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#41
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On Sun, 18 Mar 2007 15:48:38 CST, LA4RT Jon Kåre Hellan
wrote: Our regulations are very short - less than 2 1/2 pages when printed by Firefox. http://www.lovdata.no/ltavd1/lt2004/t2004-1-10-65.html, if anybody is curious. I am. Are they available in English? -- Phil Kane Beaverton, OR |
#42
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#43
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On Sun, 18 Mar 2007 18:02:45 CST, "
wrote: Mike, you've seen enough other licensed radio amateurs by now to understand that, technically, they are rather conservative in adopting "new" things. My own opinion is 'uber-conservative' but that is just personal. :-) Some of it is just economic. I'll be damned if I'm going to buy an $800 ICOM D-Star VHF/UHF digital radio that operationally doesn't give me any more than my existing VHF and UHF ICOM "rice boxes". Especially since I just invested $2K in an Elecraft K2/100 HF rig with all the bells and whistles. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane From a Clearing in the Silicon Forest Beaverton (Washington County) Oregon e-mail: k2asp [at] arrl [dot] net |
#44
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Phil Kane wrote in
: On Sat, 17 Mar 2007 14:37:57 CST, "Dee Flint" wrote: Another thing to keep in mind that as our infrastructure becomes stronger, hams will only really be needed in the absolutely worst disasters. There will always be a need because no matter how strong the infrastructure is, situations will arise that exceed that capability. Design of public safety communication systems is the specialty of my engineering firm and I'm all too painfully aware of the real-world limitations Infrastructure by it's very nature becomes more fragile the more there is of it. disasters by their nature tend to occur when multiple problems happen. Seems like a "duh" statement, but we see it all the time. We going to put satellites up to do emergency Operations? Right away I see some issues. Those birds aren't cheap, so we'll probably put a lot of stuff on them. We'll probably have a lot if interacency "patching" available, trunking of course. It will probably be an awesome piece of technology. Maybe it will work. Fortunately no satellite has ever failed.... ;^) - 73 de Mike KB3EIA - |
#45
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#46
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On Mar 18, 8:18�pm, Mike Coslo wrote:
Phil Kane wrote : On Sat, 17 Mar 2007 14:37:57 CST, "Dee Flint" wrote: Another thing to keep in mind that as our infrastructure becomes stronger, hams will only really be needed in the absolutely worst disasters. There will always be a need because no matter how strong the infrastructure is, situations will arise that exceed that capability. Design of public safety communication systems is the specialty of my engineering firm and I'm all too painfully aware of the real-world limitations * * * * Infrastructure by it's very nature becomes more fragile the more there is of it. disasters by their nature tend to occur when multiple problems happen. Seems like a "duh" statement, but we see it all the time. We going to put satellites up to do emergency Operations? Right away I see some issues. Those birds aren't cheap, so we'll probably put a lot of stuff on them. We'll probably have a lot if interacency "patching" available, trunking of course. It will probably be an awesome piece of technology. Maybe it will work. Fortunately no satellite has ever failed.... ;^) Mike, PART of the "infrastructure" includes radio amateurs. Back after the 17 Jan 94 Northridge earthquake here, the existing infrastructure was behaving just fine and FEMA brought in a bunch more communications equipment, some of it used to show continuous video of family/friend messages. For all of FEMA's highlighted "faults," they were equipped to handle comms as needed. By now the Los Angeles Communications Auxiliary (run more or less by the LAFD) is equipped and able to roll with comm-center bus/RV modifications. I took my exam at one such Aux station now still called "Old Fire House 77" despite it being re-assigned from fire fighting to communications. Some members of that Aux group are also licensed radio amateurs and can operate from fixed as well as mobile station locations. Things really aren't so scarce/rare insofar as comms are concerned in this big city complex of 8 million plus. It may be that much smaller areas have scarce facilities but that is up to those locations. I'm proud that this area I live in has beefed up its communications in the 13 years since the Northridge quake hit. What it has done can be a model of integration for other areas. Just a view a bit different than most others in here. 73, Len AF6AY |
#47
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![]() "Mike Coslo" wrote in message 36... Phil Kane wrote in : On Sat, 17 Mar 2007 14:37:57 CST, "Dee Flint" wrote: I didn't explain myself very well on my comments on infrastructure and hams in emergencies. What I was trying to say was that the smaller disasters will need hams less and less as the normal infrastructure becomes more robust despite its complexity. Therefore when the big disasters hit that do compromise the infrastructure, there will be a lower percentage of people with training and experience available. Dee, N8UZE |
#48
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#49
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Phil Kane writes:
On Sun, 18 Mar 2007 15:48:38 CST, LA4RT Jon KÃ¥re Hellan wrote: Our regulations are very short - less than 2 1/2 pages when printed by Firefox. http://www.lovdata.no/ltavd1/lt2004/t2004-1-10-65.html, if anybody is curious. I am. Are they available in English? I have written and asked. 73 de LA4RT Jon, Trondheim, Norway |
#50
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![]() "Steve Bonine" wrote in message ... wrote: On the con side, a real disaster is the worst possible scenario for trying to get this technology to work reliably. You're potentially in a high-noise low-signal poor-antenna situation. The equipment required is fairly complex, and you need a fair amount of technical knowledge to set it up. When I build a mental image of someone at a shelter trying to set up this gear, it's hard for me to see success. Finally there's the issue of what data gets sent; some of it probably is not appropriate for transmission using amateur radio. A way this works with WinLink (and what we are implementing in MA) is that you put full-up WinLink stations, with both HF and VHF capability, in a few hardened (state-owned) EOCs. Local EOCs and shelters use AirMail (the WinLink client) with VHF TNCs to communicate with the state EOCs, with forwarding over the Internet if it's still up, or HF otherwise. A VHF-only WinLink client station can be quickly set up in a temporary EOC or shelter, and can even be used mobile. - Dennis Brothers, N1DB |
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