Guest Bullet Remington Posted November 13, 2003 Report Posted November 13, 2003 Half assed??? Yeh! I resent that. At my age I'm not fast, and I'm not slow! Does that make me half-fast?? :up: :up: Quote
Guest bag swinnger Posted November 13, 2003 Report Posted November 13, 2003 Sounds like some good old media propoganda to me. Fighting it any way they can. on the other hand if there is truth to the claims. I am gonna have a chat with some satellite watching pilots that I know! :angry: Quote
Swamp Donkey Posted November 14, 2003 Report Posted November 14, 2003 I'd have to agree with graunch1. The only way it would interfere is if the internal oscillator was leaky, and considering most LNB's (the box on the arms in front of the dish) are sealed in aluminum cases this is probably near impossible! The units don't transmit, so industry Canada could care less! Probably another rumor! Quote
twotter Posted November 15, 2003 Report Posted November 15, 2003 Hey Bullet, I'd have to say that YES, you are.... Don't worry about it though, we all get on in age... :shock: Cheers buddy.. Quote
Guest Airplay Posted November 15, 2003 Report Posted November 15, 2003 Some satellite TV services also have satellite internet available. (Like StarBand) These systems receive AND transmit signals via the satellite dish. Even though the carrier frequncy is quite high (10 to 30 GHz) it is a digital signal that tends to be quite noisy and capable of spewing much lower frequecies that are equal to, or a harmonic of the modulating frequency, which varies with the data stream. Furthermore, the cable modems that connect to the satellite receivers use between 68MHz and 850MHz as the downstream and upstream modulation frequencies. This encompasses the 121.5 and 243 MHz operational range of ELTs. So...all you need is a crappy connection to your cable modem and you have a possibility of transmitting enough radio frequency energy to be mistaken for an ELT signal. You have to remember that ELTs only put out a couple of hundred milliwatts at full power, so a tiny well aimed signal from your cable can cause false alarms. Yes. It's possible, but I question the numbers. The vast majority of ELT signals heard (about 99%) are false alarms. This has been the norm for years. Even before satellite TV was abundant. Quote
Guest Bullet Remington Posted November 15, 2003 Report Posted November 15, 2003 Man. I'm FUBARD! Posted in the wrong topic!! Geeez, that freakin Old-Timers really kickin in!! Quote
Guest Bullet Remington Posted November 15, 2003 Report Posted November 15, 2003 Oh, Man! Disregard previous pot, except for the FUBARD and the Oldtimers! Better add BER to the comment in the previous post as well!! Crikey! Fly Babe: I've always wanted to say this... "Thanks, BABE!! Twotter: Ur of course, correct! And now that you've mentioned it, the last 5 attempts to post here proves it beyond a shadow of a doubt!! BR This is teerible, I cain't spoll werth a hoot!! Better make it 6 attempts. I'm going T.U!! Quote
Charles W. Posted November 15, 2003 Report Posted November 15, 2003 Bullet : If you wank to often that will also make your thinking fuzzy. Quote
Guest graunch1 Posted November 17, 2003 Report Posted November 17, 2003 I doubt that a digital modem signal on 121.5 or 243.0 would sound much like the swept analog tone of an ELT. Of course, anything is possible but it sounds more like a theory that needs a home rather than anything in the real world Quote
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