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bad reception this a.m.
Very poor reception this morning (1200 UTC). Had rain all last night and
into today, unplugged the radios due to lightening last night. Nothing received at all in SW, all bands this a.m. Brightening up this afternoon, I can hear the usual spanish scattered around the lower bands. |
On Sun, 11 Sep 2005 14:52:19 -0600, uncle arnie
wrote: Very poor reception this morning (1200 UTC). Had rain all last night and into today, unplugged the radios due to lightening last night. Nothing received at all in SW, all bands this a.m. Brightening up this afternoon, I can hear the usual spanish scattered around the lower bands. Oddly, my $50 satellite radio continues to perform nominally. http://www.sec.noaa.gov/today.html#satenv |
David wrote: On Sun, 11 Sep 2005 14:52:19 -0600, uncle arnie wrote: Very poor reception this morning (1200 UTC). Had rain all last night and into today, unplugged the radios due to lightening last night. Nothing received at all in SW, all bands this a.m. Brightening up this afternoon, I can hear the usual spanish scattered around the lower bands. Oddly, my $50 satellite radio continues to perform nominally. http://www.sec.noaa.gov/today.html#satenv My guess is that 'nominal' performance is all it's capable of even under ideal conditions. |
Wait til them satellites get totally fried in a BIG solar storm.. and
are useless for years until replaed at great expense The Ionosphere, meanwhile, will absorb the shock like a rock in a pond, settling down in a few days |
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David wrote: On 11 Sep 2005 18:07:35 -0700, wrote: Wait til them satellites get totally fried in a BIG solar storm.. and are useless for years until replaed at great expense The Ionosphere, meanwhile, will absorb the shock like a rock in a pond, settling down in a few days Actually, the fact that Earth's magnetic field is weakening is materially reducing the Reducing the what, 'tard boy? Did you have a stroke due to over medication? dxAce Michigan USA |
wrote in message ups.com... Wait til them satellites get totally fried in a BIG solar storm.. and are useless for years until replaed at great expense The Ionosphere, meanwhile, will absorb the shock like a rock in a pond, settling down in a few days The sats are not even insured at least in Sirius's case. They state that in their S.E.C files. Perhaps they can't get them insured or the rate is just too high? Lucky |
On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 11:10:27 -0400, "Lucky"
wrote: wrote in message oups.com... Wait til them satellites get totally fried in a BIG solar storm.. and are useless for years until replaed at great expense The Ionosphere, meanwhile, will absorb the shock like a rock in a pond, settling down in a few days The sats are not even insured at least in Sirius's case. They state that in their S.E.C files. Perhaps they can't get them insured or the rate is just too high? Lucky Not really worth the payments. There is a cash reserve just in case and a spare satellite in an hangar (on a hanger?). The plan is to either put the spare in the same orbit as the other 3 or use it on the Equator and use 2 of the others as rotating (pun intended) spares. If they do the former, XM's fixed-install advantage will vanish. Stay tuned. |
Perhaps they can't get them insured or the rate is just too high?
Perhaps if they lose a satellite they are SOL anyway so why bother with insurance? |
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