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- This report is brought to you courtesy of Scott, W3VS, Roy, AA4RE,
- HAMNET (a feature of COMPUSERV) and the Garlic Valley Packet Society,
- Gilroy, California.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
- :: ::
- :: T H E W 5 Y I R E P O R T ::
- :: ::
- :: D i t s & B i t s ::
- :: ::
- :: Vol 10 #6 --- 03/15/88 ::
- :: ::
- :: HamNet Electronic Edition ::
- :: CompuServe's Ham/SWL Forum ::
- :: ::
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
- Up to the minute news from the worlds of amateur radio, personal
- computing and emerging electronics. While no guarantee is made,
- information is from sources we believe to be reliable. May be
- reproduced providing credit is given to The W5YI Report.
-
- This HamNet Electronic Edition is a limited excerpt from the full published
- edition of The W5YI Report. Selected and prepared by Scott, W3VS.
-
- Commercial redistribution of this copy is prohibited.
-
- IMPORTANT Note: Some of the material included in The W5YI Report - Electronic
- Edition may not be suitable for transmission via Amateur Radio.
-
-
- In this issue:
-
- - Canada Officially Commits to a No-Code License
- - Update on UPS Proposal for 220 MHz
-
- HamNet thanks Fred Maia, W5YI, for permission to excerpt this
- Electronic Edition of his W5YI Report. The full ten-page biweekly
- newsletter is available by mail for $21 per year from Fred at Dept.
- C, PO Box 10101, Dallas, TX 75207. Samples available for a 2 stamp
- large SASE.
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- operator candidate to learn everything necessary to obtain a ham ticket
- without formal classroom training. Kit contains 3 manuals, 2 code tapes,
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- or your money back! Same Day Shipping! Price: $21.95+$2.40 postage. W5YI-
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-
- o Canada Officially Commits to a No-Code License
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- The Canadian Department of Communications (DOC) has officially announced that
- it is committed to entry level no-code Amateur Radio. The Canadian
- government's position was made known to the public during a combined DOC-
- Amateur Radio industry meeting held February 20th.
-
- The DOC is the regulatory agency overseeing telecommunications in Canada ...
- similar to our Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Its action is deemed
- very significant to the United States since the two nations often act in
- concert. Rules adopted in one nation frequently are adopted in the other.
-
- While the action may have astonished American amateurs, it did not come as a
- surprise to Canada's two national amateur radio organizations. The Canadian
- Amateur Radio Federation (CARF) and Canadian Radio Relay League (CRRL) had
- submitted a joint position paper to the goernment supporting an entry level
- ham ticket without a Morse Code requirement during mid-1986.
-
- The CRRL, an offshoot of the US American Radio Relay League, separated from
- the ARRL some time ago amid charges that the League meddled in strictly
- Canadian affairs. The ARRL remains strongly opposed to code-free US ham
- operation. The combined Canadian position, jointly signed by CARF president
- Ronald Welsh, VE3IDW, and CRRL president, Thomas B. J. Atkins, VE3CDM,
- represents the attitude of the majority of Canadian amateurs.
-
- The CARF/CRRL comments responded to the perception that ham radio is basically
- an old man's hobby. Apparently it is more fact than feeling. Recent
- Department of Communications published figures indicate that only 4.6% of all
- Canadian amateurs are under the age of 30. (15.1% are between 30 and 40,
- 20.0% between 40 and 50, 20.6% between 50 and 60, 22.2% between 60 and 70, and
- 17.5% are 70 years of age or over). The current average age of all Canadian
- amateurs is 55 ... 60% of all Canadian amateurs are over 50 years old.
-
- These figures are actually not much different from those of the United States.
- Both CARF and the CRRL recognized the need for more and younger radio amateurs
- ... and a continuing role for Morse code and experimentation ...although not
- necessarily at the entry level.
-
- Currently Canada has three amateur radio operator classes. Amateur, Advanced
- and Digital. There is no entry level "Novice" license in Canada. The digital
- license, while a "no-code" ham ticket, can't be considered entry level since
- it requires an extremely difficult written examination. It is also not very
- popular at all.
-
- The two amateur organizations in Canada initially proposed Amateur
- Restructuring to contain three ham license classes ...or "Certificates" as
- they call them.
-
- The Department of Communications, however, proposed restructuring based on
- four amateur radio certificats ...and added a new ham radio wrinkel,
- commerically manufactured transmitting equipment only for three of the four
- classes.
-
- While the Canadian authorities are strongly committed to the four amateur
- class structure, DOC members of the Working Group said nothing was "cast in
- stone" and that many details of the proposed structure were still open for
- discussion. These included:
-
- (1.) Names of the various certificates;
-
- (2.) Operating privileges;
-
- (3.) Relative difficulty of the two technical examinations;
-
- (4.) Requirements to use "commercial" equipment, and;
-
- (5.) Accomodation of holders of the present Amateur, Advanced Amateur and
- Digital Amateur certificates.
-
- Canadian amateurs will be granted the opportunity of commenting on the
- government DOC proposal once the notice appears in the official government
- journal, the "Canada Gazette". Sources tell us that the new Canadian amateur
- radio restructuring will be implemented during mid-1989.
-
-
- o Update on UPS Proposal for 220-222
- ----------------------------------
-
- SEA, Inc., under contract to provide United Parcel Service with their narrow
- band ACSB radio technology, made an "ex parte" presentation on behalf of UPS
- to the FCC on February 19th. SEA stands for Stephens Engineering Associates.
- They primarily make maritime radio equipment and are lobbying the FCC hard.
-
- Their oral presentation was before FCC Chairman Dennis Patrick, the FCC's
- Office of Congressional Affairs and the FCC's Office of Engineering and
- Technology (OET). UPS already is moving ahead with creating a 220-222 MHz
- data radio network even though the FCC has not yet finally rules that it will
- indeed reallocate 220-222 MHz to narrow band Land Mobile business radio.
- Maybe they know something the rest of us don't.
-
- ACSB (amplitude compandored sideband) is not some sort of new astonishing
- technology. Some regard it as obsolete since it is not digital. Multiple
- digital voice conversations can be multiplexed on a single channel. FCC
- officials in high decision making capacities probably were more impressed by
- the ACSB presentations, however. The fact remains that it is an old (circa
- 1970) analog single sideband system. SEA, Inc. is no doubt trying to recoup
- some of their investment in ACSB before it fades into insignificance.
-
- United Parcel Service filed their comments more than six months late and
- ordinarily they would not be accepted. They made it crystal clear in their
- comments, however, that they were not the average run-of-the-mill company.
-
- "UPS employs over 200,000 people and maintains a fleet of more than 50,000
- delivery vehicles and 100 airplances," they said. "UPS's 1987 sales volume
- was $9.5 billion, up from $6.8 billion three years earlier, an average annual
- growth rate of over 13%."
-
- While industry seems to have bypassed ACSB, UPS intends to employ the
- technology in the 220-222 MHz band to provide up-to-the-minute "state-of-the-
- art" information on the delivery status of customer packages through use of a
- terminal aboard every delivery vehicle.
-
- They said amateur radio operators "can easily yse other spectrum to conduct
- the few functions for which they currently use 220-222 MHz" ... and "concerns
- about potential interference with VHF television service are unrealistic and
- require, at more, appropriate license conditions, not rejection of the
- reallocation proposal."
-
- The answer on whether or not the FCC would accept the UPS late-filed comments
- came on March 10th. As we anticipated, the Commission issued an Order
- accepting the UPS comments on General Docket 87-14.
-
- The ARRL had filed a motion against acceptance on the grounds that besides
- being six months late, UPS had not given other commenters the opportunity to
- respond to the UPS proposal.
-
- The Commission ruled, however, that the United Parcel proposal "provided new
- and relevant information and in order to develop as complete a record as
- possible the FCC will accept them. As requested by the ARRL, the FCC will
- accept reply comments to the UPS filing until March 31st."
-
- Although UPS is a very big company (and it is difficult for the FCC to ignore
- them) it is not a good precedent for the FCC to accept comments past the
- cutoff date. You can anticipate that other firms will also be making late
- filings with "new information".
-
- We understand that it won't be long before the FCC will be making their final
- ruling on how the 220-225 MHz band will be divided up. It is starting to look
- like the 1-1/4 meter ham band will be 222-225 MHz.
-
- As Bob Eldridge/VE7BS recently wrote us, "It is good to see you reminding
- people that 220-225 has never been very secure for us. If we can get
- exclusive allocation of 222-225 MHz instead of an uncertain future for 220-
- 225, it may be the best thing that could have happened." Bob has a background
- in international spectrum management.
-
- "Only last night I head a US amateur complaining about a ticket received from
- FCC citing him for interference to a broadcasting station between 7100-7300
- kHz. Perhaps this would be a good time to remind everyone of ITU Footnote
- 528: "The use of the band 7100-7300 kHz in Region 2 in the amateur service
- shall not impose constraints on the broadcasting service intended for use
- within Region 1 and Region 3." It is well for us to know just what rights we
- have and what rights we do not have."
-
- [End this issue]
-
-
-