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#12
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On 29 Mar 2004 10:34:07 -0800, (I Am Not
George) wrote: Lancer wrote: On 28 Mar 2004 19:32:16 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: (Richard Cranium) wrote in message . com... Ten meter radios are perfectly legal for licensed amateurs to own, Right here--^ use, and sell to other licensed amateurs. Read this dimbulb and try and comprehend "no person" -that means no person - not even hams. Read this dimbulb: Transceivers used in the Amateur Radio Service below 30 MHz do not require FCC authorization prior to being imported into or marketed within the United States, but transceivers for other services, including the CB Radio Service (CB), do require Commission approval. Note: He did say ten Meter Radio. where See above.. |
#13
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Lancer wrote:
On 29 Mar 2004 10:34:07 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: Lancer wrote: On 28 Mar 2004 19:32:16 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: (Richard Cranium) wrote in message . com... Ten meter radios are perfectly legal for licensed amateurs to own, use, and sell to other licensed amateurs. Read this dimbulb and try and comprehend "no person" -that means no person - not even hams. Read this dimbulb: Transceivers used in the Amateur Radio Service below 30 MHz do not require FCC authorization prior to being imported into or marketed within the United States, but transceivers for other services, including the CB Radio Service (CB), do require Commission approval. Note: He did say ten Meter Radio. where Dual use radios (CB and Ham) will not be certified. Tthe "10-meter" transceivers that are on the "list" are not acceptable for importation or marketing into/within the United States. correct, just calling something a a ten meter radio on a web site does not certify it Now tell us again how a Radio Shack HTX-10 10 meter radio is illegal to sell in the United States? where did I say that? Your reply to Richard. You made it sound like "all" 10 meter radios where illegal. this is a CB radio newsgroup dip**** we are not talking about hams using 10 meters the subject is export cb radios. Sound like you are trying to confuse people like the export dealers do by calling them 10 meter radios LOL |
#14
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On 29 Mar 2004 11:28:20 -0800, (I Am Not
George) wrote: Lancer wrote: On 29 Mar 2004 10:34:07 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: Lancer wrote: On 28 Mar 2004 19:32:16 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: (Richard Cranium) wrote in message . com... Ten meter radios are perfectly legal for licensed amateurs to own, use, and sell to other licensed amateurs. Read this dimbulb and try and comprehend "no person" -that means no person - not even hams. Read this dimbulb: Transceivers used in the Amateur Radio Service below 30 MHz do not require FCC authorization prior to being imported into or marketed within the United States, but transceivers for other services, including the CB Radio Service (CB), do require Commission approval. Note: He did say ten Meter Radio. where Dual use radios (CB and Ham) will not be certified. Tthe "10-meter" transceivers that are on the "list" are not acceptable for importation or marketing into/within the United States. correct, just calling something a a ten meter radio on a web site does not certify it Now tell us again how a Radio Shack HTX-10 10 meter radio is illegal to sell in the United States? where did I say that? Your reply to Richard. You made it sound like "all" 10 meter radios where illegal. this is a CB radio newsgroup dip**** we are not talking about hams using 10 meters the subject is export cb radios. Sound like you are trying to confuse people like the export dealers do by calling them 10 meter radios LOL Funny, your response to him was about a licensed amateur owning, using, and selling a ten meter radio. And if you will check your headers, you will see that this is not only posted to rec.radio.cb, but also to rec.radio.amateur.policy. Sounds like you are the one thats confused, try to keep up with the thread, dip****. LOL |
#15
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![]() "I Am Not George" wrote in message m... Lancer wrote: On 29 Mar 2004 10:34:07 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: Lancer wrote: On 28 Mar 2004 19:32:16 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: (Richard Cranium) wrote in message . com... Ten meter radios are perfectly legal for licensed amateurs to own, use, and sell to other licensed amateurs. Read this dimbulb and try and comprehend "no person" -that means no person - not even hams. Read this dimbulb: Transceivers used in the Amateur Radio Service below 30 MHz do not require FCC authorization prior to being imported into or marketed within the United States, but transceivers for other services, including the CB Radio Service (CB), do require Commission approval. Note: He did say ten Meter Radio. where Dual use radios (CB and Ham) will not be certified. Tthe "10-meter" transceivers that are on the "list" are not acceptable for importation or marketing into/within the United States. correct, just calling something a a ten meter radio on a web site does not certify it Now tell us again how a Radio Shack HTX-10 10 meter radio is illegal to sell in the United States? where did I say that? Your reply to Richard. You made it sound like "all" 10 meter radios where illegal. this is a CB radio newsgroup dip**** we are not talking about hams using 10 meters the subject is export cb radios. Sound like you are trying to confuse people like the export dealers do by calling them 10 meter radios LOL Makes me wanna go fire up the ol' Icom "export cb radio". |
#16
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(I Am Not George) wrote in
m: Lancer wrote: On 29 Mar 2004 10:34:07 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: Lancer wrote: On 28 Mar 2004 19:32:16 -0800, (I Am Not George) wrote: (Richard Cranium) wrote in message ogle.com... Ten meter radios are perfectly legal for licensed amateurs to own, use, and sell to other licensed amateurs. Read this dimbulb and try and comprehend "no person" -that means no person - not even hams. Read this dimbulb: Transceivers used in the Amateur Radio Service below 30 MHz do not require FCC authorization prior to being imported into or marketed within the United States, but transceivers for other services, including the CB Radio Service (CB), do require Commission approval. Note: He did say ten Meter Radio. where Dual use radios (CB and Ham) will not be certified. Tthe "10-meter" transceivers that are on the "list" are not acceptable for importation or marketing into/within the United States. correct, just calling something a a ten meter radio on a web site does not certify it Now tell us again how a Radio Shack HTX-10 10 meter radio is illegal to sell in the United States? where did I say that? Your reply to Richard. You made it sound like "all" 10 meter radios where illegal. this is a CB radio newsgroup dip**** we are not talking about hams using 10 meters the subject is export cb radios. Sound like you are trying to confuse people like the export dealers do by calling them 10 meter radios LOL This is being crossposted to rec.radio.amateur.policy, where a 10 meter radio really is a 10 meter radio. Too much to expect you to check the header I suppose. |
#17
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Alun wrote:
This is being crossposted to rec.radio.amateur.policy, where a 10 meter radio really is a 10 meter radio. Some "10 meter radios" have strange features like echo boxes, roger beeps, and channelized tuning that no normal HF ham radio set ever has. It's perfectly fine if a ham takes a CB set and modifies it for use on 10 meters. But it can no longer be used on the CB band, so adding a switch to create a dual band dual service radio is not allowed. |
#18
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Robert Casey wrote in news:4068DBCB.9030308
@ix.netcom.com: Alun wrote: This is being crossposted to rec.radio.amateur.policy, where a 10 meter radio really is a 10 meter radio. Some "10 meter radios" have strange features like echo boxes, roger beeps, and channelized tuning that no normal HF ham radio set ever has. I know. However, it's confusing to post to both groups and use a term that means different things in each place. It's perfectly fine if a ham takes a CB set and modifies it for use on 10 meters. But it can no longer be used on the CB band, so adding a switch to create a dual band dual service radio is not allowed. I confess I didn't know that. I own a Ham Major M588 that someone else converted from CB to 10m, but it doesn't cover anything below 28 MHz now, so I guess it's OK. Mind you, it's rated at 10W on AM/FM and 20W on SSB, so it wasn't legal before it was converted! I think it originally had 'high' channels too. |
#19
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Alun wrote:
(I Am Not George) wrote in this is a CB radio newsgroup dip**** we are not talking about hams using 10 meters the subject is export cb radios. Sound like you are trying to confuse people like the export dealers do by calling them 10 meter radios LOL This is being crossposted to rec.radio.amateur.policy, where a 10 meter radio really is a 10 meter radio. Too much to expect you to check the header I suppose. That's wa3moj, the resident CB group dip**** troll. He only posts in rec.radio.cb to flame CBer's. |
#20
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