Interference to emergency communications hurts people. Just play by the rules. If you want to run 1500 watts and shoot skip quit being lazy and get a ham license.
Thank you!!
73,
n9zas
Interference to emergency communications hurts people. Just play by the rules. If you want to run 1500 watts and shoot skip quit being lazy and get a ham license.
While this may be true, it's WHERE you transmit that matters! Too many cb'ers tend to want to talk where they do not belong. They want all the benefits without doing what's required.
73,
n9zas
Hams know where they are supposed to transmit and stay there. If they are told they are causing interference for the most part they rectify it if for no other reason they are accountable by virtue of their license. Aircraft, ships and the Civil Air Patrol and other US Govt. agencies have allocations in the 25-30Mhz range as well as 27.065 a distress frequency. But that's just part of it, illegal CB equipment radiates harmonics that fall within public safety ranges, I had one of the so called "10 meter" radios and could key up my local 2 meter repeater by transmitting on 29.277, it was putting out that much power on the 5th harmonic. And yes the FCC has taken enforcement action against public safety users with expired licenses but they weigh the benefit/cost to the public when deciding to let them continue to operate until they get relicensed or shutting them down. I agree that illegal use of GMRS frequencies is a problem but since the radios only put out a 1/2 watt they are not generating many interference complaints. The fact that you argue that CBs don't/can't cause interference to emergency communications is why the FCC gives greater freedom to hams because in studying for your license you learn these things. 25-30 Mhz is not a barren wasteland of empty frequencies besides the uses already mentioned there are frequencies for studio to transmitter links, oil spill clean up, private ambulances, logging operations, etc. granted many users have migrated elsewhere because "freebanders" have made those frequencies unusable.
"So tell me this, how does a ham operator know he is not causing interferance even with his licence, hence you CAN go out of band"
Hams can get busted when they go out of band, case in point I was once operating during a contest without thinking I worked a foreign station that was just 1 KHz inside the US phone band well I got a pink slip for operating out of band because my modulation put me outside my authorized band. And that's with thousands of stations on the air that day so they were paying attention.
While this may be true, it's WHERE you transmit that matters! Too many cb'ers tend to want to talk where they do not belong. They want all the benefits without doing what's required.
73,
n9zas
So tell me this, how does a ham operator know he is not causing interferance even with his licence, hence you CAN go out of band. Having a license or not makes no difference.
As far as the CB's causing interference, I have never seen or heard of emergency services in the 25-30 mhz range.
While on the topic of illegal radio use, if the FCC wants to crack down, then they had better start with businesses and private citizens that illegally use GMRS/FRS frequencies. If ham operators cared about the total reason "illegal use" not "it interferes with my allowed band use" maybe there would be some support for the true problem.
Ham operators and the FCC sure don't seem to complain about the thousands of illegal, unlicensed, expired public safety radios that are still being used on a semi to everyday basis.
Are you for real? No, legal cb's do not normally create any interference,but Illegally modded cb's DO create a great deal of problems not for public safety but for our military who retain exclusive authorization for many freqencies in the range between 25-30mhz.
So what band is being interfered with that you are allowed to use?
FRS is no problem,carry on unless you are referring to GMRS to which you need to be licensed to use.
You ask HOW do we know we are not creating harmful interference? Easy, we use only the bands we are authorized to operate on with type accepted equipment for those said bands!
Does this answer your questions?
73,
n9zas
Lastly, I will say this one more time. Crack down on Mexico if anything, their operators are just out there to annoy the P out of you. Roger beeps, sound boards, with mega power.
"So tell me this, how does a ham operator know he is not causing interferance even with his licence, hence you CAN go out of band"
Hams can get busted when they go out of band, case in point I was once operating during a contest without thinking I worked a foreign station that was just 1 KHz inside the US phone band well I got a pink slip for operating out of band because my modulation put me outside my authorized band. And that's with thousands of stations on the air that day so they were paying attention.
Yes sir it does. But as I was saying, there are many more legal radio systems out there as mentioned that cause all kinds of mirrored images all over the bands. They are OK to do this? I thought not.
As far as GMRS many of the FRS radios now will operate in the band as well. I know the power is low, and it's still illegal. I have never heard of the FCC cracking down on businesses that have not registered their radios either as required. Illegal is illegal if they are going to crack down, then do it on all bands.
From what all the hams are saying over and over CB radios with high power are the problem. Well whats the threshold that the FCC looks for? Anything over 5 watts? 50 watts what? Again Illegal is anything over 5 watts (CB Band) but why crack down on just the big guys and not the little guys.
Is the fine the same or do they base it on the amount of wattage over the limit?
If government frequencies are in that 25-30 mhz band, why can't we hear their communications mirrored on the CB radios?
Lastly, I will say this one more time. Crack down on Mexico if anything, their operators are just out there to annoy the P out of you. Roger beeps, sound boards, with mega power.
I used to belong to another radio forum where I posted a notice of an upcoming CB Keydown contest. We discussed this on the forum and several of us decided to give the FCC a heads up on this event. We sent letters to the FCC all the way up to Riley Holingsworth, the then-enforcement guy, and sat back to see the announcements of the fines and confiscations. The weekend of the Keydown came and went. The websites and forums for the keydowns were all abuzz over the event and how well it went. Nothing from the FCC at all. Nada. This was a no brainer, easy win. Send a couple of Field types out to the shopping mall where this was happening, record the violators and start issuing fines. But it never happened. The FCC didn't seem to give a darn. After that I really lost any concern over any FCC enforcement actions. They make a show of putting out notices on a few violators once in a while but give them a full plate like a widely publicised Keydown and they can't be bothered. {Shrugs} So why should I care either.