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Mark wrote:
You know what the trouble is with us amateurs is ? We are stuck in the analogue age... We should all be using digital communications by now.. Wasn't there a time when amateurs were ahead of commercial design? Now all we do is complain when the commercial world brings out new technology that causes a problem with our old technology. Look at the big picture people... We are still using analogue communications.. Blimey , even my home phone is digital. My CD player is digital, my TV is digital. That's my 2 pence worth ( about 4 cents... ) There are some serious limitations to digital voice comms that make it not work so well for our purposes. Bandwidth issues, believe it or not. Another problem I note is that I was reading a review of a unit that will interface between the microphone and xciever. I was reading along with interest - it sounded pretty good - then at the end of the article they note that you have to receive the whole transmission, or you receive nothing. No tuning across the bands looking for a signal. Perhaps the ARS should be channelized like CB? Comparisons with cell phones are amusing because the quality of those little POC's is by and large unacceptable IMO. "Can you hear me now?" 8^) Modern digital HF voice can be hi fidelity; narrow bandwidth, and experience few dropouts. It is superior to SSB, in any case. I don't see why it is not a superior solution for amateur service HF needs. The next trend will be software defined radios/cognitive radios, for which we have already got a simple taste of in recent years with Kachina, and so on. The thing that will be new to us is the incredible flexibility of the choice of waveform and frequency. It IS a real shame that hams, as hams, have not led the telecom revolution/evolution in the last decade. We had a shot at being the first practical and major adopters of spread spectrum a generation ago--that fizzled. It may very well be that changes in the mode allowances on HF will encourage some major innovation. Do you now realize that SSB has had a longer run than AM as the dominant mode in the ham community? Other than legacy use in military and public service, where else will you find such an allegiance to SSB? SSB is noisy; not optimized in bandwidth; and of poor fidelity. CW even beats it for S/N for a given link. SSB is especially prone to broadband low noise levels. All the more reason to move it aside for better modes. 73, Chip N1IR |
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HAMS in or near EVERGREEN, COLORADO | Antenna |