I read from time to time proposals to switch GMRS from normal FM to narrow band FM, 2.5KHz deviation, and the arguments for and against it including repeater owners.
One of the questions that seems to get little attention is just how prevalent are narrow band FM capable radios out there that are in use? Any legitimate proposal to go narrow band has to address this question.
I use several that can do both normal FM and narrow band FM, primarily Kenwoods like the TK-370G, TK-3170, TK-3140 to mention a few.
The other point is how many of the current offerings from the likes of Midland, Btech and others that can do both or just narrow band like Midland that gets often mentioned?
The point I want to get to is if the majority of radios currently, or at some point in the future, are just narrow band, because that's what people buy whether they know it or not, could be the tipping point where the FCC says GMRS is going narrow band. If most radios at that point are narrow band the disruption for the majority of users would be small so the FCC isn't going to worry so much about the small number of wide band radios out there.
The FCC sort of did this with the combo FRS/GMRS radios where almost nobody was getting a license to use the GMRS channels. So they just changed the rules to reflect how the radios were really getting used. They didn't seem to worry much how this impacted GMRS users at the time.
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Lscott
I read from time to time proposals to switch GMRS from normal FM to narrow band FM, 2.5KHz deviation, and the arguments for and against it including repeater owners.
One of the questions that seems to get little attention is just how prevalent are narrow band FM capable radios out there that are in use? Any legitimate proposal to go narrow band has to address this question.
I use several that can do both normal FM and narrow band FM, primarily Kenwoods like the TK-370G, TK-3170, TK-3140 to mention a few.
The other point is how many of the current offerings from the likes of Midland, Btech and others that can do both or just narrow band like Midland that gets often mentioned?
The point I want to get to is if the majority of radios currently, or at some point in the future, are just narrow band, because that's what people buy whether they know it or not, could be the tipping point where the FCC says GMRS is going narrow band. If most radios at that point are narrow band the disruption for the majority of users would be small so the FCC isn't going to worry so much about the small number of wide band radios out there.
The FCC sort of did this with the combo FRS/GMRS radios where almost nobody was getting a license to use the GMRS channels. So they just changed the rules to reflect how the radios were really getting used. They didn't seem to worry much how this impacted GMRS users at the time.
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