It all started innocently enough, I gotten Marcus one of
those old “unsafe” electronics experimenter kits that Radio Shack used to sell
in the 80s and 90s. Happily you can
still find them unopened occasionally on eBay.
The manual was written by Forrest Mims III, an icon in the hobbyist
circles. He wrote a series of “Engineer’s
Notebooks” for Radio Shack in the 80’s. These
thin and inexpensive books were/are very accessible for the teenage mind. They contain just enough explanation and
theory to let you build the circuit diagram that followed. Letting you learn experientially the theory that
makes it all so dry from any other source.
As it turns out, this is how I learn best. I spent countless hours
building stuff on a solderless breadboard.
The watershed moment was when my mother discovered the
freezer had been wired with a light sensor and an alarm…yeah I forgot to take
it out, oops. Well, we had moved to
Severna Park by that time and it turns out that the retiree living next door
was the president of the local Amateur Radio club, AARC. He was more than happy to redirect the energies
of a curious 14 year old from scaring the crap out of his parents to learning
about radio and satellites.
I had a lot of fun hanging out with Mr. Bill (Bill Cooke,
K3CN). His TV was a Heathkit, meaning he
built it out of parts and they *expect* you to be able to fix it, that was
fun. And of course he introduced me to amateur
radio. Under his tutelage I learned Morse
Code (required in those days) and was enrolled in one of the first Novice Class
training sessions held at AARC. In due
time I passed the Novice exam and was licensed as KA3ARM; this was about 1980
or 1981.
Time moved on and Mr. Bill developed some health issues that
necessitated a series of surgeries that took him out of circulation for about 2
years. In the meantime I the license
every *other* teenager dreams about: my driver’s license. And the voices in my head started chanting
stuff about girls and as we all know, cars are like a gateway drug to
girls. So… I never really got any further
into the radio hobby.
It was something I'd always wanted to get back to, but never really seemed to have the time or money. I still don't have the time, really, but in my next post, we see how cheap it can be to jump into HAM Radio.
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