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#21
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![]() AK wrote: BPL - impact on radio communications As tests and any sort of technical common sense would make obvious, broadband transmissions on miles of unshielded power lines will create havoc with the reception of micro-volt level radio communication signals. The concept is pure nonsense to anyone with a technical background. My BSEE (with communications specialization) and top FCC commercial and amateur radio licenses does not make me a great expert, but anyone with a comprehension of radio transmission and reception knows that the BPL concept does not work, unless basic MF & HF radio is sacrificed. BPL is a poorly thought out concept, with the unlikely potential for profit driving this otherwise unfathomable concept. Please get some honest technical input before allowing this BPL debacle to continue. Sincerely, AK Unfortunately the folks at the FCC that are pushing BPL have zero comprehension of radio transmission or reception, in fact have zero comprehension of anything technical. They are a bunch of lawyers who only comprehend money. Actually, from what I've seen, the FCC is both very technically savvy; well informed; and progressive. Its emphasis on the law is because it advises , implements, and enforces it. There are plenty of technical folks , BTW. 73, Chip N1IR |
#22
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Hi,
Almost all the fcc commissioners, Mr. Powell included, have legal backgrounds, experience writing legislation for communciations industry (lobbyists ??) special interests and working for members in congress. Three of the comm. have received degrees from universities in north carolina. You are correct, it is about the money. They tried this back in the late 1970's here in ny, they wanted to eliminate the meter readers to save money but that did not work out. Don't know why they want to use the hf regions, why not 10 gig ? Plus, dsl just dropped the price here another $ 5.00 per month to be less expensive the the cable co. road runner net. I don't have a tech degree or work in rf but the harmonics over miles of cable and the expense of these repeaters and or filters seems too expensive to turn a profit in rural areas that bpl was pushing for. BTW, one city in MD has parted ways with their bpl partner and is looking for another one, after spending lots of money to wire up their city. alex AK wrote: BPL - impact on radio communications As tests and any sort of technical common sense would make obvious, broadband transmissions on miles of unshielded power lines will create havoc with the reception of micro-volt level radio communication signals. The concept is pure nonsense to anyone with a technical background. My BSEE (with communications specialization) and top FCC commercial and amateur radio licenses does not make me a great expert, but anyone with a comprehension of radio transmission and reception knows that the BPL concept does not work, unless basic MF & HF radio is sacrificed. BPL is a poorly thought out concept, with the unlikely potential for profit driving this otherwise unfathomable concept. Please get some honest technical input before allowing this BPL debacle to continue. Sincerely, AK "yea right" wrote in message news ![]() If you value radio, this may be the last and only chance to have your voice heard to stop BPL from destroying your hobby. The FCC has extended the comment period for BPL. It is VERY simple to file a FCC comment. Click the link below and enter 03-104 in box #1 (proceeding number) and fill in the blanks. The simplest way to comment is to type your comment into the box on the bottom of the form. http://gullfoss2.fcc.gov/prod/ecfs/upload_v2.cgi If you can't think of any thing to type or wish to make this as painless as possible, you can cut-n-paste the comment I typed below. Thanks for the info & the FCC link. AK |
#23
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FCC Comm. have terms,
half are dem and other half are rep. Powell will be there for a while. He has connections. Bob Miller wrote: On Tue, 08 Jun 2004 19:47:48 GMT, "AK" wrote: BPL - impact on radio communications As tests and any sort of technical common sense would make obvious, broadband transmissions on miles of unshielded power lines will create havoc with the reception of micro-volt level radio communication signals. The concept is pure nonsense to anyone with a technical background. My BSEE (with communications specialization) and top FCC commercial and amateur radio licenses does not make me a great expert, but anyone with a comprehension of radio transmission and reception knows that the BPL concept does not work, unless basic MF & HF radio is sacrificed. BPL is a poorly thought out concept, with the unlikely potential for profit driving this otherwise unfathomable concept. Please get some honest technical input before allowing this BPL debacle to continue. Sincerely, AK Nice letter, but it will fall on deaf ears -- FCC head Michael Powell is a cheerleader for BPL. My suggestion: vote for John Kerry on Nov. 2nd. Kerry does not like Powell. Powell will be out. And we can start afresh with a new FCC head, one who might worry more about the consequences of BPL than this business-friendly administration ever will. Bob k5qwg "yea right" wrote in message news ![]() If you value radio, this may be the last and only chance to have your voice heard to stop BPL from destroying your hobby. The FCC has extended the comment period for BPL. It is VERY simple to file a FCC comment. Click the link below and enter 03-104 in box #1 (proceeding number) and fill in the blanks. The simplest way to comment is to type your comment into the box on the bottom of the form. http://gullfoss2.fcc.gov/prod/ecfs/upload_v2.cgi If you can't think of any thing to type or wish to make this as painless as possible, you can cut-n-paste the comment I typed below. Thanks for the info & the FCC link. AK |
#24
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![]() "Bob Miller" wrote in message ... Nice letter, but it will fall on deaf ears -- FCC head Michael Powell is a cheerleader for BPL. My suggestion: vote for John Kerry on Nov. 2nd. Kerry does not like Powell. Powell will be out. And we can start afresh with a new FCC head, one who might worry more about the consequences of BPL than this business-friendly administration ever will. Bob k5qwg Why do you think Kerry thinks any different than Bush on BPL? Bush has already gone on record as being "pro-choice" on BPL. Has Kerry staked out the opposite side of the issue? Which politician, of either party, is against BPL? Which FCC commissioner, of either party, is against BPL? Frank Dresser |
#25
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![]() "AK" wrote in message news:awsxc.17938$4S5.15367@attbi_s52... Sadly, I am aware of that. Either he's been paid off, or the people pulling his strings have been paid off by the power company special interest reps. My "but anyone with a comprehension of radio transmission and reception knows that the BPL concept does not work" and "unfathomable concept" comments were certainly directed Powell's way. Oh for the good ol' days when at least one or two of the FCC Commissioners were ex-FCC field engineers who understood something about the medium they were supposed to be in charge of. AK Great. If BPL is unworkable, let it fail in the marketplace. Do you really think any politician will vote to preempt a failure? Let's say politician A blocks BPL. Politician B says "Mr. A wants to restrict your freedom to choose! I say every American has the God given right to pick which ever high speed internet access plan he can get!!" Then sleazeball campaigner B starts a whispering campaign -- "Who's pocket is A in? The phone company's? The cable company's? The satellite company's? All of them? Well, there must be some reason he wants to restrict your freedom!!" The upcoming election might be close, and nobody is going to restrict "Freedom" this year. Note that I used the non-partisan terms A and B to describe the politicians. I know there people around who think one party or another is the Repository of Morality and the other is the Heart of Evil, but I ain't one of 'em. Frank Dresser |
#26
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Alex wrote:
FCC Comm. have terms, half are dem and other half are rep. Which Commissioner do we split in half?grin There are five Commissioners. No more than three may be members of the same party. http://www.fcc.gov/aboutus.html Unfortunately I wouldn't count on a Democratic Presidency stopping BPL. Firstly, they're just as susceptible to campaign contributions as Republicans. Secondly, the GOP Congress has a record of overturning FCC decisions if they offend enough lobbyists. (witness the anti-LPFM legislation - which was enacted despite a Democratic President who opposed it) Democratic Congresses in my lifetime never had a record of trying anything that blatant. Doesn't mean they haven't learned from the GOP since then. -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
#27
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![]() "Frank Dresser" wrote in message ... "AK" wrote in message news:awsxc.17938$4S5.15367@attbi_s52... Sadly, I am aware of that. Either he's been paid off, or the people pulling his strings have been paid off by the power company special interest reps. My "but anyone with a comprehension of radio transmission and reception knows that the BPL concept does not work" and "unfathomable concept" comments were certainly directed Powell's way. Oh for the good ol' days when at least one or two of the FCC Commissioners were ex-FCC field engineers who understood something about the medium they were supposed to be in charge of. AK Great. If BPL is unworkable, let it fail in the marketplace. That's one of those nonsense comments that sounds good, but doesn't work. Once "the marketplace" gets tested, amateur radio and most of the other users of HF and MF radio reception will be out of business - never to bounce back once destroyed. Meanwhile, BPL will be "workable" for those areas that never had good cable access and where people were too cheap to use satellite or telephone alternatives. BPL isn't "unworkable" - it's the "unreasonable" sacrifices that must be made to allow nationwide radio spectrum disruption for some trivial gain to a few people and a few big businesses. Do you really think any politician will vote to preempt a failure? Let's say politician A blocks BPL. Politician B says "Mr. A wants to restrict your freedom to choose! I say every American has the God given right to pick which ever high speed internet access plan he can get!!" You must be that same guy that thought he had a God given right to dump whatever he wanted into the Nashua river when I lived along it. His corporate garbage killed all the fish and stunk-up the river for the rest of the world, but using the river for his personal dumping ground was his "right"! Some good ol' New England Yankee took on this "my-rights-over-everyone-else" guy by paying a cement truck to dump a full load of concrete in the guy's drainage canal to the river. The sheriff was called, saw what was done, heard why it was done, and went home without issuing any citation. Too bad that a load of concrete won't stop BPL. ak |
#28
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In article flFxc.1843$2i5.155@attbi_s52, AK wrote:
Great. If BPL is unworkable, let it fail in the marketplace. That's one of those nonsense comments that sounds good, but doesn't work. Once "the marketplace" gets tested, amateur radio and most of the other users of HF and MF radio reception will be out of business - never to bounce back once destroyed. Meanwhile, BPL will be "workable" for those areas that never had good cable access and where people were too cheap to use satellite or telephone alternatives. BPL isn't "unworkable" - it's the "unreasonable" sacrifices that must be made to allow nationwide radio spectrum disruption for some trivial gain to a few people and a few big businesses. There's an interesting analogy to this situation playing out in the airwaves right now. My understanding of this situation is as follows (and may be a bit incorrect). Some years ago, the FCC decided to allow a company which I believe was called Fleet Telecommunications to set up some digital-packet-oriented communication on a set of frequencies in the 800 MHz range. These frequencies were located quite close to the 800 MHz narrow-band FM channels allocated to publics-safety ground (trunked police and fire systems, etc.). There was concern expressed at the time that these digital channels might cause interference with the existing analog channels (intermodulation and receiver desensing, I think). The FCC agreed to allow the allocations, on the condition that the digital operator ensure that interference to existing allocations would not occur or would be abated. Subsequently (I'm hazy on the details) Fleet either went out of business or was bought up... in either case, Nextel ended up as the owner of these 800 MHz digital allocations. Nextel has used them as the basis of much of its current-generation cellphone system. The result: significant, and sometimes very severe, interference to public-safety radio operations. There have been numerous reports of police and firefighters being unable to use their radios successfully, when in proximity to Nextel cellular sites. This has resulted in very real danger to life-and-limb for police officers and firefighters. Nextel has taken some steps to abate specific instances of this (reducing power) when it's called to their attention, but the problem remains. There's a whole massive brouhaha taking place now, about "rebanding" the 800 MHz spectrum. This will probably involve consolidating the public-safety frequencies (requiring modification or replacement of much equipment - Nextel has offered to pay $billions to do this but there's concern that it'll cost twice that much), and moving at least some of Nextel's cellular allocations upwards to a higher frequency band. Nextel wants a big block of spectrum space in compensation, while other companies claim that the FCC has no legal authority to simply hand over that space to Nextel and that the law requires the spectrum to be auctioned to the highest bidder. No matter what the FCC decides to do, it's likely to end up being challenged in Federal court and delayed for years. It's a horrible mess. Some claim that the FCC *could* have acted, on its own authority, to order Nextel to shut down operations in the interleaved bands, because their system is apparently violating the "we will not cause interference to other licensed operations" clauses which were part of the original Fleet allocation grant. The FCC has apparently asserted that it doesn't have authority to act on its own in the absence of a formal legal complaint from a public-safety radio organization... and no city or county or state has been willing to file such a complaint (perhaps because the cost of pursuing it against a deep-pockets company like Nextel would be very high indeed). I agree that if BPL is rolled out en mass, it _is_ likely to cause serious interference with HF operations (amateur and otherwise), and that the momentum of "Hey, we've invested billions to field BPL, you can't just shut us down" is likely to override the original "No, there won't be interference" promised. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#29
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![]() "AK" wrote in message news:flFxc.1843$2i5.155@attbi_s52... That's one of those nonsense comments that sounds good, but doesn't work. Once "the marketplace" gets tested, amateur radio and most of the other users of HF and MF radio reception will be out of business - never to bounce back once destroyed. NEVER to bounce back? Shortwave radio is that fragile? Must not be much keeping it going right now. Meanwhile, BPL will be "workable" for those areas that never had good cable access and where people were too cheap to use satellite or telephone alternatives. BPL isn't "unworkable" - it's the "unreasonable" sacrifices that must be made to allow nationwide radio spectrum disruption for some trivial gain to a few people and a few big businesses. If there's more people who actually want BPL more than SW radio, then maybe they should have it. However, I seem to have less faith than you that BPL actually works. I do have faith that people won't spend money on a system which is unreliable. You must be that same guy that thought he had a God given right to dump whatever he wanted into the Nashua river when I lived along it. His corporate garbage killed all the fish and stunk-up the river for the rest of the world, but using the river for his personal dumping ground was his "right"! You assume wrong. I'm not the same guy. I've never dumped anything toxic in the Nashua river, even when you weren't living along it. In fact, I've never been anywhere around the Nashua river. Some good ol' New England Yankee took on this "my-rights-over-everyone-else" guy by paying a cement truck to dump a full load of concrete in the guy's drainage canal to the river. The sheriff was called, saw what was done, heard why it was done, and went home without issuing any citation. Too bad that a load of concrete won't stop BPL. ak Stopping BPL is simple. It's a political numbers game. Unfortunately, there's more potential customers for high speed internet access than there are SW hobbyists. I'm sure you've noticed that no Democrat is taking an anti-BPL stance. BPL has already been approved in a couple of areas. Or, just maybe, the politicans expect BPL to fail or succeed on it's own merits. If it fails on it's own, then nobody gets the blame for keeping it away from the customers. Frank Dresser |
#30
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![]() "Frank Dresser" wrote in message ... Stopping BPL is simple. It's a political numbers game. Unfortunately, there's more potential customers for high speed internet access than there are SW hobbyists. I'm sure you've noticed that no Democrat is taking an anti-BPL stance. BPL has already been approved in a couple of areas. Or, just maybe, the politicans expect BPL to fail or succeed on it's own merits. If it fails on it's own, then nobody gets the blame for keeping it away from the customers. I see, Frank. You are just a might-&-money makes right sort of guy. Maybe if the FCC will just authorize all U.S. hams to run 10KW on MF and HF frequencies, and give us full immunity to any interference claims, amateur radio can co-exist with BPL. ak |
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