How the Central Nebraska Near Space Program got
started…
My first exposure to this hobby known as ARHAB or Amateur
Radio High Altitude Ballooning, was in February 2002 when a friend shared an
article he found online about MABEL-1. It was
about these guys in Michigan that
had assembled some electronic packages, tied them to a weather balloon and let
it go. They were able to track the
real-time position of the balloon, take pictures and send video from the
balloon, among other things. This looked
like the kind project I could have fun with, so I did a little research. I was curious about the radios that they were
using for their communication and found out they were using amateur radio modes
and frequencies. I discovered that you
had to acquire a license in order to legally use amateur radio equipment. I purchased a book, studied, and passed the
test for the Technicians Class license in April 2002. The project was sort of “on hold” for about
two years after that. I got sidetracked
with international communication and other uses for amateur radio after earning
my General Class license in April 2003.
Early in 2004 the bug bit me again, this time hard enough to start
seriously researching what it would take to launch one of these things. I started reading all I could about the hobby
online. My biggest influences came from EOSS the Edge of Space Sciences in Colorado,
NSTAR the Nebraska Stratospheric Amateur
Radio group out of Bellevue, and
Paul Verhage who teaches in Idaho
and writes a bi-monthly near space article for Nuts & Volts magazine. Once I started assembling my own payload to
send to near space, I started communicating regularly via email with Mark N9XTN
from the NSTAR group. I knew it would be
more fun and whole lot easier if we had a group of people to help with this
project. I contacted several local
individuals, all who are “hams” and got a favorable response. CNNSP was born. NSTAR extended an open invitation to join
them on any one of their launches. We
finally got the chance to help with one of their missions on May 7, 2005. Mark made a
recommendation that we fly our first few flights in tandem with another group
just to be sure all of our gear would perform as expected. A date and location were agreed upon, and CNNSP-01
flew its first tandem flight of with NSTAR on May 30, 2005 from the Seward, NE fairgrounds.
I’d like to personally thank the following groups and / or
individuals for their contribution in helping CNNSP get started:
Mark, Wayne
and everyone else from NSTAR
Mike, Rick and folks at EOSS
Paul Verhage – KD4STH
Jack – WY0F
Jeff – K0JLR
Doug – KA0DOC
Gene – WB0PKP
Stan – N0YXV
…and all the rest of the ARHAB community for sharing your
ideas, results, and expertise.
Thank you,
- R. Hammond KC0MWM
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