On Quora, a website where people ask (and answer) all kinds of interesting (and dumb) questions, someone asked, “Why does a person still need a ham radio license?” There were the usual answers:
- Without a license, amateur radio would turn into the morass that is CB.
- Ensures that the operators have at least some basic understanding of radio and the rules and regulations they need to follow.
- Provides a way to more easily contact radio amateurs should they be causing interference to other radio services.
My answer was a bit different. I knew that the reason that amateur radio operators must pass an examination to be licensed is that it’s required by international treaties, but I didn’t know the specifics. So, I did a little Googling.
I found out that Article 25.6 2) of the ITU Radio Regulations states:
Administrations shall verify the operational and technical qualifications of any person wishing to operate an amateur station. Guidance for standards of competence may be found in the most recent version of Recommendation ITU-R M.1544. (WRC-03)
ITU-R M.1544 goes on to state:
The ITU Radiocommunication Assembly recommends:
- that administrations take such measures as they judge necessary to verify the operational and technical qualifications of any person wishing to operate an amateur station;
- That any person seeking a licence to operate an amateur station should demonstrate theoretical knowledge of:
- Radio Regulations
- international
- domestic
- Methods of radiocommunication
- radiotelephony
- radiotelegraphy
- data and image
- Radio system theory
- transmitters
- receivers
- antennas and propagation
- measurements
- Radio emission safety
- Electromagnetic compatibility
- Avoidance and resolution of radio frequency interference.
- Radio Regulations
File this under the category “you learn something new every day.”
Dave New, N8SBE says
Yup. Please remember that there is no such thing as a “dumb question”. You will likely make and keep more friends and admirers that way.
Another good reason is that you still want to be able to be frequency agile from your front panel, right? Commercial radios are operated by unskilled (in the radio art) personnel, and so that is why Part 95 radios, unless they’ve been modified specifically for amateur use after the fact, cannot be programmed from the front panel.