Subj : Classes And Exams (L) To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Mon Jul 13 2020 12:06 am (CONTINUED FROM LAST MESSAGE) Sequential Versus Vanity Callsigns ================================== Callsigns are normally issued in a sequential callsign system by the FCC, for each license class. Once issued a callsign, you can choose to keep it...or apply for a vanity callsign, after paying the appropriate fee, and submitting the required forms. NOTE: The FCC issued a Report and Order on May 21, 2015, eliminating the Vanity Callsign fee, and that change took effect on Sept. 3, 2015. Those who had previously paid a fee for their Vanity Callsign(s) are NOT eligible for a refund. When applying for a vanity callsign, you'll be required to list twenty-five (25) "requested" calls...as there is a chance that the ones you have requested are currently in use by licensed hams, or they have not passed the 2 year grace period after expiration. If you keep the callsign originally issued to you by the FCC, or ask for (and receive) a new "sequential callsign", you won't have to pay for renewal, as sequential callsigns are "free". If you go through a license renewal service, such as the W5YI renewal on the QRZ website, you will have to pay a processing fee, whether you have a vanity callsign or not. However, members of the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), who either keep their original callsign that was issued by the FCC, or a newly issued sequential (non-vanity) callsign, can have their license renewed FREE OF CHARGE at the appropriate time, from an ARRL/VEC VE Test Session. This also applies for a license modification (change of address, etc.). U.S. amateur radio callsigns are grouped by license class, starting with an A, K, N, or W...in the format of 1 or 2 letters, followed by a digit from 0 through 9...depending on the callsign district they were living in when they first got their license...followed by 1, 2, or 3 letters. Callsigns from Alaska begin with KL7, callsigns from Hawaii begin with KH6, callsigns from Puerto Rico begin with KP4, and callsigns from the U.S. Virgin Islands begin with KP2. If the amateur radio licensee from these areas is an Amateur Extra Class licensee, the first letter is likely an "A" instead of a "K". Callsigns for other U.S. territories may be a bit different per the license classes, noted below. Minimum License Class: Callsign Group: Callsign Examples: Novice 2 by 3 WA1BCD, KE2FGH Technician or General 1 by 3 K5IJK, N3LMN, W5OPQ Advanced 2 by 2 KA6RS, KK7TU Amateur Extra 1 by 2 or 2 by 1 K8VW, N9WX, W0YZ Since some of the sequential callsign groups have had all of the regular callsigns issued, the issued sequential calls fall to the lower license class. With a vanity callsign, you can apply for a callsign in this group, if you're of the appropriate license class. Callsigns that have been expired more than 2 years are returned to the "unused callsign pool", and they can be requested as a vanity callsign. The higher amateur radio license that you have, the more choices you have for a vanity callsign (i.e. Amateur Extra Class licensees can pick from any group...while General Class licensees are limited to either the 2 by 3 or 1 by 3 callsign group). Amateur Extra Calls usually begin with an A, but can also begin with either a K, an N, or a W. Advanced callsigns usually begin with a K, but they can also begin with an N or a W. Technician or General callsigns usually begin with an K, N, or a W...and Novice callsigns usually begin with either a K or a W. However, a callsign is NOT ALWAYS indicative of a ham radio operators actual license class. My first callsign, N5VLZ, issued in August, 1991, was one of the last "1 by 3" callsigns issued for Arkansas. I held that for 18 years, when I changed to the AE5WX callsign in June, 2009. Then, in December, 2012, I changed to the WX1DER callsign...which reflects the domain of my personal homepage, and of the BBS. And in 2019, I changed to the WX4QZ callsign, changing the emphasis from weather to railroad crossing safety. Besides, I know several Amateur Extra Class ham radio operators who still have their Novice class callsign format. If you are already a licensed ham radio operator, and one of your family members, who was also a ham radio operator (parent, grandparent, brother, sister, aunt, uncle, etc.), dies (becomes a Silent Key), you may provide proof of their death (such as a death certificate) to the FCC, along with a vanity callsign application, and request that callsign anytime within 2 years after that ham radio operators death. After that 2 year period, anyone can apply for it. You must hold the appropriate license class to request that vanity callsign. In other words, if the callsign of a deceased relative was from the Amateur Extra Class group, you will have to become an Amateur Extra Class licensee in order to request it. Note that once you receive your new callsign...either from the sequential or vanity callsign system...your old callsign is no longer valid. However, as long as your license is not expired, you keep the privileges you had before, but you're now using the new callsign. A list of the latest callsigns issued can be found in the ham radio bulletins door on The Thunderbolt BBS. The list is obtained from HamData.Com -- which gets its data from the FCC database. Note that during a government shutdown, this data will NOT be updated, since the FCC is closed. --- SBBSecho 3.11-Win32 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (801:1/2)