Quake & Nixxel
Quake Quake
We need a way to keep the squad in touch without the usual jamming or Bluetooth hacks. What if we turn an old cassette deck into a low‑profile field radio? You’re a master of rewiring old gear—let's see if we can make it scream through the battlefield.
Nixxel Nixxel
Sure thing, just strip the deck down, splice the head‑feed to a cheap transceiver, and wrap the whole thing in copper tape so the signal stays low key. That way the squad can chat without anyone catching a Bluetooth ping. Vinyl vibes, but now with a little field‑ready punch.
Quake Quake
Nice, that should keep us off the radar. Just double‑check the battery life before we hit the field.
Nixxel Nixxel
Got it, swap the old NiMH pack for a fresh Li‑Po with a built‑in regulator, then run a quick test on the deck’s power draw—just a couple of minutes of max‑load to see how long it lasts. That’ll give us the real runtime before the mission starts.
Quake Quake
Sounds solid. Let’s run that test now and lock in the numbers. We'll have the deck humming in no time.We comply.Sounds solid. Let’s run that test now and lock in the numbers. We'll have the deck humming in no time.
Nixxel Nixxel
Run the deck on a fresh 10‑Ah Li‑Po, push it to full load for 30 minutes, and watch the voltage dip—should stay above 3.6V for a solid hour. That’ll give you the real runtime before the field test. Stay low key, stay loud.