[TangerineSDR] Member Identification

Dave Larsen kv0s.dave at gmail.com
Sat Mar 12 12:09:54 EST 2022


Joe

The person was David N1HAC but make rocket payloads in a lab at Dartmouth.

He travels rock launches to insure the payload are installed correctly.

For a young people project a balloon with an aprs tracker is a more
trackable project.

Also the NOAA sends up weather balloons usually daily.  They can be
tracked. Usually they are not return. They generally go 50-100 mile before
the come down.


Dave KV0S

On Fri, Mar 11, 2022, 9:39 AM Joe Hobart <nova at npgcable.com> wrote:

> Hi Dave and Nathaniel,
>
> During recent Tangerine conference introductions, one of the members
> mentioned
> he was involved with telemetry for rockets.  Do either of you remember who
> that was?
>
> One of our club members just asked me about this topic.  Don is working
> with
> Native American students in Northern Arizona and needs more information
> about
> rocket telemetry.
>
> I had asked club members for ideas about an amateur radio exhibit at the
> local
> STEM celebration April 30.  The event organizers emphasize: "Plan a
> hands-on
> activity or highly engaging demonstration for participants."
> Unfortunately,
> launching rockets or even balloons from the fairgrounds would probably not
> be
> appreciated by folks at the nearby (2/3 mile distant) airport, and other
> amateur
> radio activities are not nearly as engaging.
>
> Thanks,
> Joe, W7LUX
> Snowy Flagstaff
>
>
> ---
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