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Part 97.113 - What constitutes "business use" vs legal amateur activities?

I've been reading through Part 97.113 about prohibited transmissions and I'm getting confused about the line between legitimate amateur use and "business communications." Section 97.113 prohibits transmissions for hire or material compensation, and defines amateur service as having "personal aim and without pecuniary interest".

Here are some specific scenarios I'd like clarification on:

  • Coordinating volunteer emergency communications for a nonprofit
  • Testing equipment that I might later sell
  • Participating in a ham radio club net where dues are collected

Where exactly does Part 97 draw these lines? Any elmers have real-world examples?

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  • Giovanni Rossi
    Giovanni Rossi

    For equipment testing, as long as you're genuinely experimenting and learning (not just doing QC for a business), that falls under the "technical investigations" purpose of amateur radio. Keep good no

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Great question! The rules do allow compensation in specific situations like teaching positions and control operator duties for club stations. Emergency volunteer work is typically fine since you're not being paid for the radio operation itself.

For equipment testing, as long as you're genuinely experimenting and learning (not just doing QC for a business), that falls under the "technical investigations" purpose of amateur radio. Keep good notes showing the experimental nature.

I run our local ARES group and we coordinate with served agencies regularly. The key is that we're volunteers - no payment for our radio services, even if we're reimbursed for mileage or meals. Part 97 does allow emergency communications to broadcasters when no other means exist.

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