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On Mar 19, 2:11�pm, Phil Kane wrote:
On Mon, 19 Mar 2007 15:16:42 CST, Steven Stone wrote: The biggest problems with the roving radio comm centers is desense. With all the antennas ganged up on the roof of such a small area they take each others radios out every time the other one transmits. You've noticed......! *g -- I have to disagree somewhat. Having gone through an exercise in determining "closeness" of same-band aircraft radios on the same aircraft (civil aviation band at 118-137 MHz) running 10 to 20 W max AM, only five wavelengths separation was fine. That was back at a time (early 1970s) when high-third-order IM specs hardly existed. In a relatively local area, most such emergency comms will be, generally LOS, and not "working DX." There's no point in everyone running transmitters full-out in power for relatively short distances. Yes, I'm familiar with Oregon topography but NVIS techniques can also get out of the trees and the deep low spots. If there's a Power Output control on the rigs in use, it ought to be used to drop the RF output and minimize desensing of nearby radios. I'm just tossing in some things to consider in real-world conditions. It isn't anything against what anyone is doing. 73, Len AF6AY |
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