I remember listening to the early local radio shows on September 8, 2009, when Obama was going to give a Presidential address to schoolchildren. People were losing their minds; keeping their kids out of school that day, so they wouldn't have to hear a black man speak from a position of authority.
October 16, 2025 at 12:41 AM
I remember listening to the early local radio shows on September 8, 2009, when Obama was going to give a Presidential address to schoolchildren. People were losing their minds; keeping their kids out of school that day, so they wouldn't have to hear a black man speak from a position of authority.
I'm just an systems integration / SCADA contractor for wastewater plants and get the usual anecdotes from operators about weird stuff getting trapped by the bar screens. Mopheads, turtles (!), etc; but the most chilling thing I ever heard was the explanation for why one plant had an old incinerator.
September 5, 2025 at 1:09 AM
I'm just an systems integration / SCADA contractor for wastewater plants and get the usual anecdotes from operators about weird stuff getting trapped by the bar screens. Mopheads, turtles (!), etc; but the most chilling thing I ever heard was the explanation for why one plant had an old incinerator.
I was hoping the recent polar vortex weather bringing temperatures way down might show an increase in activity per my muon theory, but it's actually been a little low.
I've got another Geiger counter kit, so maybe I'll stack it on the current one and combine them to identify muon strikes.
January 21, 2025 at 3:30 AM
I was hoping the recent polar vortex weather bringing temperatures way down might show an increase in activity per my muon theory, but it's actually been a little low.
I've got another Geiger counter kit, so maybe I'll stack it on the current one and combine them to identify muon strikes.
So what else can trigger a G-M tube more often in winter than in summer? Is it Muons created by cosmic rays in the denser cold winter atmosphere? I'm thinking it's Muons.
March 26, 2024 at 2:16 AM
So what else can trigger a G-M tube more often in winter than in summer? Is it Muons created by cosmic rays in the denser cold winter atmosphere? I'm thinking it's Muons.
I got the ham radio bug again in September/October last year and activated my station in the shack since then, checking into regular weekday nets and hunting DX contacts on the weekends. The shack has never had so much ventilation before. I figured this should wipe out the winter spike, but nope.
March 26, 2024 at 2:14 AM
I got the ham radio bug again in September/October last year and activated my station in the shack since then, checking into regular weekday nets and hunting DX contacts on the weekends. The shack has never had so much ventilation before. I figured this should wipe out the winter spike, but nope.
Prior to this past September, I pretty much only went into the shack during mowing season to access the mower and yard tools. The idea that maybe radon was just getting trapped during the winter months and increasing the measured radiation dose seemed reasonable. (I live in karst area.)
March 26, 2024 at 2:11 AM
Prior to this past September, I pretty much only went into the shack during mowing season to access the mower and yard tools. The idea that maybe radon was just getting trapped during the winter months and increasing the measured radiation dose seemed reasonable. (I live in karst area.)
Searching for an explanation, I read that radon is the largest contributor to background radiation. This tube can't detect alpha radiation, but the decay products from radon will still set it off as beta and gamma.
March 26, 2024 at 2:08 AM
Searching for an explanation, I read that radon is the largest contributor to background radiation. This tube can't detect alpha radiation, but the decay products from radon will still set it off as beta and gamma.