[SixClub] Six is open in Oklahoma
Donald Dubuque W4DJD
ke4iap at gmail.com
Wed Jun 2 12:41:31 EDT 2010
My statement was nothing more then a quick response and not gospel, I don't
think the going into physics and breaking down the atom to its smallest
particle was worth this Hams time. He was looking for answers. Here is an
example of my answer, my locale (VA) broadcast station is broadcasting at
50k watts and conditions are good, will someone on the same freq in Ohio
hear it? Mostly no, but if the conditions are just right probably yes.
So for anyone else that would like to chime in with there superior attitude
be my guest.
Don Dubuque-W4DJD
Admin for the following sites
Six Club/Hamwave/10m/6m Club/Hamradiotube/W4DJD/Stavingeeks
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 12:32, <cboone at earthlink.net> wrote:
> Donald,
> I take it your call is a vanity and not an original 1x3 which would make
> you licensed for decades..I take it you are not that because of your
> statements below (and using Wikikpedia to back them up; Wiki is NOT the
> total true reference...some entires on Wikipedia are 100%
> false!!!)...welllllll, I am at work right now BUT when lunch comes up and I
> can type more, I'll show you how wrong a number of the statements below are!
> (Here is one: AM CAN do Hi fidelity...always HAS! Its the Receiver filter
> that makes an AM radio sound the way it does..AM Broadcast stations until
> the last 10-15yrs ago, when the NRSC standards went into effect and AM audio
> was filtered to a max of 10kHz, were able to broadcast up to 20kHz wide
> audio!! Wiki didnt tell ya that, I bet)
> Stay tuned...
>
> Chris
> WB5ITT (non-vanity)
> Trustee, W5APX
> FCC Commercial PG-9-5322
> Broadcast/telecom engineer for 35+ years
>
> -----Original Message-----
> >From: Donald Dubuque W4DJD <ke4iap at gmail.com>
> >Sent: Jun 2, 2010 10:34 AM
> >To: "Richard J. Fiero II W5TFW" <w5tfw at arrl.net>, World Wide Six Meter
> Club <sixclub at mailman.qth.net>
> >Subject: Re: [SixClub] Six is open in Oklahoma
> >
> >FM is commonly used at VHF <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VHF> radio
> >frequencies <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_frequencies> for
> >high-fidelity <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-fidelity>
> >broadcasts<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_broadcasting>of
> >music <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music> and
> >speech<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_communication>(see FM
> >broadcasting <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FM_broadcasting>). Normal
> >(analog) TV sound is also broadcast using FM. A narrow band form is used
> for
> >voice <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_voice> communications in
> >commercial and amateur radio
> ><http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio>settings. The type of FM
> >used in broadcast is generally called wide-FM, or
> >W-FM. In two-way radio, narrowband narrow-fm (N-FM) is used to conserve
> >bandwidth. In addition, it is used to send signals into space.
> >
> >
> >Don Dubuque-W4DJD
>
>
>
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