Amateur radio in Metzetta

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Amateur radio is a popular hobby in Metzetta, particularly among the older generations. The first amateur radio license in Metzetta was granted in 1921 and the well-established regulations of the Metzettan Amateur Radio Union formed the basis for many of the recommendations made in the charter of the International League of Radio Amateurs, which is itself based in Inyang. The MARU is overseen by the government's Ministry of Communication.

History

TBC

 
Example QSL card featuring Metzettan callsigns.

Licensing

License offered in Metzetta for radio amateurs include Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, Special and Experimental. For most citizens only the first three are desired. Novice license holders generally go on to acquire better licenses to access more bands and use higher outputs; at the novice level no more than 5 Watts can be used for broadcasting. This rises to 20W at Intermediate and 50W for Advanced. Experimental Licenses allow access to frequencies not usually associated with amateur radio, including microwave bands. Morse code is required knowledge for Advanced License Examinations but has not been required for Novice users since the early 2000's.

Special licenses are granted on a temporary basis to run a station in commemoration of some event or competition.

Callsigns

The ILRA recommends all amateur radio callsigns take the following format; 2 letters signifying country of origin, 1 or 2 digits signifying region within a country and 3 letters, either randomly assigned or chosen by the licensee; therefore all Metzettan callsigns begin with MZ, with the following 1 or 2 digits designating the following area/rank;

0 Imperial Government 25 Gomssi 50 Experimental License 75 Unassigned
1 Hanzeong 26 Kangssi 51 Experimental License 76 Unassigned
2 Inyang 27 Choju 52 Unassigned 77 Unassigned
3 Wassi 28 Reserved for Galko 53 Unassigned 78 Unassigned
4 Zeolla 29 Reserved for Zyeol 54 Unassigned 79 Unassigned
5 Jaegyu 30 Reserved for Din 55 Unassigned 80 Metzettan Spacecraft
6 Zeowon 31 Reserved for Misun 56 Unassigned 81 Hanzeong (Alt.)
7 Mwolla 32 Unassigned 57 Unassigned 82 Inyang (Alt.)
8 Uchyeo 33 Unassigned 58 Unassigned 83 Wassi (Alt.)
9 Maritime Amateurs 34 Unassigned 59 Unassigned 84 Zeolla (Alt.)
10 Yeulla 35 Unassigned 60 Jinju 85 Jamsu (Alt.)
11 Zeosanggi 36 Unassigned 61 Unassigned 86 Kitaessi (Alt.)
12 Hitui 37 Unassigned 62 Unassigned 87 Ankae (alt.)
13 Hansang 38 Unassigned 63 Unassigned 88 Panyonggi (Alt.)
14 Panyonggi (except Choju) 39 Unassigned 64 Unassigned 89 Hitui (Alt.)
15 Jamsu 40 Military Abroad 65 Unassigned 90 University Clubs
16 Kitaessi 41 Metzettan Arctic Base 66 Unassigned 91 Radio Clubs
17 Seocheong 42 Metzettan Antarctic Base 67 Unassigned 92 Radio Clubs
18 Ungsang 43 Unassigned 68 Unassigned 93 Unassigned
19 Hokae 44 Unassigned 69 Unassigned 94 Unassigned
20 Namussi 45 Unassigned 70 Special License 95 Unassigned
21 Dengjo 46 Unassigned 71 Special License 96 Unassigned
22 Neju 47 Unassigned 72 Unassigned 97 Unassigned
23 Ankae 48 Unassigned 73 Unassigned 98 Unassigned
24 Yuwon 49 Unassigned 74 Unassigned 99 Unassigned

It is anticipated that as the number of radio amateurs grows, as yet unassigned codes may need to be opened for very populous areas such as Galko. Preparations are being made for several new area codes to be made available; additionally very popular areas have been assigned secondary codes to increase available callsign slots. Overseas territories are assigned codes even if they have no permanent residents (e.g. staff of the Polar World Archive, who use prefix MZ42).

MARU

The Metzettan Amateur Radio Union represents the interests of radio hams in the country and runs a QSL card bureau, publishes books and a magazine, runs contests and offers awards, as well as conducting the exams required for licenses which are issued by the Ministry of Communication.

Allocated spectrum

Metzetta currently opens all bands described by the ILRA to its citizens however some only with certain licenses and in certain modes(Morse, voice, digital, etc); higher frequencies in particular are usually somewhat restricted. MARU published the following table for guidance;

Band Novice Intermediate Advanced Special Experimental
LF 2200m No Modes All Modes
MF 630m No Modes All Modes All Modes
160m Morse Only All Modes All Modes All Modes
HF 80m Upper Half Only; All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
60m Upper Half Only; All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
40m All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
30m Morse Only Morse and Digital All Modes All Modes All Modes
20m All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
17m No Modes Morse Only All Modes All Modes All Modes
15m Voice Only Voice Only All Modes All Modes All Modes
12m Lower Half Only: Morse Only Morse Only All Modes All Modes All Modes
10m All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
VHF 6m All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
4m No Modes Morse Only All Modes All Modes All Modes
2m All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
1.25m No Modes Voice Only All Modes All Modes All Modes
UHF 70cm All Modes Voice Only All Modes All Modes All Modes
33cm No Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
23cm No Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
13cm No Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes All Modes
SHF 9cm No Modes All Modes
5cm No Modes All Modes
3cm No Modes All Modes
1.2cm No Modes All Modes
EHF 6mm No Modes All Modes
4mm No Modes All Modes
2.5mm No Modes All Modes
2mm No Modes All Modes
1mm No Modes All Modes
THF Sub-mm No Modes All Modes

Activities and events

Imperial Hams

Citizens Band