Posted on Jun 24, 2021
Hottest temperatures the Pacific Northwest has ever recorded are likely this weekend
1.01K
86
26
21
21
0
Edited >1 y ago
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 8
PO3 Phyllis Maynard
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. let us hope the blazing temperature left water in the Pan Handle - God Bless You, Brother
(2)
(0)
Okay, it's hot. But the business of global warming is not. I think nature is cyclical and don't agree with the idea that man is the only reason for the phenomena. I have read reports that the slight rise in temperatures has occurred before, findings were from ice core studies. The reports have also stated that while ice is fading from one side of Antarctica, which has the global warming crowd all a jitter, the ice is growing and thickening on the other side. Again I believe this is all just a cyclical part of nature. Yes, we have a responsibility to find ways to mitigate our impact on nature, including green house games and looking for ways to help nature but let's not get so caught up in this that we toss the baby out with the dirty water.
(6)
(0)
SPC Michael Terrell
MAJ Hugh Blanchard - Have you tried a SDR (Software Defined Radio) setup? I have one, but I need to put up an antenna. I live in an older mobile home with aluminum skin.
(0)
(0)
MAJ Hugh Blanchard
I once served in uniform as an Asst TRADOC System Manager for Ground IEW Systems. We built SIGINT and EW platforms for ground forces. And we wanted to use software-defined radios in some of those systems, but the technology was then in its infancy. Now they are a more pragmatic option than they were several years ago.
(1)
(0)
SPC Michael Terrell
I worked on Microdyne's RCB2000 while it was still in Engineering, to take it into production. It was a dual SDR based Telemetry receiver that allowed predefined IF bandwidth and video bandpass selection. It created a 70 MHz IF output, for each receiver, for standard data recorders as well. It did digital combining for Diversity operation, and thee system could be remote controlled via RSS23, IEEE-488 or Ethernet. All in 7" of rack space. It hit the market in 2001.The operating frequency depended on the block downconverter at the front end. The tuner module output was an analog 70 MHz which was input was digitized from 50 to 90 MHz, and processed wit FIR filters. It was the first digital system on the market. My job was to correct the manufacturing problems, and to build test fixtures. That included updating our reflow soldering process for the finer pitch components, and dealing with the It department, to get an entire block of addresses, since the firmware and software were on the engineering server. They couldn't understand why just one address wasn't enough. Once in production, many receivers were connected to the network, so I implemented programming the final block, based on the last three digits of the serial number. The chances of having two with the same address online at the same time was exceedingly rare. when the blocks were 250 units.
(1)
(0)
We're actually having a couple of cool days, 97 today, 103 tomorrow, get your chores done very early, hope like hell you have AC.
(5)
(0)
Read This Next