110 WATT RADIO Laws in Australia
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- fly_on_the_wall
- No Longer Registered
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- Joined: Thu Jun 15, 2006 10:52 pm
110 WATT RADIO Laws in Australia
Hi there, i recently tried to purchase a 110 Watt XTL5000 from an australian radio dealer and i was told that although it can be bought, he advised against it due to the huge amounts of paperwork involved with the ACMA. Just wondering if anyone here can shed some light on the subject. Maybe someone knows more on it, i got the impression the dealer did not want to go to the effort of doing all the paperwork.
It's not type approved, so you can't use it at all on the land mobile radio service.
You'd possibly be able to use it under a Scientific Assigned license, with very heavy restrictions, and tons of paperwork. It's probably not worth it.
Contact the ACMA in Canberra to find out exactly what's involved.
You'd possibly be able to use it under a Scientific Assigned license, with very heavy restrictions, and tons of paperwork. It's probably not worth it.
Contact the ACMA in Canberra to find out exactly what's involved.
- fly_on_the_wall
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- Joined: Thu Jun 15, 2006 10:52 pm
- HLA
- Posts: 2334
- Joined: Mon Jul 11, 2005 8:15 pm
- What radios do you own?: HT1550's, X9000's, CDM1550's
what do you need that much power for? just use a high gain antennae on a 45 watter and get close to the same thing. and alot cheaper.
HLA
I never check PM's so don't bother, just email me.
I won't reply to a hotmail, gmail, aol or any other generic free address, if you want me to reply use a real address.
STOP ASKING ME FOR SOFTWARE OR FIRMWARE, I JUST FORWARD ALL OF THE REQUESTS TO THE MODERATORS
I never check PM's so don't bother, just email me.
I won't reply to a hotmail, gmail, aol or any other generic free address, if you want me to reply use a real address.
STOP ASKING ME FOR SOFTWARE OR FIRMWARE, I JUST FORWARD ALL OF THE REQUESTS TO THE MODERATORS
RADIOCOMMUNICATIONS ACT 1992
- SECT 301
Supply of radiocommunications devices to unlicensed
persons
(1)
Subject to subsection (2), a person (the supplier) who carries on the business of supplying radiocommunications devices to persons intending to operate them must not supply another person with an eligible radiocommunications device in the course of carrying on that business unless:
(a) the other person presents to the supplier a licence, or a duplicate of the licence, that authorises the other person to operate the device; and
(b) the supplier causes such particulars relating to supply of the device as are specified in the regulations to be recorded in a document kept for the purposes of this Act.
- SECT 301
Supply of radiocommunications devices to unlicensed
persons
(1)
Subject to subsection (2), a person (the supplier) who carries on the business of supplying radiocommunications devices to persons intending to operate them must not supply another person with an eligible radiocommunications device in the course of carrying on that business unless:
(a) the other person presents to the supplier a licence, or a duplicate of the licence, that authorises the other person to operate the device; and
(b) the supplier causes such particulars relating to supply of the device as are specified in the regulations to be recorded in a document kept for the purposes of this Act.
There should be such rules here too. Would help keep some folks out of trouble.
Chris,
Hamming 31 years
http://www.wa2zdy.com
Wesley Chapel, Pasco County, Florida
Snow? What's that?!
The human race is proof that Darwin was wrong.
Hamming 31 years
http://www.wa2zdy.com
Wesley Chapel, Pasco County, Florida
Snow? What's that?!
The human race is proof that Darwin was wrong.
I rember doing a contract in Victoria, Installing about 150 UHF Micor base stations. I think these were 75 watts but the mobiles were syntor and syntrx which were 25 watt
(I'm still trying to work out your syntrx avatar, it doesn't look familiar but maybe the ones I used were SP's. They did MDC600 and a load of other things and it was a government contact)
(I'm still trying to work out your syntrx avatar, it doesn't look familiar but maybe the ones I used were SP's. They did MDC600 and a load of other things and it was a government contact)
Well, for LMR class license it is anyway - if you are a HAMsexy you get 140 watts on VHF/UHFmr.syntrx wrote:25W is maximum legal power here. Most of this country is dead flat, and that's generally plenty to hit the horizon anyway.HLA wrote:what do you need that much power for? just use a high gain antennae on a 45 watter and get close to the same thing. and alot cheaper.

I should have clarified, 25W is the limit for mobile radios. Most repeaters sold these days are 50W machines.Bruce1807 wrote:I rember doing a contract in Victoria, Installing about 150 UHF Micor base stations. I think these were 75 watts but the mobiles were syntor and syntrx which were 25 watt
(I'm still trying to work out your syntrx avatar, it doesn't look familiar but maybe the ones I used were SP's. They did MDC600 and a load of other things and it was a government contact)
That picture is part of the Syntrx HHCH, which looks almost the same as a Syntor/Spectra HHCH. MDC isn't usually seen on Syntrxes - did yours have the rarer Spectra-style dash mount head, by any chance?
I'm trying to remember the syntrx.
We had a fixed id in the radio and an emergency button.
We could be paged, radio checked and send an emergency with MDC600
I believe we had the HHCH but it was probably an SP.
The Syntors were an SP control head and the MDC units were similar to what New York city buses used. A seperate box with a fixed MDC code and a variable MDC code.
We had a fixed id in the radio and an emergency button.
We could be paged, radio checked and send an emergency with MDC600
I believe we had the HHCH but it was probably an SP.
The Syntors were an SP control head and the MDC units were similar to what New York city buses used. A seperate box with a fixed MDC code and a variable MDC code.