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![]() "Brian Kelly" wrote in message om... I'd be curious to know how vunerable BPL is to interference. I have no doubt the BPL people have run tests, and I'm a little surprised they're not at the front of a webpage somewhere. No sir, the BPL clods have *not* done much if any interfernce testing wherein lies the underlying reason for whole uproar and is the reason you can't find info on their "tests" online. It's all explained in depth and well documented in the ARRL website. When I wrote "vunerable BPL is to interference", I meant how outside sources of interference would effect the performance of BPL. Sorry if I wasn't clear. I still have no doubt the BPL people would test for things like that. I wouldn't expect them to care much about interference, as long as they can fit it into some interpretation of Part 15 regs. Or if they can get the Part 15 regs changed. Or if they don't get caught violating the Part 15 regs. I was wondering if there's any test results explaining how marvelously robust this BPL system is going to be. If you know where this is all explained in depth and well documented, please point me in that direction. And nothing will help as much as bringing new people into the radio hobby. By the time that might happen BPL will either have taken over the HF spectrum or been forgotten as another idiotic and failed dotcom maneuver. BPL might very well fail. Or it might hang on in a few communities. I have no idea. I'm sure, now that crackpot powerline schemes are here, they will never really go away. Far beyond the question of hams interfering with BPL comes the much more important question of BPL interfering with the long list of licensed incumbent HF users. Within that group radio hobbyists are basically bit players. Smart and noisy bit players but nonetheless bit players. Other users are *not* bit players and them's the folks who I expect will quietly and decisively torpedo BPL. w3rv Maybe, but much of the utility SW use has gone to sattelites. The bands are far quiter now than they were 30 years ago. Of course, I've got my own crackpot idea. The SW spectrum should be run rather like the way we run the National Parks. Everyone is free to use SW radio, as long as they act in a responsible manner. If only Boy Scouts could go to Yellowstone, only Boy Scouts would care about Yellowstone. Frank Dresser |
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