Bw lower as 3kc and fsk . like many other modes

That is what i think 

So legal where 3kc wide/digital is legal so out of cw portion but in the
digiarea

Dg9bfc

Sigi

At a given time if you make a snapshot there is only one tone so bw at a
given short time in lower as 500hz

So it is narrow in a short period of time ;-) should be legal anywhere

My thoughts is all modes should be legal in any band cause hamradio is
experimental!

 

 

 

  _____  

Von: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com [mailto:digitalra...@yahoogroups.com] Im
Auftrag von max d
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 25. Februar 2010 20:53
An: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Betreff: [digitalradio] The FCC's definition of Spread Spectrum

 

  


Part 97.3 "Definitions" defines: "SS. Spread-spectrum emissions using
bandwidth-expansion modulation emissions having designators with A, C, D, F,
G, H, J or R as the first symbol; X as the second symbol; X as the third
symbol. "

Title 47 Sec. 2.201 is the relevant section formally defining these symbols.
It can be found on the ARRL website.

For a signal to be officially considered Spread Spectrum by the FCC, it
would have to meet a very specific description, or maybe I should say it
should not meet the other specific definitions of emissions.

After my reading of 2.201, I don't think that ROS or Chip64 could be
"officially" defined as Spread Spectrum.

And, the response from the FCC doesn't provide any FCC position or
interpretation of ROS, and further says "The Commission does not determine
if a particular mode "truly" represents spread spectrum as it is defined in
the rules."

Just my thoughts, 

Max
NN5L



Reply via email to