Roger
Like I said to Dr Who, hit the big switch, the
met office probably would'nt know the difference between your thunder and the
other kind !!
Some say a NOV is not necessary on this QRG. Ask
them about a rock concert where the audio is transmitted for miles, whereas
radio amateurs in most cases so far have only managed a few hundred metres in
the same frequency range.
Acoustic or electromagnetic ether disturbance is
virtually the same thing. Does the thunder generator licensee
have a NOV?
Another point, a thunder storm and associated
lightening can be heard/seen for miles by ear why does the met office need an
electormagnetic detector.
This is a humorous observation.
g3kev
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, June 02, 2010 10:15
PM
Subject: LF: Sub-9kHz NoV progress
This evening I chased Rod Wilkinson at OFCOM about my sub-9kHz
NoV application submitted in March. The last time I contacted him in May he
said the matter was still waiting on a response from the Met Office and that
it had been discussed at an RSGB liaison meeting.
I hope the Met Office
can predict the weather quicker or it's back to seaweed when the austerity
cuts arrive. Actually this isn't a bad idea.......
73s Roger
G3XBM
-- http://g3xbm-qrp.blogspot.com/ http://www.g3xbm.co.uk http://www.youtube.com/user/g3xbm G3XBM
GQRP 1678 ISWL
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