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You bet. They started out when some of the guys noticed brief point-source
bright flashes on the lunar surface. Used 80m to time whether the flashes were synchronized across large observation distances. If they were not, then the flashes were likely meteors in the earth's atmosphere; if they were synchronized, then the probablility that they were associated with an event on the lunar surface was pretty high. The guys had scopes setup in the backyard and 100-foot headphone/microphone cables going back to the radio so they could observe and talk on the radio simultaneously. They did reach a conclusion about the flashes.... -- Tom "Jeffrey Herman" wrote in message ... "Bob Sherin, W4ASX" wrote in message To be honest, I never felt comfortable on 75 meters, nor did I feel that I fit in for the most part. There were groups, however, in which I enjoyed participating, Anyone remember the Astro-Net on 3885 kc from the 1960s? It was composed of group of amateur astronomers who nightly trained their telescopes on a particular celestial object and would then have round-table comments about that object. It was fascinating to eavesdrop on that net. 73, Jeff KH6O -- Chief Petty Officer, U.S. Coast Guard Mathematics Lecturer, University of Hawaii System |
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