Pete, while the ARRL bulletins are a special case the problem could
easily be solved by adding
plus-minus depending on frequency occupancy the way some nets publish
their schedule. They
also are getting complaints about the cw bulletins on 80m trashing the
PSK guys, here's a radical
idea....move the cw bulletins above 3600, you don't need to have an
Extra license to listen.
As far as "published" frequencies to avoid add these that can't move
either, not in the auto sub band
7,098.000, 7,097.00, 7,096.500, 7,096.000, 7,093.000, 7,090.500,
7,089.500, 7,088.500, 7,087.500,
7,085.000, 7,085.000, 7,082.00, 7,080.000, 7,077.500, 7,075.500,
7,072.000, 7,070.000, 7,065.900,
7,063.900, 7,061.500, 7,061.000, these are only the 40m US Winmor
stations, there's more non-domestic
further cluttering the band. The JT and PSK watering holes are easy to
avoid because if the band is open
those small slots will be full of activity, Winmor will come up on a
pile up just like W1AW did....ask the guys
that lost an FT5ZM contact.
I really don't think the rest of the world gives a damn about our
allocations or the W1AW schedule, SSB all
the way down to 7050 and it seems they don't care about anything else on
the band.
73,
Ron
K0IDT
On 2/7/2015 1:58 PM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
IIRC, the ARRL has operated for decades on a fixed frequency and
schedule, broadcasting bulletins - an activity not permitted to radio
amateurs - by specific permission of the FCC. I frankly think it is
the responsibility of operators, including those on expeditions, to
know of any respect those frequencies and schedules.
73, Pete N4ZR
Check out the Reverse Beacon Network at
http://reversebeacon.net,
blog at reversebeacon.blogspot.com.
For spots, please go to your favorite
ARC V6 or VE7CC DX cluster node.
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