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![]() "Frank Dresser" wrote in message ... "Dee D. Flint" wrote in message .com... Well interference caused by hams will be small potatoes compared to the power that some of the commercial broadcasters are allowed to use. That will compromise BPL over a much larger area than any ham station ever could. If BPL ever comes to my area, I'm within a few hundred yards of some of these broadcasters so the BPL users will never even notice my signal since they'll be constantly torn up by the commercial stuff. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE I expect the BPLers would trap the broadcast frequencies. If the interference from established broadcasters is still too high, they simply won't offer service in that neighborhood. But I don't think RF is the biggest problem for BPL. Overhead power lines will only intercept a small percentage of the RF, and re-radiate at least half of that. I think noise sources plugged directly into the power line are going to cause far more problems. Frank Dresser Could very well be. If one of the neighbors has welding equipment, that can really put a lot of noise onto an electrical line. It takes a lot of filtering to keep that out of your radio and no doubt would do a good job of interfering with the Internet signal. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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