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In article , Mike Coslo writes:
Carl R. Stevenson wrote: "N2EY" wrote in message ... Then there's the fact that the HF losses on power lines are so high that BPL systems need a repeater every few thousand feet. In rural areas that may mean a repeater for each customer, or more. Plus couplers and other hardware for *each* customer. The slides I've seen presented by BPL marketing fluff folks show repeaters every 300 meters ... that's a hell of a lot of repeaters to "serve rural America" ... yet they claimed in the same presentation that it was "low cost because no infrastructure was required because the wires were already (presumably) there." I pointed to their block diagrams with fiber to the area, "head-ends" to go from fiber to the MV/HV lines, repeaters every 300 meters, couplers, etc. and asked "How can you claim with a straight face that this "doesn't require the installation of infrastructure?"" Good work! Right there is the evidence that the proponents are being less than accurate in their portrayal of BPL. It just means they define "infrastructure" differently. They don't consider the addition of fiber, taps or bypass couplers to be "installation of infrastructure". They do consider ahving to run actual wires, particularly into subscribers' homes, as "instalation of infrastructure". Running the last mile of wire is expensive because of all the labor involved. Running the last couple of dozen/hundred feet into the subscriber's house or business is even more expensive because of the labor and having to work in somebody's house or business. The liability is high, too. Since BPL is slower than some other broadband services, and the infrastructure appears to be similar to running fiber, is the slowing attributed to the "existing infrastructure" part of the line? As I understand it, none of the systems uses the whole 2-80 MHz spectrum at the same time. This is because you couldn't "repeat" (amplify) without interfering with yourself. So a system might use, say, 30-40 MHz in one length of line, then translate to, say, 15-25 MHz for the next length so that the MV line doesn't have to break. It appears that in the Penn Yan system, only one set of frequencies is used because the system only goes about 9 blocks. I'm ignorant of the finer details of BPL, so I may be way off here. Seems like if they have to run fiber, and do all the repeaters, etc. why not just........ run fiber and put the signals into the houses as they should be? Because of the cost of getting the fiber in the houses, and the terminal equipment once it gets there. And back at the office. To my way of thinking, the "best" answer with current technology lies in the various "Wi-Fi" ("wireless") technologies. No installation cost in the subscriber homes or businesses, no RFI issues, lots of bandwidth, and will even work with a lapper that isn't plugged in. More than 15 years ago, I was talking about how we should each have a "personal fiber" that would handle all our comm needs - telephone, data, TV, etc. No EMI or RFI because it's light! But between the installation and equipment costs it's just not feasible. Yet. There was also the fact that regulations prohibit certain things, in an attemprt to prevent monopolies. At least back then, a telephone company could not offer "cable" TV, and the cable company could not offer telephone service, because of federal regulations. Any good sources of the nitty-gritty of BPL technology? One of the best (Carl, WK3C) replied to your post, Mike. Carl has experienced BPL first-hand. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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