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Dave Platt wrote:
In article , Phil Kane wrote: According to what I've heard, that's a "hot button" topic, but Bill Cross of the FCC (an active ham) said at Dayton that he applies the "duck test" to the D-Star repeaters (making them eligible for automatic control). That makes good sense to me. As I understand it, some D-Star advocates are claiming that a D-Star repeater isn't a repeater, because the regs state that a repeater retransmits the incoming signal "instantaneously", and the packet delay in a D-Star system makes it not-instantaneous... that it's fundamentally a store-and-forward system, more like a BBS (albeit with a very short storage time). One B too many IMO! ;^) That same line of thought (if valid) would seem to apply to a fairly high percentage of ham-radio analog repeaters on the air today. It's quite common to have a digital or bucket-brigate delay device in the receiver audio path, with the analog audio being presented to the repeater controller and transmitter some time (up to tens of milliseconds) after it was actually demodulated by the receiver. This can help reduce the chopping-off of the first part of the first syllable, and allows the transmitter to be un-keyed at the end of the transmission before the beginning of the squelch-tail noise burst gets out of the delay pipeline. Our repeater system uses several polling receivers at different sites. (6 or 7 IIRC) The recievers transmit their received signals to the main site. The main repeater site determines which is the strongest signal, and sends that one through to the main repeater transmitter. As you can imagine, there is some delay there too. Maybe 250 milliseconds. I can't recall hearing anyone argue that an FM analog repeater with an analog bucket-brigade (or even ADPCM digital) audio delay circuit was magically "not a repeater" because the audio retransmission was not "instantaneous". If the D-Star not-a-repeater proponents were to win their case, it might be a *very* pyrrhic victory, as analog repeater owners might also qualify to move into non-repeater frequency segments. Sauce for the goose... One of the biggest problems putting up a repeater these days is that many areas are just full. There's no room at the Inn. And the area in which a D-Star is likely to do best is in those crowded areas. So they tried to do an end run around the issue. Without a lot of thought. Seems like we have a nice patch of bandwidth between 2 meters and 440 that is a bit underutilized? - 73 de Mike N3LI - |