Pasmo 8m |
Były już balony na 13,56 MHz, 27,145 MHz i chyba właśnie 40,66 i z licencjonowanym krótkofalarstwem ma to formalnie niewiele wspólnego poza może samym aspektem technicznym. Domyślam się, że osoby bez licencji mogą eksperymentować z FT8, ROS modem czy innymi emisjami. Problem tylko w tym by nie używali znaków krótkofalarskich, bo dochodzi do nadużycia i nieporozumień jak opisane w tym wątku. Zgadzam się z tym, że wykorzystywanie tych pasm przez licencjonowanego krótkofalowca ma nikły sens skoro mamy 20m, 10m i 6m choć zdania w tym względzie są podzielone: http://www.arrl.org/files/file/EclecticTech/2021/Episode%2041.mp3 https://ei7gl.blogspot.com/2022/03/several-radio-amateurs-in-uk-obtain.html These licences are not Amateur Radio special permits, they are Innovation and Research licences which have nothing to do with Amateur Radio at all. In fact, anyone in the UK can apply for this type of licence whether they are a licensed Amateur or not. The UK regulator, Ofcom, do not issue callsigns with Innovation and Research licences, it is up to the licence holder if they wish to use one and the licence holder can use any callsign of their choice. Some UK Amateurs who obtain an Innovation and Research licence might decide to use their Amateur Radio callsigns on 40MHz and this is perfectly legal so far as Ofcom are concerned. However, using their Amateur Radio callsign on 40MHz does not mean their station is then an Amateur Radio station operating on 40MHz, it is not, it remains an Innovation and Research licence station only and this as been confirmed by Ofcom. |