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Standard Horizon HX-870 User Manual

Page 123

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Page 123

HX870

6. Marine vessels equipped with VHF radios are required to monitor Channel

16.

7. 156.050 MHz and 156.175 MHz are available for port operations and

commercial communications purposes when used only within the U.S. Coast

Guard designated Vessel Traffic Services (VTS) area of New Orleans, on

the lower Mississippi River from the various pass entrances in the Gulf of

Mexico to Devil’s Swamp Light at River Mile 242.4 above head of passes

near Baton Rouge.

8. 156.250 MHz is available for port operations communications use only

within the U.S. Coast Guard designated VTS radio protection areas of New

Orleans and Houston described in Sec. 80.383. 156.250 MHz is available

for intership port operations communications used only within the area of

Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors, within a 25- nautical mile radius of

Point Fermin, California.

9. 156.550 MHz, 156.600 MHz and 156.700 MHz are available in the U.S.

Coast Guard designated port areas only for VTS communications and

in the Great Lakes available primarily for communications relating to the

movement of ships in sectors designated by the St. Lawrence Seaway

Development Corporation or the U.S. Coast Guard. The use of these

frequencies outside VTS and ship movement sector protected areas is

permitted provided they cause no interference to VTS and ship movement

communications in their respective designated sectors.

10. Use of 156.875 MHz is limited to communications with pilots regarding the

movement and docking of ships. Normal output power must not exceed 1

watt. 5: 156.375 MHz and 156.650 MHz are available primarily for intership

navigational communications. These frequencies are available between

coast and ship on a secondary basis when used on or in the vicinity of locks

or drawbridges. Normal output power must not exceed 1 watt. Maximum

output power must not exceed 10 watts for coast stations or 25 watts for

ship stations.

11. On the Great Lakes, in addition to bridge-to-bridge communications, 156.650

MHz is available for vessel control purposes in established vessel traffic

systems. 156.650 MHz is not available for use in the Mississippi River

from South Pass Lighted Whistle Buoy “2” and Southwest Pass entrance

Mid-channel Lighted Whistle Buoy to mile 242.4 above Head of Passes

near Baton Rouge. Additionally it is not available for use in the Mississippi

River-Gulf Outlet, the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet Canal, and the Inner

Harbor Navigational Canal, except to aid the transition from these areas.

12. Use of 156.375 MHz is available for navigational communications only in

the Mississippi River from South Pass Lighted Whistle Buoy “2” and South-