GEARS W TX (146.115 MHz) recordings for 2026-02-24
Los Angeles link up.
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Los Angeles linked up.
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Ko 6 kld monitoring on 55.
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Kilo Oscar 6, Kilo Lima Delta monitoring system. Calling System 7, link up.
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8k6lnk system 36, snow mountain range.
2 hrw connected. Ke2h rw disconnected.
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Connected k6lnk system 36, snow mountain range.
All fuse disconnected.
System 19 link up.
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System 19, link up k6lnk system 36, snow mountain range.
System12 link up.
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Speaker A: Hello world. 86 POC mobile in Rotor Park. System 26 lift up. Let me make sure I got that right. N6IW8 from D6 dot mobile. Hey buddy, this is Adam over here. Traveling up the 101. It just started down for when you were talking, so I had to crank up the volume to talk to you. How you been?
Speaker B: Oh, I'm okay. Name here is Pete, Papa, Echo, Tango, Echo and Chico. And where you headed? You headed to work or headed home or what?
Speaker A: I remember you meeting Chico. Yes, I like the event at home I worked a night shift for Peach. During the day I'm a tower guy. Do a little structural engineering, a little construction, a little tower climbing. We actually had a job on Friday. I don't know if you heard about some lightning strikes down in Santa Rosa, but one of them took a direct hit to one of the towers that I got a hand in and it smoked all the wireless broadband equipment on that tower. It's pretty good show. Did the deer and the lighting mid the tower. It blackened everything. Put a really cool little pattern too.
Speaker B: Oh my God. It doesn't sound too good. Hey, I have a question. Have you ever been shocked? Really bad shock?
Speaker A: No, not that I truly remember. I can tell you I've been across 48 bolts before I came across AirBN. Across 120 and never been RS birds. But I've been on plenty of towers, hot antennas and I felt a little warming sensation going on. But let me be straight up where you can see those are in San Francisco and those are 50 kilowatt antennas on SFAM. So they are. You know, I set the breed apart.
Speaker B: Oh yeah, well, dealing with electricity scares me really. I've had times where I've taken apart
Speaker A: the
Speaker B: utility box, the meter, you know, to change a relay. I was scared,
Speaker A: Familiarity with it. But I wouldn't get some place to help you get hurt. Just take the living hell out of it. Put on some rubber gloves, use some insulated tools if you want to go to work. I seen breakers and panels that are live and what have you. It's not too freaky. Couldn't think of anything really surprising. Nothing's really coming to mind. I do have a job coming up during a couple weeks making an automatic transfer switch at one of the local radio stations. One of their three phase quick pick a dump. It's only 25 years old, so I got another one and away we go. You know, they want that walk as fast as possible. Total downtime is probably going to be about 20, 20 to 30 minutes. But of course you got these fill the night on Saturday.
Speaker B: Yeah.
Speaker A: So are you headed to work now or are you headed home? Ed is home. I work the night shift for PG. So 2 to 10 is what we call it all about 10 minutes in the house or. So it's a good 40 minute drive from where I work in Petaluma to where I work in Santa Rosa. When I rode my bike, it was closer to an hour and a half. I enjoy doing it. I just don't have three hours a day to pedal anymore. Well, we're getting a pretty good rainstorm down here. What's it looking like for you? Are it's raining.
Speaker B: Not real heavy, but it's. It's wet. And then a few days ago, like last week, I'm trying to think maybe last Thursday we had rain, snow, it was really coming down. It didn't stick, but. Pretty crazy for Chico.
Speaker A: Well, you know, my sister was there for two years since the college. All the rumors are true. Back growing up, kids went to two different colleges primarily because they Cal Poly and 500 from what I discovered from both are pretty damn similar. Told people go down there and do social things. But no, I don't recall her ever talking about. I don't recall her ever talking about it. Snowing over there in Chico. I'm putting together a job for county of Napa up on Mount St. Helena and that's at 4,300ft elevation. And boy, you could just see the snow stacked on top of that place. When I was working Friday, it looked like a solid blinded. Oh yeah.
Speaker B: You know what? One thing I noticed as we get
Speaker A: older,
Speaker B: the cold and, and the heat also seems to get more intense. You know, like these days I'm retired. Oh my gosh, no ice. My feet get cold.
Speaker A: I've got to run back to the house crying.
Speaker B: Know what?
Speaker A: I think that's actually common with most people. My sister, who's 45, I saw her for lunch on Saturday and we were talking about him. She says when she was 20 or 21 years old, she would wear to go to a frat party in the snow. She wears three in heels and skirts, a sheer blouse, have her hair make up perfect and then walk four blocks to it. Cu. Now she's wearing a parka. What am I thinking of here, Long John, Some leggies, some fur boots and whatnot. Still freezing. It's amazing how that affects you. Or does it?
Speaker B: Hey, well, where did you grow up? Like where did you go to high school?
Speaker A: Both went to high school in Santa Rosa, that's where we grew up. We went to Chico like many other young women because it's a fun place to be. I think she met a boy who he connected well with. His name was Todd and he went to Chico. So she transferred, I think a semester later. And if I remember right, I remember right. They broke up while she was in Chico. That was a story. You went on some singles cruise with his older brother. Why would you do that when you're in a relationship with somebody? Anyway, I guess he met someone else who was like eight or nine years older than him and already had two kids. End up cutting it right on my sister and then had another baby with this woman. It was all drama.
Speaker B: Now, what about you? You got kids and married,
Speaker A: Same girl for 12 years. We got married though, a couple of years back. We have an 8 month old son now. I'm 46 and if I could do my life, I could write a letter back in time to myself, send it, you know, and then receive a. When I was a young man, boy, the things I would do differently. I'll tell you this on Pete. Nobody cares about your gpa. Start talking about your college degrees and job with your co workers, they start trying to shut you down. They don't want to hear it. All that years I spent my 20 to get an A in every class. Letters of recommendation for this ethics exam, for that, you know, bragging degrees. It has absolutely no return on investment.
Speaker B: Wow. Hey, tell me about your son.
Speaker A: How old did you say he was?
Speaker B: What's his name?
Speaker A: His name is Grant. My kid, he's 8 months old. Doesn't do a whole lot right now. He keeps mom and dad up all night. Oh. You know what I learned is that the money is in the freeze. People are going to tell you. Well, that's no secret, but I started a business doing engineering design and construction for Tom Sites Power Sites. And that is what really was the uplift of my life. I had to get some capital together to do this, but boy, that was where it's at. I just wish I got into it earlier. Anyway, that's what I tell myself. It's a younger man.
Speaker B: Oh, yeah. Well, hey, you've got a son. That's something. I have two girls, one boy, they're all brown. My son is like 45 and I think, how does this happen? I mean, really, it just seems like yesterday I was holding him little baby and now look, 45, what happened?
Speaker A: 46. And I tell you what, I can think back about some things that happened 20 years ago. And that feels like that was last weekend. Yeah, don't blink. It moves by very quickly. Well, Pete, let me tell you what, buddy. I enjoyed the chat. I gotta pick it up next tomorrow night, though, because I'm pulling into my cul de sac and I want to hang this thing up so I can get something out of refrigerators it up real quick before I go to bed. Yeah, enjoy Saturday. Let's do this again tomorrow. 86 pocket finals.
Speaker B: Six, night of relays. Yeah. Hey,
Speaker A: look forward to speaking to you again.
Speaker B: Sounds good. Talk to you later.
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Los angeles link up. K6LMK system 36, no mountain range.
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Los angeles link up. K6lnk system 36, snow mountain range.
Los angeles link off k6lmk system 36 snow mountain, rain.
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Speaker A: Updated local information flood advisory with multiple
Speaker B: del Norte,
Speaker A: Humboldt
Speaker B: K6LNK System 36, Snow Mountain Range.
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Speaker A: Updated local information flood advisory with multiples
Speaker B: Del Norte, Humboldt, Mendocino, Trinity.
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K6lnk system 36, snow mountain range.
Speaker A: Station calling November 6, India Whiskey Hotel.
Speaker B: Your audio is a little low, over. I appreciate that. Hopefully this is a little bit better. Let me know.
Speaker A: I'm not sure of your location, but a little bit of noise on you, but you're making it. I heard you, over. Well, I.
Speaker B: Thank you. I'm at the cork golf course near the oakland airport.
Speaker A: Okay, well, that transmission was full quieting.
Speaker B: Doing good.
Speaker A: Oakland. Oh, I used to live in Oakland. We're on
Speaker B: Rockridge District.
Speaker A: I went to a school up there called California College of Arts and Crafts,
Speaker B: which is now closed. Okay. I'm just traveling from St. George, Utah, watching my granddaughter play golf here at the golf course. All right.
Speaker A: How is the weather? It's raining here in Chico.
Speaker B: Chico, over. Currently, that looks like a light rain this morning, but it's not raining right now, so I don't think we're expecting anything until 12 new.
Speaker A: Well, let me ask you this. Have you been driving all night? Over.
Speaker B: No, I left Saturday, spent the night in Harris ranch on Interstate 5, then got here to the Fremont Health Lodge. Spend the night Sunday and then last night tonight I'm heading over to my sisters in Redwood City and then I'll be heading up to Roseville to watch my grandson play volleyball.
Speaker A: Are you from the bay area?
Speaker B: Yeah, I grew up here in redwood city for 28 years and spent 20 years up in roseville, California, and now the last 25 years in St. George, Utah.
Speaker A: Sounds cool. Now, I've heard about St. George. Supposed to be a real nice place,
Speaker B: but yeah, I lived in Oakland for
Speaker A: 40 some odd years. Pretty nice. My son lives there and you know, people talk about crime, but my son says, nope, he doesn't go hanging out at night. But you know, he says nothing has happened. He hasn't been mugged or robbed, beat up, whatever, knock on wood. And he likes Oakland.
Speaker B: Yeah, I understand that. Usually when people talk about those sorts of things, they're in isolated spots and then they try to make it general, but it's more isolated in different areas as we go over.
Speaker A: Oh, yeah, well, Oakland does have a lot of gangs. You know, I think of the Nortenos
Speaker B: and
Speaker A: I used to teach there.
Speaker B: You know, Albany,
Speaker A: my last teaching job was in Berean Camel Pius High School. Nice job. They make a lot of money there.
Speaker B: Yeah, copy that. And that's pretty nice. Like I say, St. George is pretty good, but it's growing. A lot of people from California moving there, buying their places and increasing the prices of houses and stuff.
Speaker A: Oh, you know, people from Texas talk about how Californians Bring their political views to Texas and they don't like it.
Speaker B: Names and goes in St. George, Utah, because it's pretty conservative Republican area. The only part that's Democrat is the Salt Lake City area. Otherwise, the rest of the state is pretty conservative Republican.
Speaker A: If you don't mind my asking, are you Mormon? We have Mormons in our family.
Speaker B: I am not Catholic. Went to eight years of procurement school in Redwood City. At St. Pius,
Speaker A: I was a Catholic. My parents weren't Catholic. I went because it was across the street from where we lived and I was working my way up. I gotta tell you this. I wanted to be an altar boy. And then all of this stuff happened about the priests. I was crushed, you know, because they were the people you could go to and trust. And then I just went, oh, my God.
Speaker B: Yeah, I hear you on that. I was an altar boy from third grade all the way up through eighth grade. But this back in the 60s, so it wasn't so bad back then as it was, you know, in previous years.
Speaker A: Well, I believe in God.
Speaker B: Christ.
Speaker A: Hello. But the church I went to had traditional Latin mass. You know, they had it down, boy.
Speaker B: They had a chorus.
Speaker A: And the church was just beautiful. You know, the. The sun would come through these stained windows. I mean, you just felt God.
Speaker B: Yeah, I hear that. The church I was at, St. Pius, my first year as an ultraviolet, was Latin. And then they switched up over to
Speaker A: England the next year and I.
Speaker B: Fairly big church there in Redwood City that I belonged at. I don't practice going to the Catholic Church anymore, but I still believe in God and stuff. Anyway. Over. Oh, yeah.
Speaker A: N6iwhere. Well, I like Catholicism. Okay. I believe the intent is good. I didn't really prescribe church, and I kind of believe the earth is our church. And, you know, one thing that's happened in my life is I've seen suffering, okay? People in hospitals, relatives, you know, dying. So it's given me a new outlook on life, you know, I mean, like, don't take it so seriously.
Speaker B: Yeah, I understand. I'm not a big believer in organizations because in every organization there's good and bad, so it doesn't make a difference. But. Yeah, I hear you. As far as life goes, I was a partial one time at a golf course and I ran into these couples that were in there early 80s, and I said, how are you doing? They said, fine. It's a. Was nice day. And one gentleman said, it's nice day to be above ground. And that I was 40 at the time. So it was a Different perspective.
Speaker A: Well, you know, I. I see people, I'm retired, and I go to the doctors and stuff like that and I talk to people, I meet people and they. What's wrong with them? And they all say it's better than the alternative, which of course is being dead.
Speaker B: This is true. But when you're, when you die, you don't have any more pain or anything and you just basically fall asleep and then your spirit goes wherever it's supposed to go.
Speaker A: You know, I often think about what happens
Speaker B: after death.
Speaker A: We go somewhere, but, you know, I guess I'll let you know when I get there.
Speaker B: I understand that. It's just kind of interesting when you think about all the things that are going on in the world and how we don't have control over what the sun does and the chemistry makeup of our bodies. If some chemical goes out of whack or if something goes out of whack, it an interesting thing to think about, but I think when it's time to die, your body goes. And then your spirit goes hopefully to heaven.
Speaker A: Hey. Well, you know, my mom was a Bible thumper. Really. And I don't think that was a bad thing. She didn't shove it at you. You know, where people say you're a sinner, you're this, you're that, you need to be saved or something, I don't know. But she set an example. And when she died, okay, it was very peaceful. My two sisters were there. She believed Jesus Christ was going to come and help. And I'll bet he did, because. Nope, take off. Gone. Bye, Mom.
Speaker B: Yeah, and that's a good way to go. My mom was pretty much the same thing. I'm just a big believer in the ten Commandments and then the eleventh Commandment in the New Testament. And treat your neighbor as you treat, as you'd like yourself to be able to be treated and just be kind to everybody,
Speaker A: you know, that's what I learned.
Speaker B: And I'm so glad that I never, you know, the way I've seen some
Speaker A: guys, you know, they get in a
Speaker B: fight, they beat up the guy.
Speaker A: Even when he's out, they're still right. That's cruel, stupid. But all of that comes back, you know, And a lot of times it's the good things that we did, you
Speaker B: know, that really are important. Yeah, I agree with you. So this pretty nice little system, being able to talk to you up there in Chico, from Oakland, in Utah area, we have the inner tie that goes from Montana all the way down to Arizona and over to the eastern side of Oregon. It's pretty good.
Speaker A: Yeah. Well, I'm glad to hear signal cleaned up when your first got on.
Speaker B: It was rough, but know you're good to go.
Speaker A: Well, you know, the thing about this link, Carla, is. And they've come on to me and said, keep it short, go away. You know, find another home, blah, blah, blah. Okay, okay. Well, this machine's for emergencies only.
Speaker B: Oh, good.
Speaker A: I'm so glad. But you know, there's no rag chute know Bob and Fred are not getting on the way to work using their ham radio camaraderie, over.
Speaker B: Yeah, copy that. If it was a for emergency, they would break in and say it was and then you would figure out what the emergency was. But you know, long conversations if nobody else is on the network. I haven't really heard anybody else talking on the network as I've been monitoring. Yeah, Roger, Roger on that.
Speaker A: And you know, I'm not the only one. I've heard other people say to me, they resent that.
Speaker B: Oh, it's for emergencies only.
Speaker A: You know, all you have to do
Speaker B: is say
Speaker A: we're stopped, whatever. But I think people tend to go away, you know, they're not welcome.
Speaker B: No, I hear you. I mean, if they follow the rules. The rules are already set up for talking on the ham radios. I just passed my general course here last week. I took my technician course in January.
Speaker A: Well, what's it like for GMRs where you live? Same thing. A lot of people are getting on Paradise. Power went out, fire was coming. Nobody knew what was going on. A lot of people died. Now, no lights required, no ticket, no test for the license.
Speaker B: Ten years,
Speaker A: the whole family use the same ticket. A lot of people down here, but I never hear them talking.
Speaker B: Same in St. George area. I mean, our GMS is okay with not a lot of people talking, but we do have a network up in the Salt Lake area that is, I guess, pretty active. But you need a license in order to talk on the GMRS repeater stuff. You don't need it for the other frequencies that Simplex and other people can use. Those like the Jeep rallies and things like that. Oh, yeah, Roger, roger.
Speaker A: And they opened up some vhs. No license required. Get on up there, real close to the fire department frequencies and there's a few channels I've heard talking on. And that's kind of weird.
Speaker B: Yeah, their frequencies are in the 400, you know, up in that area, the 460 area, 450, but there's like five or seven frequencies that are set aside for repeaters and you need a license for that. I do have a license for the GMRS as well.
Speaker A: Hey, what about hf? Over.
Speaker B: I'm just starting to explore that because I just got my general's license for the ham, so now I'm able to talk on hf, but I'm doing research and stuff and trying to understand that a little bit better. Over.
Okay, this is KM7DZX73, and thanks for responding. I put my radio out the window and it's a little bit better, I guess.
Speaker A: Hey, I had some rig trouble here. I don't know what's happening. Pretty hot radio. Whoops. Talk to you later.
Speaker B: You responding? And again, like I said, I put my antenna out the window, and it's a little bit better than keeping it inside the rv.
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Kilo office six kilo lima delta. Good morning. On the carla network. Come through and say hi. Mobile and monitoring on system 7 ko6 jlb system 7 link up.
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Speaker A: Updated local information. Avalanche warning
Speaker B: alpine el dorado, nevada placer douglas lacho, carson city.
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17.
Excellent.
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D and.
Los Angeles link up.
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W0da.
Fresno link up.
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Speaker A: And 6 GRT from very rainy but taking a break, short break. Probably reading California above Reading California and six grg that's on local.
Speaker B: What's the status of your digital station can send gk?
Speaker A: Well, I haven't done anything for the last couple of days, so I'm expecting possibly the first thing I'll be putting on will be my PI 400.
Speaker B: But
Speaker A: I might try again with the Windows system. I get tons of errors with Mint. I don't know what's going on there. That was either. Well, I think Mint Mint worked from that usb and then I tried to get the Mint to install into on the Lenovo and I guess I goofed it up because it stopped working from the usb. So I put Mint on the. I just a regular download of Mint not installed on the Lenovans and the first thing that Rufus said to do was put it on the usb. And the version I put on the USB gives me a ton of error. So I don't know what's going on.
Speaker B: Yeah, okay. I was watching a video there from the. I think the guy from Rockland or whatever he is El Dorado Hills, the L K6 L W Y or whatever his name is, Raspberry PI guy. He was just going over these Raspberry PIs and I guess the prices have gone up considerably over the past couple of months because his AI is sucking all the RAM or something. So now we're having this issue like they had before with COVID and all that. So, like the availability has been tougher and the prices have gone way up still like 70 bucks or something like that for like a pi5 or something. Anyway. Yeah, so he was going over, well, which ones will actually work for his digipi, you know, so he was recommending. Right. Even at the pi0 pi02. I think it was called pi02. But of course the pi3s are still good. Me they have like one gig and it says really, it's all you need for the digipy anyway, unless you're going to start running multiple applications. So, yeah, just kind of watching that video.
Speaker A: Is Digipy anything like Camboy ATK's original PI system?
Speaker B: Yeah, I sent you information on that before. Yeah, it is. Yeah. Digipy. I think he's got a donation service or something, you know, versus, you know, GM4HTT. You can just go to GitHub and download. I think his is kind of behind a paywall. Like, I don't think it's a lot of money, but it's five Bucks or something, I don't remember. But. But Digipy was mine, that paywall.
Speaker A: But did Digipy require the use of his hardware that, you know that Digipy, that. Is that the same guy, that Digipy thing?
Speaker B: Yeah, he's a. The creator of it. Yeah. Yeah. So I don't know your question, but they use a Raspberry PI. Like if you got a pi3 or whatever. I'm sure your pi400, whatever that is, I think that's the pi4. Right. So. But yours has like a keyboard or something, so I think that's why.
Speaker A: I don't know.
Speaker B: I don't know. I've never had a PI 400. So anyway, I'm sure it'll work fine. But yeah, you have to get the program behind this paint wall.
Speaker A: Well, I've got. No longer got Internet, so. Oh, that's kind of complex. I have to deal with what I have and I've got help with the PI 400. That's why that is going to come
Speaker B: back
Speaker A: probably within a day or two.
Speaker B: Yeah. Okay. Well anyway, I'll check back in on you after that, I guess. But yeah, not having Internet is a big deal in the year 2026. I suppose after the rain and everything, you'll have some abilities again.
Speaker A: Not necessarily. The only, only thing I would have would be using the iPhone and the hotspot, which did work, but I don't know how well it would work for a download. Although I didn't really have it in the. In a spot that. I mean, I don't really know for sure what direction it's coming from from. So I suspect it's coming from my northish towards Reading and from. There's one. There's one tower way down by the 273, down over the. You like have to go over a bluff. It goes flat over there and then dropped into a canyon. And then that cell tower signal would have to come up the canyon and then somehow make it over the top of the canyon to me. But if that's where it comes from. Back when I had this one, I had this one Android system that would tell me which tower I was using. Sometimes it would say that one. Sometimes. Sometimes it would say one that was way over on the 44.
Speaker B: Oh yeah. Well, it might be kind of fun to do an experiment. Some sort of a blocker, like some sort of a shield behind it or something so you could block out signals from behind it or something. I mean, I don't know how that would work, but just thinking of the box. So you could say, okay, 1, 5. Put it this way. I get signals. I don't. I point this other way. I don't. You know, then you kind of know. I guess I was just thinking, I've never tried what you're doing. So the only time I've used mine is a hot spot is out in the field, you know, doing the parts on the air for a couple hours.
Speaker A: Well, I've got this one system that I've got to try out again that uses a cable to an antenna. And then it has. It's a Wilson system. So the antenna is a Wilson antenna that I got separately from. From. From the Wilson gadget stat. What you do is you stick your cell phone in this cradle, and then the Wilson signal comes in through the antenna port of the cradle from an antenna. So to do it right, you'd have to have probably a piece of hard line or something. It would have to be big cable. Bigger cable. And go up above the house, the roof, maybe, maybe onto my mast with that special antenna. And that antenna, even inside the building, gave me more signal than any other way that I've ever done. So the Wilson system, it will work. And I've just got to get that thing working again. That could be the way I go Internet for a while, But it's been a while since I've used it. Let's see, he's ending the weather right now, so I'm gonna pay attention to that, but I'll be able to hear you.
Speaker B: Okay, well, I'm cooking up some stuff, so I'll go back to that. But I'll talk at you later. I will. Say, just look at your weather up that way. Looks like you got rain all day until midnight. Maybe expecting about 1. 1.3 inches of rain. So. Yep. Stay dry, stay warm, and take care. 73km6mgk.
Speaker A: Yeah, I don't know if it would be as heavy as it was overnight. That was exceptionally heavy. All right. Yeah. Sierra Papakilo has moved to Arizona. She was on a boat in San Diego. And something's changed in her life. She was married. I don't know if she's still married. She moved to Cottonwood, Arizona, and she just did the weather, so. And ofg just jumped in. So I'm gonna get out of here into Jersey.
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Los Angeles link up.
Updated local information. Flood warning with multiples.
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Fresno link. Updated local information. Flood warning with multiple Humboldt Mendocino.
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System24 link up.
Papa.
Dad.
Kilo juliet 7, echo tango x3.
Los Angeles linked up.
Loop.
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Los angeles link opera.
Keep.
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K6lnk system 36, no mountain range.
Updated local information Flood warning with multiple humble Mendocino Good.
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Los Angeles link up.
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Speaker A: Hey, larry, how you doing? N6kn here,
Speaker B: Doing just fine in there again. How are you doing? Now what's been going on in your world?
Speaker C: I've been kind of bored all day. Decided to go in and change all my root and admin passwords just for the fun of it. They were a little complex only because of some of the things that happened with Chris up there on pra. Besides that, all that installed all good. How you, how you doing with the weather up there?
Speaker B: So what does a guy do when he gets bored? He changes his password.
Speaker C: Yeah, well, you know, I've got that automatic password thing with steel. I don't know, my password was just too complex. It's a whole bunch easier now, especially if I sign on with my cell phone. Yeah, wife, she's in there making some kind of a pork dinner, listening to some salsa music and I'm just in here watching a video and, and doing some self educating,
Speaker B: I guess. Good. I got a couple more things. What I know is read that email for civil procedure on migrating my player node to ESL 3.0. All I need help with earlier formatting. My best requires downloading that file there. Oh, I'm the CEO and my page zero, my SOS thing is still shutting down. Are you able to go into logs and CYA mode and shut down?
Speaker C: So that's on the eight. Zero? Yeah, I mean we should take a look at that. All right, yeah, give me a minute. I'm gonna, I'm gonna. I'm gonna disconnect myself from here and connect up to your 84 and I'll go in and look at the supermarket, see what I can find.
Speaker A: Yeah, I'm good.
Speaker C: All right, give me a minute.
Speaker B: N60.
Heavy 6 brp, huntington beach, los angeles link up.
K6jth. This is js6 hdc.
Yeah, sure. No problem. It's kn6kilo, November 6th, and the suffix is Hotel Echo. Charlie. Name is Anthony, and I'm in Orange county by 10. 1. Capistrano.
Hey, no problem. Well, it's good to hear you out there, and I just was monitoring, but we'll let you throw it your call sign out there, see if you can get some of them come back to you. And we'll be on the side listening. And what was the name over there again? Can I get your call fan right. K6JBH.
All right, sounds good, Jeff. I take her easy out there. And it's going to be a warm week this week. I was looking at the forecast 80 degrees all weekend climbing, but right now it's showing to be around 90 lower 90s for Friday. So we'll see how that goes as we get closer to it. Okay, take care, Jeff. Catch you later. KN6 HTC, back to monitoring.
Hey, Dennis. Yeah, I'm just working from home today. Got the HT here on my desk and taking notes down on this HF stuff. And I wrote down for my notes, no sunspots means no activity. So. Yeah, it's good to know. Always learn something new. And thanks for throwing that out there for other people to that.
D.
60.
K7g&d.k7g&d. And 16. Redding link.
D.
System32 link up.
D.