Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Mike Coslo
writes: Carl R. Stevenson wrote: "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , "Carl R. Stevenson" writes: The FCC and Congress see the ARS as a valuable national resource. I hope they remember that BPL. FCC seems to require a reminder now and again... And they are being reminded vis a vis BPL. The "money" I'm talking about is that represented by all the OTHER commercial radio services administered by the FCC. Oh ... why didn't you say that? This is where the FCC's true mission exists, The FCC has a Congressional mandate to regulate all of the radio spectrum "in the public interest, convenience, and necessity" - that includes the ARS. Included in that "public interest, convenience and necessity" are economic concerns. Some perceive that broadband access to the 'net is somehow a big part of economic recovery, regardless of what other services get trashed. See Comm. Abernathy's remarks on the "Road To Enlightenment" and "Wideband Nirvana" being BPL. As if! The problem is the the BPL vendors/organizations apparently "pitched" BPL to the Commissioners as "the greatest thing since sliced bread, "the infrastructure already exists" (the wires are there, but they'll have to spend many millions of ratepayers' money to add all of the couplers, modems, etc.), and that it would provide a quality, economical competitor to xDSL and cable modems, all with 'no problems'." It's understandable that the Commissioners would get rather excited at the prospect, BUT they haven't had all of the facts, just hype from the BPL industry and utilities that are seeing $signs ... despite the fact that it's a demonstrably crappy business model. The other reason the Commissioners would get excited is that they simply don't have the technical background to see the problems without significant education on the matter ... and, sadly, NONE of the Commissioners has a technical advisor on their staff ... several legal advisors each, but not a technical advisor amongst them. NOTE: I am NOT trying to "defend" the FCC's enamourment with BPL, just explaining how it came to be and what's required to turn it around. One of the odd things about the commissioners however. They must be able to suspend disbelief pretty easily. Household and electrical wiring has been around for a long time. And there's no rocket science to the technology of riding a signal on a line voltage circuit. Control signals are sent along these wires regularly and have been for many years. Mike, the "X10" system works at only a few hundred Hz of spectrum. At no time was any part of the US electrical distribution system, home to generating plant, EVER CHARACTERIZED OR STANDARDIZED AS R.F. TRANSMISSION LINES OVER A 1 TO 80 MHz FREQUENCY RANGE! Apparently the Office of Engineering and Technology at the FCC doesn't understand that yet...? I can look out at my neighborhood's electrical distribution system and see "RF transmission lines" that must vary from several hundred Ohms to just a few Ohms within the metal conduit of my home. That is NOT any sort of "RF transmission medium" that anyone can expect to work at either smooth, easy, or trouble-free radio frequency transmission. There's discontinuities up the ying-yang there and wherever there are discontinuities, there is also the danger of even more radiation (in addition to introducing more attenuation). So if this was (is) such a good way to send signals, why wasn't the internet developed this way in the first place? For the simple reason that it does NOT work very well. :-) I've got a pair of Phonex through-the-line coupled "modems" that are supposed to work between two rooms here. It's the second pair over the counter, the first pair returned because they don't work well. Second pair is no better. One good reason why they don't work is that the AC wiring in one room is on one side of the "double-phase" split from the pole drop and the outliet in the other room is on the other side. Neither Phonex or any other of the Homeplug group explains that. I measured an attenuation from the AC outlets better than 30 db from 10 to 80 MHz, 36 db being lower limit of this setup. The attenuation is probably greater than that. No sense in improving the test setup with that much attenuation...it is already too great. I believe that I am skeptical enough that even if I didn't have a technical background, that question would pop up pretty quickly when considering BPL. Carl, is there any other way that we can aid this fight? One of the first things to try is to force an explanation of how all the vaporware BPL systems work. NONE of them explain it in enough detail to make any electronic sense right now. They haven't done so in any of the prominent electronic trade publications yet...other than more generalized, non-specific-detail claims. Vaporware. LHA |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
How does a 6146B fail? | Boatanchors |