United States Licensing: Difference between revisions

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=====Novice and Advanced (deprecated)=====
=====Novice and Advanced (deprecated)=====
Novice and Advanced tests are no longer issued, and have been proceeded by Technician and General.
Novice and Advanced tests are no longer issued, and have been proceeded by Technician and General.
==== Club Callsigns ====
See [[US Club Callsigns]].
==Study Resources==
==Study Resources==
Currently, one of the most popular and most recommended study tools for US licensing is [https://hamstudy.org/ HamStudy]. HamStudy has shown a strong history of keeping up to date with the latest question pools from the FCC as soon as they are released, and has multiple study modes including flashcards, "study mode" (quizzing on individual questions), and full length practice tests.
Currently, one of the most popular and most recommended study tools for US licensing is [https://hamstudy.org/ HamStudy]. HamStudy has shown a strong history of keeping up to date with the latest question pools from the FCC as soon as they are released, and has multiple study modes including flashcards, "study mode" (quizzing on individual questions), and full length practice tests.

Revision as of 22:22, 3 November 2022

So you want to get licensed? Get ready.

In the US, there are currently 3 classes of amateur radio license:

License Classes

The band plan for all US license classes can be found here

Technician Class

Technician Class is the introductory license, with good VHF/UHF priviliges (local communication) and very limited HF priviliges (long range communication).

Technician licensees have full access to the 70cm, 1.25m, 2m, and 6m, bands as well as privileges approaching microwave frequencies in the 23cm and 33cm bands. Techs can also use phone communication modes (SSB, FM) in some portions of the 10m band, and CW (morse code) in some sections of 10m, 15m, 40m, and 80m.

General Class

The General Class license is the next step up from technician, allowing access to most of the allocated HF spectrum for radio amateurs. The test for General requires a more intricate knowledge of how radio communications work, over the legal aspects covered in the tech test.

General licensees are able to do phone, CW, and digital communications across the HF spectrum, with only some small portions left for other licenses.

General class license holders can become a volunteer examiner, and test new hams for a technician license.

Extra Class

Extra Class is the highest license level currently attainable in the US. Extra Class licensees get access to more of the HF spectrum (mostly sections concering CW and voice on 15, 20, 40, and 80 meters). Extras can also act as a volunteer examiner for all 3 license levels, and have access to special vanity callsigns (2x1, 1x2, 2x2).

Novice and Advanced (deprecated)

Novice and Advanced tests are no longer issued, and have been proceeded by Technician and General.

Club Callsigns

See US Club Callsigns.

Study Resources

Currently, one of the most popular and most recommended study tools for US licensing is HamStudy. HamStudy has shown a strong history of keeping up to date with the latest question pools from the FCC as soon as they are released, and has multiple study modes including flashcards, "study mode" (quizzing on individual questions), and full length practice tests.

When using HamStudy, Volunteer Examiner Norm K6YXH recommends following this method:

* Click on Study Mode

  • Use the drop-down option in the top bar to change from All Questions to just T1:
  • Click on T1.
  • Now go through each question in T1, until you've Seen 100% of the questions, and your Aptitude is 85% or more.
  • Only then go to the next Sub element (T2).
  • Continue doing this with each sub element.
  • Do not skip sub elements.
  • Do not take practice exams until you've Seen 100% of each sub element and your Aptitude is 85% or more in each sub element.
  • The bar graph on the right will display your Seen and Aptitude.

There are also a variety of books published for each exam. Some of the more popular ones include those by Gordon West and the ARRL.

Make sure that before ordering these books that they are the most recent edition and still a valid question pool. The NCVEC (National Conference of Volunteer Examiner Coordinators) updates each exam's question pool every 4 years, each one staggered to allow only one change per year. The current Technician, General, and Extra pools will be valid until June 30 of 2026, 2023, and 2024, respectively.