Thursday, January 26, 2006

January 26, 2006 Net Report

Tonight we had 20 Amateur Radio Operators checking into our net. Thanks to all who continue to make our weekly net a success.

Trivia Question:

What United States military service was created on January 28th by an act of congress? Was it
  • A) The Army National Guard
  • B) The Coast Guard
  • C) The Marine Corps
  • D) The Civil Air Patrol
Trivia Answer:
  • B) The Coast Guard
The Coast Guard began as the Revenue Cutter Service which was founded on August 4, 1790 as part of the Department of the Treasury. An act of the U.S. Congress created the Coast Guard in 1915, with the merger of the Revenue Cutter Service and the United States Lifesaving Service. The US Lighthouse Service was merged into the Coast Guard in 1939. The legal basis for the Coast Guard is Title 14 of the United States Code, which states: "The Coast Guard as established January 28, 1915, shall be a military service and a branch of the armed forces of the United States at all times." Upon the declaration of war or when the President directs, the Coast Guard operates under the authority of the Department of the Navy. The Coast Guard later moved to the Department of Transportation in 1967, and on March 1, 2003 it became part of the Department of Homeland Security.

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Once again, a lot of folks got the answer correct. You guys are just too smart! Here's a list of the hams that checked in to the net tonight. A * indicates the people who got the trivia answer correct. Thanks to all for checking in.

  • WB6A Pat
  • WB6ATV Ron *
  • KE6CZH Robert
  • KG6DBL Bill *
  • K6FCC Khalil *
  • KF6GKR Terry
  • KE6IYC Brian *
  • KD6JEV John *
  • N6KAS Andy *
  • WA6KFI Rick *
  • KG6KTC Leon *
  • W6NVY Gary *
  • KG6NWJ Berry
  • KF6PIH Scott
  • K6QVZ Joe *
  • KG6RDA Sidney *
  • KF6RMC Michael
  • KF6ZQM Harry *
  • N6ZZK Ted
  • K6MSU Ron *

Thursday, January 19, 2006

January 19, 2006 Net Report

Well, tonight's net was plagued by interference on our 2-meter repeater due to another repeater up on the hilltop. Even though the copy was rough, we managed to take check-in's from 24 Amateur Radio Operators. If you normally check in on 2 meters, why not try using the 440 repeater (which seems to have less of a problem with desense and interference)?

Here's tonight's trivia question:

What is the most common street name in the U.S.?

Answer:

Most folks thought the answer was Main St. and a few said First St. But, believe it or not, the most common street name in the U.S. is Second Street.

In order, the most popular street names are:
  1. Second
  2. Third
  3. First
  4. Fourth
  5. Park
  6. Fifth
  7. Main
  8. Sixth
  9. Oak
  10. Seventh
  11. Pine
  12. Maple
  13. Cedar
  14. Eighth
  15. Elm
  16. View
  17. Washington
  18. Ninth
  19. Lake
  20. Hill
Why is Second at the top of the list? Many towns prefer to give their first, or "Main" street, a proper name.

This information came from a National Public Radio piece.

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No one got the answer right! But here are the stations that checked in to the net:
  • WB6ATV Ron
  • KE6CZH Robert
  • K6FCC Khalil
  • KF6GKR Terry
  • N6HY Ernie
  • KB6IS Madeline
  • KE6IYC Brian
  • KD6JEV John
  • WA6KFI Rick
  • KG6KTC Leon
  • NY6L Jay
  • KE6MSS Thomas
  • W6NVY Gary
  • KG6NWJ Berry
  • KF6PIH Scott
  • K6QVZ Joe
  • KG6RDA Sidney
  • KG6TRR Bob
  • WA6USL Murray
  • KF6YBM Henry
  • KF6ZQM Harry
  • N6ZZK Ted
  • K6MSU Ron
  • KD6JPD Gerald
  • WD6FOX Sean
  • KD6NIW Oliver
Thanks to ALL who checked in to the net.

Thursday, January 12, 2006

January 12, 2006 Net Report

A total of 20 Amateur Radio Operators checked in to tonight's net. Thanks to all!

Trivia Question:

How much would you weigh at the center of the earth?

A) Nothing
B) The same as you do at the surface of the earth
C) An infinate number of pounds

Trivia Answer:

A) Nothing!

A good way to see this is to imagine yourself falling through Earth. Suppose there is a perfectly smooth well that goes straight through Earth and out the other side. It's airless so there's no air friction to hold you back — and forget about the huge temperatures and pressures down deep. This is a thought experiment. You take an impossibly deep breath, step over the edge, and fall into the well.

As you step off, all of Earth is below you and that entire mass pulls your mass and you start to fall. As you fall, though, now some of Earth is above you and there is, consequently, less Earth below you. The farther you fall, the less of Earth there is below pulling you down and the more Earth mass there is above pulling up. So you get lighter as you fall.

Finally, (about 21 minutes later) when you reach the center of Earth, you weigh nothing at all because half of Earth is above you and half below. The two pulls cancel.

By the way, you're going your fastest now as you whiz towards the opposite end of Earth at a blazing 17,700 mph (28440 km/h). In another 21 minutes you'll pop out of the well somewhere in the middle of the Indian Ocean. Then — back you go towards Kansas or wherever you started from.

"You'll continue to bob back and forth through the center of the Earth with your head popping out at your starting point every 84.5 minutes," says Rod Nave, physics professor at Georgia State University. "It's amusing that this is about the same time it takes a satellite to orbit Earth (right above the surface)."

Further Reading:

HyperPhysics by Rod Nave: Hole through Earth

HyperPhysics by Rod Nave: Earth's gravity

From USA Today “Wonderquest” By April Holliday

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Here's the stations that checked in to the net tonight. A * indicates that they got the trivia question answer correct. Thanks to all.

  • WB6ATV Ron *
  • KE6CZH Robert *
  • KG6DBL Bill
  • K6FCC Khalil *
  • KE6IYC Brian *
  • KD6JEV John
  • N6KAS Andy
  • KG6KTC Leon
  • K6LMN Roger *
  • W6NVY Gary
  • K6MSU Ron
  • K6QVZ Joe *
  • KG6RDA Sidney *
  • KF6RMC Michael
  • KG6TRR Bob
  • KF6ZQM Harry
  • N6ZZK Ted
  • K6LCS Clint *
  • KC2CYL Anthony *


Thursday, January 05, 2006

January 5, 2006 Net Report

I'd like to thank all the stations that checked in to the FIRST net of 2006, and, as always, a special thanks to W6NVY for playing the Newline Report and for the repeaters!

Two things before I get to the the Trivia Question:

First, Amateur Radio communicators are needed for the Los Angeles Marathon which takes place on Sunday, March 19th. You can find out more and sign up at here.

Second, I'd like to encourage everyone to make a contribution to Amateur Radio Newsline. Every week we play their report and get a lot of great information. Take a moment and write a check or make a contribution using PayPal. $5, $10, $20, or whatever. It is all appreciated. Thanks.

Trivia Question:

On January 5th 1814, The Ford Motor Company announced an 8-hour work day and set a minimum wage for a day's labor.

What was the daily minimum wage set by Ford in 1914?

A) $4 per day
B) $5 per day
C) $6 per day

Trivia Answer:

B) $5 per Day

In 1914 the Ford Motor Company announced that it would henceforth pay eligible workers a minimum wage of $5 a day (compared to an average of $2.34 for the industry) and would reduce the work day from nine hours to eight, thereby converting the factory to a three-shift day.

Overnight Ford became a worldwide celebrity. People either praised him as a great humanitarian or excoriated him as a mad socialist.

Ford said humanitarianism had nothing to do with it. Previously profit had been based on paying wages as low as workers would take and pricing cars as high as the traffic would bear. Ford, on the other hand, stressed low pricing (the Model T cost $950 in 1908 and $290 in 1927) in order to capture the widest possible market and then met the price by volume and efficiency.

Ford's success in making the automobile a basic necessity turned out to be but a prelude to a more widespread revolution. The development of mass-production techniques, which enabled the company eventually to turn out a Model T every 24 seconds; the frequent reductions in the price of the car made possible by economies of scale; and the payment of a living wage that raised workers above subsistence and made them potential customers for, among other things, automobiles--these innovations changed the very structure of society.

In 1926, General Motors Corp. unveiled its stylish Chevrolet while Ford was still churning out the aging Model T. By the time Ford unveiled an upgraded Model A, GM was already on course to overtake Ford in total sales.

The Model A helped sustain Ford through the Great Depression of the 1930s, although the company lost about $68 million a year through that period and reduced its famous $5 a day wage to $4. Many other companies folded.

By 1935, Ford had raised its minimum wage to $6 a day. That hike also was part of an effort to head off union organizing efforts that were challenging the company and turning ugly.

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Once again, a lot of folks got the answer correct! (I'm just going to have to start making the questions harder...) Here's a list of stations that checked-in to the net and a * after the name indicates those who answered the question correctly. Congratulations!

Check In's to the Net:

  • AC6AJ Lee
  • WB6ATV Ron *
  • KE6CZH Robert *
  • K6FCC Khalil *
  • KF6GKR Terry *
  • KB6IS Madeline *
  • KE6IYC Brian *
  • KD6JEV John *
  • N6KAS Andy
  • WA6KFI Rick
  • KG6KTC Leon
  • NY6L Jay
  • K6LMN Roger *
  • K6LMS Bill
  • W6NVY Gary *
  • KG6NWJ Berry
  • KF6PIH Scott *
  • K6QVZ Joe
  • KG6RDA Sidney *
  • KG6TRR Bob *
  • WA6USL Murray
  • KF6YBM Henry
  • KF6ZQM Harry *
  • N6ZZK Ted *
  • K6MJB John *
  • N6HY Ernie
  • AG6NCU Walt *
  • K6MSU Ron