bigman1
Well-Known Member
Is it legal to use a chinese dual band ham transceiver on vhf at sea in Uk waters? They seem to be very well built at a great price.
Thanks.
Thanks.
Is it legal to use a chinese dual band ham transceiver on vhf at sea in Uk waters? They seem to be very well built at a great price.
Thanks.
If they are being sold by Amazon UK, is there an implication that they UK Type Approval?
Is it legal to use a chinese dual band ham transceiver on vhf at sea in Uk waters? They seem to be very well built at a great price.
Thanks.
And without registering the set on your ships licence.
9 Radio equipment intended for use on board United Kingdom licensed vessels shall;
(a) comply with the Merchant Shipping (Marine Equipment Regulations 1999); or
(b) comply with the applicable UK Radio Interface Requirements (published by Ofcom); or
(c) have been previously type approved in accordance with Section 84 of the Telecommunications Act 1984 and with the provision that the equipment has been placed on the market before 8 April 2001. (After 7 April 2000 type approval certificates are not applicable); or
(d) have been previously type approved in accordance with the Merchant Shipping Notice MSN 1735 (M+F) published by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency.
In short its about as illegal as speeding which you likely do every day.
Whats the website ?I wonder then how many people like me had the bright idea of fitting an WW2 ex-Army Radio (called a 19 set Advertised in the Amateur Radio Magazines) I seem to remember they were £9 each.
After fitting it I tried it out and from the middle of Manchester, on the right frequency I found myself talking to a boat in Dublin Harbour.
Probably totally illegal.
Certainly a Dual Band Transceiver would make a useful addition to the stuff in my boat.
I bet your batteries took a hammering from the power supply, the 19 set was designed for tanks. Lots of Gov surplus stuff around in those days, 18 & 38 portable sets and of course the aircraft T1154 & R1155. We had a GPO DF van looking for us one time as several of us had illegal sets in school days - happy times.
>An amateur dual band set is capable of many things that would break the marine VHF licence agreement, so is already not permitted, even before you turn it on!
If it is dual band (upper and lower side band) then it will have marine frequencies as well as Ham. It needs an SSB licence not VHF.
And highly regarded in the ham world. When I did the exams a couple of years ago all the club guys had one.Those transceivers are incredibly cheap.
the 19 set was designed for tanks. ..................... and of course the aircraft T1154 & R1155.