GMRS is exempt from the narrowband deadline.Most USA-made GP6x radios were sent to the Latin American market. In other words, if you enable the keyboard and use the radio on part 95 frequencies then you are violating two different sections of the FCC rules.The GP68 design is a wideband radio so it will be illegal to use it on Part 90 frequencies after the cutoff date. Therefore if you enable the keyboard then the type certification is void. key pad programmable) will not be certified. they state that frequency agile radios (i.e. It is also perfectly legal as an amateur radio.One more comment on the FCC rules.
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Note that it is accepted as a Part 90 (business) radio. Due to this fact you cannot legally use it on GMRS.
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All station equipment in a GMRS system must comply with the technical rules in part 95.As of 1999 the GP68 is NOT on any part 95 equipment list. Write to any FCC Field Office to find out if a particular transmitter has been certificated for the GMRS. Well if you look at the GMRS rules (part 95 of the FCC Rules) you find this:Section 95.129 Station equipment.Every station in a GMRS system must use transmitters the FCC has certificated for use in the GMRS. Here's a label from a VHF radio.Some folks claim that the GP68 is legal on GMRS, some say it's not. However unless the radio actually has a label with an FCC ID number that particular radio is not considered as being type accepted. Either way, as of 1997 the UHF GP68 is on the Part 90 acceptance list as model number AZP94VNB20H2AA with FCC type acceptance number AZ489FT4811 (click for photo) and the VHF GP68 with model number AZP93VNB20H1AA is accepted as AZ489FT3786. Their argument is that the FCC approval was achieved after manufacture for foreign sales were started. Some folks say the radios are identical (since all USA-made GP68s were made on the same assembly line from the same parts), that the only difference is the sticker and that some early ones were made without the FCC labels (click for a photo). I have seen radios with type acceptance (they have an FCC ID number), and there are ones where the same sticker does not have an FCC number, and therefore they are not type accepted. Later on Motorola chose to modify the ID label to leave off the FCC ID number (I'm not sure why). It was marketed in many areas including the USA (and was submitted for FCC Type Approval as such).
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GP68, and AP73 Series Handhelds Up one level (Moto Index)Back to Home An Overview of the MotorolaGP6x Series HandheldsIncluding the GP63, GP68, AP73 and othersA table of PL and DPL codes is at the bottom of this pageAdditional information, corrections, enhancements are welcome! Compiled by Mike Morris WA6ILQ fromcontributions from several persons including:Don Best N6ALD, Clint Bradford K6LCS,Bob Burns W9RXR, Ron Gerhold K4GET,David Leeper K6DWL, and Eric Lemmon WB6FLYMaintained by Robert Meister WA1MIKWe're looking for the following to make this article more complete:1) A photo of a GP68 VHF model number sticker showing the type acceptance number (should be AZ489FT3786).2) Separate photos of an AP73, a GP63, a GP68 Plus and a GP68-8.Click here for a high band radio photo, the UHF version looks identical except for the antenna.Although a good performer, the GP6x Series radios are a 1980s design that depending on whom you talked to were either (a) a low-end radio for the USA market, or (b) a mid-range radio initially intended for the 'world market' sales. Accessibility, User Agreement, Privacy, Cookies and AdChoiceNorton Secured - powered by VerisignInformation on the Motorola GP63. Additional site navigationAbout eBayAnnouncementsCommunitySecurity CenterResolution CenterSeller CenterPoliciesAffiliatesHelp & ContactSite MapCopyright © 1995-2019 eBay Inc.