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![]() K=D8HB wrote: wrote There's an old adage out there which applies here, "Use it or lose it". There's no point to complaining about losing allocations if we don't use them. Which is the case with 24Ghz and we did it to ourselves. =A797.1 Basis and purpose. The rules and regulations in this Part are designed to provide an amateur radio service having a fundamental purpose as expressed in the following principles: . . . . . (b) Continuation and extension of the amateur's proven ability to contribute to the advancement of the radio art. Nice warmy fuzzy regulatory platitude conjured up back when amateur radio was a major player in what was back then considered the DC to daylight RF spectrum. Which is obviously no longer the case. Back when ham radio actually made some noteworthy contributions to the state of the RF comms arts. When was the last time that happened? 1920? Which is a more valuable "Use" of spectrum.... 5,000 appliances operators on wall-to-wall Lumbago Nets on 75-meters, No counter, apples and oranges, has nothing to with "use or lose". The HF ham bands are not under any particular allocation threats today because (in the U.S) the Verizons, Nextels and (globally) the "public interest" no longer have big (if any) stakes in the HF spectrum so no sweat for the GeezerNet allocations. Let 'em roll, nobody cares including the regulators. But as has been clearly demonstrated any number of times since WW2 the ham bands above 50 Mhz have been increasingly threatened species as the stakes have moved up the spectrum and have grown exponentially to the point where ham radio is now barely a bit player on frequencies above 470 Mhz. The dumbest strategy we could lean on to our preserve our allocations is to depend on our long since worn out old 97.1b nonsense and it's equivalents in the US/UK/EU/ITU etc. The only real defense we have today for retaining our high bands is occupancy, the potential for emergency ops and a lot licensed voters screaming at the regulatory agencies about screwing with our hobby. Screaming oddly enough seems to work to at least some extent as witnessed by the impact ham radio had on the recent brawl over BPL/PLC here in the States. or 5 guys designing world-class antennas and low-noise preamps in order to work the EME path on 24-Ghz? EME has been around since 1947 and nobody has shown a bit of interest in commercializing it 24 Ghz and otherwise. As you well know nobody "needs" to use a half million mile bounce path to work down preamp noise figures on any frequency. =20 =20 73, de Hans, K0HB w3rv |
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