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Lessons Learned About Frequency Sharing in the Amateur Radio Service

Lessons Learned About Frequency Sharing in the Amateur Radio Service. Gregory D. Lapin, PhD, PE American Radio Relay League. For Most Communications, The Paradigm is Shifting From…. Each communicator/broadcaster is assigned fixed frequency channels.

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Lessons Learned About Frequency Sharing in the Amateur Radio Service

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  1. Lessons Learned About Frequency Sharing in the Amateur Radio Service Gregory D. Lapin, PhD, PE American Radio Relay League

  2. For Most Communications,The Paradigm is Shifting From… • Each communicator/broadcaster is assigned fixed frequency channels. • No one else uses an assigned channel except the licensee. • Channels are reassigned geographically based on expected propagation. Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  3. …Toward the Paradigm Upon WhichThe Amateur Radio Service Is Based • The Amateur Radio Service is assigned relatively small bands of frequencies scattered throughout the spectrum to experiment with propagation. • Groups of frequencies are specified for different communications modes. • Licensees are given the right can use any assigned frequency as long as they do not interfere with other licensees. Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  4. The Amateur Radio Paradigm • All licensees have an equal right to use all frequencies. • No frequencies are permanently assigned by regulation for anyone or for any purpose. • Some frequencies have permanent assignment by agreement (via a frequency coordinator). • Emergency communications always have priority. • Hams have nearly 100 years of experience in refining this type of operating. Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  5. In the beginning… There wasSpark Gap – the original UWB No crystals, no filters – just raw RF power Circa 1910 Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  6. Frequency Sharing Was a Challenge King Spark !Grown now to full maturity, Glorious old sparks!Night after night they boomed and echoed down the air lanes.Night after night the mighty chorus swelled , by ones, by twos, by dozens,until the crescendo thunder of their Stentor bellows shook and jarred the very Universe! A thousand voices clamored for attention.Nervous, impatient sparks, purring petulantly.Clean-cut business-like sparks batting steadily along at a thirty-word clip. Survival of the fittest.Higher and higher powers were the order of the day.The race was on, and devil take the hindmost. Interference. Lord, what interference! Bedlam!Well, it could not be Utopia. -Arthur Lyle Budlong excerpted from The Story of the American Radio Relay League Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  7. The Solution • In the 1920s, trans-Atlantic experiments with narrowband CW transmissions showed that they could coexist in the same frequency band without interference. • 50 CW signals could occupy the same frequency space as one spark gap signal. • A 5-watt CW signal could be heard over a greater distance than a 500-watt spark gap signal. • By 1924 spark gap had virtually disappeared. Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  8. Amateur Frequency Allocations Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  9. Lessons to Avoid Interference When Sharing Frequencies • Listen before transmitting. • Ask if the apparently unused frequency is actually in use. • Keep transmissions short. • Use minimum power necessary. • Different stations trying to use the same frequency should be able to understand each other. • Coordinate frequency use by other means (such as a common control channel or the Internet to schedule a frequency and time to communicate). Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  10. Why Listening to a Frequency Isn’t Enough B C is talking to B A listens but does not hear C A starts transmitting and interferes with B trying to hear C A C Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  11. Regulations and Agreements • Regulations specify which frequencies can be used and which modulation modes can be used on them. • Band Plans are agreements that set aside specific sub-bands of frequencies for specific modes. Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  12. Limitations of Regulations • Regulations allow different modulation modes to be on the same set of frequencies. • How can one ask if a frequency is being used if everyone doesn’t understand the question? • Solutions to this include agreeing on Band Plans and Frequency Coordination. Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  13. Digital Modes CW QRP CW SSB, SSTV and other Wideband Modes SSB QRP Experimental Beacons AM RTTY DX Window Packet Satellite Downlinks Satellite Uplinks FM Repeater Inputs FM Repeater Outputs Auxiliary Links FM Simplex Radio Remote Control Amateur TV Earth-Moon-Earth Experimental Spread Spectrum Some Modulation Modes That Band Plans Specify Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  14. WiFi (IEEE 802.11b) format and technology is leveraged to provide High Speed Multimedia networking on Amateur Radio frequencies. Off-the-shelf hardware is connected to innovative antenna designs with higher power as permitted under Amateur Radio regulations. Details at http://www.arrl.org/hsmm A Modern Amateur Radio Experiment in Frequency Sharing Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

  15. My Favorite Story of Cooperatively Sharing a Frequency Lapin - Lessons Learned from Amateur Radio

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