It is probably tempororay until the Chinese debris is accounted for. The
military is interested  in  knowing what kind of mechanism  is used for the
anit-sat system.

Adam Kb2Jpd


On 5/15/07, Nate Duehr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


On May 14, 2007, at 2:13 PM, Rick Parrish wrote:

> Chuck Kelsey wrote:
>> That's not the way it's going to work. Remember, amateur radio is a
>> secondary user on this band and the federal government is the primary
>> user. If we make too big of a fuss, we could loose it all.
> I understand you. My point is ... this is military hardware where
> people's lives are at stake. If 50 or so watts is all the enemy
> needs to
> render the equipment useless ... it shouldn't be used for this
> application.

Chuck,

A conversation I had with some folks who really understand RADAR
systems, led to an interesting theory...

PAVE-PAWS is probably trying to see/track some VERY small targets, if
local UHF repeaters are bothering them.

The best scientifically-based theory we came up with off-line, was
that the bits and pieces of the results of the Chinese testing their
anti-satellite technology against their own bird recently, created so
much on-orbit crap and debris, that every available resource that can
"see" those bits and chunks -- which are all very dangerous to other
satellites and launches, as all on-orbit debris is -- that systems
like PAVE-PAWS are being pushed to their limits to see all of it.

We may have the Chinese government to "thank" for the recent need to
enforce (the rules aren't new) the ERP rules near the RADAR sites.

Seems reasonable to me, after thinking about it. And just weird
enough to have a ring of truth, considering the strange things that
happen in the world.

The only unreasonable part of those rules is the complete coverage by
those ERP rules of ALL of Arizona... that is probably excessive. But
there haven't been reports of it being enforced there, yet.

--
Nate Duehr - WY0X

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