Actually, the formal name of ARRL now is ARRL, with American Radio Relay League
still maintained, of course.
Now, as to the noisy grow lights, in some areas, growers are concerned that law
enforcement may find them, but they are even more concerned that people can use
RF noise to identify that there is a growing operation in a particular house.
With the 16hour on/off cycles during the growing season and a switch to 12 hour
cycles as the crop is nearing harvest, they not only know what it is, but they
know when it is ready for harvest. That has gotten the attention of growers
even in states where it is legal to grow under state law.
Ed Hare, W1RFI
-----Original Message-----
From: RFI [mailto:rfi-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of John Brosnahan W0UN
Sent: Saturday, January 16, 2016 7:47 PM
To: Joe Wolfe; RFI@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [RFI] cops zero in on noisy grow light ballasts
Joe,
RE: ARRL and National Association for Amateur Radio
I understand your concern about confusion with the name, but I would only
question the capital letters, because the name American Radio Relay League is a
bit quaint. When I was first license in 1959 it did not seem to be all that
relevant to the actual role of the national organization, even though I even
made BPL once.
While traffic WAS relayed at the time, it was such a small percentage of what
hams do and needed in a national organization, that the name seemed inadequate
at best. And certainly difficult to explain to non-hams.
In 2016 the name is even less relevant to what the role of the national
organization is now about.
While I am a traditionalist in many senses of the word, I would not be against
the ARRL changing their name to better reflect what it is they are and what
they do.
Just google "National Association for Amateur Radio" and you will see it
reference the ARRL and used to explain what the ARRL actually is not only on
social media but by the ARRL itself.
2 cents worth.
73 John W0UN
On 1/15/2016 8:27 PM, Joe Wolfe wrote:
> Least the article could have done, is get their facts straight, I
> mean, the author is supposed to be a law enforcement officer.
>
> "National Association for Amateur Radio" Who the heck is that? I
> guess he means the ARRL.
>
> I know! I know!
>
> The gist of the story is the RFI we have been dealing with, is now
> being used by the police to find illegal grows, which, once word gets
> out, could be a big boon to us...HEH, the farms will shut down and in
> the end, quiet radio returns to our communities!
>
> Joe - W7RKN
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: RFI [mailto:rfi-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Rob
> Atkinson
> Subject: [RFI] cops zero in on noisy grow light ballasts
>
> Old story but only heard about it today:
>
> http://www.policeone.com/drug-interdiction-narcotics/articles/8224280-
> How-co ps-are-catching-grow-ops-with-AM-radios
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> RFI mailing list
> RFI@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/rfi
>
>
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