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Re: LF: WSPR T/A hole discussion

To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: LF: WSPR T/A hole discussion
From: John GM4SLV <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 6 Nov 2010 23:37:41 +0000
In-reply-to: <op.vlrpsvoyyzqh0k@pc-roelof>
Organization: The Gammy Bird
References: <20101101233708.02b5f67d@opc1> <[email protected]> <007b01cb7a91$ceb8df60$4001a8c0@lark> <[email protected]> <op.vlrpsvoyyzqh0k@pc-roelof>
Reply-to: [email protected]
Sender: [email protected]
On Sat, 06 Nov 2010 22:25:33 +0100
"Roelof Bakker" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Looking forward to your comments,

Roelof, LF,

Erudite points well put, as ever.

One point keeps nagging at me. 

If Jay is correct, and the number of strong (high power/efficient
antenna/high ERP/groundwave path) W stations is large enough to prevent
adequate reception of weak signals from Europe, then this also means
there will be no possibility of weak signal reception from other WD/WE
stations.

Why are they using such high power on WSPR?

What is the point of this if, as Jay says, everyone will continually be
being overloaded by their strong groundwave neighbo(u)rs?

Are the high power stations that Jay describes only interested in
reception reports from Europe, rather than from other W stations? If
they do want reports from W-land, then by Jay's argument, they will only
get reports from their near-neighbo(u)rs, as the weaker long distance
stuff will be blocked due to RX overload.

This can't be right? 

I don't believe there is a problem of RX overload preventing reception
of weak signals (from where-ever), and if there is a problem then the
solution is to reduce TX power to the point that allows maximum
transmission distance, and minimum RX overload, rather then segregating
us into separate parts of the spectrum.

I still don't understand.

John
GM4SLV



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