FCC Itinerant Licensing - RadioReference. com Forums The term "itinerant" is thrown around a lot and often inaccurately Itinerant means you operate at varying locations for unspecified periods of time There are several frequencies set up in the business pool for intinerant operation and they still require licensing They don't require coordination but they do require licensing
Getting Licensed For UHF Itinerant Frequencies § 90 138 Applications for itinerant frequencies An application for authority to conduct an itinerant operation in the Industrial Business Pool must be restricted to use of itinerant frequencies or other frequencies not designated for permanent use and need not be accompanied by evidence of frequency coordination
Itinerant License - RadioReference. com Forums My itinerant freqs, 151 700, 151 760, and 154 5275 are licensed for 60 MO at 35 watts and my 151 505, 151 5125, and 151 625, 158 400, and 158 4075 are licensed for 60 MO at 50 watts with analog and digital voice emissions
Itinerant Licensing Question | RadioReference. com Forums Itinerant licenses can be nationwide, multiple state, statewide, or locally defined The downside with itinerant frequencies is that they are shared, and there is a high potential for interfere do to the radio traffic on those frequencies by other licensed users As CERT, our sites are throughout the county at different times
Obtaining an IG Business Itinerant License I just licensed four itinerant frequencies for nationwide use It took about 30 days The cost was $170 The Java situation has been fixed and got through the basics easily Frequency coordination is not required for itinerant channels The main delay was for "engineering review " The license is restricted near the Canadian border (they all are)
Itinerant License Question | RadioReference. com Forums (c) An applicant proposing to operate an itinerant station or an applicant seeking the assignment of authorization or transfer of control for an existing station below 470 MHz or in the 769-775 799-805 MHz, the 806-824 851-866 MHz band, or the one-way paging 929-930 MHz band (other than a commercial mobile radio service applicant or licensee on these bands) may operate the proposed station
Using an Itinerant Service for Licensure - RadioReference. com Forums Business Itinerant, from what I'm reading, is effectively fancy MURS with the exception of needing a license What I mean is, anyone can jump on these frequencies and start transmitting (yes, this is true for any frequency, but I hope my point is not lost), and as long as you're not interfering no one is going to bother you
DMR on Itinerant Frequencies? - RadioReference. com Forums One itinerant license covers simultaneous use at multiple locations As long as both locations are in the itinerant area of operation there's no problem and no need to obtain a second license Reactions: PrivatelyJeff , Floridarailfanning , DeoVindice and 2 others
Itinerant frequency for personal use? - RadioReference. com Forums I have two uhf NEXEDGE units that I would love to use on digital and was curious what the head honchos at the fcc thought about using an itinerant license for personal use It’s pretty cheap ($165 or something like that) compared to my other digital option which was the Motorola dtr series
900mhz itinerant - RadioReference. com Forums I don't think itinerant use is permitted in either 800 or 900 MHz Part 90 bands Way back in the day there was an 800 MHz channel that got set aside, but the rules quickly prevented that