Message:23071 In: INFO.USA
From: N3MELDate: Mon, 25 May 26 17:01:00 Z
Newsgroups: INFO.USA
Subject: Strengthening Our Operational Reach
Message-ID: <17827_N3MEL>
Path: N2MH4|N3MEL
R:260525/1702Z 31656@N2MH4.#SENC.NC.USA.NOAM LinBPQ6.0.24
R:260525/1701Z 17827@N3MEL.#EPA.PA.USA.NOAM LinBPQ6.0.25
The Strategic Importance of Expanding the TPRFN Hub Network.
As we continue to evolve our communication capabilities, it has become
clear that our ability to provide reliable service during a grid-down
event and with the decline in Severed Agencies' need for ARES RACES
Auxcom Services could one day depend entirely on the strength and
density of our infrastructure. While our current nodes have established
a solid foundation, the next phase of our mission requires a concerted
effort to expand the footprint of The Packet Radio RF Forwarding Network
(TPRFN).
The reality of modern emergency response is that coverage gaps are
vulnerabilities. To truly serve as a fully functional, RF-data network,
we must ensure that our backbone is not only geographically expansive
but also deeply redundant. We are currently seeking to bring additional
full-time Hub Stations into the fold—not just to broaden our reach into
new territories, but to harden the network against the failure of any
single point.
Why we are prioritizing this expansion:
Geographic Continuity: By filling in regional gaps, we ensure that
critical health, welfare, and logistical data can traverse across county
and state lines without ever relying on external infrastructure.
Operational Redundancy: A resilient network requires overlapping paths.
Adding dedicated, 24/7 Hub Stations provides the "self-healing"
capability necessary to maintain high traffic throughput, even if
specific nodes or paths are disrupted by environmental or local
equipment failure.
Capacity for Growth: As our reliance on automated digital modes like
VARA grows, so does our need for stations capable of high-availability
operation. Dedicated hubs are the cornerstone of this high-reliability
model.
Building a robust, permanent RF backbone is a long-term commitment. It
requires operators who are dedicated to maintaining the technical
infrastructure necessary for 24/7 autonomous operation. By increasing
our number of committed Hub Stations, we move away from being a
"best-effort" hobbyist network and toward becoming a mission-critical
utility that our communities can rely upon when the grid fails.
If you have the capacity to maintain a dedicated station—or if you know
of an area currently lacking coverage that would benefit from a
permanent hub—I invite you to discuss how we can integrate your node
into the TPRFN architecture. Our strength lies in our distributed
nature; the more nodes we have effectively peering, the more resilient
we become.
In this effort we have created the following:
TPRFN YouTube channel, for the purpose of promoting the network and any
of its tactical capabilities. There is no content there yet, but a
network introduction video is being produced now. If you have any
relevant content that pertains to TPRFN, please let us know.
TPRFN Allstar node, 65359
TPRFN DMR Talk Group, TGIF TG# 450
Thank you for your ongoing commitment to building a future-proof
communications network. Let’s continue to expand our reach and ensure
our readiness remains second to none. Very nice video clip below.
https://youtu.be/o9x2BYjKk5c?si=idGIFR3rRpZh7jdd
--
--
73 de Glenn N3MEL
(TPRFN) The Packet Radio RF Forwarding Network
Website:
http://tprfn.net
http://depn.net
"Keep The Packets Moving"
Never Forget 9/11 (343)
Message Sent Via N3MEL BBS Using Thunderbird.
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