Thanks for sharing this.
We can all help someone learn how to be a good Amateur Operator. It just takes some time and effort.
Colleen Roth, N8TNV;
----- Original Message -----
From: That Behler <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Date: 2009/05/21 15:01:26
Subject: Re: Ham Radio Spirit
>
>
> Thanks for sharing this, Steve.
>
> It does the heart good!
>
> 73 from Tom Behler: KB8TYJ
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Steve" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2009 10:48 AM
> Subject: Ham Radio Spirit
>
>
> Ham Spirit
>
> By way of background, a post came to the Kenwood TS-2000 LIST ASKING HOW TO
> increase power on the 2000 because he couldn't afford to get a separate
> amplifier. People told him, of course, that even if he got thirty watts
> more
> out of the 100 watts it gets normally, you could damage the finals or get a
> lot of intermod.
>
> This Dean wrote back and said he just picked up a small amp from an estate
> sale and he would give it to this guy for the cost of shipping.
>
> Many of us wrote back on the list about how nice it was that'd he do that,
> and
> how we all thought ham radio spirit was dead. Here below is Dean's
> explanation:
>
>
> Joe;
>
> Some 50 years ago, there was a young kid not even a teenager yet, that each
> Saturday evening he had an invitation from a licensed ham operator that was
> in his 70's to come over to his home. That young kid would always make sure
> he
> got all his chores done that his parents had given him that day, so that
> he could be at his friend's promptly at 7pm. He would stare at all the big
> knobs, meters, controls, microphones, and large metal boxes just wondering
> if
> it was possible to talk to the astronauts that were launching on rockets to
> fly out in space. After all, a man called President Kennedy said that they
> were going to walk on the moon before 1970.
>
> Then, the time came that he had been waiting for each week, he got to hold
> the
> microphone and talk to people on the other side of the world that were
> already
> in tomorrow. After each contact, he would go outside and look at the pieces
> of
> wire and the big antenna that could spin around thinking to himself, he
> had just used that and his voice somehow was coming off that thing. Then he
> would run back inside because he did not want to miss another chance to talk
> as he had only 1 hour in which to have his dreams come true.
>
> Well, that little boy came home from school one day to find out that his
> friend has passed on. He was crushed as he had developed a friendship with
> that
> man that he said to himself, he would never forget him and that he would
> never
> let the gift he had been given, go unnoticed. That same day that he found
> out he his friend had passed away, he was given a note that also came from
> his
> friend. He opened the note and when he read it he began to cry because his
> friend had given him a gift; one that would never be as big as his
> friendship
> but nevertheless it was a good gift, he had been given a microphone that
> had no connector on it, some wire with instructions on how to build an
> antenna, and of course a radio just like the one he had talked on with his
> friend.
> He had also been given a book to study from and the name of someone to call
> when he was ready to get a license to use the radio, the antenna, and of
> course
> the microphone. He closed the note with a goodbye and postscript, it said
> "have fun talking to the space men".
>
> That little kid was me and by 12, I had my first amateur radio license, not
> in
> this country but in another. Amateur radio has made a big impact on my life,
> I only hope it has done the same to someone else.
>
> Dean
> KG6ZCD
>
>
> Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit
> materiari?
>
> Steve, K8SP
> Lansing, Mi
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