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On Jun 16, 2:19?pm, Mike Coslo wrote:
wrote groups.com: On Jun 11, 11:21?am, "Bill Horne, W1AC" wrote: Like many others, I occasionally use AM on both 160 and 80 meters. Minor point: For some odd reason, FCC lists "80 meters" and "75 meters" in Part 97 as if they were different bands. Really odd, in that the ARRL lumps them together as 80 meters. The whole thing is not accurate anyhow, so I guess it is more by convention than anything else. Yup. Why FCC considers them different bands, even though they are right next to each other, is a mystery. I don't think we'll lose HF spectrum. VHF/UHF is what the commercial and military folks want. Agreed. HF "suffers" from unpredictability, or perhaps more accurately, it's wildly varying characteristics. One part of the day, a flea power signal can make its way around the world, the next part it won't. Then the sunspots can do the same thing. Those are all the characteristincs that we have fun with, but are really bad for the control that is needed by other groups. I like to think about what would happen during good propagation to all those competing signals. There's also the size of simple, effective antennas on the lower frequencies, particularly if you want broadband, no-tuner performance. I saw a neat design for a 40-10 meter discone in the ARRL Antenna Book - it's not exactly small. What has already started to happen is lack of protection for licensed radio amateurs. Look at the BPL mess: FCC has dragged its feet even when documented harmful interference has been presented. Politics always loses when confronted by physics. Even if wins all the battles. I don't know about politics losing all the time. If the licensed services are not protected, all kinds of havoc can happen. In the bad old days, 27 MHz was an ISM band, reserved for things like diathermy and heat-sealing machines. I remember one case, here in Philadelphia, where a heat-sealing factory's machines put a strong harmonic right on the Philadelphia Police dispatcher channel. Of course FCC was all over them in a big way. But imagine if FCC had dragged its feet... Of course amateur radio isn't the same as the police channel, but once the camel's nose gets in the tent, things get very odd. As for the bad behavior on 75, it is one of the reasons I sold my AM rig (National NC-173, EFJohnson Viking 2 and 122 VFO) and focused on CW. What really puzzles me about the problem is this: Several months ago, FCC widened 75 meters (and narrowed 80 meters) That would be quite a trick! (joke) Yup. But they did it anyway. even more than had been requested. AM voice is now legal for US Extras from 3600 to 4000 kHz. That's more space than any HF/MF ham band except 10 and 15 meters. Is there no room for AM in all those 400 kHz? Not for the miscreants! 8^( 'zactly. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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