I cannot find anything in Part 97 that covers this. The closest thing I can
find is:
"§ 97.203 Beacon station.
(f) A beacon must cease transmissions upon notification by a Regional
Director that the station is operating
improperly or causing undue interference to other operations. The beacon
may not resume transmitting
without prior approval of the Regional Director."
It seems to me that a 222 MHz beacon on the east coast or central USA is
very unlikely to interfere with a beacon on the same frequency on the west
coast. 50 MHz may be a different matter.
73, Zack W9SZ
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On Mon, Nov 20, 2023 at 6:29 PM Herb Krumich via VHFcontesting <
vhfcontesting@contesting.com> wrote:
> A friend of mine is studying for his general licenseHe questioned me about
> beacon frequenciesThe pool asks if there can be two beacons on the same
> frequency.The answer is "no beacons can be on the same frequency".Now I was
> wondering if the band in which they are talking about, had anything to do
> with the answerLets talk 222 mhzThe W3CCX beacon transmit on 222.060Is the
> FCC saying a beacon in Sunny California cannot transmit on 222.060>Makes no
> sense to me, but I don't write the rulesHerb K2LNS
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