Title: Amateur Extra Licensing Class
1Amateur Extra Licensing Class
Rules Regs
- Lake Area Radio Klub
- Spring 2012
2Amateur Radio Extra ClassElement 4 Course
Presentation
- ELEMENT 4 Groupings
- Rules Regs
- Skywaves Contesting
- Outer Space Comms
- Visuals Video Modes
- Digital Excitement with Computers Radios
- Modulate Your Transmitters
- Amps Power Supplies
- Receivers with Great Filters
3Amateur Radio Extra ClassElement 4 Course
Presentation
- ELEMENT 4 Groupings
- Oscillate Synthesize This!
- Circuits Resonance for All!
- Components in Your New Rig
- Logically Speaking of Counters
- Optos OpAmps Plus Solar
- Test Gear, Testing, Testing 1,2,3
- Antennas
- Feedlines Safety
4Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1A01When using a transceiver that displays the
carrier frequency of phone signals, a displayed
frequency of 3 kHz below the upper band edge will
result in a normal USB emission being within the
band. - E1A03With your transceiver displaying the
carrier frequency of phone signals, you hear a DX
station's CQ on 14.349 MHz USB. It is not legal
to return the call using upper sideband on the
same frequency because your sidebands will extend
beyond the band edge. - 14.349 MHz 3 KHz 14.352 MHz.
-
The band edge for 20 meters is 14.350 MHz
therefore your signal would be out of band by 2
KHz.
5Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1A02 When using a transceiver that displays the
carrier frequency of phone signals, a 3 kHz above
the lower band edge displayed carrier frequency
display will result in a normal LSB emission
being within the band. - E1A04 With your transceiver displaying the
carrier frequency of phone signals, you hear a DX
station's CQ on 3.601 MHz LSB. It is not legal to
return the call using lower sideband on the same
frequency because your sidebands will extend
beyond the edge of the phone band segment. - 3.601 MHz - 3 KHz 3.598 MHz
- The band edge for phone on 80 meters is 3.600
MHz therefore your signal at 3.598 MHz would be
out of the band by 2 KHz and in the RTTY and
data segment of the 80 meter band
6Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1A09The 80/75, 40, 20 and 15 meter frequency
bands contain at least one segment authorized
only to control operators holding an Amateur
Extra Class operator license.
7Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1A06The maximum power output permitted on the
60 meter band is 50 watts PEP effective radiated
power relative to a dipole. - You must do a calculation of transmitter power,
antenna gain and line loss to determine your ERP.
- On the 60 meter band power is limited to 50
Watts ERP, (Effective Radiated Power) referred to
a dipole antenna which includes antenna gain and
the path loss or gain from the transceiver to
antenna itself. - If you had an antenna with 6 dB of gain over a
dipole and a coaxial line loss of -3dB the
maximum output allowed from the transmitter would
be 25 watts. - Gain over dipole would be 6 dB -3dB Loss or 3db,
therefore you would have to have a transmitter
power of 3 db less than 50 watts, or 25 watts
transmitter output power. - 5330.5 kHz USB
- 5346.5 kHz USB
- 5366.5 kHz USB
- 5371.5 kHz USB
- 5403.5 kHz USB
8Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1A07 The 60 meter band is the only amateur band
where only the transmission on specific channels
rather than a range of frequencies is permitted.
9Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1A08Upper sideband SSB is the only emission
permitted to be transmitted on the 60 meter band
by an amateur station. - E1A13When a US-registered vessel is in
international waters, any amateur license or
reciprocal permit for an alien amateur licensee
with an FCC-issued license or permit is allowed
to transmit amateur communications from an
on-board amateur transmitter. - E1A12If an amateur station is installed on board
a ship or aircraft, its operation must be
approved by the master of the ship or the pilot
in command of the aircraft before the station is
operated.
10Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1A05 The only amateur band that does not permit
the transmission of phone or image emissions is
30 meters - The 30 meter band is restricted to RTTY and data
transmission only. - E1B03 Within a distance of 1 mile an amateur
station must protect an FCC monitoring facility
from harmful interference. - E1F08 The National Radio Quiet Zone is an area
surrounding the National Radio Astronomy
observatory. - The National Radio Quiet Zone (NRQZ) was
established by the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) in 1958 to minimize possible
harmful interference to the National Radio
Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in Green Bank, WV
and the radio receiving facilities for the United
States Navy in Sugar Grove, WV.
11Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1B02 An amateur station apparatus or antenna
structure may be restricted if the location is
significant to our environment, American history,
architecture, or culture. - E1B04 An Environmental Assessment must be
submitted to the FCC before placing an amateur
station within an officially designated
wilderness area or wildlife preserve, or an area
listed in the National Register of Historical
Places.
12Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
E1F02 The CEPT operating arrangements allows an
FCC-licensed US citizen to operate in many
European countries, and alien amateurs from many
European countries to operate in the US. CEPT
is the European Conference of Post and
Telecommunications Administration E1F03
The IARP agreement allows an FCC-licensed US
citizen and many Central and South American
amateur operators to operate in each others
countries.
IARP is an acronym for International Amateur
Radio Permit. The ARRL has issued the
International Amateur Radio Permit (IARP) that
allows US amateurs to operate from Argentina,
Brazil, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela without
having to obtain a special license (the US and
Canada also are CITEL signatories). The IARP is
valid in any country that is a signatory to the
CITEL Amateur Convention.
13Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1F16 Communications incidental to the purpose
of the amateur service and remarks of a personal
nature may be transmitted to amateur stations in
foreign countries. - E1F06 The A line is a line roughly parallel to
and approx. 50 miles south of the US-Canadian
border. - E1F07 Amateur stations may not transmit on the
420 - 430 MHz frequency segments if they are
located north of Line A.
14Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1B05 An amateur station antenna structure not
close to a public use airport, unless the FAA is
notified and it is registered with the FCC,
cannot be higher than 200 feet above ground level
at its site.
15Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
Distances from runway and height permitted. 200
feet maximum is the only info needed.
16Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1B06If you are installing an amateur station
antenna at a site within 20,000 feet of a public
use airport you may have to notify the Federal
Aviation Administration and register it with the
FCC. - E1B07Before erecting an amateur station antenna
located at or near a public use airport the FAA
must be notified and it must be registered with
the FCC if the antenna would exceed a certain
height depending upon the antennas distance from
the nearest active runway. - E1F10An amateur station may send a message to a
business when neither the amateur nor his or her
employer has a pecuniary interest in the
communications. - E1F11Amateur-operator-to-amateur-operator
communications transmitted for hire or material
compensation are prohibited, except as otherwise
provided in the FCC rules.
17Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1F09Under no circumstances may the control
operator of a repeater accept payment for
providing communication services to another
party. - E1A10If a station in a message forwarding system
inadvertently forwards a message that is in
violation of FCC rules, the control operator of
the originating station is primarily accountable
for the rules violation. - E1A11The first action you should take if your
digital message forwarding station inadvertently
forwards a communication that violates FCC rules
is to discontinue forwarding the communication as
soon as you become aware of it.
18Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1C07Local control means direct manipulation of
the transmitter by a control operator. - E1C01 A remotely controlled station is a station
controlled indirectly through a control link. - E1C08The maximum permissible duration of a
remotely controlled stations transmissions if
its control link malfunctions is 3 minutes.
Most control link frequencies are found on UHF
420-430 MHz or up on 1.2 GHz. Control link is
the key for remote control of an amateur station
or repeater.
19Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1C06When operating remotely controlled amateur
stations, a control operator must be present at
the control point. - E1C02Automatic control of a station is the use
of devices and procedures for control so that the
control operator does not have to be present at a
control point. - E1C03Control operator responsibilities of a
station under automatic control differ from one
under local control in that under automatic
control the control operator is not required to
be present at the control point. - E1C10Only amateur auxiliary, repeater or space
stations may automatically retransmit the radio
signals of other amateur stations.
An example of an auxiliary relay station would be
a mobile rig configured to be a cross band
repeater.
20Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1C09 Frequencies from 29.500 - 29.700 MHz are
available for automatically controlled
ground-station repeater operation. - Repeater operation on HF is limited only to the
top of the 10 meter band, between 29.5 MHz to
29.7 MHz. No other HF frequency (3-30MHz) bands
permit repeater operation. - E1F15 Technician, General, Advanced or Extra
Class Amateur operators may be the control
operator of an auxiliary station. - Auxiliary stations transmit communications point
to point within a system of cooperating stations.
An example would be the Washington State
Evergreen Inter-Tie System that links stations
across the northwest. - Any amateur radio operator, EXCEPT NOVICE CLASS,
may set up an auxiliary station and be the
control operator of that station.
21Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1F17The FCC can issue a "Special Temporary
Authority" (STA) to an amateur station to provide
for experimental amateur communications. - E1B09The Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service
(RACES) is a radio service of amateur stations
for civil defense communications during periods
of local, regional, or national civil
emergencies. - E1B10Any FCC-licensed amateur station certified
by the responsible civil defense organization for
the area served may operate amateur stations
under RACES.
22Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1B11 All amateur service frequencies otherwise
authorized to the control operator are normally
authorized to any FCC licensed amateur station
participating in RACES. - You do NOT gain any out-of-band privileges as a
RACES operator. - E1B13 Communications permissible in RACES
include authorized civil defense emergency
communications affecting the immediate safety of
life and property. - E1B12 Specific amateur service frequency
segments authorized in FCC Part 214 are
authorized to an amateur station participating in
RACES during a period when the President's War
Emergency Powers are in force. - If a war should break out, RACES operators may
be authorized specific segments in the amateur
service MF, HF, VHF, and UHF bands. -
23Amateur Radio Extra Class Rules Regs
- E1E04 The Volunteer Examiner Coordinator (VEC)
is an organization that has entered into an
agreement with the FCC to coordinate amateur
operator license exams. - E1E03 All of the VECs are responsible for
maintaining the question pools from which all
amateur license examination questions must be
taken. - E1E02 The questions for all written US amateur
license examinations are listed in the
VEC-maintained question pool. - E1E05 A VE (Volunteer Examiner) is an amateur
operator who is approved by a VEC to administer
amateur operator license examinations.
24Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1E08 The Volunteer Examiner accreditation
process is the procedure by which a VEC confirms
that the VE applicant meets FCC requirements to
serve as an examiner. - E1E07 Persons seeking to become VEs who have
ever had an amateur operator or amateur station
license suspended or revoked cannot be
accredited. - E1E20 You must be a minimum of 18 years of age
to be a volunteer examiner.
25Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1E06 A VE team is a group of at least three VEs
who administer examinations for an amateur
operator license. - E1E01 The minimum number of qualified VEs
required to administer an Element 4 amateur
operator license examination is three. - E1E12 A VE may not administer an examination to
their close relatives as listed in the FCC rules.
26Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1E10Each administering VE is responsible for
the proper conduct and necessary supervision
during an amateur operator license examination
session. - E1E09All of the administering VEs must be
present be and located where they can observe the
examinees throughout the entire examination
session. - E1E14The VE team must collect and immediately
grade the examinees test papers once they have
finished the examination.
27Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1E15 If an examinee scores a passing grade on
all examination elements needed for an upgrade or
new license a minimum of three attending VEs must
certify that the examinee is qualified for the
license grant and that they have complied with
the VE requirements.
28Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1E16 If the examinee does not pass the exam the
VE team will return the application document to
the examinee. - E1E11 If a candidate fails to comply with the
examiners instructions during an amateur
operator license examination, the examiner should
immediately terminate the candidates
examination. - E1E18 Preparing, processing, administering and
coordinating an examination are types of
out-of-pocket expenses that VEs and VECs can be
reimbursed.
29Amateur Radio Extra ClassRules Regs
- E1E19 The VE team and VEC may accept
reimbursement for preparing, processing,
administering and coordinating an examination and
actual out-of-pocket expenses. - E1E17 Failure to appear for re-administration of
an examination when so directed by the FCC will
cause the licensee's license to be cancelled. - E1E13 The penalty for a VE who fraudulently
administers or certifies an examination is the
revocation of the VEs amateur station license
grant and the suspension of the VEs amateur
operator license grant.
30Element 4 Extra Class Question Pool Rules
Regs
Valid July 1, 2008 Through June 30, 2012
31E1A01 When using a transceiver that displays the
carrier frequency of phone signals, which of the
following displayed frequencies will result in a
normal USB emission being within the band?
- The exact upper band edge
- 300 Hz below the upper band edge
- 1 kHz below the upper band edge
- 3 kHz below the upper band edge
32E1A03 With your transceiver displaying the
carrier frequency of phone signals, you hear a DX
station's CQ on 14.349 MHz USB. Is it legal to
return the call using upper sideband on the same
frequency?
- Yes, because the DX station initiated the contact
- Yes, because the displayed frequency is within
the 20 meter band - No, my sidebands will extend beyond the band edge
- No, USA stations are not permitted to use phone
emissions above 14.340 MHz
33E1A02 When using a transceiver that displays the
carrier frequency of phone signals, which of the
following displayed frequencies will result in a
normal LSB emission being within the band?
- The exact lower band edge
- 300 Hz above the lower band edge
- 1 kHz above the lower band edge
- 3 kHz above the lower band edge
34E1A04 With your transceiver displaying the
carrier frequency of phone signals, you hear a DX
station's CQ on 3.601 MHz LSB. Is it legal to
return the call using lower sideband on the same
frequency?
- Yes, because the DX station initiated the contact
- Yes, because the displayed frequency is within
the 75 meter phone band segment - No, my sidebands will extend beyond the edge of
the phone band segment - No, USA stations are not permitted to use phone
emissions below 3.610 MHz
35E1A09 Which frequency bands contain at least one
segment authorized only to control operators
holding an Amateur Extra Class operator license?
- 80/75, 40, 20 and 15 meters
- 80/75, 40, 20 and 10 meters
- 80/75, 40, 30 and 10 meters
- 160, 80/75, 40 and 20 meters
36E1A06 What is the maximum power output permitted
on the 60 meter band?
- 50 watts PEP effective radiated power relative to
an isotropic radiator - 50 watts PEP effective radiated power relative to
a dipole - 100 watts PEP effective radiated power relative
to an isotropic radiator - 100 watts PEP effective radiated power relative
to a dipole
37E1A07 What is the only amateur band where
transmission on specific channels rather than a
range of frequencies is permitted?
- 12 meter band
- 17 meter band
- 30 meter band
- 60 meter band
38E1A08 What is the only emission type permitted
to be transmitted on the 60 meter band by an
amateur station?
- CW
- RTTY Frequency shift keying
- Single sideband, upper sideband only
- Single sideband, lower sideband only
39E1A13 When a US-registered vessel is in
international waters, what type of FCC-issued
license or permit is required to transmit amateur
communications from an on-board amateur
transmitter?
- Any amateur license with an FCC Marine or
Aircraft endorsement - Any amateur license or reciprocal permit for
alien amateur licensee - Only General class or higher amateur licenses
- An unrestricted Radiotelephone Operator Permit
40E1A12 If an amateur station is installed on
board a ship or aircraft, what condition must be
met before the station is operated?
- Its operation must be approved by the master of
the ship or the pilot in command of the aircraft - The amateur station operator must agree to not
transmit when the main ship or aircraft radios
are in use - It must have a power supply that is completely
independent of the main ship or aircraft power
supply - Its operator must have an FCC Marine or Aircraft
endorsement on his or her amateur license
41E1A05 Which is the only amateur band that does
not permit the transmission of phone or image
emissions?
- 160 meters
- 60 meters
- 30 meters
- 17 meters
42E1B03 Within what distance must an amateur
station protect an FCC monitoring facility from
harmful interference?
- 1 mile
- 3 miles
- 10 miles
- 30 miles
43E1F08 What is the National Radio Quiet Zone?
- An area in Puerto Rico surrounding the Arecibo
Radio Telescope - An area in New Mexico surrounding the White Sands
Test Area - An area surrounding the National Radio Astronomy
Observatory - An area in Florida surrounding Cape Canaveral
44E1B02 Which of the following factors might cause
the physical location of an amateur station
apparatus or antenna structure to be restricted?
- The location is in or near an area of political
conflict, military maneuvers or major
construction - The location's geographical or horticultural
importance - The location is in an ITU zone designated for
coordination with one or more foreign governments - The location is significant to our environment,
American history, architecture, or culture.
45E1B04 What must be done before placing an
amateur station within an officially designated
wilderness area or wildlife preserve, or an area
listed in the National Register of Historical
Places?
- A proposal must be submitted to the National Park
Service - A letter of intent must be filed with the
National Audubon Society - An Environmental Assessment must be submitted to
the FCC - A form FSD-15 must be submitted to the Department
of the Interior
46E1F02 Which of the following operating
arrangements allows an FCC-licensed US citizen to
operate in many European countries, and alien
amateurs from many European countries to operate
in the US?
- CEPT agreement
- IARP agreement
- ITU reciprocal license
- All of these choices are correct
47E1F03 Which of the following operating
arrangements allow an FCC-licensed US citizen and
many Central and South American amateur operators
to operate in each others countries?
- CEPT agreement
- IARP agreement
- ITU agreement
- All of these choices are correct
48E1F16 What types of communications may be
transmitted to amateur stations in foreign
countries?
- Business-related messages
- Automatic retransmissions of any amateur
communications - Communications incidental to the purpose of the
amateur service and remarks of a personal nature - All of these choices are correct
49E1F06 Which of the following geographic
descriptions approximately describes "Line A"?
- A line roughly parallel to and south of the
US-Canadian border - A line roughly parallel to and west of the US
Atlantic coastline - A line roughly parallel to and north of the
US-Mexican border and Gulf coastline - A line roughly parallel to and east of the US
Pacific coastline
50E1F07 Amateur stations may not transmit in which
of the following frequency segments if they are
located north of Line A?
- 440 450 MHz
- 53 54 MHz
- 222 223 MHz
- 420 430 MHz
51E1B05 What height restrictions apply to an
amateur station antenna structure not close to a
public use airport unless the FAA is notified and
it is registered with the FCC?
- It must not extend more than 300 feet above
average height of terrain surrounding the site - It must be no higher than 200 feet above ground
level at its site - There are no height restrictions because the
structure obviously would not be a hazard to
aircraft in flight - It must not extend more than 100 feet above sea
level or the rim of the nearest valley or canyon
52E1B06 Which of the following additional rules
apply if you are installing an amateur station
antenna at a site within 20,000 feet of a public
use airport?
- You may have to notify the Federal Aviation
Administration and register it with the FCC - No special rules apply if your antenna structure
will be less than 300 feet in height - You must file an Environmental Impact Statement
with the EPA before construction begins - You must obtain a construction permit from the
airport zoning authority
53E1B07 Whose approval is required before erecting
an amateur station antenna located at or near a
public use airport if the antenna would exceed a
certain height depending upon the antennas
distance from the nearest active runway?
- The FAA must be notified and it must be
registered with the FCC - Approval must be obtained from the airport
manager - Approval must be obtained from the local zoning
authorities - The FAA must approve any antenna structure that
is higher than 20 feet
54E1F10 When may an amateur station send a message
to a business?
- When the total money involved does not exceed 25
- When the control operator is employed by the FCC
or another government agency - When transmitting international third-party
communications - When neither the amateur nor his or her employer
has a pecuniary interest in the communications
55E1F11 Which of the following types of
amateur-operator-to-amateur-operator
communications are prohibited?
- Communications transmitted for hire or material
compensation, except as otherwise provided in the
rules - Communications that have a political content,
except as allowed by the Fairness Doctrine - Communications that have a religious content
- Communications in a language other than English
56E1F09 When may the control operator of a repeater
accept payment for providing communication
services to another party?
- When the repeater is operating under portable
power - When the repeater is operating under local
control - During Red Cross or other emergency service
drills - Under no circumstances
57E1A10 If a station in a message forwarding system
inadvertently forwards a message that is in
violation of FCC rules, who is primarily
accountable for the rules violation?
- The control operator of the packet bulletin board
station - The control operator of the originating station
- The control operators of all the stations in the
system - The control operators of all the stations in the
system not authenticating the source from which
they accept communications
58E1A11 What is the first action you should take
if your digital message forwarding station
inadvertently forwards a communication that
violates FCC rules?
- Discontinue forwarding the communication as soon
as you become aware of it - Notify the originating station that the
communication does not comply with FCC rules - Notify the nearest FCC Field Engineers office
- Discontinue forwarding all messages
59E1C07 What is meant by local control?
- Controlling a station through a local auxiliary
link - Automatically manipulating local station controls
- Direct manipulation of the transmitter by a
control operator - Controlling a repeater using a portable handheld
transceiver
60E1C01 What is a remotely controlled station?
- A station operated away from its regular home
location - A station controlled by someone other than the
licensee - A station operating under automatic control
- A station controlled indirectly through a control
link
61E1C08 What is the maximum permissible duration
of a remotely controlled stations transmissions
if its control link malfunctions?
- 30 seconds
- 3 minutes
- 5 minutes
- 10 minutes
62E1C06 Which of the following statements
concerning remotely controlled amateur stations
is true?
- Only Extra Class operators may be the control
operator of a remote station - A control operator need not be present at the
control point - A control operator must be present at the control
point - Repeater and auxiliary stations may not be
remotely controlled
63E1C02 What is meant by automatic control of a
station?
- The use of devices and procedures for control so
that the control operator does not have to be
present at a control point - A station operating with its output power
controlled automatically - Remotely controlling a stations antenna pattern
through a directional control link - The use of a control link between a control point
and a locally controlled station
64E1C03 How do the control operator
responsibilities of a station under automatic
control differ from one under local control?
- Under local control there is no control operator
- Under automatic control the control operator is
not required to be present at the control point - Under automatic control there is no control
operator - Under local control a control operator is not
required to be present at a control point
65E1C10 What types of amateur stations may
automatically retransmit the radio signals of
other amateur stations?
- Only beacon, repeater or space stations
- Only auxiliary, repeater or space stations
- Only earth stations, repeater stations or model
crafts - Only auxiliary, beacon or space stations
66E1C09 Which of these frequencies are available
for automatically controlled ground-station
repeater operation?
- 18.100 18.168 MHz
- 24.940 24.990 MHz
- 10.100 10.150 MHz
- 29.500 29.700 MHz
67E1F15 Who may be the control operator of an
auxiliary station?
- Any licensed amateur operator
- Only Technician, General, Advanced or Amateur
Extra Class operators - Only General, Advanced or Amateur Extra Class
operators - Only Amateur Extra Class operators
68E1F17 Under what circumstances might the FCC
issue a "Special Temporary Authority" (STA) to an
amateur station?
- To provide for experimental amateur
communications - To allow regular operation on Land Mobile
channels - To provide additional spectrum for personal use
- To provide temporary operation while awaiting
normal licensing
69E1B09 What is the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency
Service (RACES)?
- A radio service using amateur service frequencies
on a regular basis for communications that can
reasonably be furnished through other radio
services - A radio service of amateur stations for civil
defense communications during periods of local,
regional, or national civil emergencies - A radio service using amateur service frequencies
for broadcasting to the public during periods of
local, regional or national civil emergencies - A radio service using local government
frequencies by Amateur Radio operators for civil
emergency communications
70E1B10 Which amateur stations may be operated in
RACES?
- Only those club stations licensed to Amateur
Extra class operators - Any FCC-licensed amateur station except a
Technician class operator's station - Any FCC-licensed amateur station certified by the
responsible civil defense organization for the
area served - Any FCC-licensed amateur station participating in
the Military Affiliate Radio System (MARS)
71E1B11 What frequencies are normally authorized
to an amateur station participating in RACES?
- All amateur service frequencies otherwise
authorized to the control operator - Specific segments in the amateur service MF, HF,
VHF and UHF bands - Specific local government channels
- Military Affiliate Radio System (MARS) channels
72E1B13 What communications are permissible in
RACES?
- Any type of communications when there is no
emergency - Any Amateur Radio Emergency Service
communications - Authorized civil defense emergency communications
affecting the immediate safety of life and
property - National defense and security communications
authorized by the President
73E1B12 What are the frequencies authorized to an
amateur station participating in RACES during a
period when the President's War Emergency Powers
are in force?
- All frequencies in the amateur service authorized
to the control operator - Specific amateur service frequency segments
authorized in FCC Part 214 - Specific local government channels
- Military Affiliate Radio System (MARS) channels
74E1E04 What is a Volunteer Examiner Coordinator?
- A person who has volunteered to administer
amateur operator license examinations - A person who has volunteered to prepare amateur
operator license examinations - An organization that has entered into an
agreement with the FCC to coordinate amateur
operator license examinations - The person that has entered into an agreement
with the FCC to be the VE session manager
75E1E03 Who is responsible for maintaining the
question pools from which all amateur license
examination questions must be taken?
- All of the VECs
- The VE team
- The VE question pool team
- The FCCs Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
76E1E02 Where are the questions for all written US
amateur license examinations listed?
- In FCC Part 97
- In an FCC-maintained question pool
- In the VEC-maintained question pool
- In the appropriate FCC Report and Order
77E1E05 What is a VE?
- An amateur operator who is approved by three or
more fellow volunteer examiners to administer
amateur license examinations - An amateur operator who is approved by a VEC to
administer amateur operator license examinations - An amateur operator who administers amateur
license examinations for a fee - An amateur operator who is approved by an FCC
staff member to administer amateur operator
license examinations
78E1E08 Which of the following best describes the
Volunteer Examiner accreditation process?
- Each General, Advanced and Amateur Extra Class
operator is automatically accredited as a VE when
the license is granted - The amateur operator applying must pass a VE
examination administered by the FCC Enforcement
Bureau - The prospective VE obtains accreditation from a
VE team - The procedure by which a VEC confirms that the VE
applicant meets FCC requirements to serve as an
examiner
79E1E07 Which of the following persons seeking to
become VEs cannot be accredited?
- Persons holding less than an Advanced Class
operator license - Persons less than 21 years of age
- Persons who have ever had an amateur operator or
amateur station license suspended or revoked - Persons who are employees of the federal
government
80E1E20 What is the minimum age to be a volunteer
examiner?
- 13 years old
- 16 years old
- 18 years old
- 21 years old
81E1E06 What is a VE team?
- A group of at least three VEs who administer
examinations for an amateur operator license - The VEC staff
- One or two VEs who administer examinations for an
amateur operator license - A group of FCC Volunteer Enforcers who
investigate Amateur Rules violations
82E1E01 What is the minimum number of qualified
VEs required to administer an Element 4 amateur
operator license examination?
- 5
- 2
- 4
- 3
83E1E12 To which of the following examinees may a
VE not administer an examination?
- Employees of the VE
- Friends of the VE
- The VEs close relatives as listed in the FCC
rules - All these answers are correct
84E1E10 Who is responsible for the proper conduct
and necessary supervision during an amateur
operator license examination session?
- The VEC coordinating the session
- The FCC
- Each administering VE
- The VE session manager
85E1E09 Where must the VE team be while
administering an examination?
- All of the administering VEs must be present
where they can observe the examinees throughout
the entire examination - The VEs must leave the room after handing out the
exam(s) to allow the examinees to concentrate on
the exam material - The VEs may be elsewhere provided at least one VE
is present and is observing the examinees
throughout the entire examination - The VEs may be anywhere as long as they each
certify in writing that examination was
administered properly
86E1E14 What must the VE team do with the
examinees test papers once they have finished
the examination?
- The VE team must collect and send them to the
NCVEC - The VE team must collect and send them to the
coordinating VEC for grading - The VE team must collect and grade them
immediately - The VE team must collect and send them to the FCC
for grading
87E1E15 What must the VE team do if an examinee
scores a passing grade on all examination
elements needed for an upgrade or new license?
- Photocopy all examination documents and forwards
them to the FCC for processing - Three VEs must certify that the examinee is
qualified for the license grant and that they
have complied with the VE requirements - Issue the examinee the new or upgrade license
- All these answers are correct
88E1E16 What must the VE team do with the
application form if the examinee does not pass
the exam?
- Return the application document to the examinee
- Maintain the application form with the VECs
records - Send it to the FCC
- Destroy the application form
89E1E11 What should a VE do if a candidate fails
to comply with the examiners instructions during
an amateur operator license examination?
- Warn the candidate that continued failure to
comply will result in termination of the
examination - Immediately terminate the candidates examination
- Allow the candidate to complete the examination,
but invalidate the results - Immediately terminate everyones examination and
close the session
90E1E18 For which types of out-of-pocket expenses
may VEs and VECs be reimbursed?
- Preparing, processing, administering and
coordinating an examination for an amateur radio
license - Teaching an amateur operator license examination
preparation course - No expenses are authorized for reimbursement
- Providing amateur operator license examination
preparation training materials
91E1E19 How much reimbursement may the VE team and
VEC accept for preparing, processing,
administering and coordinating an examination?
- Actual out-of-pocket expenses
- The national minimum hourly wage for time spent
providing examination services - Up to the maximum fee per examinee announced by
the FCC annually - As much as the examinee is willing to donate
92E1E17 What are the consequences of failing to
appear for re-administration of an examination
when so directed by the FCC?
- The licensee's license will be cancelled
- The person may be fined or imprisoned
- The licensee is disqualified from any future
examination for an amateur operator license grant - All of the above
93E1E13 What may be the penalty for a VE who
fraudulently administers or certifies an
examination?
- Revocation of the VEs amateur station license
grant and the suspension of the VEs amateur
operator license grant - A fine of up to 1000 per occurrence
- A sentence of up to one year in prison
- All of these choices are correct