SB QST @ ARL $ARLB028 ARLB028 ARRL Petitions for New 60-Meter Amateur Band ZCZC AG28 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 28 ARLB028 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT July 26, 2001 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB028 ARLB028 ARRL Petitions for New 60-Meter Amateur Band A petition filed this week by the ARRL could result in a new high-frequency band for US amateurs. The ARRL has asked the FCC to allocate 5.250 to 5.400 MHz to the Amateur Service on a domestic (US-only), secondary basis. The League told the FCC that the new band would aid emergency communication activities by filling a ''propagation gap'' between 80 and 40 meters. ''There are times on certain paths when a frequency in the 80-meter band is too low, and a frequency in the 40-meter band is too high for reliable ionospheric propagation,'' the ARRL said in its petition. The ARRL said the propagation gap can hamper communication between the US and the Caribbean during a hurricane or severe weather emergency. The ARRL Board of Directors approved the proposal at its July 20-21 meeting. The FCC has not yet invited public comments on the petition. Even if the petition finds favor with the FCC, it's likely to be several years before the new band actually becomes available. As proposed by the ARRL, amateurs General class and higher would be permitted to operate phone, data, image and RTTY on the new band running maximum authorized power. No mode-specific subbands were proposed. The ARRL said a new 150-kHz allocation at 5 MHz also could relieve substantial overcrowding that periodically occurs on 80 and 40. If the new band is approved, hams would have to avoid interfering with--and accept interference from--current occupants of the spectrum, as they already do on 30 meters. The band 5.250 to 5.450 MHz now is allocated to Fixed and Mobile services on a co-primary basis in all three ITU regions. The ARRL's petition cites the success of the League's WA2XSY experimental operation in the 60-meter band, carried out since 1999, which confirmed the communication reliability of 60 meters. ''An amateur allocation in this band would improve the Amateur Service's already exemplary record of providing emergency communications during natural disasters when even modern communications systems typically fail,'' the ARRL concluded. A copy of the ARRL petition is available on the ARRL Web site, http://www.arrl.org/announce/regulatory/5MHz NNNN /EX