Everything is magic. Watch the full episode here: ua-cam.com/video/RIXF9L6HRLA/v-deo.htmlsi=yY3ne5HlnzNiyAWF Merch, magic, and more only at scamstuff.com #prank #stunt #educational
I had to learn about something similar when getting my HAM radio license a few decades ago - "ducting" when radio waves just bounce around in the atmosphere for a while allowing some signals to travel beyond standard line of sight.
What amazed me is the “wow…” comment from the other individual. This is an ancient technology, but still a fun and challenging hobby that I picked up from my Grandfather who was a Ham operator. I quit the hobby in the late '90s when the Internet was beginning to explode. I thought returning but playing around with it a few years back, it has lost a lot of it's mystique and charm, many stations are now gone, it's just not worth the time and money to go back.
You would be surprised. I am 32 years old and figured out how to do ham radio thru UA-cam and others in my community. It has been fun logging contacts from the other side of the planet. The possibilities are endless with today's tech. I have seen hybrid smartphone/ham radios out there on Google. I hope you get back into the swing of things! 73!
Everything is magic.
Watch the full episode here: ua-cam.com/video/RIXF9L6HRLA/v-deo.htmlsi=yY3ne5HlnzNiyAWF
Merch, magic, and more only at scamstuff.com
#prank #stunt #educational
Well, I have a new potentially expensive hobby to get into.
Don’t do it.
Just wait until you find out you can do amateur television and access satellites. It has been one of my favorite hobbies!
@@thedarthsidious66 Why do you have to tell him that? lmao
Potentially expensive? Nah. EXPENSIVE.
@@Recivu-project you didn't have to come in with the knife like that 😭
That’s a crazy combover!😂
I had to learn about something similar when getting my HAM radio license a few decades ago - "ducting" when radio waves just bounce around in the atmosphere for a while allowing some signals to travel beyond standard line of sight.
What amazed me is the “wow…” comment from the other individual. This is an ancient technology, but still a fun and challenging hobby that I picked up from my Grandfather who was a Ham operator. I quit the hobby in the late '90s when the Internet was beginning to explode. I thought returning but playing around with it a few years back, it has lost a lot of it's mystique and charm, many stations are now gone, it's just not worth the time and money to go back.
You would be surprised. I am 32 years old and figured out how to do ham radio thru UA-cam and others in my community. It has been fun logging contacts from the other side of the planet. The possibilities are endless with today's tech. I have seen hybrid smartphone/ham radios out there on Google. I hope you get back into the swing of things! 73!
If the raquia were dome shaped you'd have a time element that could be validated. Anyone done that?
Doesn't work because there is no "dome". Soooo..... PROVEN WRONG!
it's bouncing on firmament
In a way, yes. The ionosphere is effectively solid to those frequencies.
Its radio. What do you think the firmament is made out of? Glass? Itd go straight through glass.
Had a friend that rebuilds antique shortwave radios. He built one that only picked up the atomic clock out of Texas. We live in Mississippi.
Not uncommon at all.