RadioBanter

RadioBanter (https://www.radiobanter.com/)
-   Shortwave (https://www.radiobanter.com/shortwave/)
-   -   Idaho Telecommunications Company Getting Out of BPL (https://www.radiobanter.com/shortwave/87469-re-idaho-telecommunications-company-getting-out-bpl.html)

[email protected] January 29th 06 09:23 PM

Idaho Telecommunications Company Getting Out of BPL
 
BPL,,, We dont want any stinking BPL!
cuhulin


[email protected] January 30th 06 02:11 AM

Idaho Telecommunications Company Getting Out of BPL
 

wrote:
wrote:

BPL,,, We dont want any stinking BPL!
cuhulin


You got that right!


If the shortwave listening community really feels that way, it is
critical that, organizationally and individually, you assess BPL
interference where it is occurring worldwide, and then report it as
interference.

So far, Amateur Radio has been the squeaky wheel, and all industry
efforts by individual companies have been to protect amateur radio.
Those of you with S meters will understand that in the 15 or so BPL
sites I have been to do do testing, I saw S9+ (extremely strong)
interference levels across tens of MHz spectrum as much as a half mile
down power lines. This would effectively put and end to shortwave
listening on the spectrum that BPL uses.

ARRL's information on BPL has some videos that are well worth watching.
See
http://www.arrl.org/bpl.

BPL is in a number of cities in the US now, operating at these strong
levels on the shortwave bands. Yet formal reports have not been filed.

See http://p1k.arrl.org/~ehare/bpl/ex2.html for a list of the places
where BPL is deployed.

ARRL has the standing to speak for Amateur Radio, but its information
has been put together in a way that other services can use it to assess
whether BPL will have an impact. It cannot speak for other radio
services, for a number of good and necessary reasons.

Ed Hare,


weatherall January 30th 06 05:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by
ARRL's information on BPL has some videos that are well worth watching.
See http://www.arrl.org/bpl.

BPL is in a number of cities in the US now, operating at these strong
levels on the shortwave bands. Yet formal reports have not been filed.

See http://p1k.arrl.org/~ehare/bpl/ex2.html for a list of the places
where BPL is deployed.

Thank you for your post. I want to participate individually in filing interference reports when it becomes an issue. I wish that shortwave listeners in the affected areas would write about their experiences here as well.

N9NEO January 30th 06 05:18 PM

Idaho Telecommunications Company Getting Out of BPL
 
We still talking about the BPLosaurus?

It will go away all by itself. It was doomed before it ever got off
the ground. 60Hz power lines are just that. Fiber optics, sat, and
microwave links are killer technologies offering WIDE bandwidths.

73
NEO


Panzer240 January 30th 06 08:49 PM

Idaho Telecommunications Company Getting Out of BPL
 
"N9NEO" wrote in news:1138641490.368387.123770
@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:

We still talking about the BPLosaurus?

It will go away all by itself. It was doomed before it ever got off
the ground. 60Hz power lines are just that. Fiber optics, sat, and
microwave links are killer technologies offering WIDE bandwidths.

73
NEO



Don't be too sure :(. There are Idiots like this still in there pitching.

http://www.infoworld.com/article/06/...OPcurve_1.html



--
Panzer



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:08 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com