The sounds of Sputnik
- Share via
Jessica Garrison
COSTA MESA -- Thirty years ago, Jim Scott made history by taping the
sounds of Sputnik on his ham radio.
Now he uses the equipment to wow his children and grandchildren.
Nestled between a crib and tiny, brightly colored plastic chairs is
the black receiver on which the Costa Mesa resident says he captured the
beep, beep, beeps of Sputnik, the Soviet satellite launched in 1957.
The incident had been tucked away in his memories until he attended an
Aug. 24 school board meeting, where students from Harbor View Elementary
demonstrated how they talked to the Space Shuttle Columbia via ham radio.
Scott remembers his brush with Sputnik as if it were yesterday.
It was the height of the Cold War, and Scott was a young father living
in Texas. He spent his spare time fiddling with the technology of ham
radio, which let him talk to people half a world away.
He read in the newspaper that the Soviets had successfully launched a
satellite before the Americans, terrifying people and propelling the U.S.
to spend millions on its own space program in an effort to keep up with
-- and eventually pass -- its Communist enemy.
Scott’s first thought was: “I wonder if I can hear it.”
So he went out to the shack where he had his ham radio, and he and
friends started searching for a signal. He was in luck. There was a radio
transmitter on Sputnik, and the satellite was broadcasting.
“We found it,” he said triumphantly. “It was going beep, beep, beep.”
Thinking quickly, Scott, who holds seven patents and now operates a
company that makes gaskets for airlines, rockets and submarines, slipped
a tape into his machine and recorded the sound.
Then, he and his friends hooked up the signal to a machine that
translates noise into sound waves.
“We could tell what the amplitude of the signal was,” he said.
And from that, he said, he and his friends deduced that the satellite
was “nothing more than a tube ... and that it did not have military
capability.”
“It was propaganda. It had no military value to the Russians,” Scott
said, adding that he thinks Sputnik is “the best thing that could have
happened to America ... because it sparked the space race.”
At 4 that morning, Scott put on his bathrobe and went out into the
backyard. He looked up at the sky and saw Sputnik cruising by.
He then picked up his radio and told the world that he found the
signal.
Not long after that, Scott said, there was a knock on his door. Two
men identified themselves as officers with Naval Intelligence.
At first, Scott thought he was in trouble. He thought he was going to
be accused of accidentally interfering in transmission.
But the two men quickly got to the point: The Navy had been caught off
guard by Sputnik.
They had not been monitoring ham radio wavelengths at the time Sputnik
was launched and didn’t capture its transmission. But they later had
heard Scott tell his radio friends that he had the tape, and they wanted
it.
“Can you imagine the trauma that these guys felt?” he said.
Scott, who considers himself a staunch patriot and served in World War
II, said he was delighted and proud to surrender the tape.
“I would give my life for this country,” he said.
Jim Scott Jr., who has taken over the family company, SECO Seals Inc.,
said he vividly remembers his father playing the tape of Sputnik.
“We grew up in the ‘60s, so there was always rockets going up,” he
said. “But that tape was cool.”
With the high-speed communication of the Internet, ham radio is no
longer cutting edge, but Scott still has it all set up in the back
bedroom. And as he shared it with his children, he plans to share his
brush with space-age greatness with his grandchildren.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.