SB QST @ ARL $ARLB112 ARLB112 Spread spectrum changes ZCZC AG79 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 112 ARLB112 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT December 19, 1995 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB112 ARLB112 Spread spectrum changes The ARRL has asked the Federal Communications Commission to relax its spread-spectrum regulations to give Amateur Radio more opportunity to contribute to spread-spectrum development. The League's petition for rulemaking, filed in December, seeks relaxed restrictions on spreading sequences and greater flexibility in spreading modulation. The spread-spectrum technique, which distributes information among several synchronized frequencies within a band at the transmitter and reassembles the information at the receiver, was first approved for Amateur Radio in 1985 for bands above 225 MHz, and there has been some experimental amateur operation since then. The petition proposes that the FCC permit brief test spread-spectrum transmissions and allow international spread-spectrum communications between amateurs in the US and those in countries that permit hams to use spread-spectrum techniques. The current rules allow only domestic communication. The petition also asks for automatic power-control provisions to insure use of minimum necessary power to conduct spread-spectrum communication and limit the potential for interference to narrowband modes. The petition does not ask for any changes in frequency restrictions on SS emissions, the 100 watt power limit or logging and identification requirements. In urging the FCC to adopt the changes, the League's petition calls the proposals the minimum necessary changes in order to foster SS experimentation in the Amateur Service. NNNN /EX