Thank you Don... this needs to be repeated every so often because these 'Urban Myths' seem to never die in spite of the facts...
The way I've got it figured is the FCC doesn't want to do much of anything to limit bandwidth... not so much for the sake of AM but to leave the doors open for other yet unknown modes... I mean, and this is a silly comparison but..., Just how 'wide' is a spread spectrum signal??? and for giggles run an check on some of the DAT modes... intermodulation distortion is a bug in even some of the best equipment and that brings us back to 'good enginneering practices'... Bad example I admit but when you think about it... tnx agn Don... 73 vince ka1iic On Sunday 26 September 2004 06:02 pm, Donald Chester wrote: > That is a popular urban myth. There is NOTHING in the US regulations that > specifically limits bandwidth. The regulations specify "good engineering

