| The ITU-RR:s have status of international law and treaty, as they form an annex 
to the Telecommunications Convention.
Most countries have them "incorporated by reference" in their national rules 
and regulations.
 
Some countries, however, have delibrately omitted any references to ITU-RR in 
the national rules, as their stance is that "the ITU stands in the way of
telecom market deregulation". In these countries the Amateur Service has a very 
weak, if any, legal standing.
 
73/
Karl-Arne
SM0AOM
----Ursprungligt meddelande----
Från: g8on@fsmail.net
Datum: 2013-10-09 10:38
Till: "Manfred Mornhinweg"<manfred@ludens.cl>, <amps@contesting.com>
Ärende: Re: [Amps] 160M PI network Toroidal Coil
Manfred
>I'm not even aware of those Radio Regulations. I suppose you mean the 
British ones? In my country they aren't valid anyway - and I wish there 
were any at all! <
Actually Manfred, your government has signed up to them! I'm referring to the 
International Radio Regulations, published by the ITU, and signed up to, by all 
the participants in a World Radio Conference. Is there not a ban on spark 
transmitters? That's in the RR.
Interesting point about iron cores and VFOs. As I recall, the old Command 
transmitters were very stable, and they had iron cores in both the VFO and the 
PA. But they were magnetically loosely coupled, unlike toroids.
73
Peter G3RZP
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