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#21
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In article ,
Scott Dorsey wrote: In article , Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote: Martin Potter wrote: The sunspot peak of 1968-69 helped a lot. The band was pretty dead (thankfully) due to low MUF during the early 1960s. When I said popular, I was refering to the operation within the U.S. law (which was and is very different than the rest of the world) which prohibits "skip" operation. Not at all. It just mandates a certain power input to the finals. Actually the CB regs _do_ (or at least did) prohibit 'skip' operation. Look it up. Communication between stations more than 150 (IIRC) miles apart is expressly forbidden. |
#22
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In article ,
Jon Teske wrote: On Wed, 14 Mar 2007 13:54:04 +0000 (UTC), (Geoffrey S. Mendelson) wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: Not at all. It just mandates a certain power input to the finals. At one time it DID mandate something like "local communications only". I can't remember the exact wording, so I leave it in quotes. Note that Class D wasn't all there was. There was Class C which allowed pulse modulation in the 26 MHz range for remote control, and Class A citizens band which was AM in the 450 MHz range. I don't recall what Class B was. I had a class C and D license. The difference was ticking a box on the application. Geoff. Since I never operated CB except for one short contact in my carpool mate's car to show him how it worked, I was not intimately familiar with CB rules. I seem to remember thought that there were regulation which prohibited even attempting to make a contact of over 200 miles this was one of the ways to attempt to rein in the use of powerful (or so) even if conditions permitted this. I can confirm the existance of 'distace' restriction. As I recall, it is 150 mi., not 200. I seem to remember that amplifiers that many CBers used (of course the prohibition of the sale of amps capable of operation in that range, including those intended for ham use, was another FCC mandate.) Anyone know more about that?? Note: the amps were illegal regardless, as there was a limit of watts of power in to the final amp, and a maximum of 4 watts RF energy out. It is worth noting that when 'skip' conditions were right, it did not take large amounts of RF to reach long distaces. I used an '11 meter' (but _not_ 'citizens band') rig with just under 2-1/8 watts (measured!) RF out, and one day was asked to shut down, by a station nearly 900 miles distant. I was _so_strong_ in their area that legal max (10 watt RF) stations couldn't communicate at 6 blocks distance. I don't know the licensing requirements, but I think that there is also a frequency or frequencies at 72 MHZ available for radio control of models in addition to 26MHz; and, 50 MHz if one is a licensed amateur. Anyone up on that? "way back when", there was 2nd set of frequenceis, besides the 11m ones for RC controls. I don't remember at this remove (roughly 30 years) just where it was. Was not used much, gear was much more expensive. And yes, there were some ham frequencies where RC operations were allowed. |
#23
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Robert Bonomi wrote:
[snip] "way back when", there was 2nd set of frequenceis, besides the 11m ones for RC controls. I don't remember at this remove (roughly 30 years) just where it was. Was not used much, gear was much more expensive. IIRC, there was some RC at ~49MHz. ISTR some in the 72-76 MHz range as well, but since aircraft marker beacons operate at 75 MHz, I may be imagining. And yes, there were some ham frequencies where RC operations were allowed. Hams can use almost any VHF or UHF frequency for RC: in fact, some RC competitors have obtained ham licenses just to get access to interference-free channels and thus away from the "clothespin competition" so often seen at meets. William (Filter noise from my address for direct replies) |
#24
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Robert Bonomi ) writes:
"way back when", there was 2nd set of frequenceis, besides the 11m ones for RC controls. I don't remember at this remove (roughly 30 years) just where it was. Was not used much, gear was much more expensive. And yes, there were some ham frequencies where RC operations were allowed. Amateur radio invented remote controlled vehicles, certainly as a hobby. Since amateur radio was a technical playground, and fairly open rules to allow that, it was there when someone wanted to fly a remote controlled. Years ago, there was a bit in QST about early work in RC airplanes, I think it was Ross Hull (the Australian ham who moved to the US to work at the ARRL and was never licensed in the US, and died by accidental electrocution) and Roland Bournes. It took no special license, since it was allowed under the rules. It was only later, when the hobby became more popular that a need for an RC license that didn't require a test came about, with frequencies set aside for the purpose. There was a whole period when people would get a ham license because they were interested in radio controlled vehicles. That faded with the arrival of RC licenses and frequencies. The "frequencies" for RC in the ham bands were a combination of where it was legal to send that sort of thing (but it wasn't specifically about RC) and gentlemen's agreement, since one didn't really want interference from other operators when flying an RC plane. Michael VE2BVW |
#25
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#27
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Chuck Reti ) writes:
They had to scrap that callsign system as it did not comply with ITU convention- US calls have to begin with W, K, N, AA-AL, and not a number. This was an issue as someone apparently didn't consider that propagation could carry CB signals across international borders, so the ITU regs applied. This is an understatement. If they'd given thought to propagation, they'd not have allocated 27MHz to a band intended for local use. Even with nobody working skip, when the skip was in the band got cluttered. You couldn't avoid propagation getting those distant signals to you, and that did not help the intended use of the band. Michael VE2BVW |
#28
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Michael Black wrote:
[snip] If they'd given thought to propagation, they'd not have allocated 27MHz to a band intended for local use. Even with nobody working skip, when the skip was in the band got cluttered. You couldn't avoid propagation getting those distant signals to you, and that did not help the intended use of the band. Michael VE2BVW Michael, I don't feel it was a question of propagation: the FCC wanted to create an inexpensive radio service that could be used by those who could not afford the standard "two-way" radios that were available at the time. The problem, in a nutshell, was that tube designs for VHF and UHF were very expensive to manufacture, tune, and repair. I think the idea with the class C & D Citizens' Bands was to make the rigs affordable _using the vacuum tube designs of the day_, and that meant keeping the frequencies low. Since ham operators had an assignment at 10 meters, and the primary user of 11 meters (Medical Diathermy) wouldn't be affected, it probably seemed like the ideal spot: the only commercial allocations near it were in the 30-50 MHz range, but assigning a new service there would have meant displacing existing FM licensees, including many local government users, who were _also_ interested in keeping their radio costs down. Don't forget: the class A & B Citizens' Bands had been authorized for many years, with dismal results: since class A & B CB radios used 460 MHz, users had to pay for the same Motorola or GE or Johnson sets that telephone, utility, taxicab, and others with deep pockets were using. Long story short: experience had shown that the cost of UHF units was too high a barrier for farmers and other rural users, and IMHO, _that_ was the reason for choosing 27 MHz. YMMV. William (Filter noise from my address for direct replies) |
#29
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Since ham operators had an assignment at 10 meters, and
the primary user of 11 meters (Medical Diathermy) wouldn't be affected, it probably seemed like the ideal spot: the only commercial allocations near it were in the 30-50 MHz range, but assigning a new service there would have meant displacing existing FM licensees, including many local government users, who were _also_ interested in keeping their radio costs down. I remember medical diathermy in the 50's being an important cause of TVI. They apparently were available for home use by patients. I never needed one so I really have no idea what they were supposed to do. To they still exist? Have they been replaced by a different technology? Jon W3JT |
#30
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William Warren ""w_warren_nonoise\"@comcast(William Warren).net" wrote:
Don't forget: the class A & B Citizens' Bands had been authorized for many years, with dismal results: since class A & B CB radios used 460 MHz, users had to pay for the same Motorola or GE or Johnson sets that telephone, utility, taxicab, and others with deep pockets were using. Actually there were some cheap two-tube units out there, which used a single device as a regenerative detector or as an oscillator, combined with an audio amplifier tube. The performance was very poor, however. "Vocaline" was the manufacturer that I remember. Long story short: experience had shown that the cost of UHF units was too high a barrier for farmers and other rural users, and IMHO, _that_ was the reason for choosing 27 MHz. Yes. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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