Hi Sil,

 
In the world of  data comms (not radio),  the meanings of  terms are generally 
as follows :
 
Simplex = One direction only  ( A to B only, never in the other direction )  eg 
a broadcast,  NOAA WX stations, etc

HDX  Half Duplex  =  Alternating on both directions,  e.g   A to B,  
turnaround,  B to A, turnaround, A to B, and so on .....

FDX  Full Duplex  =  simultaneously in  both directions at same time,  A to B  
AND  B to A.  
 
For Simplex and for HDX  only 2 wires (baseband) or 2  FSK frequencies are 
enough. 
TX and RX dont clash, because they are used Alternately, like a single track 
railway.

Turnaround Time was always an important factor, because it slowed down the 
total amount of data  transferred per hour, and required careful 
synchronisation of modem turnarounds at both ends.
 
For Full Duplex FDX you need a 2 track railway, or 4 wires, or 4 FSK 
frequencies, which can send and receive at the same time, for trains to go in 
both directions, for cars to pass on an an ordinary road, for data to pass 
(ignoring phase modulation and other techniques.)
 
Simplex,  HDX and FDX have nothing to do with Cross-Band working.  

Cross-Band is a completely separate and additional requirement.
  
FM Repeaters often are FDX with frequencies only 600 khz apart,  which is 
Same-Band FDX in the repeater-radio  (and used in HDX mode by human users with 
HDX radios). 
  
Humans using Satellites at VHF and UHF for Simultaneous Up and Down links,  
require radios with FDX  and Cross-band functions.  
 
To summarise,  for sat operations, two different functions are required of a 
radio,
FDX  and Cross-Band working. 
 
Combining  these 2 separate function names  into one name seems to confuse the 
matter.
 
 73
 
 de M3RRX
 


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