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In article et, "KØHB"
writes: "Mike Coslo" wrote And it makes an unenforceable power level for no real purpose. Two points: POINT A ------------ This "unenforceable" mantra is a weak argument, which does not gain strength by the repetition. Of course it's enforceable, or at least just as enforceable as power levels have ever been. "Unenforceable" is a complete cop out. If power level is not enforceable at 50W, then it's not enforceable at 2.5W, 25W, 50W ERP, 100W, 200W, or 1.5KW, all of which are power currently exist in FCC Amateur Radio regulations. Then WHY have it? Simply ISSUING ORDERS is a stupid idea without some reasoning behind it. So...why is the "maximum power" under your plan 50 W instead of 100 W? Show your work. POINT B ------------ That particular power level has a real purpose. The purpose is two-fold. Well, if YOU said it, it must have a "real purpose." :-) Purpose #1) It allows us to institute a "learners permit" class of license in which we can limit power to a level which FCC has stated is safe for both the user and unknowing passers-by. What do you mean "we," white man? I think you think you think more than the OET and the IEEE and the USAF and the ANSI. Purpose #2) It allows us to institute a "learners permit" class of license in which the power level minimizes the unwanted side-effects of granting broad spectrum access to relatively underqualified operators. Now, before you spin up your rotors about "but QRP operators work around the world", bear in mind that most of the "bad" signals heard on HF are the result of ignorant operators trying to run a lot of power, and the consequent splatter, flat-topping, birdies, over-compression, etc. On the other hand, I've never heard a distorted or crappy QRP station. In further support of the idea is the fact that all these 100W-class rigs you keep harping on are running at near their designed-in upper capability, making them more likely to become purveyors of all the crappy-signal symptoms I just talked about. At 50W they are much less likely to be straining their design specifications and consequently radiating cleaner signals. In the hands of even a QCAO life-member it would be hard to splatter/chirp/over-modulate when you're running at half the design limit of the rig. Of course. A "learner's permit." As if the ONLY radio emitters in the world came from amateur radio stations. :-) Geez...for a work manager supposedly with a degree you sure don't know much about equipment that can go wrong, be misadjusted, and lots of other little nasties lurking inside electronics boxes. Tsk, tsk. "In the hands of you QCAO members," the "expertise" in radio matters went out the window if you think that RF power output is the ONLY thing causing splatter/chirp/over-modulation (etc.). Someone do something nasty in your wheaties this morning? :-) LHA |
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