I'm assuming then that they have specified some antenna with a pattern which results in being licensed for 360 degrees at the EIRP they need.
I.E if you coordinate a 5 degree beamwidth antenna every 5 degrees you'll end up with 360 degrees of coverage being licensed. This is one of those pull out the rulebook situations but I suspect they have their bases covered. On Sun, Mar 13, 2022, 11:41 AM Jason McKemie < j.mcke...@veloxinetbroadband.com> wrote: > Yes, every 5 degrees. > > On Saturday, March 12, 2022, Forrest Christian (List Account) < > li...@packetflux.com> wrote: > >> Are they evenly spaced? >> >> I don't think I've looked close enough at a pcn to see if elevation >> (angle above horizon) is specified. >> >> Makes me wonder if the PCN is set up with that many beams to coordinate a >> link that could be pointed in any direction. >> >> On Sat, Mar 12, 2022, 2:45 PM Jason McKemie < >> j.mcke...@veloxinetbroadband.com> wrote: >> >>> I just received my first SpaceX PCNs. They have 71 different azimuth >>> numbers listed in a 18ghz PCN, are they paying the FCC fees for each of >>> these? I haven't seen a PCN like this before, I actually didn't know you >>> could use 18ghz for this application. -- >>> AF mailing list >>> AF@af.afmug.com >>> http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com >>> >> -- > AF mailing list > AF@af.afmug.com > http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com >
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