You can't the continental U.S., but there are some states and territories where 
you can. 7.307(f)(2) spells out the limitations.

73,

John
KD6OZH

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Thursday, May 03, 2007 13:43 UTC
  Subject: Re: [digitalradio] Digi Voice: No Bandwidth Limit


  John,

  While I agree with you that we should be allowed to mix voice and ASCII 
  text (primarily for emergency communications use), what makes you think 
  we can use voice in the 7075 to 7100 here in the U.S.?

  73,

  Rick, KV9U

  John B. Stephensen wrote:
  > WinDRM and HamDRM are good examples of modes where all functions shoud 
  > be legal in the image/phone segments in the U.S. but sending 
  > a text file in most HF image/phone segments is dissallowed by current 
  > rules. The crazy thing is that you can render the text as glyphs and 
  > send it as an image but not do the most efficient thing and send the 
  > ASCII codes. There is no practical reason that user's of WinDRM or 
  > HamDRM shouldn't also be allowed to send program files but if it isn't 
  > intended for direct printing or displaying it's technically illegal.
  > 
  > Other than 160 meters, 7,075-7,100 kHz is the only other segment that 
  > allows mixed voice, data, RTTY and image.
  > 
  > 73,
  > 
  > John
  > KD6OZH



   

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