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From: "Jim Hampton" on Sun,May 8 2005 4:26 pm
wrote in message oups.com... From: bb on May 7, 9:38 pm K4YZ wrote: bb wrote: wrote: would be something about ham radio style "operating." :-) The United States military communications groups are PROFESSIONAL in all aspects, not amateur radio hobbyists. shrug It just might be what a particular operator is familiar with. Back when (in the 60s) the military used a lot of HF point to point communications, they (the radiomen) were familiar with having to change frequencies, how to set crypto gear, and many other things. One thing they were *not* familiar with was how to handle a strong signal. [heh...I could see what was coming before reading further] When the communications station attempted to re-establish communications with Saipan, Hans, K0HB, was sent to Saipan. The communications station kept telling him he was "loud, but garbled". Big hint - too much signal for the local oscillator injection to properly demodulate the ssb. I called Hans from the hamshack (KG6AAY) and we (the hams) ended up not only establishing communications but got orders to pass traffic from Saipan to Commander, Naval Forces Marianas directly. So...an anecdote from USN days is suddenly a Standard Operating Procedure? Or a professional dissertation on how certain others are "completely 'wrong'?" :-) Two things, perhaps three, come to mind here. First of all, the HF military receivers of the 60s era, typified by the R-388s and R-390s, all had RF GAIN controls. NOT a problem to handle the alleged "overloads" of strong signal length. There are ADDITIONAL controls for attenuation, not only on the receivers but on their outboard Converters for TTY or SSB separation. Were all the "S Meters" on those receivers inoperative? Secondly, a transmitter could have been deliberately mistuned (without damage to itself) to reduce the signal power output. Non-standard, but that would have been a possibility...such as toss a wire out the window (porthole?) and tune that up. :-) Third, how did YOU "know" the garble WAS "intermodulation distortion" if you didn't have any way of determining the incoming signal strength? I'm familiar with the characteristics of U.S. military receivers of the 60s (through testing to spec. and for other, specialized applications)...and those have a rather wide dynamic signal strength range with or without the deliberate attenuation via RF GAIN setting. I also recall whilst aboard ship we lost the "broadcast" - multiplex signals for many channels of teletypes. Sounds like the common "commercial format" SSB that's been around since the 30s...12 KHz wide modulation spectrum, the outer 6 KHz carrying 4 to 12 TTY tone pairs. One needs the Converters (outboard) to separate them and all the Converters I've seen all have separate level-setting controls...as do the "carrier" equipments that separate out the individual TTY signals. The problem was that we were getting to close to the station and we were in a skip zone. I suggested to the chief that we try LF (low frequency). He didn't think it would work, but said to give it a try as everything else was out. On LF, the signal was overpowering. In a few minutes, the broadcast was back up and running. What are you saying there? Are you saying that LF is "immune" from IM effects? [ain't so...] The USN was running 12 KHz SSB on LF? Capable of it? Doesn't sound likely. Please explain. In both of these instances, it was the hams that had the proper experience. "Proper?" :-) Your tale, oriented for the "lets all give each other high- fives as hams for saving the world again" crowd in here is a nice story. But, without some revealing details, it seems little more than a STORY. In that same era, in the USA, it was not uncommon to have Field Radio AN/GRC-26 huts-and-trucks at sites as close as 15 miles. They never had any reported "overload to the point of garble" on their single-channel TTY with AM voice communications locally. "Angry-twenty-six" was typically 400 W (CW) output carrying dipole and half-rhombic wire antennas, using either R-388 or R-390 receivers. Could it be - gasp, choke - that the Army guys were "better" at communications than you sailors? :-) I shan't go much further than to say that one day whilst aboard ship, we received an SOS on 500 KHz. It turns out that only *two* of us could actually copy Morse at any reasonable speed. I don't know about the other guy, but I was an amateur extra and also had a commercial telegraph license. The military radioman were *supposed* to be able to copy 16 words per minute to graduate from A school. There ya go! Another tale of "hams make the world safe and show the pros how to do it via CW." :-) Ho hum. Why is it that the ENTIRE maritime world of radio REJECTED morse code messaging for distress and safety in favor of GMDSS? Tsk. I've heard all the tales of "GMDSS won't work!" from all the retired navy morsemen...but GMDSS continues to work...with the approval of the maritime community. Tsk. Field Radio MOSs in the Army of the 60s era ALSO had to demonstrate morsemanship. Ho hum. The Army field commanders insisted on using TTY messaging just the same. There's NO need to demonstrate morsemanship in ANY branches' radio communications specialties today. NONE. Sorry to shoot your "professional" theory down. Just WHO were you aiming at? Wasn't me. I wasn't hit by any "fire." :-) Your airborne "spotter" must have been that TN CAP ace, Stebie Robeson, former "ANCOIC" of Okinawa MARS and PR Field Agent for ARRL recruiting. :-) HE should have his wings clipped. You aren't totally wrong, of course; it is what happens when the *unexpected* happens. Tsk, tsk, tsk. Us ex-Army types just never had "emergencies" or "weren't as good as hams?" :-) Best you hike on down to the nearest office of BuShips or whatever and inform THEM that they are "all wrong" or even "partly wrong" and re-insitute all that morsemanship training (to keep the world safe through use of Sam's wonderful code). Think of it as a "holy mission." Peace be unto you. Amen. |
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