Well that's about what I expected. The ARRL failed with the band allocations
by bandwidth (Winlink wars) and now it looks like they are trying an end run
to get the wideband junk everywhere. Did anyone on the Ad Hoc Symbol Rate Rule
Modernization Committee ask for input from the ham community? This smells
bad.....again, it got very ugly last time. Write to your director and try to
stop it
before it gets to the FCC.
The questions I asked during the last dust up that got me booted and banned
from a certain digital reflector were
1. Who monitors the messages for content?
2. Does Part 97.101(b) not apply to Winlink?
3.Part 97.113(4), are emails moving through the Winlink system encrypted
within the message body? See point 1.
4. Part 97.113(5) SailMail is available.
This got started when a sysop told users to turn off busy channel detection and
the open admission of users that they never had the volume up on their rigs
to listen for other signals.
I need to cool down some before I write my director or need bp meds.
Ron
K0IDT
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ben Antanaitis - WB2RHM" <wb2rhm@wb2rhm.com>
To: "rtty-contesting.com" <rtty@contesting.com>
Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2013 2:58 PM
Subject: Re: [RTTY] BoD votes LoTW initiatives
All,
FYI---- Here is the response I received today, 7/24/2013 from K1ZZ, the CEO of the
ARRL Re my strong objection to the ARRL 2.8KHz bandwidth proposal for digital modes
in all the HF bands.........
Here is the ARRL (but, we are working for your best interests)
position...........
73,
Ben - WB2RHM, WB2RHM/4, WB2RHM/2
ARRL Life Member
ARRL 50 yr Member
Active RTTY Contester
**************************************************************************************
Ben, I will forward your comments to your Director, Dennis Bodson, W4PWF.
However, you should welcome a limit being placed on the bandwidth of HF digital data
signals. At the present time there is no bandwidth limit whatsoever on digital data
signals as long as the 300 baud limit is observed. It is legal today for a signal
with multiple carriers, each with multiple-bit-per-symbol modulation, to be
considerably wider than 2.8 kHz. The 2.8 kHz value accommodates digital emissions
now in common use while putting a cap on the bandwidth that a station could occupy
in the future.
73,
David Sumner, K1ZZ
Chief Executive Officer, ARRL
**************************************************************************************
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