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by stefan_
1272 days ago
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No, there are plenty of modern weather radars now that have nothing to do with 5 GHz. This is a good example of how the FCC managing spectrum is the furthest thing possible from a good allocation; trillions of economic activity are driven by use of unlicensed bands, yet because there is nobody in particular ready to put up billions for a slice of spectrum, we end up with the FCC "design by committee" process for releasing them. That means whoever happened to be there is considered some sort of "lifetime incumbent" that must be worked around at all costs, even if their use of prime spectrum is absurdly wasteful. Challenged with the choice between "incur $ costs on few" or "incur $$$ costs on many", the FCC will consistently pick "incur $$$$ on all". |
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Keep in mind that whenever a new application appears, detailed technical analysis and simulations have to be done with regards to the other applications in co-channel and adjacent channel/bands, both with regards to direct interference, aggregated interference taking into account the projected density of the new spectrum use, clutter/terrain, propagation models, geometries of antennas, filter characteristics, etc. And even then, administrations do their best to find the right balance and enable as many applications as possible (including unlicensed and SRD), but those are tradeoffs and sometimes administration take risks to foster innovation (and sometimes it proves it was too permissive for the new user, such as what is happening now with regards to wifi vs weather radars).
(N.B. I am not in the US, but I guess FCC works similarly to EU administrations - which I know very well).