[aprssig] APRS low-power-local ALT input channel
Robert Bruninga
bruninga at usna.edu
Mon Sep 27 14:11:41 EDT 2004
>>> wes at johnston.net 9/27/04 11:38:41 AM >>>
>I did some stats with 4 home stations (10 min each) and
>4 trackers (1 minute each) and came up with... 264
>seconds out of 3600 seconds per hour, 7.3% utilization
> on 144.99 if everyone in my local area ran 144.39+600.
>This number is a little higher than Bob's. But it's in the ballpark.
I'll buy that, but it is a bit high, because it assumes
those 4 trackers are in the area for the full hour. Either a commute
is shorter than that, or he traveled out of area..
>>Finally, let's look at your digipeater design .... Every time
>>the WIDEn-n side transmits, your local receiver is
>>desensed and cannot copy anything on the "local" side.
>Right again.... We either need vertical separation of the
>144.99 and .39 antennas, or to run cavities.
>This means we have to double my 7.3% number above
>to 14%.
AH, but now you are starting to mix apples and oranges.
(deaf trackers versus all other stations). We need to keep
clear what issue we are talking about here. I have only
been addressing the alt-freq idea independently of what
kind of station uses it..
>Now if we can forward packets to the digi from the alt
>input site in such a way that it does not desense the alt
>input's receiver, we have a winner.
Yes, but this is only an advantage for deaf trackers... not
for regular stations...
>If we end up with multiple alt input digipeaters in a metro
>area, we need to take care that they can all hear each
>other. This is getting convoluted though.... I fear that
>by trying to cover all the bases and possibilites I am
>muddying the water.
Yes, keeping it simple is the only way to achieve progress
one digi at a time... Jumping thorugh all kinds of complexity
and hardware to change an 86% success rate up by
just 7% is just not worth it when the 86% rate is already
far better than trying to operate a low p ower device on
144.39...
>The maker of the pocket track has said that it will use
>144.39 and (144.99 or 144.34). It appears he selected
>144.34 at the request of a couple of his first customers
>[for balloons] and because it was close in prox to 144.39.
>He has offered to sell a pocket tracker on any freq you
>ask for... so this is really a non-issue.
Yep, that is all we are trying to accomplish here, is to help find
a way to make plenty of more room available on APRS
for these and other local users of APRS.....
>And finally, if CSMA works so well, why did they
>switch to DAMA in europe?
Good thought wes! Yes, the missplaced belief that CSMA
works well on simplex AX.25 with shared high-site digis
and low-site users is one of the things that has always held
back packet from its potential for HAM radio... since day
one in the 1980-'s
good thoughts Wes...
thanks
Bob, Wb4APR
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