Oh dear, I guess the usa stations I have worked earlier this year on 60m
were not legal then? :-)
My special licence permit refers to it being granted for experimenting
in near inter uk near vertical incidence propogation, but does allow me
to make contact with amateurs in other countries which are licenced on
60m, plus with army cadets etc in this country, provided it is on the
five fixed channels we have been allocated for the experiment.
However, I find it difficult enough to cope with 160 - 10m in cqww
without adding more options into the band changing dilemma, so don't
count on seeing me on 60m during the cqww weekends!
73
Steve gw0gei
-----Original Message-----
From: cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com
[mailto:cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Zack Widup
Sent: 10 September 2004 13:43
To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] CQWW question
On Fri, 10 Sep 2004, Timo Klimoff wrote:
> > 30mhz may be used, excluding the WARC bands. Doesn't
> > that wording allow me to make contest QSOs on 60
> > meters during the CQWW Phone contest, since it isn't a
> > WARC band?
>
> At least in Finland, regulations determine that QSOs on 60 meters are
not
> amateur radio traffic. I suppose same is in the UK eg. too.
> So with this logic you could make contest QSOs also on 11 meters.
>
> 73 Timo OH1NOA
>
Hams in the USA could probably make some contest QSO's on 60 meters but
only with other USA stations. I believe the regulations do not permit
DX
QSO's from the USA.
73, Zack W9SZ
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