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oups.com... Wonder no longer, because broadcasing at IF frequencies has been for year the standard in the US. In spite of some rather silly speculative posts, this mechanism has proved itself for more than 10-years here. In a confined space such as a tunnel, a transmitter of 10-watts more than sufficint to get the job done, and using nothing more sophisticated than a simple wire radiator running the length of the tunnel. In Boston, we also retransmit commercial radio broadcasts into our tunnels, but that requires equipment dedicated to each radio channel that we re-broadcast, and that becomes very costly after 10 stations or so, hence there is a limit. The real challenge is in maintaining emergency communications to the outside from within our tunnels. All are serviced by the traditional leaky coax that runs along the top of the tunnel, but considering that all of these emergency services operate on their own indepdendent frequency bands, so servicing them simulteously becomes somwhat problematic. particularly when hand-held, low power devices enter the big picture. Harry C. All agreed, but that is in a tunnel, which has the advantage of not having to overcome the still-received commercial stations. The OP wants to do this out in the open, anywhere, any time. He also wanted to do it while driving at high speed for some reason, but I think he's quietly shelved that part of the idea. Cheers. Ken |
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