparklers in the eyes of all worshippers.
[shipping extra cost]

:-)



Len Over 21 July 6th 04 06:38 PM

In article , PAMNO
(N2EY) writes:


If you say that, you don't understand much about how such missions actually
work. Particularly the orbital mechanics of getting from here to there and
back.

we had more than
enough time to plan for it, and we had the inertia to get there.


Easy to say if you don't have to actually do it.


How many times did you do it? :-)


Tell us how big a manned Mars mission ship would have to be in order to get to
Mars and back, carrying all the supplies, spares and equipment needed. Or give
us an alternative scenario, such as sending supply ships on ahead to Martian
orbit - *with details*. Tell us how long the trip would be, and what the
relative planetary positions would be at the start, Martian landing, and
return.

Tell us how those who land on Mars would deal with the cold, wind, and dust.


Use morse? :-)

Most of all tell us what it would all cost, and what we would do that could

not
be done by robots.


I'm curious as to how the "Buro" would handle those interplanetary QSLs!

:-)

Gee...it's so nice with this private little chat room for extra morsemen
and finding out How The Space Boys Do It! So interesting hearing from
the mighty space biz insiders...nothing dull and uninformative like ham
radio policy and hearing how morse is the ultimate mode for all space
communications, getting through when nothing else willlllll......

You guys have wayyyyyyy too much imagination or have a very good
stash of high-grade powder...

LHA / WMD

Len Over 21 July 6th 04 06:38 PM

In article , PAMNO
(N2EY) writes:


So the end result is that it's simply a bad idea in the first place.


...the wagging finger wags, and having wagged, moves on... :-)

So, just how did this segue from BPL-PLC ever radiate into outer
space and all the "informed discussion" between two "veterans of
the space program?"

It's just so nice to have this little private chat room where all the
extra morsemen can chat up their mighty adventures with NASA
and all those spaceships. Interplanetary QSOs? QSL?

Have a QSO with Weiner von Brawn the "next time he is in
Huntsville" and get the latest scoop on wazzup.

Beep, beep.

LHA / WMD

William July 7th 04 12:42 AM

(Len Over 21) wrote in message ...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...

This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!


To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?


Yes. What wasn't mentioned was the demand that non-amateur
radio hobbyists MUST drink from different fountains and use the
"special" restrooms. :-)


Welp, if they were available, I'd use them too. Some kind of
fanatical rabid love of code develops after drinking from the Chalice
of Morse.

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)


It's all just a matter of ego.


NO!? Say it isn't so... :-)


Yup. Sad but true.

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.


Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.


Right! That's why all the other radio services rely on morse! :-)


They may have to. And amateur radio operators will lead the way to
salvation.

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.


Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.


Yes. Weiner von Brawn and his sidekick in PA. :-)


Wheiner (can be pronounced either "wee-ner" or "why-ner") keeps trying
to make friends.

Isn't all so much fun to have a private "ham" chat room to talk all
about the space program, national economics, traveling salesmen,
the educational system, and other assorted "ham interest" items?


And arguing with CBers. They impress people wherever they go. If
they don't immediately get the attention they think they deserve, they
thump their chests a few times to make their "achievements" more
visible. I really do wish the FCC would issue some kind of combat
infantry badge to these guys.

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)


They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.


If either one cancels their Popular Science subscription, we won't
know the answers to all those profound questions of "ham interest"
policy problems.


Don't forget Popular Mechanics, and Popular Psychology. Ooops.
Scratch teh second one.

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len


Never knew the man, but he is legend.


...celebrated in song and story forever, the founder of the Service.
A real firecracker that put sparklers in the eyes of all worshippers.
[shipping extra cost]

:-)



Kind of like the followers of Rev. Moon.

N2EY July 7th 04 01:24 AM

In article , (Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:

Not enough money.


Sure there is. It's just a matter of priorities.


And everybody's got different ones. If the majority of Americans would rather
have better transit than put a man on Mars, whose priority should be followed?

Even if the Elser-Mathes Cup stays unclaimed....

The only difference here is that you're asking Joe Average to be ready
to
give up his/her SUV (or at least keep it garaged a lot more) and they don't
want to do it.


No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.


That's what I said, Jim...Joe Average doesn't want to give up
his/her
SUV. To do so would be to take some responsibility for participating in
helping the enviroment.


That's cured by education. And it doesn't stop at the
SUV-as-a-commuting-vehicle - there are lots of other opportunities to reduce
consumption, resulting in eventual energy independence.

btw, did you see who the Democrats are running for VP?

73 de Jim, N2EY

Len Over 21 July 7th 04 01:57 AM

In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...

This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!

To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?


Yes. What wasn't mentioned was the demand that non-amateur
radio hobbyists MUST drink from different fountains and use the
"special" restrooms. :-)


Welp, if they were available, I'd use them too. Some kind of
fanatical rabid love of code develops after drinking from the Chalice
of Morse.


An epiphany strikes?

"The chalice with the keyer has the brew that is true,
the chalice with the mike has the brew that is peew!"

- from the motion picture "The Morse Jester" starring Danny Kode.

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)

It's all just a matter of ego.


NO!? Say it isn't so... :-)


Yup. Sad but true.


I am disheartened. snif :-)

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.

Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.


Right! That's why all the other radio services rely on morse! :-)


They may have to. And amateur radio operators will lead the way to
salvation.


The Army? ["it's a Service!!!" :-) ]

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.

Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.


Yes. Weiner von Brawn and his sidekick in PA. :-)


Wheiner (can be pronounced either "wee-ner" or "why-ner") keeps trying
to make friends.


Is THAT what the putzmacher is trying to do?!?!?


Isn't all so much fun to have a private "ham" chat room to talk all
about the space program, national economics, traveling salesmen,
the educational system, and other assorted "ham interest" items?


And arguing with CBers. They impress people wherever they go. If
they don't immediately get the attention they think they deserve, they
thump their chests a few times to make their "achievements" more
visible. I really do wish the FCC would issue some kind of combat
infantry badge to these guys.


It's called "The Blue Riffle." Comes from riffling through lots of QST
ads and product reviews, then portraying themselves as "expert"
radio heroes.

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)

They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.


If either one cancels their Popular Science subscription, we won't
know the answers to all those profound questions of "ham interest"
policy problems.


Don't forget Popular Mechanics, and Popular Psychology. Ooops.
Scratch teh second one.


I think it's old NASA brochures and hand-outs of the 70s and 80s.
Those don't cost anything from a dump.

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len

Never knew the man, but he is legend.


...celebrated in song and story forever, the founder of the Service.
A real firecracker that put sparklers in the eyes of all worshippers.
[shipping extra cost]

:-)



Kind of like the followers of Rev. Moon.


Oh, NO! Not "mooning" again! :-)

Sigmund Fraud will start making another libelous AOL Home Page
shouting and hollering all about "naked men" and "pornographic
images!!!" And, his favorite pejorative, "Liars!!!" :-)



Mike Coslo July 7th 04 02:36 AM



N2EY wrote:
In article , (Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:


Not enough money.


Sure there is. It's just a matter of priorities.



And everybody's got different ones. If the majority of Americans would rather
have better transit than put a man on Mars, whose priority should be followed?


Sad to think that the spirit of exploration is just about dead. Sad to
think that a bunch of nerds sitting around in a room guiding robots are
what pass for adventurers these days.


Even if the Elser-Mathes Cup stays unclaimed....

The only difference here is that you're asking Joe Average to be ready
to
give up his/her SUV (or at least keep it garaged a lot more) and they don't
want to do it.

No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.


That's what I said, Jim...Joe Average doesn't want to give up
his/her
SUV. To do so would be to take some responsibility for participating in
helping the enviroment.


That's cured by education. And it doesn't stop at the
SUV-as-a-commuting-vehicle - there are lots of other opportunities to reduce
consumption, resulting in eventual energy independence.


What do you think of the energy density of hydrogen and it's effect on
trying to convert to hydrogen vehicles?

btw, did you see who the Democrats are running for VP?


I was kind of hoping for Wes Clark

- Mike KB3EIA -


N2EY July 7th 04 11:24 AM

In article , Mike Coslo
writes:

N2EY wrote:
In article ,
(Steve Robeson K4CAP) writes:


Not enough money.


Sure there is. It's just a matter of priorities.


And everybody's got different ones. If the majority of Americans would
rather have better transit than put a man on Mars, whose priority should be
followed?


Sad to think that the spirit of exploration is just about dead.


I don't think it's dead at all, Mike.

And it wasn't the spirit of exploration that sent people to the moon. It was
the need to show the Rooskies that we could do better than they could.

Spirit of exploration is great but bankrolling it with trillions of taxpayer
dollars is a hard sell when people see the middle class being eroded at every
turn...

Sad to
think that a bunch of nerds sitting around in a room guiding robots are
what pass for adventurers these days.


Sadder to think that such triumphs of engineering are dismissed so easily.

I bet if you asked for volunteers to go on a manned Mars mission, 3 years long,
with all sorts of risks and discomforts, the response would be so overwhelming
that you'd need a major budget item just to deal with it. Even more so for a
lunar mission. Heck, if you asked for volunteers to go to the Moon on a
*permanent* basis (as in "we don't know when or even if there will be space on
a ship to bring you back") there'd be the same flood of volunteers.

Even if the Elser-Mathes Cup stays unclaimed....


Nobody but me seems to know what that award is...

The only difference here is that you're asking Joe Average to be ready
to
give up his/her SUV (or at least keep it garaged a lot more) and they
don't want to do it.

No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.

That's what I said, Jim...Joe Average doesn't want to give up
his/her
SUV. To do so would be to take some responsibility for participating in
helping the enviroment.


That's cured by education. And it doesn't stop at the
SUV-as-a-commuting-vehicle - there are lots of other opportunities to
reduce consumption, resulting in eventual energy independence.


What do you think of the energy density of hydrogen and it's effect on
trying to convert to hydrogen vehicles?


That energy density is determined by how the hydrogen is stored. Normally it's
quite low, but when comressed, quite a bit of hydrogen can be stored in a small
space. Same for methane (natural gas). Trouble is, do you want to drive around
with a high pressure fuel tank and fuel lines?

One interesting solution is proposed by the same guy who gave us LCDs. His idea
(IIRC) is that the hydrogen is stored chemically in metal hydride pellets,
which give off hydrogen when warmed by engine waste heat. No high pressure
tank.

The big hydrogen question is: where do we get all the hydrogen from?

btw, did you see who the Democrats are running for VP?


I was kind of hoping for Wes Clark


Me too but he's dropped below the radar.

73 de Jim, N2EY

William July 7th 04 01:31 PM

(Len Over 21) wrote in message ...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...

This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!

To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?

Yes. What wasn't mentioned was the demand that non-amateur
radio hobbyists MUST drink from different fountains and use the
"special" restrooms. :-)


Welp, if they were available, I'd use them too. Some kind of
fanatical rabid love of code develops after drinking from the Chalice
of Morse.


An epiphany strikes?


If it strikes the Yell Yell Marine, he's got the right to use lethal
force.

"The chalice with the keyer has the brew that is true,
the chalice with the mike has the brew that is peew!"

- from the motion picture "The Morse Jester" starring Danny Kode.


Danny Kode was superb. Alas, they are making color movies today.

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)

It's all just a matter of ego.

NO!? Say it isn't so... :-)


Yup. Sad but true.


I am disheartened. snif :-)

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.

Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.

Right! That's why all the other radio services rely on morse! :-)


They may have to. And amateur radio operators will lead the way to
salvation.


The Army? ["it's a Service!!!" :-) ]


W1AW will be on the AM boradcast band, but in CW. Everyone will be
standing in line to have a bfo installed in their
Pioneer/Kenwood/Panasonic car stereos.

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.

Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.

Yes. Weiner von Brawn and his sidekick in PA. :-)


Wheiner (can be pronounced either "wee-ner" or "why-ner") keeps trying
to make friends.


Is THAT what the putzmacher is trying to do?!?!?


In a dysfunctional way. His only means.

Isn't all so much fun to have a private "ham" chat room to talk all
about the space program, national economics, traveling salesmen,
the educational system, and other assorted "ham interest" items?


And arguing with CBers. They impress people wherever they go. If
they don't immediately get the attention they think they deserve, they
thump their chests a few times to make their "achievements" more
visible. I really do wish the FCC would issue some kind of combat
infantry badge to these guys.


It's called "The Blue Riffle." Comes from riffling through lots of QST
ads and product reviews, then portraying themselves as "expert"
radio heroes.


Ging once, going twice...

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)

They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.

If either one cancels their Popular Science subscription, we won't
know the answers to all those profound questions of "ham interest"
policy problems.


Don't forget Popular Mechanics, and Popular Psychology. Ooops.
Scratch teh second one.


I think it's old NASA brochures and hand-outs of the 70s and 80s.
Those don't cost anything from a dump.


Like those old Air Force pubs Yell Yell was claiming I got my military
experience from. He probably reads them at every CAP meeting.

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len

Never knew the man, but he is legend.

...celebrated in song and story forever, the founder of the Service.
A real firecracker that put sparklers in the eyes of all worshippers.
[shipping extra cost]

:-)



Kind of like the followers of Rev. Moon.


Oh, NO! Not "mooning" again! :-)

Sigmund Fraud will start making another libelous AOL Home Page
shouting and hollering all about "naked men" and "pornographic
images!!!" And, his favorite pejorative, "Liars!!!" :-)



That goes hand in hand with the code problem, except without the
peanut butter sandwiches.

Mike Coslo July 8th 04 02:43 AM

N2EY wrote:

In article , Mike Coslo
writes:


N2EY wrote:

In article ,
(Steve Robeson K4CAP) writes:




Not enough money.



Sure there is. It's just a matter of priorities.




And everybody's got different ones. If the majority of Americans would
rather have better transit than put a man on Mars, whose priority should be
followed?



Sad to think that the spirit of exploration is just about dead.



I don't think it's dead at all, Mike.


Maybe I'm hanging out with the wrong people, Jim.

And it wasn't the spirit of exploration that sent people to the moon. It was
the need to show the Rooskies that we could do better than they could.


Yeah, we know why the pols bankrolled it. But I highly doubt that was
reason number one in the astronauts minds.

Spirit of exploration is great but bankrolling it with trillions of taxpayer
dollars is a hard sell when people see the middle class being eroded at every
turn...


....and while we are decrying the expense of doing things, we might
want to look over our shoulder, someone's catching up and will pass us.


Sad to
think that a bunch of nerds sitting around in a room guiding robots are
what pass for adventurers these days.


Sadder to think that such triumphs of engineering are dismissed so easily.


Heavens no! I love the engineering. But there is a world of difference
between the "adventurers" giving a live press conference from the studio
and adventurers being *there*. If that doesn't make a big difference to
you , I guess it is kind of a "Jeep" thing.


I bet if you asked for volunteers to go on a manned Mars mission, 3 years long,
with all sorts of risks and discomforts, the response would be so overwhelming
that you'd need a major budget item just to deal with it.


Yup. Kind of tells me something.

Even more so for a
lunar mission. Heck, if you asked for volunteers to go to the Moon on a
*permanent* basis (as in "we don't know when or even if there will be space on
a ship to bring you back") there'd be the same flood of volunteers.


Uh huh! I'd be one of 'em.


Even if the Elser-Mathes Cup stays unclaimed....



Nobody but me seems to know what that award is...


I looked it up. Too bad the Apollo astronauts didn't have a 2 meter
HT.. 8^)


The only difference here is that you're asking Joe Average to be ready
to
give up his/her SUV (or at least keep it garaged a lot more) and they
don't want to do it.

No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.

That's what I said, Jim...Joe Average doesn't want to give up
his/her
SUV. To do so would be to take some responsibility for participating in
helping the enviroment.


That's cured by education. And it doesn't stop at the
SUV-as-a-commuting-vehicle - there are lots of other opportunities to
reduce consumption, resulting in eventual energy independence.


What do you think of the energy density of hydrogen and it's effect on
trying to convert to hydrogen vehicles?



That energy density is determined by how the hydrogen is stored. Normally it's
quite low, but when comressed, quite a bit of hydrogen can be stored in a small
space. Same for methane (natural gas). Trouble is, do you want to drive around
with a high pressure fuel tank and fuel lines?

One interesting solution is proposed by the same guy who gave us LCDs. His idea
(IIRC) is that the hydrogen is stored chemically in metal hydride pellets,
which give off hydrogen when warmed by engine waste heat. No high pressure
tank.

The big hydrogen question is: where do we get all the hydrogen from?


My guess is that it would come from electrolysis at hydropower or more
likely Nuc power plants. Dunno if it would be done at the same sites
where desalinization would (*will*) be happening. (welcome to your
future, California!)

Of course there will be environmental issues, such as what to do with
all the salt. Another biggie is that seawater electrolysis tends to
produce chlorine instead of oxygen:

http://www2.electrochem.org/cgi-bin/...g=204&abs=0710

Hard to argue that chlorine wouldn't be a pollutant. The anti
environmentalists might even agree on that one!

and using seawater is probably pretty important, because....

Who on earth is going to want to give up their fresh water? The left
coast? Hardly likely! They are the ones that are going to be surviving
on electrolysis in the future. East coast? We're so variable here, and
population is eventually simply going to limit fresh water supplies.

And just as I don't like biofuels, I think that using a substance that
people depend on for their lives like food and water means that some
terrible choices might have to be made in the future.

Put simply, if it isn't seawater, it isn't going to happen.


btw, did you see who the Democrats are running for VP?


I was kind of hoping for Wes Clark



Me too but he's dropped below the radar.



Len Over 21 July 8th 04 03:46 AM

In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...

This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!

To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?

Yes. What wasn't mentioned was the demand that non-amateur
radio hobbyists MUST drink from different fountains and use the
"special" restrooms. :-)

Welp, if they were available, I'd use them too. Some kind of
fanatical rabid love of code develops after drinking from the Chalice
of Morse.


An epiphany strikes?


If it strikes the Yell Yell Marine, he's got the right to use lethal
force.


Not quite the epiphany I had in mind.

According to Yell Yell, nobody, absolutely NO ONE can possibly
know a damn thing about amateur radio without passing a little
test, receiving the nice piece of paper with a fancy border (suitable
for framing), and then coming on like a Dill Instructor with a mouth
full of pickle.

Apparently, one gets a Full Knowledge (or something like that) on
receiving that call sign. Perhaps a subtle divine voice from on high
that imparts all the smarts on hum raddio to the fully licensed?

Poor guy can't separate the reality from his murine fantasy of the
"amateur corps."

"The chalice with the keyer has the brew that is true,
the chalice with the mike has the brew that is peew!"

- from the motion picture "The Morse Jester" starring Danny Kode.


Danny Kode was superb. Alas, they are making color movies today.


Morse is colorless. It fits. Morse is 160 years old. Didn't even
have motion pictures back in 1844.

But, according to Yell Yell and his kin, ALL amateurs MUST know
morse to gain "the true knowledge" on passing the Test. For a hobby
activity.

There's lots of ANGER floating around the newsgripe...yelling and
yelling at those who didn't do EXACTLY like the Kodies did or
embrace "the service" like it was a murine corps.

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their

exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)

It's all just a matter of ego.

NO!? Say it isn't so... :-)

Yup. Sad but true.


I am disheartened. snif :-)

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.

Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.

Right! That's why all the other radio services rely on morse! :-)

They may have to. And amateur radio operators will lead the way to
salvation.


The Army? ["it's a Service!!!" :-) ]


W1AW will be on the AM boradcast band, but in CW. Everyone will be
standing in line to have a bfo installed in their
Pioneer/Kenwood/Panasonic car stereos.


Riiiiiight. :-)

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.

Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.

Yes. Weiner von Brawn and his sidekick in PA. :-)

Wheiner (can be pronounced either "wee-ner" or "why-ner") keeps trying
to make friends.


Is THAT what the putzmacher is trying to do?!?!?


In a dysfunctional way. His only means.


There's at least two putzmachers in here. May the fnortz be with
them and their attempts at purity and ethnic cleansing.

Isn't all so much fun to have a private "ham" chat room to talk all
about the space program, national economics, traveling salesmen,
the educational system, and other assorted "ham interest" items?

And arguing with CBers. They impress people wherever they go. If
they don't immediately get the attention they think they deserve, they
thump their chests a few times to make their "achievements" more
visible. I really do wish the FCC would issue some kind of combat
infantry badge to these guys.


It's called "The Blue Riffle." Comes from riffling through lots of QST
ads and product reviews, then portraying themselves as "expert"
radio heroes.


Ging once, going twice...


:-)

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big

Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)

They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.

If either one cancels their Popular Science subscription, we won't
know the answers to all those profound questions of "ham interest"
policy problems.

Don't forget Popular Mechanics, and Popular Psychology. Ooops.
Scratch teh second one.


I think it's old NASA brochures and hand-outs of the 70s and 80s.
Those don't cost anything from a dump.


Like those old Air Force pubs Yell Yell was claiming I got my military
experience from. He probably reads them at every CAP meeting.


Yell Yell was a Murine. That sums it up.

All else are inferior...unless the else are code-tested extras. :-)

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len

Never knew the man, but he is legend.

...celebrated in song and story forever, the founder of the Service.
A real firecracker that put sparklers in the eyes of all worshippers.
[shipping extra cost]

:-)



Kind of like the followers of Rev. Moon.


Oh, NO! Not "mooning" again! :-)

Sigmund Fraud will start making another libelous AOL Home Page
shouting and hollering all about "naked men" and "pornographic
images!!!" And, his favorite pejorative, "Liars!!!" :-)



That goes hand in hand with the code problem, except without the
peanut butter sandwiches.


"Peanut butter sandwiches?!?" :-)



Len Over 21 July 8th 04 04:35 AM

In article , Mike Coslo
writes:

N2EY wrote:

In article , Mike Coslo
writes:

N2EY wrote:

In article ,
(Steve Robeson K4CAP) writes:


Not enough money.


Sure there is. It's just a matter of priorities.


And everybody's got different ones. If the majority of Americans would
rather have better transit than put a man on Mars, whose priority should

be
followed?


Sad to think that the spirit of exploration is just about dead.


I don't think it's dead at all, Mike.


Maybe I'm hanging out with the wrong people, Jim.

And it wasn't the spirit of exploration that sent people to the moon. It

was
the need to show the Rooskies that we could do better than they could.


Yeah, we know why the pols bankrolled it. But I highly doubt that was
reason number one in the astronauts minds.

Spirit of exploration is great but bankrolling it with trillions of

taxpayer
dollars is a hard sell when people see the middle class being eroded at

every
turn...


....and while we are decrying the expense of doing things, we might
want to look over our shoulder, someone's catching up and will pass us.

Sad to
think that a bunch of nerds sitting around in a room guiding robots are
what pass for adventurers these days.


Sadder to think that such triumphs of engineering are dismissed so easily.


Heavens no! I love the engineering. But there is a world of difference
between the "adventurers" giving a live press conference from the studio
and adventurers being *there*. If that doesn't make a big difference to
you , I guess it is kind of a "Jeep" thing.

I bet if you asked for volunteers to go on a manned Mars mission, 3 years

long,
with all sorts of risks and discomforts, the response would be so

overwhelming
that you'd need a major budget item just to deal with it.


Yup. Kind of tells me something.

Even more so for a
lunar mission. Heck, if you asked for volunteers to go to the Moon on a
*permanent* basis (as in "we don't know when or even if there will be space

on
a ship to bring you back") there'd be the same flood of volunteers.


Uh huh! I'd be one of 'em.

Even if the Elser-Mathes Cup stays unclaimed....


Nobody but me seems to know what that award is...


I looked it up. Too bad the Apollo astronauts didn't have a 2 meter
HT.. 8^)

The only difference here is that you're asking Joe Average to be ready
to
give up his/her SUV (or at least keep it garaged a lot more) and they
don't want to do it.

No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.

That's what I said, Jim...Joe Average doesn't want to give up
his/her
SUV. To do so would be to take some responsibility for participating in
helping the enviroment.

That's cured by education. And it doesn't stop at the
SUV-as-a-commuting-vehicle - there are lots of other opportunities to
reduce consumption, resulting in eventual energy independence.

What do you think of the energy density of hydrogen and it's effect on
trying to convert to hydrogen vehicles?


That energy density is determined by how the hydrogen is stored. Normally

it's
quite low, but when comressed, quite a bit of hydrogen can be stored in a

small
space. Same for methane (natural gas). Trouble is, do you want to drive

around
with a high pressure fuel tank and fuel lines?

One interesting solution is proposed by the same guy who gave us LCDs. His

idea
(IIRC) is that the hydrogen is stored chemically in metal hydride pellets,
which give off hydrogen when warmed by engine waste heat. No high pressure
tank.

The big hydrogen question is: where do we get all the hydrogen from?


My guess is that it would come from electrolysis at hydropower or more
likely Nuc power plants. Dunno if it would be done at the same sites
where desalinization would (*will*) be happening. (welcome to your
future, California!)

Of course there will be environmental issues, such as what to do with
all the salt. Another biggie is that seawater electrolysis tends to
produce chlorine instead of oxygen:

http://www2.electrochem.org/cgi-bin/...g=204&abs=0710

Hard to argue that chlorine wouldn't be a pollutant. The anti
environmentalists might even agree on that one!

and using seawater is probably pretty important, because....

Who on earth is going to want to give up their fresh water? The left
coast?


Those snarled-at "left coast" people designed the first stage
rockets for Apollo. The "left coast" people designed the SSMEs
that push shuttle.

Hardly likely! They are the ones that are going to be surviving
on electrolysis in the future.


"Left coast" people are getting electrolysis treatments to remove
unwanted hair? I think not.

Try removing the internal hair and the left-brain, right-brain
thinking when talking about the coastal regions of the UNITED
States of America.

Washington, Oregon, and northern California have plentiful water.

East coast? We're so variable here, and
population is eventually simply going to limit fresh water supplies.


What has that got to do with amateur radio policy?

Note: The FCC does NOT regulate water.

BPL = Broadband over Power Lines, NOT over water lines.

And just as I don't like biofuels, I think that using a substance that
people depend on for their lives like food and water means that some
terrible choices might have to be made in the future.

Put simply, if it isn't seawater, it isn't going to happen.


Are you one of those dihydrogen monoxide extremists?

Take that to the dihydrogen monoxide conspiracy newsgroup.

Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts, like those
two who have already pontificated aplenty on How To Do Space
without having any space biz experience. :-)



N2EY July 8th 04 11:11 AM

In article ,
(Len Over 21) writes:

Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts, like those
two who have already pontificated aplenty on How To Do Space
without having any space biz experience. :-)


Translation: Len wants us to shut up. Next step is him calling us "feldwebels"

Of course, Len has no amateur radio experience, but he wants to pontificate to
us about How It Should Be in amateur radio.

But when you ask him how to fight the BPL meance, he has no new ideas at all.

Most of all, note that Len tells us to

"Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts"

Shouldn't we do the same with BPL?

N2EY July 8th 04 11:11 AM

In article , Mike Coslo
writes:

N2EY wrote:

In article , Mike Coslo
writes:


N2EY wrote:


In article ,
(Steve Robeson K4CAP) writes:
Sad to think that the spirit of exploration is just about dead.


I don't think it's dead at all, Mike.


Maybe I'm hanging out with the wrong people, Jim.


Maybe!

And it wasn't the spirit of exploration that sent people to the moon. It
was the need to show the Rooskies that we could do better than they could.


Yeah, we know why the pols bankrolled it. But I highly doubt that was
reason number one in the astronauts minds.


Ever read the Tom Wolfe book "The Right Stuff"? Quite illuminating about what
drove the US space program in its early days.

Spirit of exploration is great but bankrolling it with trillions of
taxpayer
dollars is a hard sell when people see the middle class being eroded at
every turn...


...and while we are decrying the expense of doing things, we might
want to look over our shoulder, someone's catching up and will pass us.


Why is that a problem? Or, why can't we do it as a team?

Sad to
think that a bunch of nerds sitting around in a room guiding robots are
what pass for adventurers these days.


Sadder to think that such triumphs of engineering are dismissed so easily.


Heavens no! I love the engineering.


But you describe a highly successful and complex mission as "guiding robots",
and those who made it all possible as a "bunch of nerds".

But there is a world of difference
between the "adventurers" giving a live press conference from the studio
and adventurers being *there*. If that doesn't make a big difference to
you , I guess it is kind of a "Jeep" thing.


I think it's important to realize that the 'adventurers' are simply part of a
much larger team.

I bet if you asked for volunteers to go on a manned Mars mission, 3 years
long, with all sorts of risks and discomforts, the response would be so
overwhelming that you'd need a major budget item just to deal with it.


Yup. Kind of tells me something.


What, exactly?

Even more so for a
lunar mission. Heck, if you asked for volunteers to go to the Moon on a
*permanent* basis (as in "we don't know when or even if there will be space
on a ship to bring you back") there'd be the same flood of volunteers.


Uh huh! I'd be one of 'em.


Exactly. So 'spirit of adventure' isn't dead at all.

Even if the Elser-Mathes Cup stays unclaimed....


Nobody but me seems to know what that award is...


I looked it up. Too bad the Apollo astronauts didn't have a 2 meter
HT.. 8^)


Nice try!

No, what I'm asking is for a lot more - responsibility.


That's what I said, Jim...Joe Average doesn't want to give up
his/her
SUV. To do so would be to take some responsibility for participating in
helping the enviroment.


That's cured by education. And it doesn't stop at the
SUV-as-a-commuting-vehicle - there are lots of other opportunities to
reduce consumption, resulting in eventual energy independence.


What do you think of the energy density of hydrogen and it's effect on
trying to convert to hydrogen vehicles?


That energy density is determined by how the hydrogen is stored. Normally
it's quite low, but when comressed, quite a bit of hydrogen can be stored in

a
small space. Same for methane (natural gas). Trouble is, do you want to

drive
around with a high pressure fuel tank and fuel lines?

One interesting solution is proposed by the same guy who gave us LCDs. His
idea (IIRC) is that the hydrogen is stored chemically in metal hydride

pellets,
which give off hydrogen when warmed by engine waste heat. No high
pressure tank.


The big hydrogen question is: where do we get all the hydrogen from?


My guess is that it would come from electrolysis at hydropower or more
likely Nuc power plants. Dunno if it would be done at the same sites
where desalinization would (*will*) be happening. (welcome to your
future, California!)


That would require a lot of generating capacity. Does it exist, or would new
plants have to be built?

And if the source of hydrogen is electricity, why not simply build electric
cars and use the electricity to charge the batteries? Or electric transit? It
is my understanding that LA's "Blue Line" is an enormous success.

Of course there will be environmental issues, such as what to do with
all the salt. Another biggie is that seawater electrolysis tends to
produce chlorine instead of oxygen:


http://www2.electrochem.org/cgi-bin/...g=204&abs=0710

Hard to argue that chlorine wouldn't be a pollutant. The anti
environmentalists might even agree on that one!


You'd have to desalinate first, then electrolyze, then compress and
regfrigerate. How efficient is all that?

and using seawater is probably pretty important, because....


Who on earth is going to want to give up their fresh water? The left
coast? Hardly likely! They are the ones that are going to be surviving
on electrolysis in the future. East coast? We're so variable here, and
population is eventually simply going to limit fresh water supplies.


What it all comes down to is living in accordance with Nature. That doesn't
mean we must all go back to an agrarian life. What it does mean is that
unsustainable growth and increases in consumption will have dire effects if not
corrected.

Expecting to have lush green lawns and big swimming pools. *and* a huge
population, in a semi-arid region isn't realistic. Etc.

And just as I don't like biofuels, I think that using a substance that
people depend on for their lives like food and water means that some
terrible choices might have to be made in the future.


The trick with biofuel is to use waste products to make it. For example,
there's a turkey processing plant in the midwest that generates about 200
*tons* of turkey waste per *day*. A TDP plant was recently built that allegedly
processes the waste into fuel. What used to be a disposal problem is now an
energy source, according to reports.

Put simply, if it isn't seawater, it isn't going to happen.


The thing to do is to work on the problem from all angles. There's no one magic
solution.

73 de Jim, N2EY


Mike Coslo July 8th 04 02:27 PM

N2EY wrote:
In article ,
(Len Over 21) writes:

Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts, like those
two who have already pontificated aplenty on How To Do Space
without having any space biz experience. :-)



Translation: Len wants us to shut up. Next step is him calling us "feldwebels"


I don't know what a "feldwebel" is, but it sounds like a "weeble".

Feldwebels wobble but they don't fall down?



Of course, Len has no amateur radio experience, but he wants to pontificate to
us about How It Should Be in amateur radio.

But when you ask him how to fight the BPL meance, he has no new ideas at all.

Most of all, note that Len tells us to

"Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts"

Shouldn't we do the same with BPL?


nope.


- Mike KB3EIA -




Mike Coslo July 8th 04 02:46 PM

Len Over 21 wrote:
In article , Mike Coslo
writes:



snippage


My guess is that it would come from electrolysis at hydropower or more
likely Nuc power plants. Dunno if it would be done at the same sites
where desalinization would (*will*) be happening. (welcome to your
future, California!)

Of course there will be environmental issues, such as what to do with
all the salt. Another biggie is that seawater electrolysis tends to
produce chlorine instead of oxygen:

http://www2.electrochem.org/cgi-bin/...g=204&abs=0710

Hard to argue that chlorine wouldn't be a pollutant. The anti
environmentalists might even agree on that one!

and using seawater is probably pretty important, because....

Who on earth is going to want to give up their fresh water? The left
coast?



Those snarled-at "left coast" people designed the first stage
rockets for Apollo. The "left coast" people designed the SSMEs
that push shuttle.


Who's snarling? People need water, and yer going to run out sometime,
unless the water sources decide to keep up with population growth. Since
it's unlikely that the present sources are going to expand, that leaves
desalinization. And in the content of what I'm talking about with Jim,
it isn't likely that the left coast is not going to want to give up
whatever fresh water they have.


Hardly likely! They are the ones that are going to be surviving
on electrolysis in the future.



"Left coast" people are getting electrolysis treatments to remove
unwanted hair? I think not.

Try removing the internal hair and the left-brain, right-brain
thinking when talking about the coastal regions of the UNITED
States of America.

Washington, Oregon, and northern California have plentiful water.


East coast? We're so variable here, and
population is eventually simply going to limit fresh water supplies.



What has that got to do with amateur radio policy?

Note: The FCC does NOT regulate water.

BPL = Broadband over Power Lines, NOT over water lines.


And just as I don't like biofuels, I think that using a substance that
people depend on for their lives like food and water means that some
terrible choices might have to be made in the future.

Put simply, if it isn't seawater, it isn't going to happen.



Are you one of those dihydrogen monoxide extremists?



Water you talking about? 8^)


Take that to the dihydrogen monoxide conspiracy newsgroup.

Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts, like those
two who have already pontificated aplenty on How To Do Space
without having any space biz experience. :-)


Taken under advisement. Now I think I'll go back to discussing this
with Jim. Feel free to jump in the conversation any time if you like.

- Mike KB3EIA -


N2EY July 8th 04 09:59 PM

Mike Coslo wrote in message ...
N2EY wrote:
In article ,
(Len Over 21) writes:

Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts, like those
two who have already pontificated aplenty on How To Do Space
without having any space biz experience. :-)


Translation: Len wants us to shut up. Next step is him calling us "feldwebels"


I don't know what a "feldwebel" is, but it sounds like a "weeble".

Feldwebels wobble but they don't fall down?


It's German for the military rank of "corporal". Which is the rank a
certain mid-20th century German chancellor held in the Wehrmacht in
WW1.

Here's the original post:

http://groups.google.com/groups?selm...&output=gplain

Len doesn't exactly show good manners or professional behavior when
confronted by a differing opinion or information that proves him to be
mistaken.

For more of the same, Google that word with him as author.

Of course, Len has no amateur radio experience, but he wants to pontificate to us about How It Should Be in amateur radio.

But when you ask him how to fight the BPL


menace

he has no new ideas at all.


Lots of criticism of others on this point but no new ideas.

Most of all, note that Len tells us to

"Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts"

Shouldn't we do the same with BPL?


nope.


but...but Mike, we're just amateurs! With "vacuum tube transmitters"!
Len has told us many, many times how we're nowhere near "state of the
art", how we live by "standards of the 1930s", how we're not really
involved in emergency work, nor technical advancement, etc., etc.,
etc. He's also been consistently critical of ARRL, even to the point
of accusing them of fraud (with absolutely no evidence).

Also seems to think that I am somehow responsible for the posts of
others....

Now he seems to think we should know how to defeat BPL - even though
he doesn't.

Odd. Very odd.

73 de Jim, N2EY

Mike Coslo July 9th 04 01:39 AM

N2EY wrote:
Mike Coslo wrote in message ...

N2EY wrote:

In article ,
(Len Over 21) writes:


Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts, like those
two who have already pontificated aplenty on How To Do Space
without having any space biz experience. :-)

Translation: Len wants us to shut up. Next step is him calling us "feldwebels"


I don't know what a "feldwebel" is, but it sounds like a "weeble".

Feldwebels wobble but they don't fall down?



It's German for the military rank of "corporal". Which is the rank a
certain mid-20th century German chancellor held in the Wehrmacht in
WW1.

Here's the original post:

http://groups.google.com/groups?selm...&output=gplain

Len doesn't exactly show good manners or professional behavior when
confronted by a differing opinion or information that proves him to be
mistaken.

For more of the same, Google that word with him as author.


Of course, Len has no amateur radio experience, but he wants to pontificate to us about How It Should Be in amateur radio.

But when you ask him how to fight the BPL



menace


he has no new ideas at all.



Lots of criticism of others on this point but no new ideas.


Most of all, note that Len tells us to

"Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts"

Shouldn't we do the same with BPL?


nope.



but...but Mike, we're just amateurs! With "vacuum tube transmitters"!
Len has told us many, many times how we're nowhere near "state of the
art",


Oh dear... I'm confused... I like both SOA equipment *and* tube radios.
It's all good!

how we live by "standards of the 1930s",

Whatever that is.

how we're not really
involved in emergency work,


hmm, I am. Plus whatever public service work that comes my way.

nor technical advancement, etc., etc.,
etc. He's also been consistently critical of ARRL, even to the point
of accusing them of fraud (with absolutely no evidence).


Yeah, I've read that. There are always some people that hate the big
dog in any kennel.

Also seems to think that I am somehow responsible for the posts of
others....

Now he seems to think we should know how to defeat BPL - even though
he doesn't.

Odd. Very odd.


High expectations for the 1930's standards people, eh?

- Mike KB3EIA -


William July 9th 04 01:58 AM

(Len Over 21) wrote in message ...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...
In article ,
(William) writes:

(Len Over 21) wrote in message
...

This is one weird group of licensed amateur extra regulars!

To say the least. Did you pick up on the new thread where someone
asked if a person works in the industry and has a commercial license,
would he be welcomed at a ham radio club meeting?

Yes. What wasn't mentioned was the demand that non-amateur
radio hobbyists MUST drink from different fountains and use the
"special" restrooms. :-)

Welp, if they were available, I'd use them too. Some kind of
fanatical rabid love of code develops after drinking from the Chalice
of Morse.

An epiphany strikes?


If it strikes the Yell Yell Marine, he's got the right to use lethal
force.


Not quite the epiphany I had in mind.


He would perceive it that way. If he didn't, he'd have to think
something nice about it, and since you made the suggestion...

According to Yell Yell, nobody, absolutely NO ONE can possibly
know a damn thing about amateur radio without passing a little
test, receiving the nice piece of paper with a fancy border (suitable
for framing), and then coming on like a Dill Instructor with a mouth
full of pickle.


Even guys without any "service time" get to claim "real military
experience" because they passed the amateur test.

Apparently, one gets a Full Knowledge (or something like that) on
receiving that call sign. Perhaps a subtle divine voice from on high
that imparts all the smarts on hum raddio to the fully licensed?


Just like Edgar Casey.

Poor guy can't separate the reality from his murine fantasy of the
"amateur corps."


"Seven Hostile Dits"

"The chalice with the keyer has the brew that is true,
the chalice with the mike has the brew that is peew!"

- from the motion picture "The Morse Jester" starring Danny Kode.


Danny Kode was superb. Alas, they are making color movies today.


Morse is colorless.


And odorless. It requires a detector.

It fits. Morse is 160 years old. Didn't even
have motion pictures back in 1844.

But, according to Yell Yell and his kin, ALL amateurs MUST know
morse to gain "the true knowledge" on passing the Test. For a hobby
activity.


It's like the base hobby shop. You have to get signed off on -all- of
the equipment or they won't let you in. All except for the phone
equipment, the rtty equipment, the sstv equipment, the psk31
equipment, the satellite equipment, the...

There's lots of ANGER floating around the newsgripe...yelling and
yelling at those who didn't do EXACTLY like the Kodies did or
embrace "the service" like it was a murine corps.


And all that spittle with all that yelling.

They care more about their "honor" in telling fibs of their

exploits
then get totally pished at others who have had truthful
experience beyond the limitations of Part 97. Fantasyland at
times! :-)

It's all just a matter of ego.

NO!? Say it isn't so... :-)

Yup. Sad but true.

I am disheartened. snif :-)

BPL-PLC will mean an END to low-level signal reception on HF and
low VHF in urban areas but the licensed amateur extras in here
just want to FIGHT with anyone who challenges their mighty words.

Not to worry. Morse always gets thru.

Right! That's why all the other radio services rely on morse! :-)

They may have to. And amateur radio operators will lead the way to
salvation.

The Army? ["it's a Service!!!" :-) ]


W1AW will be on the AM boradcast band, but in CW. Everyone will be
standing in line to have a bfo installed in their
Pioneer/Kenwood/Panasonic car stereos.


Riiiiiight. :-)


No, really. Edgar Casey predicted it.

They won't DO anything against the already-here problem of HF
pollution but they want to destroy anyone not believeing in their
fantasies of the religion of St. Hiram and the League-ionaires.

Just notice who's remaining in this sorry group.

Yes. Weiner von Brawn and his sidekick in PA. :-)

Wheiner (can be pronounced either "wee-ner" or "why-ner") keeps trying
to make friends.

Is THAT what the putzmacher is trying to do?!?!?


In a dysfunctional way. His only means.


There's at least two putzmachers in here. May the fnortz be with
them and their attempts at purity and ethnic cleansing.


Actuarial tables...

Isn't all so much fun to have a private "ham" chat room to talk all
about the space program, national economics, traveling salesmen,
the educational system, and other assorted "ham interest" items?

And arguing with CBers. They impress people wherever they go. If
they don't immediately get the attention they think they deserve, they
thump their chests a few times to make their "achievements" more
visible. I really do wish the FCC would issue some kind of combat
infantry badge to these guys.

It's called "The Blue Riffle." Comes from riffling through lots of QST
ads and product reviews, then portraying themselves as "expert"
radio heroes.


Ging once, going twice...


:-)

Even more bizarre is the on-going "discussion" between two extras
who have NO experience in space travel talking all about Big

Issues
in Space...none of which concerns amateur radio policy! :-)

They've managed to combine "Missiles of October," and "October Sky."
Maybe one day they'll launch an Estes rocket and attain the altitude
of 1,200' AGL.

If either one cancels their Popular Science subscription, we won't
know the answers to all those profound questions of "ham interest"
policy problems.

Don't forget Popular Mechanics, and Popular Psychology. Ooops.
Scratch teh second one.

I think it's old NASA brochures and hand-outs of the 70s and 80s.
Those don't cost anything from a dump.


Like those old Air Force pubs Yell Yell was claiming I got my military
experience from. He probably reads them at every CAP meeting.


Yell Yell was a Murine. That sums it up.

All else are inferior...unless the else are code-tested extras. :-)


Brothers in Ditz and Duhs.

Well, time to celebrate the 4th coming up...and to worship at the
Church of St. Hiram who invented radio and the vacuum tube, etc.
:-)

Len

Never knew the man, but he is legend.

...celebrated in song and story forever, the founder of the Service.
A real firecracker that put sparklers in the eyes of all worshippers.
[shipping extra cost]

:-)



Kind of like the followers of Rev. Moon.

Oh, NO! Not "mooning" again! :-)

Sigmund Fraud will start making another libelous AOL Home Page
shouting and hollering all about "naked men" and "pornographic
images!!!" And, his favorite pejorative, "Liars!!!" :-)



That goes hand in hand with the code problem, except without the
peanut butter sandwiches.


"Peanut butter sandwiches?!?" :-)


I don't think Hiram required them to eat peanut butter sandwiches like
the Rev. Moon does.

N2EY July 9th 04 02:57 AM

In article , Mike Coslo
writes:

N2EY wrote:
Mike Coslo wrote in message

...

N2EY wrote:

In article ,
(Len Over 21) writes:


Leave the space business stuff to the industry experts, like those
two who have already pontificated aplenty on How To Do Space
without having any space biz experience. :-)


Translation: Len wants us to shut up. Next step is him calling us
"feldwebels"

I don't know what a "feldwebel" is, but it sounds like a "weeble".

Feldwebels wobble but they don't fall down?


It's German for the military rank of "corporal". Which is the rank a
certain mid-20th century German chancellor held in the Wehrmacht in
WW1.


Here's the original post:


http://groups.google.com/groups?selm...001553%40mb-m1
8.aol.com&output=gplain

oh - btw, while on the space exploration thing...

I have no doubt that it's technically feasible to go back to the Moon,
establish a base there, and even to go to Mars. I have high cofidence that all
of the technical problems could be solved. It's just very expensive.

The problem isn't one of engineering - it's one of public policy. And such
problems are *not* to be left up to those "in the business".

Here's one way to go to Mars:

First, you need a lowcost method of getting things into earth orbit. The
"unmanned cargo space shuttle" idea is one way. Mass production of
purpose-designed dockets is another.

Second, a couple of unmanned supply ships are assembled in earth orbit. They're
unmanned because it's simpler to do it that way. There are a couple of them in
case one or two don;t make the journey intact.

Third, as soon as the supply ships are ready, they are launched towards Mars.
It may take them years to get there but it's of no consequence because they are
unmanned.

Fourth, a duo or trio of manned Mars ships are assembled in earth orbit.
There's more than one of them in case trouble develops. These ships carry only
people and the essential supplies for the trip. The landers and Mars surface
equipment are on the supply ships. This is done to reduce the weight of the
manned ships. They're "hot rods" in that they are designed primarily for speed.
They're launched towards Mars at the optimum time for a minimum-time trip. They
go to Mars, rendezvous with the supply ships and then the landers on the supply
ships go down to the Martian surface. When the surface mission is done, the
astronauts get back in the manned ships and come home.

I think all of the technical problems could be solved but the cost would be -
astronomical.

but...but Mike, we're just amateurs! With "vacuum tube transmitters"!
Len has told us many, many times how we're nowhere near "state of the
art",


Oh dear... I'm confused... I like both SOA equipment *and* tube radios.
It's all good!


I have a confession to make....I actually have a vacuum tube transmitter...and
what's worse - I still use the thing, and even worse....I *enjoy* it...

how we live by "standards of the 1930s",

Whatever that is.


It means actually using Morse Code on the air, and thinking it's useful.

how we're not really
involved in emergency work,


hmm, I am. Plus whatever public service work that comes my way.

nor technical advancement, etc., etc.,
etc. He's also been consistently critical of ARRL, even to the point
of accusing them of fraud (with absolutely no evidence).


Yeah, I've read that. There are always some people that hate the big
dog in any kennel.


There are some who think we don't need a strong national organization at all.

Also seems to think that I am somehow responsible for the posts of
others....

Now he seems to think we should know how to defeat BPL - even though
he doesn't.

Odd. Very odd.


High expectations for the 1930's standards people, eh?

Yep.

73 de Jim, N2EY

Dave Heil July 9th 04 06:59 AM

William wrote:


Just like Edgar Casey.


No, really. Edgar Casey predicted it.


Edgar Cayce.

I don't think Hiram required them to eat peanut butter sandwiches like
the Rev. Moon does.


No peanut butter, only Rev. Moon Pies.

Dave K8MN

William July 9th 04 01:51 PM

Dave Heil wrote in message ...
William wrote:


Just like Edgar Casey.


No, really. Edgar Casey predicted it.


Edgar Cayce.

I don't think Hiram required them to eat peanut butter sandwiches like
the Rev. Moon does.


No peanut butter, only Rev. Moon Pies.

Dave K8MN


Eight years of usenet therapy and Dave develops a sense of humor!

Way to go, Dave


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