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Perhaps where we should go with this is to define half or partial duplex, duplex, and "full duplex". In some regard, the specific meaning is subjective. One of the dictionary definitions of duplex is having two parts. I lived in an apartment duplex once. A repeater fits that definition.
Does use of the term HAVE to imply two way simultaneous end-to-end communication? My opinion is no, it does not. It's contextual... In other words, a repeater is a transceiver. Most transceivers work in one direction at a time, but a repeater obviously transmits and receives simultaneously. It's duplex, even if the overall end-to-end communication is not. Take that same piece of hardware down and replace the repeater circuitry with a speaker and a microphone, and it can participate in full duplex communication, by YOUR definition.
The definitions I was weaned on are:
Simplex- tx and rx on a single frequency.
Half duplex - Tx and Rx on different frequencies.
Full duplex - Tx and Rx on different frequencies at the same time.
And a full duplex piece of hardware is separate from full duplex communications.
And there is a basic difference. While I pretty much got the same teaching of definitions for RF applications there is one difference. Full Duplex must be capable of bidirectional and simultaneous communications.
If you leave RF out of it, don’t use the term frequencies at all, then it becomes, for me, a bit easier to see.
Simplex – one path of data flow, any direction but only one direction at a time.
Half duplex – regardless of number of paths of data flow, only one node/station can transfer data at a time.
Full duplex – either multiple physical or multiple virtual paths of data flow, and both (all) nodes / stations can simultaneously transfer data.
And yes, a full duplex piece of hardware is separate from a full duplex system. In fact you can build a full duplex system without a single piece of full duplex hardware involved.
T!