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Topband: FCC seeks to assign entire 160 ham band to primary status

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Subject: Topband: FCC seeks to assign entire 160 ham band to primary status
From: "Jim Monahan" <K1PX@msn.com>
Date: Thu, 22 Nov 2012 07:31:47 -0500
List-post: <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com>
Allocation Changes to 160 Meter Band

The FCC is proposing to change the Amateur Radio Service allocation to the 160 
meter band (1800-2000 kHz), reallocating the 1900-2000 kHz segment to the 
Amateur Radio Service on a primary basis. In the NPRM, the FCC noted that "the 
ARRL has identified the 160 meter band and the amateur HF bands as '[b]y far, 
the heaviest-used [Amateur Service] allocations.'"

Historically, the 1715-2000 kHz band was allocated exclusively to the Amateur 
Service. In 1953, the FCC removed the 1715-1800 kHz segment from the Amateur 
Radio Service and allocated the 1800-2000 kHz band to the Amateur Service on a 
shared basis with the Radionavigation Service. Then in 1983, the FCC allocated 
the 1800-1900 kHz band to the Amateur Service on an exclusive basis and the 
1900-2000 kHz band to the Radiolocation Service on a primary basis for federal 
and non-federal use and to the Amateur Service on a secondary basis. The FCC 
stated that "[t]he purpose of allocating this band [1900-2000 kHz] to the 
Radiolocation Service was to provide reaccommodation spectrum for radiolocation 
users that will have to move out of the 1605-1705 kHz band when AM broadcasting 
is implemented in that band." The AM broadcasting proceeding was resolved in 
2000, and a review of the FCC's Universal Licensing System (ULS) database finds 
that no one is licensed to use this non-federal Radiol
 ocation Service allocation.

Currently, federal use of the 1900-2000 kHz segment is light, with only 10 
assignments authorized to operate in this segment. "A single federal assignment 
authorizes land and mobile stations in the Radiolocation Service to transmit on 
1922 kHz using a necessary bandwidth of 600 Hz within a protected radius of 193 
kilometers centered on San Diego, California," the FCC noted in the NPRM. "All 
other federal assignments in the 1900-2000 kHz band are for unallocated uses, 
and thus, these assignments operate on an unprotected and non-interference 
basis."

The FCC is proposing to amend the US Table of Allocations and remove the 
federal and non-federal Radiolocation Service allocations from the 1900-2000 
kHz band and the raise the secondary Amateur Radio Service allocation to 
primary status because "there appear to be few (if any) Radiolocation Service 
stations operating in this band," it said. "In addition, we note [from WARC-79] 
that 'this [Radiolocation Service] allocation was made for reaccommodation 
purposes and not to provide additional spectrum for radiolocations needs,' that 
the Commission has concluded its AM Expanded Band proceeding that would have 
prompted non-federal RLS licensees to relocate to the 1900-2000 kHz band and 
that this band was historically allocated to the Amateur Service on an 
exclusive basis."


The entire article can be read which includes other proposals at:

http://www.arrl.org/news/fcc-seeks-to-assign-entire-amateur-portion-of-160-meter-band-to-primary-status-to-amateur-radio-serv<http://www.arrl.org/news/fcc-seeks-to-assign-entire-amateur-portion-of-160-meter-band-to-primary-status-to-amateur-radio-serv>

Jim, K1PX

K1PX@msn.com<mailto:K1PX@msn.com>
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