Australia just has bandwidth limits, nothing about baud rate: For 2200m & 600m: 2.1kHz For 160m to 15m: 8kHz For 10m: 16kHz For 6m & 2m: 100kHz For 70cm and up: unlimited
For details refer to the licence conditions document: http://www.wia.org.au/members/legislation/determinations/documents/Radiocomm...
73, Matt VK2RQ
On 21/12/2013, at 5:14 AM, PE1RDW pe1rdw@amsat.org wrote:
(Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ On 20-12-13 19:01, kb9mwr@gmail.com wrote:
(Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ Hello all,
I don't like the idea of regulatory discussions on this list.
However, I am curious (as it's pertinent to what we do on this list) what the rules are in other counties for ham radio.. So far I haven't had much luck finding the answers on the web.
Presently in US ham radio data bandwith: 2 meters is 20 khz max, 19.6 kilobauds 70 cm is 100 khz max, 56 kilobauds
Ironically, while there is plenty of space on 70 cm, other modes like ATV are permitted to occupy up to 6 MHz of bandwidth.
Since we have a nice mix of hams from all over the world on this list, I'd appreciated a reply (can be off list) on what is permitted in your country on 2 meters and 70 cm.
Thanks,
Steve, KB9MWR _________________________________________ 44Net mailing list 44Net@hamradio.ucsd.edu http://hamradio.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/44net
In the Netherlands, if it fits in the bandlimits you can legaly use it regardless of mode, band or speeds. Offcourse you have to wonder if it is smart to use a small band like 2 meter (2 MHz wide) with very wide modes.
73 Andre PE1RDW _________________________________________ 44Net mailing list 44Net@hamradio.ucsd.edu http://hamradio.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/44net