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In article , JJ
writes: Len Over 21 wrote: TAFKARJ claims that "CB" originated in 1946...except that "11 meters" is not at 465 MHz. :-) There was a band at that frequency that citizens could apply for and use, thus a "citizens band" or "cb". Only two of the original four Citizens Band Radio Service classes survive. "Class C" CB evolved into Radio Control as shown in Part 95, Title 47 C.F.R. That Radio Control Radio Service also achieved its own band in the 72 MHz region, now favored by modelers instead of the 27 MHz fixed frequencies. "Class D," originally only 23 fixed frequencies on the old amateur 11 meter band, was expanded to 40 fixed frequencies several years ago. "CB radios" now are all considered to be THE CB. "Class A" and "Class B" CB, both on UHF, were deallocated and eliminated from U.S. regulations back before "CB" was expanded from 23 to 40 channels. "Class C" and "Class D" CB was created in 1958 by the FCC. That was over 45 years ago. I read about that first in 1958 in Popular Electronics magazine during lunchbreak at Ramo- Wooldridge Corporation in El Segundo, CA. Because if there were 100 million amateur licensees in America like there are 100 million cellular telephone subscriptions, our bands would be overloaded and useless. CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW??? And that is exactly why the cell network is useless for official emergency comms, every cell user wants to dial up twenty of their closest friends and tell them to turn on the tee-vee, overloading the network. The military and civil autorities do not consider the cell network a viable means of emergency comms, they do for ham radio. The military have their own radios. Those work very well and in environments far harsher than most "emergencies." Civil authorities have their own radios. Public Safety Radio Services include police, fire department, and medical services. Those are backed-up with emergency electrical power at base stations and are already networked. Real emergency organizations consider ALL forms of communications to be viable and will use anything that survives a real emergency. They plan for that, train for that, and work with the infrastructure of existing radios and landlines. The best source of what happened aboard the "fourth plane" on 11 Sep 01 came from passengers' and crews' cell phones. Hijackers had taken over regular aircraft communications devices in the cockpit. No ham radio was on board to do anything in that Very Real emergency. In the Pentagon Attack area during 11 Sep 01, military and civilian communications was handled by existing military and civilian communications means...a part of that was by cell phone although most of it was by VHF and UHF HTs. No ham radio was used in fire control or rescue work then. In the WTC Attack during 11 Sep 01, the NYC Emergency Communications Center (in an adjacent building) was largely destroyed by falling debris, also severing many trunk lines of the telephone system. NYC police and fire units did work- arounds using their own radios in a relay system to several centrals, calling in other agencies as well as special units to help. Some cell phone service did work, regardless of myth to the contrary and some wired phone service still worked, used by almost anyone on the WTC Attack scene. Amateur radio did not play any significant part (if any at all) during the few hours after the Attack on the WTC. When the cellsite is down, unaccessable, or overloaded, HOW do you communicate with your cellphone? When your ham radio is broke, how do you communicate with it? He THROWS it? :-) Which one, I have several, what are the odds they are all down at the same time? How many cell phones do you have? Since neither you nor your equipment is identified and we don't know the working status of your "several" radios, the above is just a brag claim of no intrinsic value. Your emergency plan scenario that you are acting out this weekend is that cell phones won't be working. Am I wrong? As far as using the cell network for official emergency comms, you can consider it not working. In times of a major emergency it becomes useless for anything but attempting to make a call. That is a popular myth but it remains only a myth. The cellular telephone network is part of the telephone infrastructure and is intimately connected with the local exchange's switching unit. That switching unit is designed to handle only a fraction of installed numbers, both wireline and cell phone. But the switch itself is also backed up by battery supplies "riding on" the primary power; also true for cell sites themselves. During any sudden event there WILL be a flurry of telephone calls made and that MAY overtax the limited number-handling capability of the switch. The probability of overload is in inverse relationship to the suddenness of the event. The overload, if any, does NOT last indefinitely. Such an overload is also dependent on the telephone exchange and subscriber services arrangement. Note: Not all subscribers are routed through the switch but may be direct to some PBX-equivalent. The onset of an earthquake is sudden, as yet not predictable. That will guarantee an overload of telephone switches as worried, distraught subscribers seek information and reassurance. The onset of the 11 Sep 01 Attack by four hijacked airliners was not only sudden but unprecedented, without any possible warning. The subsequent crash of two airliners into the WTC towers did destroy a portion of the lower Manhattan telephone system wiring but did NOT destroy or disable the entire Manhattan telephone infrastructure. The onset of a fire storm, typically in dry open country, is not sudden and may take literal days from ignition start to reaching fire storm conditions. There is plenty of warning time using conventional communications means to begin fighting that. Hurricanes are known and predicted from NOAA tracking, allow days for all in the path to prepare. Again, communications may be done by conventional means. Tornados are more sudden but allow hours of preparation from first sighting. Storm and flood conditions allow hours to days of preparation, again using conventional communications to effect that. Whenever conventional communications means survive any emergency, those will be used. If from nothing else, their availability such as with cellular telephones (at least 100 Million in the USA). Regardless of the popular myth, the telephone system in the USA has remained viable and grown in two decades that include several earthquakes, several hurricanes, several tornados, several fire storms, several floodings and storms...and the 11 Sep 01 Attack On America from three hijacked airliners deliberately crashed into buildings. It remains working. There is no reported evidence of amateur radio ever stopping an earthquake, hurricane, tornado, flood, storm, or aircraft hijacking. LHA / WMD |
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