The FCC
Part 97
That which seriously degrades, obstructs, or repeatedly interrupts a radio communication service operating in accordance with the Radio Regulations
Enhancing international goodwill
Radionavigation Service
A one-way transmission of measurements at a distance from the measuring instrument
Frequency Coordinator
Amateur operators in a local or regional area whose stations are eligible to be auxiliary or repeater stations
A station in the Amateur Radio Service consisting of the apparatus necessary for carrying on radio communications
At no time
Allowing a person to conduct radio experiments and to communicate with other licensed hams around the world
A one-way transmission to initiate, modify or terminate functions of a device at a distance
Stop operating or take steps to eliminate the harmful interference
A United Nations agency for information and communication technology issues
Some U. S. Territories are located in ITU regions other than region 2
52.525 MHz
2 meter band
443.350 MHz
1296 MHz
1.25 meter band
U.S. amateurs may find non-amateur stations in the bands, and must avoid interfering with them
To allow for calibration error in the transmitter frequency display
So that modulation sidebands do not extend beyond the band edge
To allow for transmitter frequency drift
The 6 meter, 2 meter, and 1.25 meter bands
CW only
Amateur frequency assignments can vary among the three ITU regions
Data
Special event
W3ABC
Communications incidental to the purposes of the amateur service and remarks of a personal character
When the foreign country authorizes it
K1XXX
From any vessel or craft located in international waters and documented or registered in the United States
Revocation of the station license or suspension of the operator license
Ten years
Two years
As soon as your operator/station license grant appears in the FCC’s license database
No, transmitting is not allowed until the FCC license database shows that the license has been renewed
Any licensed amateur
Technician, General, Amateur Extra
Only the person named as trustee on the club station license grant
Any country whose administration has notified the ITU that it objects to such communications
During an Armed Forces Day Communications Test
Only when transmitting control commands to space stations or radio control craft
When incidental to an authorized retransmission of manned spacecraft communications
When the equipment is normally used in an amateur station and such activity is not conducted on a regular basis
Any such language is prohibited
Auxiliary, repeater, or space stations
When the communication is incidental to classroom instruction at an educational institution
Only where such communications directly relate to the immediate safety of human life or protection of property
Transmissions intended for reception by the general public
When transmitting signals to control a model craft
When transmitting code practice, information bulletins, or transmissions necessary to provide emergency communications
Never
Only a person for whom an amateur operator/primary station license grant appears in the FCC database or who is authorized for alien reciprocal operation
The station licensee
The class of operator license held by the control operator
The location at which the control operator function is performed
Automatic
The control operator and the station licensee are equally responsible
Repeater operation
Local control
Operating the station over the Internet
The station licensee
At no time
Tactical call sign
At the end of each communication and every ten minutes during a communication
At least every 10 minutes during and at the end of a communication
The English language
Send the call sign using CW or phone emission
KL7CC stroke W3
KL7CC slant W3
KL7CC slash W3
The foreign station must be one with which the U.S. has a third party agreement
/KT, /AE or /AG when using new license privileges earned by CSCE while waiting for an upgrade to a previously issued license to appear in the FCC license database
Repeater station
The control operator of the originating station
Any station whose government permits such communications
At least 4
At any time upon request by an FCC representative
Plus or minus 600 kHz
446.000 MHz
Plus or minus 5 MHz
Say the station's call sign then identify with your call sign
Transmit the other station’s call sign followed by your call sign
Properly identify the transmitting station
Station identification is required at least every ten minutes during the test and at the end of the test
Calling any station
Your call sign
A voluntary guideline for using different modes or activities within an amateur band
While not exceeding the maximum power permitted on a given band, use the minimum power necessary to carry out the desired communication
Listen first to be sure that no one else is using the frequency
Ask if the frequency is in use
Make sure you are in your assigned band
Simplex communication
CTCSS
Carrier squelch
The repeater receiver may require an audio tone burst for access
The repeater receiver may require a CTCSS tone for access
The repeater receiver may require a DCS tone sequence for access
The amplitude of the modulating signal
Its signal occupies more bandwidth
Microphone gain too high, causing over-deviation
Common courtesy should prevail, but no one has absolute right to an amateur frequency
Use of a phonetic alphabet
QRM
QSY
When the stations can communicate directly without using a repeater
It is permitted in at least some portion of all the amateur bands above 50 MHz
Never, FCC rules always apply
Connect the battery in parallel with a vehicle’s battery and run the engine
Such words and terms should be spelled out using a standard phonetic alphabet
Both organizations may provide communications during emergencies
A radio service using amateur frequencies for emergency management or civil defense communications
A radio service using amateur stations for emergency management or civil defense communications
An emergency service using amateur operators certified by a civil defense organization as being enrolled in that organization
Begin your transmission by saying "Priority" or "Emergency" followed by your call sign
Remain on frequency without transmitting until asked to do so by the net control station
Passing messages exactly as received
Yes, but only if necessary in situations involving the immediate safety of human life or protection of property
The information needed to track the message as it passes through the amateur radio traffic handling system
The check is a count of the number of words or word equivalents in the text portion of the message
Licensed amateurs who have voluntarily registered their qualifications and equipment for communications duty in the public service
Try moving a few feet or changing the direction of your antenna if possible, as reflections may be causing multi-path distortion
The shorter wavelength allows them to more easily penetrate the structure of buildings
Horizontal
Signals could be significantly weaker
Try to find a path that reflects signals to the repeater
Picket fencing
Electromagnetic
Random combining of signals arriving via different paths
Either vertically or horizontally polarized antennas may be used for transmission or reception
Error rates are likely to increase
The ionosphere
Wavelength
The orientation of the electric field
Electric and magnetic fields
At the speed of light
The wavelength gets shorter as the frequency increases
Wavelength in meters equals 300 divided by frequency in megahertz
The approximate wavelength
30 to 300 MHz
300 to 3000 MHz
3 to 30 MHz
300,000,000 meters per second
UHF signals are usually not reflected by the ionosphere
Signals are being refracted from a sporadic E layer
The signals exhibit rapid fluctuations of strength and often sound distorted
Sporadic E
Knife-edge diffraction
Tropospheric scatter
6 meters
Temperature inversions in the atmosphere
From dawn to shortly after sunset during periods of high sunspot activity
The distance over which two stations can communicate by direct path
The Earth seems less curved to radio waves than to light
Six or ten meters
Some connectors include push-to-talk and voltages for powering the microphone
For logging contacts and contact information
For sending and/or receiving CW
For generating and decoding digital signals
It prevents voltage fluctuations from reaching sensitive circuits
Between the transmitter and the antenna
In series with the feed line, between the transmitter and antenna
Terminal node controller
The sound card provides audio to the microphone input and converts received audio to digital form
Flat strap
Ferrite choke
The alternator
At the battery or engine block ground strap
Noise on the vehicle’s electrical system is being transmitted along with your speech audio
The output signal might become distorted
The keypad or VFO knob
To mute receiver output noise when no signal is being received
Store the frequency in a memory channel
Turn on the noise blanker
The receiver RIT or clarifier
Receiver Incremental Tuning
Permits noise or interference reduction by selecting a bandwidth matching the mode
2400 Hz
500 Hz
The difference between the repeater’s transmit and receive frequencies
To keep received audio relatively constant
Amperes
Watts
Current
Direct current
About 12 volts
Copper
Glass
Alternating current
Power
The volt
Frequency
1,500 milliamperes
1500 kHz
One thousand volts
One one-millionth of a volt
0.5 watts
3 amperes
3525 kHz
1 microfarad
3 dB
-6 dB
10 dB
28.400 MHz
2.425 GHz
Capacitance
The farad
Inductance
The henry
Hertz
Radio frequency signals of all types
Radio waves
Power (P) equals voltage (E) multiplied by current (I)
138 watts
30 watts
10 amperes
It is a measure of the opposition to AC current flow in a circuit
Ohms
Current (I) equals voltage (E) divided by resistance (R)
Voltage (E) equals current (I) multiplied by resistance (R)
Resistance (R) equals voltage (E) divided by current (I)
30 ohms
8 ohms
3 ohms
1.5 amperes
2 amperes
10 amperes
1 volt
10 volts
20 volts
Resistor
Potentiometer
Resistance
Capacitor
Capacitor
Inductor
Inductor
Switch
Fuse
Nickel-metal hydride
Lithium-ion
Lead-acid gel-cell
Carbon-zinc
Transistors
Diode
Transistor
Transistor
Transistor
With a stripe
Light Emitting Diode
Field Effect Transistor
Anode and cathode
Emitter, base, and collector
Source, gate, and drain
Gain
Schematic symbols
Resistor
Transistor
Lamp
Battery
Capacitor
Light emitting diode
Variable resistor
Transformer
Variable inductor
Antenna
Electrical components
The way components are interconnected
Rectifier
A switch controlled by an electromagnet
Single-pole single-throw
Meter
Regulator
Transformer
LED
Capacitor
Integrated circuit
Control the flow of current
An inductor and a capacitor connected in series or parallel to form a filter
To prevent coupling of unwanted signals to or from the wire
Sensitivity
A unit combining the functions of a transmitter and a receiver
Mixer
Selectivity
Oscillator
Transverter
The push to talk function which switches between receive and transmit
Modulation
A multi-mode VHF transceiver
An RF power amplifier
Between the antenna and receiver
Talk farther away from the microphone
The receiver is unable to reject strong signals outside the AM or FM band
Fundamental overload
Harmonics
Spurious emissions
Put a RF filter on the telephone
Block the amateur signal with a filter at the antenna input of the affected receiver
Make sure that your station is functioning properly and that it does not cause interference to your own radio or television when it is tuned to the same channel
Snap-on ferrite chokes
Low-pass and high-pass filters
Band-reject and band-pass filters
Work with your neighbor to identify the offending device
Politely inform your neighbor about the rules that prohibit the use of devices which cause interference
Check your station and make sure it meets the standards of good amateur practice
An unlicensed device that may emit low powered radio signals on frequencies used by a licensed service
Your transmitter may be slightly off frequency
Your batteries may be running low
You could be in a bad location
Reports of garbled, distorted, or unintelligible transmissions
Be sure all TV coaxial connectors are installed properly
To prevent the radiation of signals when making tests
An antenna analyzer
A measure of how well a load is matched to a transmission line
1 to 1
2 to 1
Impedance mismatch
It is converted into heat
Directional wattmeter
Moisture contamination
Ultraviolet light can damage the jacket and allow water to enter the cable
It requires special techniques to prevent water absorption
Carrying RF signals between a radio and antenna
A non-inductive resistor and a heat sink
A voltmeter
In parallel with the circuit
In series with the circuit
An ammeter
An ohmmeter
Attempting to measure voltage when using the resistance setting
Voltage and resistance
Rosin-core solder
A grainy or dull surface
The circuit contains a large capacitor
Ensure that the circuit is not powered
Ensure that the voltmeter and leads are rated for use at the voltages to be measured
Single sideband
FM
SSB
FM
CW
Upper sideband
SSB signals have narrower bandwidth
3 kHz
Between 10 and 15 kHz
About 6 MHz
150 Hz
Any amateur whose license privileges allow them to transmit on the satellite uplink frequency
The minimum amount of power needed to complete the contact
All of these answers are correct
Any amateur holding a Technician or higher class license
A transmission from a space station that contains information about a satellite
The Keplerian elements
An observed change in signal frequency caused by relative motion between the satellite and the earth station
The satellite uplink is in the 70 cm band and the downlink is in the 2 meter band
Rotation of the satellite and its antennas
The satellite is in a Low Earth Orbit
FM Packet
Radio direction finding
A directional antenna
Contesting
Send only the minimum information needed for proper identification and the contest exchange
A letter-number designator assigned to a geographic location
By using DTMF signals
1 watt
A label indicating the licensee’s name, call sign and address must be affixed to the transmitter
From a repeater directory
Use the keypad to transmit the IRLP node ID
A gateway
A method of delivering voice communications over the Internet using digital techniques
A technique to connect amateur radio systems, such as repeaters, via the Internet using Voice Over Internet Protocol
Packet
PSK31
MFSK
Automatic Packet Reporting System
A Global Positioning System receiver
An analog fast scan color TV signal
Providing real time tactical digital communications in conjunction with a map showing the locations of stations
Phase Shift Keying
A low-rate data transmission mode
A check sum which permits error detection
A header which contains the call sign of the station to which the information is being sent
Automatic repeat request in case of error
International Morse
Straight Key
Electronic Keyer
Computer Keyboard
A digital scheme whereby the receiving station detects errors and sends a request to the sending station to retransmit the information
An antenna that concentrates signals in one direction
The electric field is perpendicular to the Earth
A horizontally polarized antenna
It does not transmit or receive as effectively as a full-sized antenna
Shorten it
Directional antennas
Signals can be significantly weaker than when it is outside of the vehicle
19
112
Broadside to the antenna
The increase in signal strength in a specified direction when compared to a reference antenna
It offers a lower angle of radiation and more gain than a 1/4 wavelength antenna and usually provides improved coverage
A roof mounted antenna normally provides the most uniform radiation pattern
Inserting an inductor in the radiating portion of the antenna to make it electrically longer
To allow the efficient transfer of power and reduce losses
50 ohms
It is easy to use and requires few special installation considerations
It matches the antenna system impedance to the transceiver's output impedance
The loss increases
A Type N connector
They are commonly used at HF frequencies
To prevent an increase in feed line loss
A loose connection in an antenna or a feed line
RG-8 cable has less loss at a given frequency
Air-insulated hard line
Shorting the terminals can cause burns, fire, or an explosion
By heating tissue
It disrupts the electrical functions of cells
It causes involuntary muscle contractions
Safety ground
To interrupt power in case of overload
Excessive current could cause a fire
Use three-wire cords and plugs for all AC powered equipment
Connect all AC powered station equipment to a common safety ground
Use a circuit protected by a ground-fault interrupter
Ground all of the protectors to a common plate which is in turn connected to an external ground
A fuse or circuit breaker in series with the AC hot conductor
Explosive gas can collect if not properly vented
The battery could overheat and give off flammable gas or explode
You might receive an electric shock from the charged stored in large capacitors
At all times when any work is being done on the tower
Put on a climbing harness and safety glasses
Never
Look for and stay clear of any overhead electrical wires
To lift tower sections or antennas
So that if the antenna falls unexpectedly, no part of it can come closer than 10 feet to the power wires
This type of tower must never be climbed unless it is in the fully retracted position
Separate eight-foot long ground rods for each tower leg, bonded to the tower and each other
The antenna could contact high-voltage power wires
Sharp bends must be avoided
Local electrical codes
Ensure that connections are short and direct
Non-ionizing radiation
50 MHz
50 watts PEP at the antenna
Frequency and power level of the RF field
Distance from the antenna to a person
Radiation pattern of the antenna
The human body absorbs more RF energy at some frequencies than at others
By calculation based on FCC OET Bulletin 65
By calculation based on computer modeling
By measurement of field strength using calibrated equipment
They might receive a painful RF burn
Relocate antennas
By re-evaluating the station whenever an item of equipment is changed
It affects the average exposure of people to radiation
The percentage of time that a transmitter is transmitting
RF radiation does not have sufficient energy to cause genetic damage
2 times as much