New
60-Meter Frequencies
Available as of February
13, 2026
The
new 60-meter frequencies
approved by the FCC in
December will become
available to amateurs as
of February 13, 2026,
along with new power
restrictions on those
frequencies. It’s a bit
confusing, as different
rules apply to different
segments of the band.
The changes result from
the FCC’s action to
approve a worldwide
60-meter amateur
allocation made by the
World Radiocommunication
Conference in 2015
(WRC-15).
As
of February 13,
FCC-licensed amateur
operators holding
General Class or higher
licenses may operate on
a secondary basis
anywhere between 5351.5
and 5366.5 kHz, subject
to a maximum bandwidth
of 2.8 kHz and maximum
transmit power of 9.15
watts ERP (effective
radiated power). For the
purpose of computing
ERP, the transmitter PEP
(peak envelope power) is
multiplied by the
antenna gain relative to
a half-wave dipole
antenna. A half-wave
dipole is presumed to
have a gain of 1 (0
dBd). Amateurs using
other antennas must
maintain in their
station records either
the antenna
manufacturer's data on
the antenna gain or
calculations of the
antenna gain.
Here’s
the confusing part: The
existing 60-meter
channels centered on
5332, 5348, 5373, and
5405 kHz remain as
secondary amateur
allocations with maximum
power of 100 watts ERP.
However, the old channel
at 5358.5 kHz is
eliminated as it is now
part of the new
5351.5-5366.5 kHz
subband and subject to
the lower power limit.
For
all 60-meter
transmissions, emission
bandwidth is limited to
2.8 kHz or less and
amateurs must not cause
harmful interference to,
and must accept
interference from,
stations authorized by
the United States (NTIA
and FCC) and other
nations in the fixed
service; and all other
nations in the mobile
service (except
aeronautical mobile).
Data or RTTY emissions
in particular must be
limited in transmission
length so as not to
cause harmful
interference. Digital
mode operators must be
familiar with offsets in
order to stay within the
authorized frequencies.
_________________________
The
DX Mentor Podcast By
Bill Salyers The DX
Mentor podcast is
directed towards any
amateur radio operator
(Ham) or Short Wave
Listener (SWL) who has
an interest in
listening to or
communicating with
stations that are not
in your country, or
DX. There have already
been many episodes
with more in the
future, and I think
you'll find them quite
interesting. Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/347995275954755/ 60m website:
www.60metersonline.com.
Our
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45056 US