E1231: CB Operator CAUGHT for using Amp! High-Power CB Radio! - podcast episode cover

E1231: CB Operator CAUGHT for using Amp! High-Power CB Radio!

Nov 17, 202313 min
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Episode description

This is a story I found online in a few places, including the FCC's own website. A CB Operator was caught using an Ameritron Amplifier and asked to stop - no fines were issued yet, according to this article, but I wonder what will happen if he doesn't comply with their warnings.

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Transcript

Thank you for choosing to download the Ham Radio two point zero audio podcast rip. This is the audio taken out of a video or a livestream I did recently. You can catch all my videos on YouTube Ham Radio two point zero and catch us live every Sunday night at seven pm Central Standard Time for a different topic each week. Thank you for the support, and thank you for

being a member of the community. The FCC is back at it again, and this time they're after a CBE radio operator in Tennessee for running too much power with what do you know, an Ameritron amplifier. Okay, so I found this story and I started googling, and the best I've actually seen this story on a couple of different websites. One that has the best description NatCom Magazine, which is a paid service. You can go to natcommag dot com

and subscribe vibe. They have a lot of really good radio related news articles about CB, HAM radio, gmrs, the whole nine yards. The FCC is going after air Tennessee Citizens Band radio operator apparently for using excessive power using a ten meter radio modified to transmit on CB channels and allegedly call causing interference. Now I get sometimes I get and we're gonna talk about this striker radio

this guy's using here in just a minute. Sometimes I will get people commenting on my videos, or I will get emails from people and they'll be like, Hey, I just picked up this ham radio. It does this, this and this and this, and come to find out later it's one of these Striker cbs, or one of these Ranger the RCI twenty nine to fifty, twenty one to seventy, or maybe one of the older Galaxy model ten meter export radios as they call them. I have mixed feelings about those.

Number one, they are not a ham radio. They're a ten meter radio that does more power than is legal on eleven meters. And the reason those companies they're selling those inside of the USA as ten meter export radios is so that cbers will buy them, modify them, and use them. You know what, It's not legal to do that. You're going to do that? More power to you. That's on you, Bud. I do not care.

I really don't. I will not go so far as to say that I've never done that myself, although I have never It's been more than twenty years since I've done anything like that. But they are not a HAM radio. They are meant to be a CBN. Yeah, a lot of these radios have a larger range of frequencies they'll go to that will include ten and twelve meters And guess what, since in Part ninety seven, there's no such

things that type accepted Part ninety seven radio. If you're a private ham radio operator, if you're a company manufacturing radios, it's a little bit different. So we as hamm radio operators Part ninety seven have an experimenter's license. You can build a radio in your garage and use it on the air, as long as you're not manufacturing this radio. So I actually want to take one of these radios out to a PoTA one time and see what we can do

on ten meters with it. More to come on that later. But if you are into MANUFAC, you are into like building your own stuff, I highly recommend pcbway dot Com. Pcbwave dot Com does professional CNC printing, professional three D printing, they'll do board design, they'll let you design your own boards. They are a sponsor of this video and they have a lot of

different things that you can get on their website. Order from the website get your custom ideas come to life, get it done professionally, professionally grade and sent to you. Thank youpcbway dot com for supporting this channel. You guys, check the links in the description blow at the end of this video. So FCC's Region two Enforcement Bureau office in Powder Springs, Georgia, issue to notice of unlicensed operation letter on Thursday, August thirty first. This was just

a couple months ago. At the time of this recording to Thomas Warmouth of College Dale, Tennessee. It's letter sent to Warmouth, the FCC was acting in compliance and interference residus electronics devices. So here's the letter that the FCC did. This is actually the first thing I found, and when I started googling for this, I found a couple of different websites. This was on and not mag did the best job of describing it. In my opinion.

Agents from the Atlanta office confirmed by direction finding techniques that radio signals on frequency two seven dot two two five Megga Hurts, we're emanating from your residence in College Dale, Tennessee. This is a letter they wrote to this mister Warmouth. Guy. Agents confirm through investigation that your radio station is operating in a manner that is inconsistent with rules that are applicle to CBE radio stations. Therefore,

your radio station operator is operating without authorization. Radio stations operating on certain frequencies, including CDB radio, which is twenty six dot nine to six five megahertz to twenty seven dot four oh five. Twenty six dot nine sixty five is channel one, twenty seven dot four oh five is channel forty, and in those you can operate on certain frequencies. In those, it's channelized, so you can't actually go anywhere. Well, you can go anywhere in between

there's and operate sideband kind of in between frequencies. But if you're operating AM, it's supposed to be on those specific forty channels, and they don't go in order. It's kind of a weird thing. Maybe I'll do another video on that later. CBE radio band must be licensed by the Commission pursuant to Section three one of the Communications Act of nineteen thirty four. An amended Act, section ninety five dot three oh five Commission's Rules authorizes eligible persons to operate

Part ninety five cbpersonal rail services without individual license. You are hereby warned that operation of non approved radio transmitting equipment as well as operating without a valid radio station authorization. You don't need a license to operate CB, so I'm not sure what that means. Constitutes a violation of federal laws and rules cited above and could subject the operator to severe penalties, including but not limited to substantial

monetary fines in REM. In REM, that's Latin. I don't know what in REM means seizure and perhaps and also seizure of the offending radio equipment and criminal sanctions including imprisonment. Okay, and then here you know, you have ten days from this date of notice to respond. Assigned Debbie roy Bisky, Regional Director, Region two Enforcement Bureau, FCC. There you go. I'll put a link to this in the description below. So they're saying that,

so Part ninety five is the CEBEE Radio BANM. Part ninety five dot three one is what they're quoting here, and Part ninety five a couple other pieces of Part ninety five nine dot three five and nine to sixty seven. Part ninety five is the CB radio band. It covers more than just CB radio, but these specific sections are applicable to CB radio. So in other words, you don't have to have a license to operate CB, but you have to have a licensed CB. So, in other words, according to the

rule, according to the regulations. Okay, sometimes I'll call it a laws in past and people come by, it's not a law, it's a rule. Okay, semantics, whatever you want to call it. Okay, according to the regulations, you don't need a license to operate CB in the United States anymore. They used to require licensed years ago, but not anymore. But you need an unauthorized and licensed radio something that has been improved by the FCC to eliminate or to reduce spurious emissions. Like it or not, that's

the regulation. That's the rule. I'm not saying I do or don't agree with it. I think part of it's kind of stupid. But you know what, they didn't call me and ask me, so I'm just telling you what it says. You make your own decision about that thing. Here's a response. Wait a second. You may say that person uses CB don't need a license or authorized to do so, so how to FCC. Here's the kicker. If person's using CB radios are licensed by the rule Part ninety five,

FCC which is the governance PCB regulations. Why you don't need a CB license anymore. The metre fact that you fire up before what CB radio talking there. You're licensed on a licensed free spectrum to use CB's forty channels as long as you follow the rules on part ninety five, which is basically what I just said. This is the best part right here. Okay, So

this is a screenshot of this guy's Twitter account, Facebook account. I thought that was Twitter, it's Facebook. This is a This is a Thomas Warfile's profile photo posted on Facebook, and this is the radio who he was using. It's a Striker SR nine to fifty five hp. HP usually means high power. Wonder how much power that is? Now, if I'm wanting to use that on PODA for ten meters, my license allows me to use that

within the ten meter amateur radio band. Part ninety seven allows me to use experimental radio equipment, So it would be totally legal for me or for you as a licensed amateur radio operator, even even with a technician license, if you stay between twenty eight dot three and twenty eight dot five, be completely legal to use this on mture radio bands as long as it's not pumping out

over fifteen hundred watts. This is probably a I don't know what is this striker nine to fifty five hp okay, according to Walcott Radio at this site right here, this is a three hundred and fifty dollars radio. Seventy five watts PEP via bird meter, forty five watts AMS CB is legal. Four watts on key down. Again, that's most CBS AM you can do Sideman and now FM on CB as well. Four watts is the key down. So in other words, on AM, when you key down the mic,

you can't produce more than four wats. When you talk into the mic, it modulates the signal, it'll do more than four watts, and that's legal. And I don't know if there is a legal limit on peak envelope power PEP or not. I'd have to look that up, but four watts is the legal limit on key down. So this one's doing seventy five watts PEP. I don't it does not really saying what forty five watts RMS that's I forget what RMS stands for. That might mean that it's forty five watts on

key down and seventy five wants on pep. But again, Walcott Radio is selling this as a ten meter radio, and that level of power is completely acceptable within the amateur radio spectrum of the ten meter band. Might be fun to try to try one of these on a PODA activation. I would really like that, may have one. I don't have a Striker radio, but I do have an old Galaxy radio. Something to think about. But this

is really good right here. Okay, Now, mister warmouth, if you're if you happened upon this video, I don't mean this by an insult, but my god, English bud. Okay, look at this. Well, I had a Ham radio. A Ham operator turned me into the po po. Okay. I know a lot of you guys in the comments love the blame HAMM radio operators for all this stuff. Okay, let's say that's true. How would a Ham radio operator know he was running that much power?

Is it possible he was interfering with something your TV set, your computer speakers, some sort of AM receiver in your house, car stereo and your car AMFM car stereo in your car something. I mean, how would they know if this guy had properly grounded and or if I choked his equipment. It's possible that they would have never heard him, but I don't know. So he says, I had a Ham radio operator turned me into the PO. PO said my ameritron a LAB was coming across his guitar speaker. That's where

I read it, coming across his guitar speaker. Okay, So how do he knows a Ham radio operator? Maybe it was I'm not saying it was or wasn't, okay, but someone turned him in for coming across his guitar speaker. The Amraitron amp, which is a Ham radio amplifier, is not legal on me on CB, So there you go. The police showed up with a couple other gentlemen showed up and said that they were FCC, but they did not say they were the FCC, and wants me to shut down.

I said, I'll put my amp out of line, but I will not quit transmitting on my radio. They also told me that my radio is illegal because it's the Striker nine to fifty five. So basically, I'm getting harassed. What else can I do about this? Wow? No punctuation, no comments, no periods, all lowercase. I my first what can I do about this? As his last statement, those last words was what can I do about this? Learn English? That's my first suggestion. I would

learn English. I would, I would absolutely one hundred percent learn English, and then and then maybe you'd have a better time of actually getting stuff across. But well, I know, people talk. People type on Facebook, they type on comments on YouTube, they type this way, people type this way. Okay, all right, I don't mean people call me a grammar nazi. Okay, you know what. It's just that if you want to be taken seriously, you might try to type in a manner that proves that

you graduated the third grade. That's my personal opinion. You may not agree with me. That's what I think. So he claims a hand radio operator turned him in. Perhaps that's true, Perhaps it's not true. I don't know. So what do you guys think about this? An ameritron app on a Striker ten meter made for ten meter export radio that again not really a ham radio. If you ask any ham radio operator if that's a Ham radio,

they will tell you no, it's not a ham radio. It is sold by Striker as an export radio for ten meters that's meant to be modified used on the eleven meter band to get around the FCC requirements. More power to you, buddy, capitalism. You gotta love it, gotta love I do. I love capitalism. I absolutely love capitalism. I think some of this, some of the rules and regulations around CEBE radio were dumb. I think some of the rules around rules and regulations around GMRS radio are dumb.

I think if I have a license to operate on those bands, I should be able to use any radio I want to. I don't think the Part ninety five rules are very good. Now does that mean I'm gonna just go break the rules just because I don't agree with him. No, I'm not gonna do that. But there's ways to get rules and regulations changed in this country, and ignoring them is not one of those ways. But again my opinion. I'm not telling you what to do, but I would like to

know what you think about this article. Put a comment below.

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