Radiocommunications Regulations




3338 NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE, No. 119 2 OCTOBER 2014

  1. General conditions applying to all transmissions under this licence—

  2. The frequency ranges, peak power of transmissions within those frequency ranges, and designated uses of frequencies are those prescribed in this licence. All transmissions in a given frequency range must comply with any special conditions relating to that frequency range.

  3. Transmitters, and persons supplying or using transmitters, must comply with the requirements of Regulations 32 to 37 of the Radiocommunications Regulations 2001.

  4. Frequency use is on a shared basis and the chief executive does not accept liability under any circumstances for any loss or damage of any kind occasioned by the unavailability of frequencies or interference to reception.

  5. Should interference occur to services licensed pursuant to a radio licence or a spectrum licence, the chief executive reserves the right to require and ensure that any transmission or any emission pursuant to this General User Radio Licence change frequency, reduce power or cease operation.

  6. Transmissions that are broadcasting, as defined in the Broadcasting Act 1989, are not permitted.

  7. Consequential revocation of licence—
    (1) The Radiocommunications Regulations (General User Radio Licence for Short Range Devices) Notice (No. 1) 2013, dated the 28th day of November 2013 and published in the New Zealand Gazette, 28 November 2013, No. 159, page 4413, is revoked.

(2) Notwithstanding the revocation of the notice under subsection (1), every transmitter capable of making transmissions compliant with the requirements of that notice on the commencement date of this notice is deemed to be compliant with the requirements of this notice.

Dated at Wellington this 2nd day of October 2014.

JEFFREY DENNIS HICKS, Manager, Radio Spectrum Management Licensing, Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment.

Explanatory Note
This note is not part of the notice, but is intended to indicate its general effect.

This notice:
• adds provisions for the operation of radio microphones in the frequency range of 174 to 230 MHz starting on 1 September 2015 and ceasing on 30 September 2019 after which transmissions must cease; and
• removes the fixed point-to-point restriction and modifies provisions for transmissions in the 57 to 66 GHz frequency range.

New Zealand Gazette, 4 November 2010, No. 148, page 3723

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Radiocommunications Regulations (General User Radio Licence for Fixed Radio Link Devices) Notice 2014

Pursuant to section 111 of the Radiocommunications Act 1989 and Regulation 9 of the Radiocommunications Regulations 2001, and acting under delegated authority from the chief executive, I give the following notice.

Notice

  1. Short title and commencement—
    (1) This notice is the Radiocommunications Regulations (General User Radio Licence for Fixed Radio Link Devices) Notice 2014.
    (2) This notice comes into force on 2 October 2014.

  2. Licence—
    (1) Licence Name: General User Radio Licence for Fixed Radio Link Devices (GURL-FRLD).
    (2) Licence: Any person may transmit radio waves using Fixed Radio Link Devices, including those known as U-NII devices, using digital modulation techniques to typically provide high data rate fixed point-to-point communications for individuals, businesses and institutions, in accordance with the applicable terms, conditions and restrictions of this notice.
    (3) Licence Number: 246068
    (4) Commencement Date: 2 October 2014.

  3. Spectrum—

Low (MHz) High (MHz) Reference Frequency (MHz) Maximum Power dBW e.i.r.p. Remarks
5725.000 5825.000 5775.000 23 Special Condition 1
57000.00 64000.00 60500.00 55 Special Conditions 2 and 3
  1. Location—
    (1) Transmit Location: All New Zealand.
    (2) Receive Location: All New Zealand.

  2. Special conditions—

  3. Transmitter maximum power must not exceed 0 dBW (1 W) and the power spectral density must not exceed 17 dBm/MHz e.i.r.p.

  4. Transmitter maximum power must not exceed –3 dBW (500 mW) and the power spectral density must not exceed –10 dBm/MHz e.i.r.p. For emission bandwidths less than 100 MHz, the transmitter peak power of –3 dBW (500 mW) must be prorated by (bandwidth (MHz) / 100 (MHz)).

  5. The maximum power of any emission must not exceed 55 dBW e.i.r.p., or minus 2 dB for every dB that the antenna gain is less than 51 dBi. The average power of any emission shall not exceed 52 dBW e.i.r.p., or minus 2 dB for every dB that the antenna gain is less than 51 dBi.



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Online Sources for this page:

Gazette.govt.nz PDF NZ Gazette 2014, No 119





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🚂 Radiocommunications Regulations (General User Radio Licence for Short Range Devices) Notice 2014 (continued from previous page)

🚂 Transport & Communications
2 October 2014
Radiocommunications Act, Regulations, Short Range Devices, Radio Licence, Spectrum
  • JEFFREY DENNIS HICKS, Manager, Radio Spectrum Management Licensing, Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment

🚂 Radiocommunications Regulations (General User Radio Licence for Fixed Radio Link Devices) Notice 2014

🚂 Transport & Communications
Radiocommunications Act, Regulations, Fixed Radio Link Devices, Radio Licence, Spectrum