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#1
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posted to rec.boats.electronics
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![]() These users may be legal - you'd have to check the FCC frequency allocations to be sure. The marine VHF band is in the middle of the land mobile band - used by taxis, trucking companies, and other commercial radio services. They use Channel 68 or 69 in my area. Truckers have been heard on Ch. 71, and 19a Looks like they are using Marine Channels according to the FCC rules! Oh, well, keeps them off the 10 meter ham bands! A few years ago I heard outbanders on 28.085 griping about people throwing carriers, but the "carriers" were hams on code transmission. With the tight bandwidth of cw receivers, the hams were probaly not even aware of the interlopers! |
#2
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On Sat, 2 Feb 2008 12:36:55 -0600, "John Anderson"
wrote: These users may be legal - you'd have to check the FCC frequency allocations to be sure. The marine VHF band is in the middle of the land mobile band - used by taxis, trucking companies, and other commercial radio services. They use Channel 68 or 69 in my area. Truckers have been heard on Ch. 71, and 19a Looks like they are using Marine Channels according to the FCC rules! Not necessarily - they could be using assigned land mobile frequencies that happen to be close enough to those marine channels that they can be heard on a standard marine radio. As I said, you'd have to check to see if the FCC has any land mobile allocations close to those marine channels for use in your area. Oh, well, keeps them off the 10 meter ham bands! A few years ago I heard outbanders on 28.085 griping about people throwing carriers, but the "carriers" were hams on code transmission. With the tight bandwidth of cw receivers, the hams were probaly not even aware of the interlopers! -- Peter Bennett, VE7CEI peterbb4 (at) interchange.ubc.ca GPS and NMEA info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter Vancouver Power Squadron: http://vancouver.powersquadron.ca |
#3
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![]() They use Channel 68 or 69 in my area. Truckers have been heard on Ch. 71, and 19a Looks like they are using Marine Channels according to the FCC rules! Not necessarily - they could be using assigned land mobile frequencies that happen to be close enough to those marine channels that they can be heard on a standard marine radio. As I said, you'd have to check to see if the FCC has any land mobile allocations close to those marine channels for use in your area. They are using marine radios on marine channels. A ham friend of mine has talked to them. They are arguing that they don't need licenses, and indeed, if the FCC does not have the money or manpower to go after them, then this activity, like the mess on CB will become legal by default! |
#4
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posted to rec.boats.electronics
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"John Anderson" wrote in news:fo2d8d$vgh$1
@news.netins.net: Oh, well, keeps them off the 10 meter ham bands! A few years ago I heard outbanders on 28.085 griping about people throwing carriers, but the "carriers" were hams on code transmission. With the tight bandwidth of cw receivers, the hams were probaly not even aware of the interlopers! All hams have to do is force the stupid ARRL goats to change the 10M bandplan to stop it all. Reserve the bottom 500Khz 28.0-28.5 for REPEATER outputs on NBFM...and reserve the top 500 Khz 29.2-29.7 for REPEATER INPUTS away from the CBer equipment. Powerhouse FM repeater outputs would easily keep the bottom end of 10M clear of SSB CBers, and we'd have GREAT FM repeater fun on the mostly-dead 10 meter band. There's plenty of room IN THE MIDDLE of 10M, away from the CB pirates, for the simplex stuff...CW, SSB, etc. Of course, stoic CW operators moving above the bottom 20 Khz of the band would simply have a heart attack over such a LOGICAL move.... 10M FM repeaters are loads of fun, especially when the band is open! 29.620 repeater in Puerto Rico had great coverage over the whole East Coast and Caribbean for years. Sadly, Robert KD4PBC, who is a paging engineer by trade and was a paging company owner for years, here, THREW A PERFECTLY GOOD QUINTRON 500 WATT 10M REPEATER INTO THE DUMPSTER, all crystalled up with hi stability precision oscillators and all in mint condition. Noone would put it on the air and he didn't have time. Very sad...pathetically so.... 73 DE LARRY W4CSC Charleston, SC. |
#5
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Larry wrote:
snip Sadly, Robert KD4PBC, who is a paging engineer by trade and was a paging company owner for years, here, THREW A PERFECTLY GOOD QUINTRON 500 WATT 10M REPEATER INTO THE DUMPSTER, all crystalled up with hi stability precision oscillators and all in mint condition. Noone would put it on the air and he didn't have time. Very sad...pathetically so.... Why on earth would anyone do this except out of some emotional disturbance? Goodwill, Hamfests, donations, and even eBay are all easy alternatives. Michael |
#6
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posted to rec.boats.electronics
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msg wrote in
: Larry wrote: snip Sadly, Robert KD4PBC, who is a paging engineer by trade and was a paging company owner for years, here, THREW A PERFECTLY GOOD QUINTRON 500 WATT 10M REPEATER INTO THE DUMPSTER, all crystalled up with hi stability precision oscillators and all in mint condition. Noone would put it on the air and he didn't have time. Very sad...pathetically so.... Why on earth would anyone do this except out of some emotional disturbance? Goodwill, Hamfests, donations, and even eBay are all easy alternatives. Michael Hurried move to start new job. He had to move a whole business very quickly and abandoned lots of stuff. |
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