DJboutit3 said:Bongwater I like this idea 5 to 7 watt for AM & 20 to 40 watt for FM with strong restrictions on antenna height. Part 15 FM is a joke your range is about 50 to 100 ftm, If FM stations loose listeners to pirate stations this means licensed station are not doing something right & should change the way to run there station. Just leave pirates alone we can all get along.
Bongwater said:well it shure couldnt go above 108MHz ( air band is up there) i could see a drop of TV CH 6 and allowing say 85.1 - 87.9 FM but have them with strict rules.DJboutit3 said:I think we can find a solution. Nobody should own the broadcast radio spectrum. The FM band should be expanded to 128 MHz and no further consildation should be allowed. I think a portion of that new spectrum should be reserved for these new licensed microbroadcasters I've proposed and that should solve a LOT of problems.
-MAX antenna hight 150FT or ( 15FT above the building if building more then 150ft)
-Max Power 50Watts ERP (that would cover a good sized city)
-All equipment has to be F.C.C approved gear. (no home made stuff)
-they have standard calls. W--- / K--- say a $100 file fee Licence good for 3 years
-channel spaceing resonable. ( if started at 85.1 take NYC for example 85.1 , 85.5 , 85.9 , 86.3 , 86.7, 87.1, 87.5, (87.9*as long as no station is on 88.1) thats 7 channels in NYC
-They have to follow same rules as the big boys do (x-mitter has to be in spec. no overmodulation, no cursing, ect ect)
im shure i could think of more for FM..
as far as AM-
-open 1710 - 1790
-Max Power 100Watts
-Professional Antenna design & Grounding.
-as with the fm stations are issued regular calls with a 100$/3year licence.
-in example in NYC you could have a 1710, 1740, 1770 *30khz spacing in major citys depending on mileage from the other station.
-AM/FM stations can be commercial ( to a point they can make the cash to pay the bills and the help and let them have a resonable income but have it limited on how much these stations can make - over XXXX amount of profitable income has to be donated to a GOOD and WORTHY cause that dose serve the community they
broadcast to.
i could think of more if i had more time..
but reading these post yes pirate will not go away, the more corp radio slamms the door , the more pirates will show.
i will say i have heard some really good pirate stations that have a good/professional sound and are good to there communitys and then i have heard some that have no buisness looking at a transmitter ( and them are the ones id like to see the fcc nab , and leave the ones that ARE doing something good for there community alone)
charles hobbs said:There ought to be *some* outlet for serious, local, community-focused radio. But I can't see a lot of the casual pirates out there wanting to follow any sort of limitations that might be needed to make such a service valuable for the community (as opposed to, just being loads of fun for a wannabe dj out there).
dbdigital said:This is true. Pirates have a far different mind-set than Part-15'ers. Obviously adherence to the law is one big difference. But more than that those who run Part-15 stations have a sense of responsibility to the community, to licensed broadcasters (many are licensed ham operators anyway) and a desire to help others who are developing Part-15 stations.
I have never seen any of that with pirates.
In fact, Part-15 operators do very well with self-regulation. For the most part they don't seem to need much supervision from the FCC. They would be perfect candidates for a small watt, community-based radio service.
db
Thats quite alrightNeil E. said:Sorry, posted in the wrong thread by mistake.
charles hobbs said:dbdigital said:This is true. Pirates have a far different mind-set than Part-15'ers. Obviously adherence to the law is one big difference. But more than that those who run Part-15 stations have a sense of responsibility to the community, to licensed broadcasters (many are licensed ham operators anyway) and a desire to help others who are developing Part-15 stations.
I have never seen any of that with pirates.
In fact, Part-15 operators do very well with self-regulation. For the most part they don't seem to need much supervision from the FCC. They would be perfect candidates for a small watt, community-based radio service.
db
I say, give them 1-watt on AM. There'd be a test, similar to the ham radio exam, perhaps a VE-type organization could administer it.
Neil E. said:My response to this is going to be mostly from the technical point of view. Anytime anyone puts a transmitter on the air there is the possibility of harmful interference to other users of the radio spectrum. Part15, among other things, limits the field strength of unlicensed transmitters with the intent of minimizing this interference due to the puny powers involved. Even a dirty transmitter overmodulated won't cause much harm. Now, if we allow unlicensed stations with uncertified "appliance operator" equipment at watts of power operated by those who have little technical background what do you think will happen? We don't allow people to pilot aircraft without the proper competence and airframes, why should we allow "pirates" to operate on the airwaves?
Another consideration is suppose I operate an unlicensed station on 1600 kHz. and someone down the street decides to do likewise. "I was here first" is for kindergarden so I wonder how these types of disputes will be resolved.
Like it or not, what is done on the RF spectrum excludes some and affects others simply because it is a limited resource.
Neil