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KØHB wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... KØHB wrote: Being a CW operator, quite frankly I'm happy about the flexibility that gives me. But it's a mystery to me why all modes aren't treated in this generous manner, and why other CW operators seem so firmly opposed to the Canadian/European "market forces" model of frequency sharing. Has to do with the compatibility of modes, Hans. Not all mode share bandspace equally well. That's a non-sequiter, Jim. I don't think so. That's why there are bandplans. IARU has been in the bandplanning business mostly everywhere except in the USA for about 75 years. As new modes gain favor (market dynamics change) they reach agreement in their bandplans to accomodate the proportions of users of the various modes. Supposedly, anyway. One problem with IARU bandplans is that the ham bands in other countries aren't all the same as they are here. Not all operators follow the bandplans, either. Really? Well then I guess Riley will just have to invoke the "good amateur practice" rule..... oh, never mind, he's already doing that. Not good enough for you..... OK, add a new sentence to §97.101(a) so it reads as follows: (a) In all respects not specifically covered by FCC Rules each amateur station must be operated in accordance with good engineering and good amateur practice. Nonconformance with IARU bandplan guidance is specifically considered a violation of this paragraph. What that does is to turn what are now voluntary bandplans into the rule of law. From what I read, the folks in Region 1 are already beginning to notice problems being caused by the "market forces" (loudest signal wins) model of frequency "sharing". A lot of Region 1 hams aren't so happy with how it's working out in real life. "Already"? After 75 years? The Region 1 folks haven't always had the free-for-all rules they mostly have now. Neither has Canada. --- One reason for the separation of 'phone and Morse/digital is to maximize the utilization of the available bandwidth. Say you have a band like 80/75 meters. 500 kHz of bandspace. If we allow 2.5 kHz for each SSB QSO and 250 Hz for each CW/digital QSO, (average) it's clear that the band could theoretically support 200 simultaneous SSB QSOs or 2000 simultaneous CW/digital QSOs. Be careful what you wish for. Using that logic, it follows that fair frequency management techniques would allow for an equal number of CW and Phone contacts since the number of regular users is about equal, and CW would lose some man-sized chunks of spectrum. If you look at it that way, maybe. OTOH, that approach rewards those who use the most spectrum, rather than those who use the spectrum the most efficiently. The theoretical "even number" division of this 500kHz band would work out to 90 CW (250 Hz) and 90 SSB (2500 Hz) QSO's. Which means only 180 QSOs in the entire 500 kHz. And where do the digital folks go? The CW allocation would be 3500-3522.5kHz, and SSB would have the remainder of the band. Sorry, but I can't live with that! Why not? You're the one pushing "market forces", Hans. What will you do when the bandplan says that's what CW gets? Neither should we live with the current plan where CW has a theoretical 2000-QSO band, and SSB is limitedto a theoretical limit of just 100 QSO's on that same band. Agreed! But simply tossing out the regulations isn't the answer. If the number of CW users is roughly equal to the number of SSB users, why does CW now enjoy a 20-1 advantage in effective frequency space (measured in simultaneous QSO's)? Old rules, old ideas. I see no mention of digital. The future is probably going to be very different. For one thing, we will soon have many hams on HF who don't know any Morse Code at all. We also have, already, a growing number using an increasing variety of "digital" modes which cannot be decoded without special equipment (usually a computer) and where the operator looks at a visual display rather than listening to the band. There are also "semi-automatic" and "robot" digital stations with no operator at all. How does a Morse Code station, or an SSB station, tell a digital station that the digital station is causing interference - or even identify the callsign of the digital station? That's just one problem. The widening variety of modes and operating methods means we need more rules, not less (unfortunately). I suggest that the bands be carved up into subbands-by-mode - CW only, narrow digital, wide/auto digital, analog voice. The ARRL "subbands by bandwidth" proposal tries to address the problem but it's got too many flaws. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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