Yes, this could be a real problem.
If only we had some means of alerting people when a station from HS running
SSB is found in the lower portions of 80 and/or 40 meters.
Just think... why, you could use a BBS type system, have someone who
discovers the station post a message on said BBS or equivalent, and it would
be read by hundreds, maybe thousands, of hams across the world in a matter
of moments.
Now, we could use the Internet for a system like this. Or we could use a
digital mode, such as, oh, I don't know, AX.25, to run a system like this on
VHF or UHF. In fact, we could do both... use V/UHF for local BBS's -- call
them "nodes" -- and tie those "nodes" together via the Internet. Hmmm.
"Nodes" sounds like a medical condition. Maybe a better word would be...
clusters. Yeah, that works.
We could call it the AX.25 system, but that doesn't roll well off the
tongue. Come to think of it, most AX.25 operation uses "Packet" radio.
Why, we could even combine the two terms... Packet Cluster. A network to
pass information along to interested stations. Of course, users of this
would be considered to be operating with assistance from others... but
somehow, I think we have categories in the contest for just this
possibility.
Packet Cluster. What a concept. Too bad it will never work...
/sarcasm
73, ron w3wn
-----Original Message-----
From: CQ-Contest [mailto:cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of
Charles Harpole
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2015 5:38 PM
To: CQ-Contest Reflector; jakkree hantongkom
Subject: [CQ-Contest] Wk HS ssb on 80/160 special freqs
Thailand hams, HS and E2, continue to be limited to the lower 25kc of both
the 80 and 160 meter bands, but operations there can be any mode including
SSB.
I guess this just about puts Thailand out of the running because world
stations are unlikely to tune there to find HS on SSB and prop is very
variable, too.
Sadly, although Thailand's NBTC (like FCC) has approved new bands, such as
3.5-3.6, all of 160, and part of 6 meters, the Thailand military has
superseded that civilian authority and blocked these additions for an
indeterminate time. Thailand has over 300,000 licensed hams, second in
numbers to JA, and some are upgrading to HF from being trapped on half of
two meters only.
Our national ham club, RAST, has struggled valiantly to get the NBTC
approval. There is hope for improvements.
73
--
Charly, HS0ZCW
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