Doing My Hobby At Work: Conclusion

Past Steps and Summary

In a previous post, I mentioned that myself and Jon Schoenberg AA1FH were teaching MIT Lincoln Laboratory’s first amateur radio course. The Lab strongly encourages professional education. Traditionally, these courses are centered around topics like Stochastic Estimation, Introduction to Electromagnetics, or Radar Principles. These courses tend to be very apropos to people’s day jobs and can sometimes be even more esoteric.

For this course, however, I embarked on something that was a bit more tangential — though relevant — to people’s day jobs. Spoiler alert: The class was a huge success! And I was pretty nervous overall to plan, manage, organize, and teach some of the classes. I remain shocked, stunned, and awed by the outpouring of interest people have for this hobby.

So what happy by-products resulted from this endeavor:

  • 6 people (that I know of so far) obtained their amateur license with 5 doing it through our club.
  • Our own Burns Fisher was a guest lecturer for the amateur satellite portion of the class! (Thanks, Burns!) Looking around the room, his talk noticeably engaged the students.
  • Our Weekly Bulletin featured the Amateur Radio course on the front page! This is excellent for coverage and exposure for when we offer this again in Fall 2019. One of our newly minted hams, KO5TI, had a truly wonderful quote: ““The Amateur Radio course is unique in that it uses learning a popular hobby as a vehicle for presenting relevant technical material. We’ve heard from world class experts on antennas, propagation, digital communications, and electronic design.”
  • We took interested folks from the class on the KC1XX (Matt Strelow) superstation tour to demonstrate what state-of-the-art looks like! This helped to maintain interest and get people excited about their own smaller-scale homebrew projects.
  • We generated enough interest for a part-two spin-off. It looks like it’s going to be a HAB project, ladies and gentlemen. This will be a fun hands-on project to get newly interested people involved in hardware and amateur radio. (But with the added benefit of data collection and analysis). We should have a good degree of success from the vast experience of folks at the Lab.

Next Steps

At work, the Technology Office is sponsoring a Build-Your-Own-X class, where X = (something fun). As an example, a Build-Your-Own-Radar currently exists. In this course, employees learn some radar theory, and then build their own radar, perform calibration, and do some testing on moving objects.

I took a shot and submitted a HABCAR (High-Altitude Balloon Carrying Amateur Radio) proposal. The wrinkle in this (which NARS has not done before) is for the flights to be global circumnavigations using WSPR. You can read a fair amount about this from the QRPLabs website and elsewhere on the web. In particular, M0XER has been quite busy; racking up a maximum number of 8 circumnavigations!

Luckily, many people at work have logged many hours flying and engineering the types of balloons needed for these flights. For instance, one has to use mylar balloons instead of latex since latex breaks down from long-term UV exposure. Additionally, one typically needs to worry about carrying ballast with these balloons. At night, as the air cools, the balloon has to release ballast in order to maintain a constant altitude.

After making a 4 minute elevator pitch, with some Q&A, I recently learned the HABCAR idea made it to the final round on January 18th. So, I need to think through more rigorously what a class built around this would look like in my presentation. I will have to present a Bill of Materials, list the support/help required, and outline the goals for each week of the class. It’s a lot of work. But it’ll be fun. Maybe after this project gets off the ground (pun intended), I can bring the lessons learned to NARS’ continuing STEM program.

Happy flying!

–Brian AB1ZO

4 thoughts on “Doing My Hobby At Work: Conclusion”

  1. This is so great Brian! It was a lot of fun to teach that satellite section, to meet your co-workers, and to visit MITLL! Hopefully we will be welcoming even more hams to the fold as time goes on.

    Good luck with HABCAR! We had a paper at the AMSAT Symposium last month about mylar HABs. Very cool! (Maybe they are MABs since they don’t go quite as high?)

  2. Brian,

    Sure glad to see that such “lowly technical” stuff as amateur radio was a bit hit at MITLL. Having spent my career working for military-related projects, there is a mindset in the culture that if it ain’t real expensive ($millions), it ain’t worth it and won’t work. Amateur radio and all its new stuff adds the KISS prospect to the possible solutions to some of the military’s research. All those creative minds at MITLL now have something else to draw on.

    73 de TE

  3. Thanks for all the comments everyone.

    Layne: I actually don’t know the answer to your question currently, but I can dig in and try to find something out.

    Ed: I have noticed for the past few years at the Lab, that people are trending towards COTS (commerical-off-the-shelf) components for the obvious affordability reasons, customization concerns, etc. Because of this, I think amateur radio is fitting in quite nicely! I was really happy with the outcome and looing forward to doing it again!

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