tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1608381420022248590.post634674222628601760..comments2024-03-26T15:49:53.549+00:00Comments on EI7GL....A diary of amateur radio activity: More information about the proposed Amateur TV experiments at 29.250 MHz & 51.7 MHzJohn, EI7GLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02903298584057380083noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1608381420022248590.post-16442167754527671932021-12-12T18:33:05.681+00:002021-12-12T18:33:05.681+00:00Hi David
If you look back at the link to the Augu...Hi David<br /><br />If you look back at the link to the August posting, they're talking about 300 kHz so it's 29.1 to 29.4 MHz.<br /><br />I suspect the level of activity will be at a level where interference is unlikely. It's only a few guys exchanging TV pictures as opposed to some sort of ATV repeater that is on 24/7.<br /><br />The main thing is that it is experimental and people are trying to push the boundaries of what might be possible as opposed to the same old usual stuff that has been done countless of times before.<br /><br />JohnJohn, EI7GLhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02903298584057380083noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1608381420022248590.post-27971109686755287182021-12-12T17:26:00.153+00:002021-12-12T17:26:00.153+00:00Um...excuse me but from what I understand the ATV ...Um...excuse me but from what I understand the ATV 10m signals are 500khz wide!<br /><br />So, a strong signal wipes out the AM window, FM gateways, FM input frequencies and may QRM the FM calling channel. That can't be right can it? This would be a perfect mode for a 500khz allocation on 8m!<br /><br />David.<br />G8JGO.G8JGOhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00505492102212197876noreply@blogger.com