
There are many bands on HF besides the ham bands. R&S has been pitching this for years, and they are a leading supplier of HF equipment to militaries around the world and also to the aviation interests that use HF. With the decline of HF broadcasting, I haven’t seen any HF spectrum scarcity nor any move towards the ham bands. But of course it’s always possible. Even the fast-traders using experimental licenses seem to be looking outside the ham bands insofar as I can determine. And there are several HF broadcast applications pending at the FCC that seem a little suspect by their description of proposed service, so much so that the FCC staff is looking into them. But all this again is outside the HF ham bands. “Wideband” reference probably is to wideband 4G ALE, a data mode that employs up to 48 kHz. The overall R&S description at this link may be useful, I’d guess that their presentation parallels some parts of this. https://www.ab4oj.com/dl/rs/rebirth_hf.pdf Of course, if anyone detects a suggestion or move toward our bands, do let me know! I keep watch and just haven’t seen anything and given propagation characteristics and international allocations the way they are, I think that this would be an uphill battle for anyone to wage in the immediate-to-intermediate future and unlikely given the existence of much easier HF pickings outside our bands. But sometimes things do happen. 73, Dave K3ZJ David R. Siddall Managing Partner DS Law, PLLC 1629 K St. NW, Ste 300 Washington, DC 20006 direct: +1 202 559 4690 Unauthorized Disclosure Prohibited. This e-mail is intended solely for the intended recipient(s) and may contain information that is proprietary, confidential or privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, it is prohibited to disclose, copy, distribute, or use the contents of this email and its attachments. If you received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all electronic and physical copies of the e-mail message and its attachments. Unintended transmission shall not constitute waiver of attorney-client or any other privilege. Thank you. From: arrl-odv <arrl-odv-bounces@reflector.arrl.org> on behalf of "Bob Famiglio, K3RF via arrl-odv" <arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org> Reply-To: "Bob Famiglio, K3RF" <RBFamiglio@Verizon.net> Date: Tuesday, January 25, 2022 at 5:44 PM To: 'arrl-odv' <arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org> Subject: [arrl-odv:33335] Commercial expansion into HF Wideband - New webinar: HF in a nutshell January 31, 2022 A communications technology client in the state of Delaware just invited me to use their invitation, as their guest, to this ROHDE & SCHWARZ Webinar. I am going to attend. What caught my attention is the HF Wideband reference. Here is an excerpt from the brochure and invitation. Perhaps some on this board already deals with this or is otherwise familiar. Not sure what this portends for amateur radio’s contributions to EmComm HF activities or even future spectrum threats: “We hereby invite you to our introductory webinar, “HF in a nutshell,” which covers currently available beyond-line-of-sight (BLOS) communications and focuses on high frequency (HF) communications. HF communications technology is reliable, proven and has been in service for decades. This webinar is the first in a series covering HF topics and will illustrate that HF communications is in no way your grandparents’ technology, but rather THE communications solution for the future. You will receive an overview of currently available BLOS communications solutions and the latest developments in this field, i.e. HF versus satellite communications (SATCOM) Rohde & Schwarz experts will highlight all the relevant benefits of HF, including robustness, capabilities and costs (CAPEX, OPEX). The webinar will be rounded off with an overview of HF wideband – a current development – and its pros and cons. “ Bob Famiglio, K3RF Vice Director - ARRL Atlantic Division 610-359-7300 [cid:image001.png@01D81213.2F2DA9F0] Serving NNY, WNY, WPA, EPA, SNJ, DE and MD/DC sections www.QRZ.com/db/K3RF