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#1
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The FCC has granted a license for a new, common carrier, class 1A CW coast
station, callsign KSM. This is the first time in many years that the FCC has granted a new license for this service. The hours of operation for the station have not yet been determined, but the call is KSM and frequencies of operation will be 426, 500, 6474 and 12993 kHz with an authorized output of 5kW on all frequencies. M.A.N. -- "I have never made but one prayer to God, a very short one: "O Lord, make my enemies ridiculous." And God granted it." - Voltaire |
#2
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On Wed, 20 Apr 2005 04:48:20 GMT, Mel A. Nomah wrote:
The FCC has granted a license for a new, common carrier, class 1A CW coast station, callsign KSM. This is the first time in many years that the FCC has granted a new license for this service. The hours of operation for the station have not yet been determined, but the call is KSM and frequencies of operation will be 426, 500, 6474 and 12993 kHz with an authorized output of 5kW on all frequencies. Note that the licensee is the Maritime Radio Historical Society, which has been restoring the original Morse stations on several WW-II-era vessels used as floating museums in the San Francisco Bay and other West Coast areas and has made restoration of the coast station (site and equipment owned by the Golden Gate National Seashore) a prime goal in the last five years or so. The site of KSM (and its equipment) is the old RCA marine coast station KPH, transmitters in Bolinas, CA and receivers/control point in Point Reyes, CA. The same station is used for the annual "KPH" fire-up on July 12, the anniversary of the last commercial Morse traffic in the US, and for frequent operation of the power-lowered transmitters on the ham bands as K6KPH. Everyone concerned is a volunteer. I've done some work with them but I'm too far from San Francisco to be one of the "regulars". -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
#3
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"Phil Kane" wrote in
ganews.com: On Wed, 20 Apr 2005 04:48:20 GMT, Mel A. Nomah wrote: The FCC has granted a license for a new, common carrier, class 1A CW coast station, callsign KSM. This is the first time in many years that the FCC has granted a new license for this service. The hours of operation for the station have not yet been determined, but the call is KSM and frequencies of operation will be 426, 500, 6474 and 12993 kHz with an authorized output of 5kW on all frequencies. Note that the licensee is the Maritime Radio Historical Society, which has been restoring the original Morse stations on several WW-II-era vessels used as floating museums in the San Francisco Bay and other West Coast areas and has made restoration of the coast station (site and equipment owned by the Golden Gate National Seashore) a prime goal in the last five years or so. The site of KSM (and its equipment) is the old RCA marine coast station KPH, transmitters in Bolinas, CA and receivers/control point in Point Reyes, CA. The same station is used for the annual "KPH" fire-up on July 12, the anniversary of the last commercial Morse traffic in the US, and for frequent operation of the power-lowered transmitters on the ham bands as K6KPH. Everyone concerned is a volunteer. I've done some work with them but I'm too far from San Francisco to be one of the "regulars". -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane Methinks the Op wanted us to think that the FCC was bringing back CW in the maritime service! Well spotted, Phil. |
#4
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![]() Alun L. Palmer wrote: "Phil Kane" wrote in ganews.com: On Wed, 20 Apr 2005 04:48:20 GMT, Mel A. Nomah wrote: The FCC has granted a license for a new, common carrier, class 1A CW coast station, callsign KSM. This is the first time in many years that the FCC has granted a new license for this service. The hours of operation for the station have not yet been determined, but the call is KSM and frequencies of operation will be 426, 500, 6474 and 12993 kHz with an authorized output of 5kW on all frequencies. Note that the licensee is the Maritime Radio Historical Society, which has been restoring the original Morse stations on several WW-II-era vessels used as floating museums in the San Francisco Bay and other West Coast areas and has made restoration of the coast station (site and equipment owned by the Golden Gate National Seashore) a prime goal in the last five years or so. The site of KSM (and its equipment) is the old RCA marine coast station KPH, transmitters in Bolinas, CA and receivers/control point in Point Reyes, CA. The same station is used for the annual "KPH" fire-up on July 12, the anniversary of the last commercial Morse traffic in the US, and for frequent operation of the power-lowered transmitters on the ham bands as K6KPH. Everyone concerned is a volunteer. I've done some work with them but I'm too far from San Francisco to be one of the "regulars". -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane Methinks the Op wanted us to think that the FCC was bringing back CW in the maritime service! Well spotted, Phil. That's so sad. |
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