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Surfinusa
Premium
join:2001-02-08

Ham's arent complaining ?

If this works maybe finally BPL will get off the ground. And Ham radio operators can live with BPL ( if it really works ). Sure hope so. Time will tell if Ham radio's have interference in all states if it really does get implemented.

AnOldGuy2
Premium
join:2008-02-29
Kewanee, IL

reply to Surfinusa

Re: Ham's arent complaining ?

well - I live about 30 miles from Princeton and the hams that I know there are complaining. Seems that they have experienced interference and as with most of the other BPL trials it has been swept under the table by the FCC.


PthirusPubis

@comcast.net

approval from:
amigo_boy See Profile

reply to Surfinusa
F* the hams! The more I read about the FCC and the ARRL, the more I think that they are both wholly-owned subsidiaries of T and VZ.

I suspect that BPL technology works well enough and that the telecorps obviously don't want more competition.



BF69
Premium
join:2004-07-28
Camden, TN

reply to AnOldGuy2

said by AnOldGuy2:

well - I live about 30 miles from Princeton and the hams that I know there are complaining. Seems that they have experienced interference and as with most of the other BPL trials it has been swept under the table by the FCC.
BS and who cares. God why are we catering to a very very very small less than 1% group of people? that's why t takes forever for technology to advance becaus every single group that might complain has to be sattisfied which is IMPOSSIBLE. The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. Ham operators can find a new hobby.


alphapointe
Don't Touch Me
Premium,MVM
join:2002-02-10
Columbia, MO
kudos:2
Reviews:
·Socket Internet ..
·Mediacom

reply to PthirusPubis
If I hear one more ham bashing moron I think I'm going to scream. Most, if not all, wireless technology got its' start in ham radio. Your cell phone? Hams came up with the technology, WLANs stem from packet radio data networks created by hams, and don't even get me started about the emergency communications.

BPL is marketing-induced shit that the FCC needs to get rid of, and if the engineers were still running things like they did 20 years ago, it wouldn't be allowed to cause all this interference. But the politicos are in charge, and only care about lining their pockets.

Sigh

I think I'll go talk to someone 5000 miles away running 1 watt. Sounds like more fun than listening to JAWS spew this crap.

KC0--Z (Callsign obscured for privacy) - Ham operator for 13 years.
--
Ham radio for the disabled:
»www.handiham.org
---
View my gallery:
»/pics/dimaging/582493
---
Read about my photos here:
»Blind Photography


AnOldGuy2
Premium
join:2008-02-29
Kewanee, IL

Well - it's Sunday and the "Mental Midgets" have nothing better to do with their time so what do you expect?

One other thing - there is a relatively new technology out that does seem to very peacefully coexist with the other services - not just hams but most importantly public service (that's Fire/Police/Rescue) for our mentally challenged friends. Now - if the folks who have BPL deployed would just use this technology then everyone would benefit.


jc100

join:2002-04-10

reply to BF69
Umm... Because if this were done on a large scale, it'd effect a lot more than 1 percent. Still, ham operators are probably the minority but this technology just sucks. Find better ways to give internet if you ask me. Wimax for one or satellite via the balloons sounds more feasible.


wvcaver
Premium
join:2005-04-17
Millersburg, OH

reply to BF69
BPL SUCKS !!!!!


jjeffeory

join:2002-12-04
USA

1 edit

reply to BF69
HAM radio is too important to just make the "little HAM radio geeks" go away. It's very useful in the event of a major catastrophic emergency... You know, like hurricanes, large fires, earthquakes, major brown outs, terrorist attacks, etc... 10 years ago I would have laughed at the odds of having 3 of the events happening near the same time, but living through many of them, has changed that thought. You can speak to people very far away with very little power. I think it's stupid to just tell them to go away.
I don't use HAM radio, but for me it is like having a backup plan to communicate across distances in case some other major infrastructure is "fubared". BPL, sounds like crap... If it works and doesn't mess with HAM radio, give it a try, oterhwise it shouldn't be used.


RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11

reply to BF69

Re: Ham's arent complaining ?

I'll put money on there being more hams now than there would ever be rural broadband customers served by BPL even without the technical restrictions. So I agree, why are we catering to a very very very small less than 1% group of people? A group even smaller than the three quarters of a million amateur radio operators in the US alone. Considering that there are multiple, better ways to get relatively slow broadband access to people BPL is at best a bad technology.
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.

amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

reply to jjeffeory

said by jjeffeory:

HAM radio is ... very useful in the event of a major catastrophic emergency...
It's all relative. Hobbyists sacrifice the quality of their frequencies in the name of personal enjoyment and expanding their participants. A good example is eliminating morse code. 10 years ago the argument for retaining it is exactly the same argument used today against BPL. It was the only thing that could reliably communicate in an emergency (when your microphone is damaged, etc.). It communicates in a smaller band with less power. Etc., etc. And, without it, the riff-raff would get licenses and the hobby hands would sound like CB.

But, it went by the wayside. Now you have people using more power than is required to communicate. Just talking over others. Etc.

Which bands does BPL affect? HF only? It sounds like it because people say the problem with BPL is propagation. But, I'm not sure.

Mark

moonpuppy

join:2000-08-21
Glen Burnie, MD

BPL affect more than just HAM radio. It affects frequencies up to 80Mhz.

Please do some more research before you spout off what you clearly know nothing about.


amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

said by moonpuppy:

BPL affect more than just HAM radio. It affects frequencies up to 80Mhz.
Ok, but what I was getting at is: why can't higher frequencies be used for the stated "emergency services" which hobby frequencies are supposed to be protected for?

Mark

moonpuppy

join:2000-08-21
Glen Burnie, MD

said by amigo_boy:

said by moonpuppy:

BPL affect more than just HAM radio. It affects frequencies up to 80Mhz.
Ok, but what I was getting at is: why can't higher frequencies be used for the stated "emergency services" which hobby frequencies are supposed to be protected for?

Mark
Do you even know what occupies the HF spectrum? It runs the gamut from commercial operators all the way to the military. Try telling the military they have to move. Add to that, we as taxpayers have to pay higher taxes for all government and military users to swap out all their radios with new ones. That won't be cheap.

And don't think you can confine BPL just to the HAM radio sections because it is not enough space.

Try again.

amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

said by moonpuppy:

Do you even know what occupies the HF spectrum?
One question at a time please. That's not what I asked. Why can't higher frequencies be used for the emergency services which we're told is the benefit of hobby radio?

Mark

moonpuppy

join:2000-08-21
Glen Burnie, MD

said by amigo_boy:

said by moonpuppy:

Do you even know what occupies the HF spectrum?
One question at a time please. That's not what I asked. Why can't higher frequencies be used for the emergency services which we're told is the benefit of hobby radio?

Mark
That question directly relates to your question. Moving everyone up will cost billions. It is not just amateur radio that would need to move.

As the frequency goes up, the distance goes down. Long range communications are possible in HF and not so much in VHF or higher.

amigo_boy

join:2005-07-22
Reviews:
·magicjack.com

said by moonpuppy:

As the frequency goes up, the distance goes down. Long range communications are possible in HF and not so much in VHF or higher.
Relays and nets? It's all relative, right?

Mark

moonpuppy

join:2000-08-21
Glen Burnie, MD

said by amigo_boy:

said by moonpuppy:

As the frequency goes up, the distance goes down. Long range communications are possible in HF and not so much in VHF or higher.
Relays and nets? It's all relative, right?

Mark
Nope, it is not. Again, you know nothing of what you are talking about. A relay is only as good as the furthest distance it can reach. As it stands now, HF is the ONLY set of frequencies that can cover this country. Not 50Mhz nor anything higher in the amateur spectrum. VHF is line of sight which becomes extremely difficult in mountainous regions. You do realize we have mountains in this country right?

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