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In article 1cHYd.62360$7z6.6536@lakeread04,
"Jack Painter" wrote: I know that Bruce. I mentioned the "vessel" because it is for the owner of A VESSEL, and cannot be transferred or used when the licensee goes to another vessel. So it is "for life" only if it remains ON THAT VESSEL. Please grow up or go back to your barstool. Wrong again Jackie..... the Resricted Radiotelephone Operators Permit is a PERSONAL Operators License and does NOT go with any Radio Station License, one may, or may not have issued to a vessel or aircraft they may own. It is also REQUIRED to be in the possession of any Pilot who makes an International Flight, or who flys outside US airspace and under a Non-US Flight Control Center. It is NOT tied to any vessel or aircraft, and is a Lifetime Permit, for that reason. You may change vessels or aircraft and Station Licenses for them, but you NEVER need to change your Resricted Radiotelephone Operators Permit. Here you go mixing up licenses again, forgetting the title and topic of this newsgroup is RECREATIONAL boating. Only a Restricted Operators permit is required for a recreational boater who wants to visit a foreign port. His boat can remain "covered by the rule" which means no station license for VHF-only, and the ROP covers his carriage of the radio, whether he uses it OR NOT, in a foreign port. Jackie, you need a bit of a refresher in your International Radio Law, son.. If a US Flagged vessel is fitted with a VHF radio, and Licensed under the Blanket License Rule, and leaves US Waters and enters a foreign port, it is as if he had NO Authorization for the fitted Radio. Said radio would not be covered under International Law to transmit under any circiumstance, baring a Distress Transmission. It doesn't matter if it is a "recreational boater" or not. I am not "mixing up" anything, just presenting the FACTS of International Maritime Radio Law, which you seem to not be able to grasp. A Restricted Radiotelephone Operators Permit is NOT a Station License, and confers no Authority to Fit, or imply Legality of Carriage, that requires a Station License. Station and Operator Licenses are two DIFFERENT things. How hard can this be to graps? That's called being "covered by the rule" and does not permit a vessel to dock in a foreign port, which is why it's another of your useless comments that serves only the interests of your strange ego. This has absolutly nothing to do with "dock in a foreign port" in anyway. A US Flagged vessel may certainly "dock in a foreign port" with a fitted VHF Radio that would be Licensed in US waters under the Blanket License Rule, the Operator just could not legally make any Transmissions from inside the waters of another country, or communicate with any station, once he entered the waters of another country. Why is this so hard for you to grasp? Actually, in some countries, it is a CRIME to have a Radiotelephone fitted, and no Internationally Recognized License for such a Radio, and they maybe impounded by the Government, whos water your in. The Rules have not changed, since the last time I reveiwed the IMO Annual Meeting Minutes. I was never a "field-rep", in fact I was Field Agant dually sworn, with the same Oath that you took, upon entering the USCG, no claim, just FACT. I still have my Badge, and cancelled Credentials, as do all Retired and RIF'd Field Agants. Bruce in alaska -- Bruce (semiretired powderman & exFCC Field Inspector for Southeastern Alaska) add a 2 before @ Bruce Gordon * Debora Gordon R.N. Bruce's Trading Post P.O. Box EXI Excursion Inlet South Juneau, Alaska 99850 Excursion Inlet, Alaska 99850 www.btpost.net www.99850.net |
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