BULLETIN: Moscow, October 5, 1957...Soviets Fire Earth Satellite Into Space It Is Circling the Globe at 18,000 M.P.H. Transmitters sending continuous signals... |
Those dag-blamed Rus-kees ... it's all their fault! You see, just over 50 years ago, the Soviets launched a little fella' named Sputnik.
Sputnik was the first man-made object launched into space, and it went up in October of 1957. The basketball-sized satellite transmitted a little radio signal - sort of a
"beep-beep-beep" which could be heard around the world, including my little corner of it, El Paso, Texas. And boy, did that little guy's radio signal change my life, with a whole lot of help from my father.
It was largely because of Sputnik, and the fact that this just-beginning high schooler had no meaningful hobby other than a paper route, that my parents one
month after launch bought me my first shortwave radio for my 13th birthday. We all gathered around the sparkling new radio - a Hallicrafters S-38E - laughing at each
"tone" we heard - thinking we were hearing some coded Russian spy message from space. It was a hoot, and shortwave radio became love at first sight ... err ... first
sound. And because of that birthday present, countless radio tubes, meters, scopes, resistors, amplifiers, you name it, would go up in smoke at some point in time
over the next 50 years. Oh Yeah, we found a meaningful hobby allright, ... Ham Radio!
In the months after the "novelty" of Sputnik's "beep" wore off, I started noticing these interesting stations of the Amateur Radio Service - "Hams" for short. And
after study, and code practice, my Dad and I took ... and passed the exam. My school grades suffered, but what the heck! I was "KN5PLZ" - the "N" for "Novice" would later be dropped after
passing a higher level exam.
But there was one pitfall of this great new hobby. It seemed that little Johnny's mother, down the street, informed my mother that the wonderfully melodic
and artistically paced Morse Code "dots and dashes" that I was sending over the "airwaves" were, in fact, being clearly received by their son's guitar amp, for cryin' out
loud.
Oh, How The Time Does Fly !
Well, I've just celebrated my 50th anniversary as a "Ham" - equipped with a station setup which has so many buttons, bells, and whistles
that Marconi would shake his head in disbelief. And while I don't receive any bad reports from area guitarists, there is one unconfirmed report of this strange new melodic
sound coming out of one neighbor's stereo sub-woofer speaker. Wonder what that could be?
Here's to the best of times and Ham radio, with special thanks to my father, who, God rest his soul, can also pick up the strains of K5PLZ from his QTH in Arlington Cemetery. I truly believe that.
Thanks for stopping by, and "73". I hope to hear you on the radio, soon. ... Bill, K5PLZ/W5YO.
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