An interested link

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An interested link

Brett Gazdzinski
I don't understand why some people like to limit other peoples activity, or
choices.
It seems to me like there is very little important communication going on in
ham radio, so why stress the narrow bandwidth? Would it block some critical
or important communication?

Ham radio just seems like a bunch of people who enjoy fooling with radio
equipment, so why not just let them fool with it?

What about operating on an empty band, the operator still must (by law)
sound like a cheap cell phone?

There are other modes much narrower than ssb, why not not ban ssb as wasting
spectrum?

People should try to get along, I dislike contests, they can take over and
ruin a band, I am not fond of RTTY, or slow scan TV, or ssb, or many other
things other hams do, but the last thing I would want to do is restrict
something that others find enjoyable.

Brett
N2DTS





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ESSB and Selfishness (or Learning to Play Nice in the Sandbox)

Jim Brown-10
On Sun, 27 Sep 2009 14:31:19 -0400, Brett Gazdzinski wrote:

>I don't understand why some people like to limit other peoples activity, or
>choices.

Human society DEPENDS on limitations on other peoples activity. To name only a
few simple ones, we have traffic lights, speed limits, lane changing rules, and
parking rules. If I play loud music I'll disturb my neighbors. There are
hundreds of other ways that we as human beings must be considerate of our
neighbors. Most of these include limits on someone's behavior.

>It seems to me like there is very little important communication going on in
>ham radio, so why stress the narrow bandwidth? Would it block some critical
>or important communication?

One roundtable of a half dozen guys on ESSB transmitting as described in a
previous email can easily chew up 25 kHz of a band, and in extreme cases, twice
that.

>What about operating on an empty band, the operator still must (by law)
>sound like a cheap cell phone?

I have no problem ESSB or similar modes on an empty band. But propagation,
lousy receivers, a big power amp, and local noise can turn one guy's hot DX
band into another's dead band.

>People should try to get along, I dislike contests, they can take over and
>ruin a band,

I've been working the CQWWRTTY contest this weekend. That is burning about 40
kHz on 80M (3560-3600), less than 75 kHz on 40M, and about 100 kHz on 20M
(14050-14150). There are probably more than 1,000 active stations worldwide
sharing that bandwidth, and this isn't a BIG contest -- the big contests have
5-10 times that number. That's just over 200 kHz divided between more than
1,000 guys, and it's 20 times less piggish than those six guys in an ESSB
roundtable! These contests prohibit activity on 160M, 30M, 17M, and 12M, and it
is few contests burn more than one-third of a band.

Compare this with "normal" activity. A few days ago, I wanted to check out a
new 40M dipole I'd put up for contesting. It was 3pm on a weekday in CA, and I
heard one one CW or digital signal (a guy in Detroit, more than 2,000 miles
away), and only two SSB QSOs. And my QTH is quiet, in a redwood forest with few
neighbors!

73,

Jim K9YC


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Re: An interested link

Grant Youngman
In reply to this post by Brett Gazdzinski

On Sep 27, 2009, at 1:31 PM, Brett Gazdzinski wrote:

> I don't understand why some people like to limit other peoples  
> activity, or
> choices.

Because, like everything else, ham radio is "tribal".  And we always  
want to limit other's activities (ham radio, architectural committees,  
political parties, religions -- all the tribes we belong to have  
something to say about kicking the other guy.

> It seems to me like there is very little important communication  
> going on in
> ham radio, so why stress the narrow bandwidth? Would it block some  
> critical
> or important communication?

Because the figurative "MY" rights to communicate are always more  
important than the figurative "YOUR" rights to communicate.  There  
seem to be more and more hams who are just angry that their are any  
other hams who don't do precisely what they do, and we have more "road  
rage" than makes any sense at all.  We're killing our valued hobby by  
all of the screaming, literal anger, and infighting over mode,  
frequencies, bandwidth, operating -- and maybe just enjoy picking  
fights, to the detriment of all of us.

Grant/NQ5T



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Re: An interested link

David Gilbert
In reply to this post by Brett Gazdzinski
Brett Gazdzinski wrote:


N2DTS:  "I don't understand why some people like to limit other peoples
activity, or choices."

AB7E:   So it's OK for me to hold a keg party on the street in front of
your house late at night?    It isn't about arbitrarily wanting to limit
the activities of the wide-band ESSB folks ... it's about not wanting
the activities of the wide-band ESSB folks to arbitrarily limit the
number of hams who can enjoy themselves on the relatively narrow HF bands.



N2DTS:  "It seems to me like there is very little important
communication going on in ham radio, so why stress the narrow bandwidth?
Would it block some critical or important communication?"

AB7E:   There is relatively little "important" communication going on at
all in ham radio, and that applies at least as much to the wide-band
ESSB folks.  How "important" is it to spend an hour critiquing that last
0.1 db of voice frequency response below 50 Hz?  The issue isn't the
importance of the content ... the issue is the right to reasonable
opportunity to express it.



N2DTS: "Ham radio just seems like a bunch of people who enjoy fooling
with radio
equipment, so why not just let them fool with it?"

AB7E:   While ESSB has endured scorn from mainstream hams for some time,
it really wasn't too much of an issue while their experiments (and their
splatter) were held to rather few frequencies that everyone else could
generally manage to avoid.  Now that ESSB has found a way to take up
even more space with wide bandwidths and its practitioners are openly
advocating operation anywhere on the HF bands, it has become a totally
different issue.  If your upwind neighbor enjoyed burning tires in his
back yard, would you be inclined to "just let him fool with it"?



N2DTS:   "There are other modes much narrower than ssb, why not not ban
ssb as wasting spectrum?

AB7E:   There aren't any practical VOICE modes narrower than SSB.  FCC
regulations and common-use band plans try to provide room for everyone
to enjoy the hobby without unduly infringing on others right to do the
same.  Wide-band ESSB is like insisting on wearing a big hat in a
crowded movie.



N2DTS: "I am not fond of RTTY, or slow scan TV, or ssb, or many other
things other hams do, but the last thing I would want to do is restrict
something that others find enjoyable."

AB7E:   So why not open up the HF bands to wide-band FM?


I have no problem at all with people using the K3 for clean ESSB when
the band activity allows it.  I do have a problem with people using ESSB
on any rig when the bands are crowded, and I have a significant problem
with people extending ESSB to ridiculous bandwidths like 6 KHz and
beyond, and I have a huge problem with people generating splatter by
pushing a rig that can't handle it to ESSB bandwidths.

Dave   AB7E


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