Neil E. said:Black shire,
When you wrote:
Also, the narrower bandwidth has the effect (whether the rule makers intended it or not, I don't know) of making the signal intelligible at a greater range with the given power than a standard 10 kHz AM signal could be copied.
you perhaps had in mind the equation which predicts noise at a receiver which is
En = SQRT(4*k*T*BW*R)
Intelligibility is related to the signal to noise ratio and this equation predicts that the noise will be reduced by the SQRT of the bandwidth, but unless the bandwidth of the receiver is narrowed, there will be no gain in S/N for a bandwidth limited TIS transmitter as compared to a full bandwidth broadcast AM station. This advantage is a function of the receiver bandwidth and not the transmitter bandwidth.
Perhaps you know of another reason there is an advantage to narrow bandwidth that I missed.
Neil
A 6 kHz wide AM mode signal can be heard farther away than a 10 kHz wide AM mode signal at the same radiated power for the same reason that a CW signal can be heard farther away than an SSB signal (which in turn can be heard farther away than an AM mode signal)--you're putting the same amount of energy into a narrower slice of spectrum, which punches through the noise more strongly.