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KC4L is and was assigned. It's been my callsign since it was issued, probably in 1979 (can't remember exactly, other than I got my Extra ticket in Fall 1978).
I am not affiliated with the show and have no idea why they used that sign. It was a real surprise when I watched the episode. On Friday, September 2, 2016 at 9:16:09 AM UTC-7, Patty Winter wrote: In article , Paul W. Schleck wrote: In Patty Winter writes: The FCC database says it is: Thanks for catching that, Patty. I used a secondary source, QRZ, which gives a cryptic, "This call sign record is unmanaged. No additional information is available." if you're not logged in. Log in, and you can see the holder. I often see people referring to doing a "QRZ.com lookup," and that site is indeed handy if you want to see what additional information people have provided about themselves (shack photos, etc.), but for simple callsign lookups, I use the same site I've used for decades--now available on the World Wide Web, of course: http://callsign.ualr.edu/callsign.shtml Also still available via telnet: telnet://callsign.ualr.edu:2000 It's a great site because you can search not only by callsign (or partial callsign if you don't know the whole thing), but also by name/partial name, ZIP code, etc. Much more flexible than either the QRZ or FCC front ends to the FCC database. The link I posted yesterday was to the FCC database, but my initial search when I watched the show a couple of days ago was on UALR. I use that site very frequently; in fact, I keep a tab open with it. Patty |
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