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==WE NEED A BANDWIDTH-BASED FREQUENCY PLAN==
FOR THE FUTURE OF AMATEUR RADIO Bravo! for the new ARRL proposal in the works for code-free license restructuring. It is long overdue, and it is a great step forward! ARRL: Thank you for all your work... Please consider that, due to recent radio technology and the proposed changes to licensing structure, we desperately need a better frequency plan than the olde "Novice Refarming Proposal" from the 1990s that was pulled off a dusty shelf. Instead, we need a "Bandwidth-Based Frequency Plan" for the next decade or more. DIGITAL MODULATION IS THE FUTURE Digital modulation and processing is changing the way we communicate and coexist in the HF frequency spectrum. With the multitude of new digital and analog modulation schemes, including "digital voice", there are compelling reasons to integrate voice, CW, data, image, and keyboarding "modes". Hams want to be able to use existing technology to simultaneously keyboard, exchange multimedia files, and talk by voice with each other on the same frequency... something our present rules prevent on HF. MODE IS NO LONGER A VALID DEFINITION Due to technology changes, the old definitions of what a "mode" is are now blurred beyond recognition. Existing band/mode rules are stifling creativity. ARE WE NOT COMMUNICATORS? One example of how our present plan stifles communication is by keeping USA amateurs segregated and actually preventing us from communicating with the rest of the world on the 40 and 80/75 meter bands. Hams want to be able to communicate via voice internationally on the 40m and 80m ham bands. HF FREQUENCY PLAN BY EMISSION BANDWIDTH - NOT MODE If we are to continue to advance amateur radio into the future, we need MODE FLEXIBILITY. Otherwise, we will be faced with the need to be constantly generating new proposals to the FCC to accomodate new technology. The simplest and best way to solve this problem is to divide the HF bands according to "emission bandwidth" for better distribution of spectrum activity. This will not only encourage new research and development in modulation techniques, but it will help amateurs to communicate with each other by breaking down the frequency/mode/band barriers which have confounded us on some bands for the past 40 years. Here is a better HF Frequency Plan for Amateur Radio in USA. MODE-BASED HF FREQUENCY PLAN USA kHz 1800 to 2000 any mode 500Hz bandwidth 1830 to 2000 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 3500 to 4000 any mode 500Hz bandwidth 3600 to 4000 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 5MHz channels - mode 2.8kHz bandwidth 7000 to 7300 any mode 500Hz bandwidth 7075 to 7300 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 10100 to 10150 any mode 500kHz bandwidth 10115 to 10150 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 14000 to 14300 any mode 500Hz bandwidth 14075 to 14350 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 18068 to 18168 any mode 500Hz bandwidth 18080 to 18168 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 21000 to 21450 any mode 500Hz bandwidth 21100 to 21450 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 21350 to 21450 any mode 10kHz bandwidth 24890 to 24990 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 28000 to 29700 any mode 500Hz bandwidth 28100 to 29700 any mode 3kHz bandwidth 28600 to 29700 any mode 10kHz bandwidth NEW AMATEUR EXTRA - ALL FREQUENCIES - ALL BANDS. "NEW GENERAL" and "NEW NOVICE" BANDS ACCORDING TO THE FOLLOWING FREQUENCY PLAN: kHz 1800 to 2000 GENERAL 3510 to 3600 GENERAL AND NOVICE 3650 to 4000 GENERAL 3700 to 4000 NOVICE 5MHz channels GENERAL 7010 to 7075 GENERAL 7025 to 7075 NOVICE 7100 to 7300 GENERAL 7150 to 7300 NOVICE 10100 to 10150 GENERAL 14010 to 14075 GENERAL 14025 to 14075 NOVICE 14150 to 14350 GENERAL 14250 to 14350 NOVICE 18068 to 18168 GENERAL, NOVICE 21010 to 21100 GENERAL, NOVICE 21100 to 21450 GENERAL 21250 to 21450 NOVICE 24890 to 24990 GENERAL, NOVICE 28000 to 29700 GENERAL, NOVICE BY YEAR 2010, 30% OF ALL HAMS WILL BE NOVICE OPERATORS Under the new ARRL proposed license restructuring plan, the number of amateur radio operators on HF will increase dramatically. This is good. We need this to preserve our frequency allocations. We will see a vast increase in the number of "New Novices". The new Novice operators will be valuable emergency communicators, so we need to make room in our bands for them to communicate. 73---Bonnie KQ6XA ARRL Member .. |
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