• 3rd Party Traffic (2)

    From Daryl Stout@316:36/20 to All on Fri Mar 19 00:04:49 2021

    Operation in the US by Foreign Amateurs

    Foreign amateurs who wish to operate in the US and are not US licensees
    or citizens may do so in one of three ways:

    1) If the country of which you are a citizen and an amateur licensee has entered into a multilateral operating agreement with the US, CEPT or
    IARP, no additional permit is required -- simply bring your CEPT or IARP documentation when you visit the US. Identify your station by the US call district identifier, such as W3/G1ABC. Use "W" and the number of the FCC
    call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and
    your home call sign (plus any other CEPT or IARP requirements). Amateurs
    must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed. This is
    intended for short visits.

    2) Or, if your country of citizenship and amateur license share a
    bilateral Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, the FCC allows
    foreign amateurs to operate with no permit. Simply carry your foreign
    amateur license and proof of your citizenship in that country. Identify
    using "W" and the number of the FCC call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and your non-US call sign, e.g. W3/G1ABC). Amateurs must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed.
    Check these links for a list of the US call districts shown graphically
    or for a text listing.

    3) If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in
    lists of countries that have such agreements with the US, then no
    operating agreement is in effect between the US and that country--and
    operation is not possible in the US based on your home license. Should
    you wish to seek such an agreement between your home country and the US
    for the future, you may want to contact your national Amateur Radio
    society to request that they contact the responsible government official
    to request such an agreement with the US. US citizenship is not required
    to obtain a US license, but a US mailing address is. Once a person is
    prepared to take the US license examinations, licensing is possible in
    as little as a few days to a week. If a US license is held, no other
    reciprocal operating authority may be used for operation in the US.

    Check the bulletin in this area for the list of countries which have
    signed a reciprocal operating agreement with the US. If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in the list above, see if
    it is possible to obtain a CEPT license or an IARP from your home
    country. If none these are possible, then no reciprocal operating
    authority is in effect between the US and that country and operation
    is not possible in the US.

    Foreign amateurs may, however, obtain a US license by taking and passing
    the appropriate license. To find information on obtaining a US license,
    see http://www.arrl.org/foreign-licenses-operating-in-u-s . A US mailing address is required for application purposes. If a US license of any class
    is held by the foreign amateur, it supercedes any other operating authority when operating in the US. In that case, the US license MUST be used in place
    of any other operating authority. If the country holds no reciprocal
    operating agreement with the US and does not participate in CEPT or IARP,
    a US license is the only option. You can NOT ask a licensed U.S. amateur
    radio operator to use their address...you MUST provide your own.

    Operation Outside the US by FCC-Licensed Amateurs

    US amateurs and citizens may operate under a multilateral agreement
    (CEPT or IARP) very easily. Countries which have entered into a
    Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, but are not part of CEPT
    or IARP arrangements require that a permit be obtained. Even if a
    reciprocal agreement does not exist, it may still be possible to obtain
    a permit from the foreign government.
    --- SBBSecho 3.13-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (316:36/20)
  • From Daryl Stout@316:36/20 to All on Sat Jun 19 00:03:52 2021

    Operation in the US by Foreign Amateurs

    Foreign amateurs who wish to operate in the US and are not US licensees
    or citizens may do so in one of three ways:

    1) If the country of which you are a citizen and an amateur licensee has entered into a multilateral operating agreement with the US, CEPT or
    IARP, no additional permit is required -- simply bring your CEPT or IARP documentation when you visit the US. Identify your station by the US call district identifier, such as W3/G1ABC. Use "W" and the number of the FCC
    call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and
    your home call sign (plus any other CEPT or IARP requirements). Amateurs
    must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed. This is
    intended for short visits.

    2) Or, if your country of citizenship and amateur license share a
    bilateral Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, the FCC allows
    foreign amateurs to operate with no permit. Simply carry your foreign
    amateur license and proof of your citizenship in that country. Identify
    using "W" and the number of the FCC call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and your non-US call sign, e.g. W3/G1ABC). Amateurs must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed.
    Check these links for a list of the US call districts shown graphically
    or for a text listing.

    3) If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in
    lists of countries that have such agreements with the US, then no
    operating agreement is in effect between the US and that country--and
    operation is not possible in the US based on your home license. Should
    you wish to seek such an agreement between your home country and the US
    for the future, you may want to contact your national Amateur Radio
    society to request that they contact the responsible government official
    to request such an agreement with the US. US citizenship is not required
    to obtain a US license, but a US mailing address is. Once a person is
    prepared to take the US license examinations, licensing is possible in
    as little as a few days to a week. If a US license is held, no other
    reciprocal operating authority may be used for operation in the US.

    Check the bulletin in this area for the list of countries which have
    signed a reciprocal operating agreement with the US. If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in the list above, see if
    it is possible to obtain a CEPT license or an IARP from your home
    country. If none these are possible, then no reciprocal operating
    authority is in effect between the US and that country and operation
    is not possible in the US.

    Foreign amateurs may, however, obtain a US license by taking and passing
    the appropriate license. To find information on obtaining a US license,
    see http://www.arrl.org/foreign-licenses-operating-in-u-s . A US mailing address is required for application purposes. If a US license of any class
    is held by the foreign amateur, it supercedes any other operating authority when operating in the US. In that case, the US license MUST be used in place
    of any other operating authority. If the country holds no reciprocal
    operating agreement with the US and does not participate in CEPT or IARP,
    a US license is the only option. You can NOT ask a licensed U.S. amateur
    radio operator to use their address...you MUST provide your own.

    Operation Outside the US by FCC-Licensed Amateurs

    US amateurs and citizens may operate under a multilateral agreement
    (CEPT or IARP) very easily. Countries which have entered into a
    Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, but are not part of CEPT
    or IARP arrangements require that a permit be obtained. Even if a
    reciprocal agreement does not exist, it may still be possible to obtain
    a permit from the foreign government.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (316:36/20)
  • From Daryl Stout@316:36/20 to All on Sun Sep 19 00:03:57 2021

    Operation in the US by Foreign Amateurs

    Foreign amateurs who wish to operate in the US and are not US licensees
    or citizens may do so in one of three ways:

    1) If the country of which you are a citizen and an amateur licensee has entered into a multilateral operating agreement with the US, CEPT or
    IARP, no additional permit is required -- simply bring your CEPT or IARP documentation when you visit the US. Identify your station by the US call district identifier, such as W3/G1ABC. Use "W" and the number of the FCC
    call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and
    your home call sign (plus any other CEPT or IARP requirements). Amateurs
    must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed. This is
    intended for short visits.

    2) Or, if your country of citizenship and amateur license share a
    bilateral Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, the FCC allows
    foreign amateurs to operate with no permit. Simply carry your foreign
    amateur license and proof of your citizenship in that country. Identify
    using "W" and the number of the FCC call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and your non-US call sign, e.g. W3/G1ABC). Amateurs must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed.
    Check these links for a list of the US call districts shown graphically
    or for a text listing.

    3) If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in
    lists of countries that have such agreements with the US, then no
    operating agreement is in effect between the US and that country--and
    operation is not possible in the US based on your home license. Should
    you wish to seek such an agreement between your home country and the US
    for the future, you may want to contact your national Amateur Radio
    society to request that they contact the responsible government official
    to request such an agreement with the US. US citizenship is not required
    to obtain a US license, but a US mailing address is. Once a person is
    prepared to take the US license examinations, licensing is possible in
    as little as a few days to a week. If a US license is held, no other
    reciprocal operating authority may be used for operation in the US.

    Check the bulletin in this area for the list of countries which have
    signed a reciprocal operating agreement with the US. If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in the list above, see if
    it is possible to obtain a CEPT license or an IARP from your home
    country. If none these are possible, then no reciprocal operating
    authority is in effect between the US and that country and operation
    is not possible in the US.

    Foreign amateurs may, however, obtain a US license by taking and passing
    the appropriate license. To find information on obtaining a US license,
    see http://www.arrl.org/foreign-licenses-operating-in-u-s . A US mailing address is required for application purposes. If a US license of any class
    is held by the foreign amateur, it supercedes any other operating authority when operating in the US. In that case, the US license MUST be used in place
    of any other operating authority. If the country holds no reciprocal
    operating agreement with the US and does not participate in CEPT or IARP,
    a US license is the only option. You can NOT ask a licensed U.S. amateur
    radio operator to use their address...you MUST provide your own.

    Operation Outside the US by FCC-Licensed Amateurs

    US amateurs and citizens may operate under a multilateral agreement
    (CEPT or IARP) very easily. Countries which have entered into a
    Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, but are not part of CEPT
    or IARP arrangements require that a permit be obtained. Even if a
    reciprocal agreement does not exist, it may still be possible to obtain
    a permit from the foreign government.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (316:36/20)
  • From Daryl Stout@316:36/9 to All on Sat Mar 19 00:05:19 2022

    Operation in the US by Foreign Amateurs

    Foreign amateurs who wish to operate in the US and are not US licensees
    or citizens may do so in one of three ways:

    1) If the country of which you are a citizen and an amateur licensee has entered into a multilateral operating agreement with the US, CEPT or
    IARP, no additional permit is required -- simply bring your CEPT or IARP documentation when you visit the US. Identify your station by the US call district identifier, such as W3/G1ABC. Use "W" and the number of the FCC
    call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and
    your home call sign (plus any other CEPT or IARP requirements). Amateurs
    must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed. This is
    intended for short visits.

    2) Or, if your country of citizenship and amateur license share a
    bilateral Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, the FCC allows
    foreign amateurs to operate with no permit. Simply carry your foreign
    amateur license and proof of your citizenship in that country. Identify
    using "W" and the number of the FCC call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and your non-US call sign, e.g. W3/G1ABC). Amateurs must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed.
    Check these links for a list of the US call districts shown graphically
    or for a text listing.

    3) If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in
    lists of countries that have such agreements with the US, then no
    operating agreement is in effect between the US and that country--and
    operation is not possible in the US based on your home license. Should
    you wish to seek such an agreement between your home country and the US
    for the future, you may want to contact your national Amateur Radio
    society to request that they contact the responsible government official
    to request such an agreement with the US. US citizenship is not required
    to obtain a US license, but a US mailing address is. Once a person is
    prepared to take the US license examinations, licensing is possible in
    as little as a few days to a week. If a US license is held, no other
    reciprocal operating authority may be used for operation in the US.

    Check the bulletin in this area for the list of countries which have
    signed a reciprocal operating agreement with the US. If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in the list above, see if
    it is possible to obtain a CEPT license or an IARP from your home
    country. If none these are possible, then no reciprocal operating
    authority is in effect between the US and that country and operation
    is not possible in the US.

    Foreign amateurs may, however, obtain a US license by taking and passing
    the appropriate license. To find information on obtaining a US license,
    see http://www.arrl.org/foreign-licenses-operating-in-u-s . A US mailing address is required for application purposes. If a US license of any class
    is held by the foreign amateur, it supercedes any other operating authority when operating in the US. In that case, the US license MUST be used in place
    of any other operating authority. If the country holds no reciprocal
    operating agreement with the US and does not participate in CEPT or IARP,
    a US license is the only option. You can NOT ask a licensed U.S. amateur
    radio operator to use their address...you MUST provide your own.

    Operation Outside the US by FCC-Licensed Amateurs

    US amateurs and citizens may operate under a multilateral agreement
    (CEPT or IARP) very easily. Countries which have entered into a
    Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, but are not part of CEPT
    or IARP arrangements require that a permit be obtained. Even if a
    reciprocal agreement does not exist, it may still be possible to obtain
    a permit from the foreign government.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (316:36/9)
  • From Daryl Stout@316:36/20 to All on Sun Jun 19 00:14:34 2022

    Operation in the US by Foreign Amateurs

    Foreign amateurs who wish to operate in the US and are not US licensees
    or citizens may do so in one of three ways:

    1) If the country of which you are a citizen and an amateur licensee has entered into a multilateral operating agreement with the US, CEPT or
    IARP, no additional permit is required -- simply bring your CEPT or IARP documentation when you visit the US. Identify your station by the US call district identifier, such as W3/G1ABC. Use "W" and the number of the FCC
    call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and
    your home call sign (plus any other CEPT or IARP requirements). Amateurs
    must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed. This is
    intended for short visits.

    2) Or, if your country of citizenship and amateur license share a
    bilateral Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, the FCC allows
    foreign amateurs to operate with no permit. Simply carry your foreign
    amateur license and proof of your citizenship in that country. Identify
    using "W" and the number of the FCC call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and your non-US call sign, e.g. W3/G1ABC). Amateurs must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed.
    Check these links for a list of the US call districts shown graphically
    or for a text listing.

    3) If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in
    lists of countries that have such agreements with the US, then no
    operating agreement is in effect between the US and that country--and
    operation is not possible in the US based on your home license. Should
    you wish to seek such an agreement between your home country and the US
    for the future, you may want to contact your national Amateur Radio
    society to request that they contact the responsible government official
    to request such an agreement with the US. US citizenship is not required
    to obtain a US license, but a US mailing address is. Once a person is
    prepared to take the US license examinations, licensing is possible in
    as little as a few days to a week. If a US license is held, no other
    reciprocal operating authority may be used for operation in the US.

    Check the bulletin in this area for the list of countries which have
    signed a reciprocal operating agreement with the US. If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in the list above, see if
    it is possible to obtain a CEPT license or an IARP from your home
    country. If none these are possible, then no reciprocal operating
    authority is in effect between the US and that country and operation
    is not possible in the US.

    Foreign amateurs may, however, obtain a US license by taking and passing
    the appropriate license. To find information on obtaining a US license,
    see http://www.arrl.org/foreign-licenses-operating-in-u-s . A US mailing address is required for application purposes. If a US license of any class
    is held by the foreign amateur, it supercedes any other operating authority when operating in the US. In that case, the US license MUST be used in place
    of any other operating authority. If the country holds no reciprocal
    operating agreement with the US and does not participate in CEPT or IARP,
    a US license is the only option. You can NOT ask a licensed U.S. amateur
    radio operator to use their address...you MUST provide your own.

    Operation Outside the US by FCC-Licensed Amateurs

    US amateurs and citizens may operate under a multilateral agreement
    (CEPT or IARP) very easily. Countries which have entered into a
    Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, but are not part of CEPT
    or IARP arrangements require that a permit be obtained. Even if a
    reciprocal agreement does not exist, it may still be possible to obtain
    a permit from the foreign government.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (316:36/20)
  • From Daryl Stout@316:36/20 to All on Mon Dec 19 00:03:48 2022

    Operation in the US by Foreign Amateurs

    Foreign amateurs who wish to operate in the US and are not US licensees
    or citizens may do so in one of three ways:

    1) If the country of which you are a citizen and an amateur licensee has entered into a multilateral operating agreement with the US, CEPT or
    IARP, no additional permit is required -- simply bring your CEPT or IARP documentation when you visit the US. Identify your station by the US call district identifier, such as W3/G1ABC. Use "W" and the number of the FCC
    call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and
    your home call sign (plus any other CEPT or IARP requirements). Amateurs
    must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed. This is
    intended for short visits.

    2) Or, if your country of citizenship and amateur license share a
    bilateral Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, the FCC allows
    foreign amateurs to operate with no permit. Simply carry your foreign
    amateur license and proof of your citizenship in that country. Identify
    using "W" and the number of the FCC call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and your non-US call sign, e.g. W3/G1ABC). Amateurs must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed.
    Check these links for a list of the US call districts shown graphically
    or for a text listing.

    3) If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in
    lists of countries that have such agreements with the US, then no
    operating agreement is in effect between the US and that country--and
    operation is not possible in the US based on your home license. Should
    you wish to seek such an agreement between your home country and the US
    for the future, you may want to contact your national Amateur Radio
    society to request that they contact the responsible government official
    to request such an agreement with the US. US citizenship is not required
    to obtain a US license, but a US mailing address is. Once a person is
    prepared to take the US license examinations, licensing is possible in
    as little as a few days to a week. If a US license is held, no other
    reciprocal operating authority may be used for operation in the US.

    Check the bulletin in this area for the list of countries which have
    signed a reciprocal operating agreement with the US. If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in the list above, see if
    it is possible to obtain a CEPT license or an IARP from your home
    country. If none these are possible, then no reciprocal operating
    authority is in effect between the US and that country and operation
    is not possible in the US.

    Foreign amateurs may, however, obtain a US license by taking and passing
    the appropriate license. To find information on obtaining a US license,
    see http://www.arrl.org/foreign-licenses-operating-in-u-s . A US mailing address is required for application purposes. If a US license of any class
    is held by the foreign amateur, it supercedes any other operating authority when operating in the US. In that case, the US license MUST be used in place
    of any other operating authority. If the country holds no reciprocal
    operating agreement with the US and does not participate in CEPT or IARP,
    a US license is the only option. You can NOT ask a licensed U.S. amateur
    radio operator to use their address...you MUST provide your own.

    Operation Outside the US by FCC-Licensed Amateurs

    US amateurs and citizens may operate under a multilateral agreement
    (CEPT or IARP) very easily. Countries which have entered into a
    Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, but are not part of CEPT
    or IARP arrangements require that a permit be obtained. Even if a
    reciprocal agreement does not exist, it may still be possible to obtain
    a permit from the foreign government.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (316:36/20)
  • From Daryl Stout@316:36/20 to All on Sun Mar 19 00:03:51 2023

    Operation in the US by Foreign Amateurs

    Foreign amateurs who wish to operate in the US and are not US licensees
    or citizens may do so in one of three ways:

    1) If the country of which you are a citizen and an amateur licensee has entered into a multilateral operating agreement with the US, CEPT or
    IARP, no additional permit is required -- simply bring your CEPT or IARP documentation when you visit the US. Identify your station by the US call district identifier, such as W3/G1ABC. Use "W" and the number of the FCC
    call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and
    your home call sign (plus any other CEPT or IARP requirements). Amateurs
    must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed. This is
    intended for short visits.

    2) Or, if your country of citizenship and amateur license share a
    bilateral Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, the FCC allows
    foreign amateurs to operate with no permit. Simply carry your foreign
    amateur license and proof of your citizenship in that country. Identify
    using "W" and the number of the FCC call letter district in which you are operating followed by a slash and your non-US call sign, e.g. W3/G1ABC). Amateurs must be a citizen of the country in which they are licensed.
    Check these links for a list of the US call districts shown graphically
    or for a text listing.

    3) If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in
    lists of countries that have such agreements with the US, then no
    operating agreement is in effect between the US and that country--and
    operation is not possible in the US based on your home license. Should
    you wish to seek such an agreement between your home country and the US
    for the future, you may want to contact your national Amateur Radio
    society to request that they contact the responsible government official
    to request such an agreement with the US. US citizenship is not required
    to obtain a US license, but a US mailing address is. Once a person is
    prepared to take the US license examinations, licensing is possible in
    as little as a few days to a week. If a US license is held, no other
    reciprocal operating authority may be used for operation in the US.

    Check the bulletin in this area for the list of countries which have
    signed a reciprocal operating agreement with the US. If your country of citizenship and amateur license is not named in the list above, see if
    it is possible to obtain a CEPT license or an IARP from your home
    country. If none these are possible, then no reciprocal operating
    authority is in effect between the US and that country and operation
    is not possible in the US.

    Foreign amateurs may, however, obtain a US license by taking and passing
    the appropriate license. To find information on obtaining a US license,
    see http://www.arrl.org/foreign-licenses-operating-in-u-s . A US mailing address is required for application purposes. If a US license of any class
    is held by the foreign amateur, it supercedes any other operating authority when operating in the US. In that case, the US license MUST be used in place
    of any other operating authority. If the country holds no reciprocal
    operating agreement with the US and does not participate in CEPT or IARP,
    a US license is the only option. You can NOT ask a licensed U.S. amateur
    radio operator to use their address...you MUST provide your own.

    Operation Outside the US by FCC-Licensed Amateurs

    US amateurs and citizens may operate under a multilateral agreement
    (CEPT or IARP) very easily. Countries which have entered into a
    Reciprocal Operating Agreement with the US, but are not part of CEPT
    or IARP arrangements require that a permit be obtained. Even if a
    reciprocal agreement does not exist, it may still be possible to obtain
    a permit from the foreign government.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (316:36/20)