Source: http://unwantedemissions.com/wiki/display.aspx?f=434790000
Timestamp: 2017-02-28 03:07:34
Document Index: 153744859

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 2', 'art 95', 'arth\n432', 'art 90', 'arts 2', 'arts 2']

Amateur US270 5.282 5.286 US64 US87 US230 US269 US397 FCC Rule Parts:Private Land Mobile (90)MEDRadio (95I)Amateur Radio (97)
RADIOLOCATION G2 G129 5.286 US64 US87 US230 US269 US270 US397 G8 ITU Region 1 Allocations
AMATEUR RADIOLOCATION Earth exploration-satellite (active) 5.279A 5.138 5.271 5.276 5.277 5.280 5.281 5.282 ITU Region 2 Allocations
RADIOLOCATION Amateur Earth exploration-satellite (active) 5.279A 5.271 5.276 5.277 5.278 5.279 5.281 5.282 ITU Region 3 Allocations
RADIOLOCATION Amateur Earth exploration-satellite (active) 5.279A 5.271 5.276 5.277 5.278 5.279 5.281 5.282 SpectrumWiki
Amateur Radio (70 cm Band) Radiofrequency Identification (RFID) FCC Narrowbanding Mandate PMR446 and dPMR446 PAVE PAWS Wind Profiler Radars ReconRobotics Surveillance Robot Waiver Medical Micropower Networks (MMNs) in 413-457 MHz More...
5.271 Additional allocation: in Belarus, China, India, Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan, the band 420-460 MHz is also allocated to the aeronautical radionavigation service (radio altimeters) on a secondary basis. (WRC-07) 5.276 Additional allocation: in Afghanistan, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Brunei Darussalam, Burkina Faso, Djibouti, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Ecuador, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Greece, Guinea, India, Indonesia, Iran (Islamic Republic of), Iraq, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Kuwait, Libya, Malaysia, Niger, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, the Philippines, Qatar, the Syrian Arab Republic, the Dem. People’s Rep. of Korea, Singapore, Somalia, Sudan, Switzerland, Tanzania, Thailand, Togo, Turkey and Yemen, the band 430-440 MHz is also allocated to the fixed service on a primary basis and the bands 430-435 MHz and 438-440 MHz are also allocated to the mobile, except aeronautical mobile, service on a primary basis. (WRC-12) 5.277 Additional allocation: in Angola, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Cameroon, Congo (Rep. of the), Djibouti, the Russian Federation, Georgia, Hungary, Israel, Kazakhstan, Mali, Mongolia, Uzbekistan, Poland, the Dem. Rep. of the Congo, Kyrgyzstan, Slovakia, Romania, Rwanda, Tajikistan, Chad, Turkmenistan and Ukraine, the band 430-440 MHz is also allocated to the fixed service on a primary basis. (WRC-12) 5.278 Different category of service: in Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Guyana, Honduras, Panama and Venezuela, the allocation of the band 430-440 MHz to the amateur service is on a primary basis (see No. 5.33). 5.279 Additional allocation: in Mexico, the bands 430-435 MHz and 438-440 MHz are also allocated on a primary basis to the land mobile service, subject to agreement obtained under No. 9.21. 5.279A The use of this band by sensors in the Earth exploration-satellite service (active) shall be in accordance with Recommendation ITU-R RS.1260-1. Additionally, the Earth exploration-satellite service (active) in the band 432-438 MHz shall not cause harmful interference to the aeronautical radionavigation service in China. The provisions of this footnote in no way diminish the obligation of the Earth exploration-satellite service (active) to operate as a secondary service in accordance with Nos. 5.29 and 5.30. 5.280 In Germany, Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Liechtenstein, Montenegro, Portugal, Serbia, Slovenia and Switzerland, the band 433.05-434.79 MHz (centre frequency 433.92 MHz) is designated for industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) applications. Radiocommunication services of these countries operating within this band must accept harmful interference which may be caused by these applications. ISM equipment operating in this band is subject to the provisions of No. 15.13. (WRC-07) 5.281 Additional allocation: in the French overseas departments and communities in Region 2 and India, the band 433.75-434.25 MHz is also allocated to the space operation service (Earth-to-space) on a primary basis. In France and in Brazil, the band is allocated to the same service on a secondary basis. 5.282 In the bands 435-438 MHz, 1260-1270 MHz, 2400-2450 MHz, 3400-3410 MHz (in Regions 2 and 3 only) and 5650-5670 MHz, the amateur-satellite service may operate subject to not causing harmful interference to other services operating in accordance with the Table (see No. 5.43). Administrations authorizing such use shall ensure that any harmful interference caused by emissions from a station in the amateur-satellite service is immediately eliminated in accordance with the provisions of No. 25.11. The use of the bands 1260-1270 MHz and 5650-5670 MHz by the amateur-satellite service is limited to the Earth-to-space direction. 5.286 The band 449.75-450.25 MHz may be used for the space operation service (Earth-to-space) and the space research service (Earth-to-space), subject to agreement obtained under No. 9.21. US230 The bands 422.1875-425.4875 MHz and 427.1875-429.9875 MHz are allocated to the land mobile service on a primary basis for non-Federal use within 80.5 kilometers (50 miles) of Cleveland, OH (41° 29' 51.2'' N, 81° 41' 49.5'' W) and Detroit, MI (42° 19' 48.1'' N, 83° 02' 56.7'' W). The bands 423.8125-425.4875 MHz and 428.8125-429.9875 MHz are allocated to the land mobile service on a primary basis for non-Federal use within 80.5 kilometers of Buffalo, NY (42° 52' 52.2'' N, 78° 52' 20.1'' W).
US269 In the band 420-450 MHz, the following provisions shall apply to the non-Federal radiolocation service: (a) Pulse-ranging radiolocation systems may be authorized for use along the shoreline of the conterminous United States and Alaska. (b) In the sub-band 420-435 MHz, spread spectrum radiolocation systems may be authorized within the conterminous United States and Alaska. (c) All stations operating in accordance with this provision shall be secondary to stations operating in accordance with the Table of Frequency Allocations. (d) Authorizations shall be granted on a case-by-case basis; however, operations proposed to be located within the areas listed in paragraph (a) of US270 should not expect to be accommodated. US270 In the band 420-450 MHz, the following provisions shall apply to the amateur service: (a) The peak envelope power of an amateur station shall not exceed 50 watts in the following areas, unless expressly authorized by the FCC after mutual agreement, on a case-by-case basis, between the District Director of the applicable field office and the military area frequency coordinator at the applicable military base. For areas (5) through (7), the appropriate military coordinator is located at Peterson AFB, CO. (1) Arizona, Florida and New Mexico. (2) Within those portions of California and Nevada that are south of latitude 37° 10' N. (3) Within that portion of Texas that is west of longitude 104° W. (4) Within 322 km of Eglin AFB, FL (30° 30' N, 86° 30' W); Patrick AFB, FL (28° 21' N, 80° 43' W); and the Pacific Missile Test Center, Point Mugu, CA (34° 09' N, 119° 11' W). (5) Within 240 km of Beale AFB, CA (39° 08' N, 121° 26' W). (6) Within 200 km of Goodfellow AFB, TX (31° 25' N, 100° 24' W) and Warner Robins AFB, GA (32° 38' N, 83° 35' W). (7) Within 160 km of Clear AFS, AK (64° 17' N, 149° 10' W); Concrete, ND (48° 43' N, 97° 54' W); and Otis AFB, MA (41° 45' N, 70° 32' W). (b) In the sub-band 420-430 MHz, the amateur service is not allocated north of Line A (def. § 2.1). US397 In the band 432-438 MHz, the Earth exploration-satellite service (active) is allocated on a secondary basis for Federal use. Stations in the Earth exploration-satellite service (active) shall not be operated within line-of-sight of the United States except for the purpose of short duration pre-operational testing. Operations under this allocation shall not cause harmful interference to, nor claim protection from, any other services allocated in the band 432-438 MHz in the United States, including secondary services and the amateur-satellite service. US64 (a) In the band 401-406 MHz, the mobile, except aeronautical mobile, service is allocated on a secondary basis and is limited to, with the exception of military tactical mobile stations, Medical Device Radiocommunication Service (MedRadio) operations. MedRadio stations are authorized by rule on the condition that harmful interference is not caused to stations in the meteorological aids, meteorological-satellite, and Earth exploration-satellite services, and that MedRadio stations accept interference from stations in the meteorological aids, meteorological-satellite, and Earth exploration-satellite services. (b) The bands 413-419 MHz, 426-432 MHz, 438-444 MHz, and 451-457 MHz are also allocated on a secondary basis to the mobile, except aeronautical mobile, service. The use of this allocation is limited to MedRadio operations. MedRadio stations are authorized by rule and operate in accordance with 47 CFR part 95.
US87 The band 449.75-450.25 MHz may be used by Federal and non-Federal stations for space telecommand (Earth-to-space) at specific locations, subject to such conditions as may be applied on a case-by-case basis. Operators shall take all practical steps to keep the carrier frequency close to 450 MHz. G2 In the bands 216.965-216.995 MHz, 420-450 MHz (except as provided for in G129), 890-902 MHz, 928-942 MHz, 1300-1390 MHz, 2310-2390 MHz, 2417-2450 MHz, 2700-2900 MHz, 3300-3500 MHz (except as provided for in US108), 5650-5925 MHz, and 9000-9200 MHz, use of the Federal radiolocation service is restricted to the military services. G8 Low power Federal radio control operations are permitted in the band 420-450 MHz. G129 Federal wind profilers are authorized to operate on a primary basis in the radiolocation service in the frequency band 448-450 MHz with an authorized bandwidth of no more than 2 MHz centered on 449 MHz, subject to the following conditions: 1) wind profiler locations must be pre-coordinated with the military services to protect fixed military radars; and 2) wind profiler operations shall not cause harmful interference to, nor claim protection from, military mobile radiolocation stations that are engaged in critical national defense operations. SpectrumWiki
Amateur Radio (70 cm Band)
All or part of this band is allocated worldwide on a seconday basis to the amateur and amateur-satellite services. The band is often referred to as either the 440 band or the 70 cm band.
In the United States, the entire range 420 - 450 MHz is allocated for amateur radio. According to the ARRL, the following band plan is used:
Frequency (MHz):Use
420-426: ATV repeater or simplex with 421.25 MHz video carrier (NTSC)
426-432: ATV simplex with 427.25 MHz video carrier (NTSC)
432-432.07: Earth-Moon-Earth
432.07-432.10: Weak-signal CW
432.1: 70-cm calling frequency
432.1-432.3: Mixed-mode and weak-signal work
432.3-432.4: Propagation beacons
432.4-433.0: Mixed-mode and weak-signal work
433-435: Auxiliary/repeater links
435-438: Satellite only (internationally)
438-444: ATV repeater input (439.25 MHz video carrier)
442-445: Repeater inputs and outputs (local option)
445-447: Shared auxiliary & control links; repeaters and simplex
446.0: National simplex FM frequency
447-450: Repeater inputs and outputs (local option)
420 - 450 MHzAmateur radio 440 band (aka 70 cm band)Amateur N
PAVE PAWS is a high-power phased array radar operated by the U.S. military to detect intercontinental ballistic missiles. There are presently (2013) three operating PAVE PAWS sites at Clear, AK, Cape Cod, MA, and Beale AFB, CA. The PAVE PAWS radar is also known by its government designator, AN/FPS-115.According to the spec sheet at the fas.org Web site, PAVE PAWS has a peak/average transmit power of 582/146 kW, antenna gain of 38 dBi, and an operational range of 3,000 nm (about 5500 km).PAVE PAWS radars are also capable of detecting echoes off of Earth-orbiting space debris.
420 - 450 MHzPAVE PAWS radarRadiolocation F
AN/FPS-115 (fas.org)
PAVE PAWS (Wikipedia)
ReconRobotics Surveillance Robot Waiver
Under a waiver granted to ReconRobotics, Inc., the company's products can use the 430-436, 436-442, and 442-448 MHz segments for analog video and audio transmission. Units must be licensed under Part 90 of the FCC rules. Eligibility is limited to state and local police and firefighters eligible for licensing under Section 90.20(a)(1), and security personnel in critical infrastructure industries.
420 - 450 MHzReconRobotics surveillance robot- -
ReconRobotics waiver order
Medical Micropower Networks (MMNs) in 413-457 MHz
Medical Micropower Network (MMN): An ultra-low power wideband network consisting of a MedRadio programmer/control transmitter and medical implant transmitters, all of which transmit or receive non-voice data or related device control commands for the purpose of facilitating functional electric stimulation, a technique using electric currents to activate and monitor nerves and muscles. [FCC R&O in ET Docket No. 09-36 at Para. 19]
413 - 419 MHzMMN MedRadio TransmittersMobile except aeronautical mobileN
426 - 432 MHzMMN MedRadio TransmittersMobile except aeronautical mobileN
438 - 444 MHzMMN MedRadio TransmittersMobile except aeronautical mobileN
451 - 457 MHzMMN MedRadio TransmittersMobile except aeronautical mobileN
Amendment of Parts 2 and 95 of the Commission's Rules to Provide Additional Spectrum for the Medical Device Radiocommunication Service in the 413-457 MHz band, Report and Order in ET Docket No. 09-36 (Nov. 30, 2011)
News Release, "FCC Takes Steps to Introduce New Advanced Medical Technologies to Treat Neuromuscular Disorders and Traumatic Injuries" (Nov. 30, 2011)
Amendment of Parts 2 and 95 of the Commission's Rules to Provide Additional Spectrum for the Medical Device Radiocommunication Service in the 413-457 MHz Band, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in ET Docket No. 09-36, FCC 09-20 (Mar. 20, 2009)
FCC ECFS Record in ET Docket No. 09-36
405.4 cm2
378.0 cm2
353.2 cm2
145.2 dB
176.2 dB
176.3 dB
176.4 dB
196.8 dB