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[RTTY] Winlink wants YOUR frequencies!

To: <rtty@contesting.com>
Subject: [RTTY] Winlink wants YOUR frequencies!
From: "Skip Teller" <hteller@comcast.net>
Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2005 14:04:57 -0400
List-post: <mailto:rtty@contesting.com>
The following was posted on www.zerobeat.net.

Please read carefully and send comments to bandwidth@arrl.org. Failure to do 
may result in
PSK31 operations being forced down into the CW regions of the bands in order to 
escape QRM
from 2.4 KHz-wide unattended Winlink Pactor-III robots! It may also mean an 
invasion of
unattended Pactor-III robots (2400 Hz wide) into the RTTY contesting areas.

73, Skip KH6TY

------------------------

Winlink wants YOUR frequencies!

Not satisfied with dominating the 3.8% of the HF ham frequencies set aside by 
the FCC for
wideband unattended operations, Winlink, for the sole benefit of their 
less-than-1% of the
US hams, is now pressuring the ARRL to take away frequencies used for 
contesting, Dxing,
ragchewing, experimentation, and award-chasing, and make those additional 
frequencies
available for Winlink to dominate with their unattended email robots.

If you have ever had your CW or PSK31 QSO trampled by a Pactor station when you 
were
already on the frequency, or you do not want this to happen to you in the 
future, then you
MUST email Dave Sumner, CEO, at bandwidth@arrl.org and tell him the following 
without
delay!

1. That you do NOT agree to give up any frequencies outside of the present FCC 
sub-bands
for automatically controlled digital station operations, INCLUDING the Executive
Committee's intention to increase the space on the 30 meter FCC sub-bands, 
where unattended
wideband digital operations are already allowed (and already dominated by 
Winlink), by 33%,
because 30m is already a SMALL band and a band that has to be SHARED with 
commercial
services.

2. That you DO NOT BELIEVE that unattended or so-called "semi-automatic" 
Winlink operations
will not dominate any frequencies they publish, SINCE THEY DO ALREADY, even 
though they
claim to have "activity detection" already in the modems they use. That the 
claim of
"activity detection" is a false promise in order to get the ARRL to petition 
the FCC to
take away spectrum from everyone else for the increased convenience of the 5100 
Winlink
users, who mainly use ham radio as a way to get remote email access to the 
Internet, and
not for communications.

3. That the HISTORICALLY HIGH LEVEL OF INTERFERENCE BY PACTOR STATIONS to 
everyone else has
demonstrated time and time again that even the operator-controlled Winlink 
Pactor stations
don't care if a frequency is busy (because they can easily take it away), in 
their passion
to get their email from the Internet, so they MUST NOT BE ALLOWED to mix with 
hams trying
to COMMUNICATE WITH EACH OTHER!

4. That you do NOT agree that more space should be allocated to unattended 
phone-width
DIGITAL operations because the phone bands are already overcrowded with hams 
trying to talk
to each other, and any re-allocation to make more room for phone-width signals 
should only
be used for analog or digital voice that will benefit 99% of the hams instead 
of the
less-than-1% that Winlink represents.

5. That there is no spectrum that can be taken away from where CW and 
person-to-person
digital communications like RTTY, PSK31 and MFSK16 are used for ragchewing, 
Dxing, and
contesting.

6. That ham radio is a HOBBY, not a quasi-commercial email "service" as Winlink 
provides,
and that ham radio, from the very beginning, has always been mainly about hams
communicating with other hams, and not about being used for unattended email 
gateways to
the Internet, mostly for a few sailors, because the FCC Maritime Radio 
Frequencies were set
aside for that purpose and are underused.

7. That all unattended wideband digital operations, of any type, MUST be 
confined to the
current sub-bands for automatically controlled digital stations, and not 
allowed to use any
frequency they wish just in order to avoid having to wait a short time for a 
clear
frequency in the sub-bands.


Here is the Winlink bulletin that was posted on their servers:

****************

VERY IMPORTANT Update, March 23, 2005

HELP US KEEP AND ENHANCE WINLINK 2000. PLEASE RESPOND BY APRIL 6!

All,

Recently, we asked that all Winlink users write to the ARRL to save our
Winlink wideband (Pactor 3) operations on the 30 meter band. The ARRL had
just recommended the deletion of such operations on that band for all US
licensed Amateurs. Our users did respond to the request for opinions, and as
a result, the ARRL Executive Committee has now rescinded their original
recommendation to delete wideband digital operations on 30 meters.

Once again, we are asking you to write to David Sumner at
bandwidth@arrl.org, and request the following:

1. That bandwidth space be expanded for digital modes above 500 Hz, and that
semi-automatic operations be allowed outside the current very restricted
sub-bands. Semi-automatic operations are always initiated by human beings
who are capable of listening before they transmit.

2. That because sophisticated signal detection is planned for the Winlink
2000 semi-automatic operations, the unattended receiving end of Winlink 2000
will have built-in protection from interference. It is already available in
the modems we use.  Even without it, most QRM is avoided by those initiating
the connection listening carefully before they transmit. That you understand
there are additional inexpensive, and soon to be readily available,
technologies such as SCAMP now being beta tested for Winlink data transfer
that already deploy signal detection.

3. That your use of Winlink 2000 wideband mode (Pactor 3) is valuable to
you, and assists greatly with your personal safety and well-being (if it
does).

4. That under the current band plan, digital operations are cluttered,
without adequate space for normal operations.  The addition of additional
technologies, all crammed into the current limited space will make it
impossible to use.

5. That the future of the Amateur Radio service is dependent on viable
communications using enabling digial voice, image and data technologies, and
it is important that STATIC REGULATIONS not restrict future development of
these technologies as they change.

PLEASE use your own words, and if there is something else you wish to add,
please do.

PLEASE RESPOND TO THIS REQUEST BY THE ARRL TO PROVIDE YOUR EXPERIENCE AND
INFORMATION BY APRIL 6. IT IS CRITICAL TO THE SUCCESSFUL OPERATION OF
WINLINK 2000, and other high bandwidth data transfer, voice and image
digital modes. Responding to their request for your opinion will help
keep Winlink 2000 alive.  Not responding may end the very service we
now provide.

Please do not leave it to others. Respond to David Sumner, CEO,
bandwidth@arrl.org. If you wish to also copy your ARRL Division Director,
save a copy, and we will soon put out another message with the States and
locations of each.

Thanks,


Steve, k4cjx

**************End of Bulletin****************

You are welcome to cut and paste whatever you wish from this posting, but 
PLEASE email Dave
Sumner, CEO, at bandwidth@arrl.org, AND your Division Director, WITHOUT FAIL, 
and say you
DO NOT AGREE with what Winlink is asking for.

You need to do this URGENTLY, because if 5000 Winlink users send emails, the 
ARRL will only
see 5000 votes in favor of Winlink expansion and will have no way to know that 
all those
5000 just came from Winlink users who have been told their email may be cut off 
unless they
email in favor of Winlink. They will be identified only by their callsigns, 
just like
everyone else.

To stop this attempted takeover, EVERYONE ELSE needs to vote NOT to agree to 
the Winlink
request, so ARRL does not get the wrong impression that the "majority" of hams 
want to
sacrifice the frequencies they use for communicating, so that the less-than-1%, 
that are
Winlink users, don't have to wait longer than 90 seconds to receive an email on 
HF or can't
send picture attachments to the Internet.

Please act today to help preserve amateur radio as a hobby, for the traditional 
purpose of
communicating with other radio amateurs, and not as a radio gateway to the 
Internet for a
special interest group.

Thom
K3HRN



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