My granddaddy got me interested in Ham Radio when I was a kid. Back then, the entry level license was the novice class. The test for the novice license required passing the Morse Code test. I tried to learn the code when I was in 5th grade, but was never able to get it. Honestly, to this day, I’ve still been unable to get it.
In 2004, at the age of 26, I decided that I was going to finally get my license. I’m not sure when it happened, but at some point the FCC had dropped the novice class and replaced it with the technician class. The entry level technician class license test didn’t require learning Morse Code. To help make sure I stuck with it, I signed up for a class at Universal Radio. At the end of the class, I took my test and received my first callsign: KD8ANP.
About three weeks ago, I filed an application with the FCC to change my amateur radio callsign. My application was granted two days ago, and my callsign has officially been changed from KD8ANP to W8IPK.
Why W8IPK? It was my Granddaddy’s callsign from the time he was 16 years old in 1932 until he passed away in 1999. He never got to see me get my license, but I think he’d be proud that I’m keeping his old callsign on the air.
I don’t seem to have enough storage space in my house. I’m sure I’m not alone in that. Yesterday I took on a little construction project in my garage.
We turned that old bed into a twin sized storage shelf in my garage. We mounted two 2×4′s on the walls in the corner to make a mounting rail to support the bed and make hanging and leveling it easier. Next, we added a couple of support members to the roof trusses to strengthen them. The trusses are designed to be loaded from above, and I was concerned about suspending the corner of the shelf from the bottom of the truss without extra support.
I was hoping to get a couple more years out of my old Blazer, but it had finally reached the point where maintaining it was going to cost more than the payments on a newer vehicle. It served me well for the 7 years that I drove it.
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