Multi-Use Radio Service

For the American rapper Murs sometimes stylized as MURS, see Murs (rapper).

In the United States, the Multi-Use Radio Service (MURS) is an unlicensed two-way radio service similar to Citizens Band (CB). Established by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission in the fall of 2000, MURS created a radio service allowing for unlicensed (Part 95) operation, with a power limit of 2 watts. The FCC formally defines MURS as "a private, two-way, short-distance voice or data communications service for personal or business activities of the general public." MURS stations may not be connected to the public telephone network, may not be used for store and forward operations, and radio repeaters are not permitted.

In 2009 Industry Canada (IC) established a five year transition plan which would have permitted the use of MURS in Canada starting June 2014.[1] In August 2014 IC announced a deferral of MURS introduction, as "the Department does not feel that the introduction of MURS devices in Canada is warranted at this time, and has decided to defer the introduction of MURS devices in Canada until a clearer indication of actual need is provided by Canadian MURS advocates and/or stakeholders..".[2]

Eligibility

No licenses are required or issued for MURS within the United States.

Any person is authorized to use the MURS frequencies given that it:[3]
  • Is not a foreign government or a representative of a foreign government.
  • Uses the transmitter in accordance with 47 CFR. 95.1309.
  • Operates in accordance with the rules contained in Sections 95.1301-95.1309.
  • Operates only legal, type accepted MURS equipment.

Frequencies

MURS comprises the following five frequencies:

Channel Frequency Authorized bandwidth Channel Name
1 151.820 MHz 11.25 kHz N/A
2 151.880 MHz 11.25 kHz N/A
3 151.940 MHz 11.25 kHz N/A
4 154.570 MHz 20.00 kHz Blue Dot
5 154.600 MHz 20.00 kHz Green Dot

Channels 1-3 use "narrowband" frequency modulation (2.5 kHz deviation). Channels 4 and 5 use "wideband" FM (5 kHz deviation). MURS falls under part 95 and is not mandated for narrow banding such as those of part 90 in the public service bands by January 2013.

Because previous business band licensees who have maintained their active license remain grandfathered with their existing operating privileges, it is possible to find repeaters or other operations not authorized by Part 95 taking place. These are not necessarily illegal. If legal, such operations may enjoy primary status on their licensed frequency and as such are legally protected from harmful interference by MURS users.

Range

MURS range will vary depending on antenna size and placement. With an external antenna, ranges of 10 miles or more can be expected.[4] Full line-of-sight propagation is usually not possible due to the relatively low power restriction of 2 watts.

Authorized modes

Designator Common Name
A1D Amplitude modulation; on off keyed or quantized; no modulation; Data, telemetry, telecommand
A2B Amplitude modulation; Digital, with modulation; Telegraphy for machine copy (RTTY, fast Morse)
A2D Amplitude modulation; Digital, with modulation; Data, telemetry, telecommand
A3E Amplitude modulation; Single analog channel; Telephony, voice, sound broadcasting
F2B Angle modulation, straight FM; Digital, with modulation; Telegraphy for machine copy (RTTY, fast Morse)
F1D Angle modulation, straight FM; on off keyed or quantized; Data, telemetry, telecommand
F2D Angle modulation, straight FM; Digital, with modulation; Data, telemetry, telecommand
F3E Angle modulation, straight FM; Single analog channel; Telephony, voice, sound broadcasting
G3E Angle modulation, phase modulation; Single analog channel; Telephony, voice, sound broadcasting

Permitted areas of operation

MURS operation is authorized anywhere a CB station is authorized and within or over any area of the world where radio services are regulated by the FCC. Those areas are within the territorial limits of:

Restrictions

Products

There are a wide variety of radio products that use MURS frequencies. MURS devices consist of wireless base station intercoms, handheld two-way radios, wireless dog training collars, wireless public address units, customer service callboxes, wireless remote switches, and wireless callboxes with or without gate opening ability. Since MURS uses standard frequencies, most devices that use MURS are compatible with each other.

In 2015, Brooklyn-based startup goTenna released a cognitive digital radio product that operates on the MURS band and pairs wirelessly with smartphones to enable users to send texts and share locations on a peer-to-peer basis, enabling users to send texts and share locations without centralized communications infrastructure of any kind. Proprietary networking protocols enable goTenna users to have more of a smartphone-like experience than a walkie-talkie experience — including delivery confirmations, group creation, and automatic channel-switching.[6][7]

Due to these unique protocols, goTenna is not interoperable with other MURS devices even though they operate on the same spectrum. goTenna’s networking protocols are “listen-before-talk” which means a goTenna will wait for nearby MURS radios to complete an in-process transmission first so as to not contribute to congestion in the band’s five channels.[8]

See also

External links

References

  1. "Spectrum Allocation and Utilization Policy Regarding the Use of Certain Frequency Bands Below 1.7 GHz for a Range of Radio Applications" (PDF). Industry Canada. June 2009. Retrieved September 2, 2011. A five-year transition period is established from the publication date of this spectrum policy, after which the distribution and sale of MURS devices will be permitted.
  2. http://www.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/smt-gst.nsf/eng/sf10822.html
  3. http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=service_home&id=multi_use
  4. 1 2 http://www.fcc.gov/encyclopedia/multi-use-radio-service-murs-0
  5. 1 2 http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2009-title47-vol5/pdf/CFR-2009-title47-vol5-part95.pdf
  6. Statt, Nick. "GoTenna creates a cell network out of thin air anywhere on Earth". CNET. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
  7. Nelson, Patrick. "Device lets smartphones communicate during network outage". Network World. Network World. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
  8. news.ycombinator.com https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8058473. Retrieved 3 November 2015. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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