Although 10 meters has a worldwide amateur radio allocation, in some countries the use of portions of 10 meters is allocated by the government by license class, by signal mode or signal bandwidth. Beyond these regulations there is also a general voluntary band plan adhered to by amateurs throughout the world.
Worldwide frequency allocations Worldwide 10 meter frequency allocations are specified by the ITU. The International Telecommunication Union recommends allowing amateur radio operations in the frequency range from 28.000–29.700 MHz, subject to member nations' individual regulation of radio.
IARU Region 1 IARU Region 2 IARU Region 3 United States Canadian 10-meter band plan Canada is part of region 2 and as such is subject to the IARU band plan.
Radio Amateurs of Canada offers the bandplan below as a recommendation for use by radio amateurs in that country but it does not have the force of law and should only be considered a suggestion or guideline.
Japan Refer to the following URL. https://www.jarl.org/English/6_Band_Plan/JARL%20Band%20Plan20230925(E).pdf
Key Novice sub-bands Named for the segment of 10 meters granted for use to American Novice Class Amateur Radio license holders. The Novice sub-bands consist of two frequency ranges; one for CW and Data operation, and the other for SSB phone operation.
Novice/Technician phone The most active part of the 10 meter band is probably 28.300–28.500 MHz. Worldwide, operation in this band segment is almost exclusively SSB.
Beacons Because the propagation on 10 meters can vary drastically throughout the day,
propagation beacons are very important to gauge the current conditions of the band. With some differences in each
ITU Regions and also from country to country, the beacon sub-bands fall between 28.100–28.300 MHz. ITU Region 1 is generally 28.190-28.225 MHz and ITU Region 2 is generally 28.200–28.300 MHz. A list of 10 meter propagation beacons is available.
AM sub-band From 29.000 to 29.200 MHz. Formerly-common practice was to use the band in 10 kHz steps: e.g. 29.010, 29.020, 29.030,... etc. This has not been the case since the 1970s, which saw an influx of surplus 23-channel
CB equipment modified for use on the 10-meter amateur band. The surplus equipment would land in 10 kHz steps on the 5 kHz step such as: 29.015, 29.025, 29.035, etc. Users of the surplus equipment also inherited those radios' odd channel spacing, which on CB skipped channels that were not used there, because they were set aside for remote control operations.
Satellite sub-band From 29.300 to 29.510 MHz the satellite sub band allows amateur radio operators to communicate with orbiting
OSCARs.
Satellite operation Many amateur radio satellites have either an uplink or a downlink in the 29 MHz range. Information about particular satellites and operational modes is available from AMSAT. As of the current writing, only AO-7's 10 m downlink is active.
FM sub-band From 29.000 MHz to 29.700, The FM sub-band is usually channelized into
repeater and
simplex frequencies. The channels are commonly grouped into repeater inputs, simplex, and repeater output frequencies. Repeater input frequencies: 29.510, 29.520, 29.530, 29.540, 29.550, 29.560, 29.570, 29.580 and 29.590 MHz.
Simplex channel, worldwide calling FM: 29.600 MHz Secondary simplex is 29.500 Japan and others use 29.00 to 29.40 FM simplex. 10kHz steps from 29.0 to 29.1 and 20kHz steps 29.2 to 29.40 with 29.30 a national simplex channel in Japan. Repeater output frequencies: 29.610, 29.620, 29.630, 29.640, 29.650, 29.660, 29.670, 29.680 and 29.690 MHz.
Repeater operation Common practice for 10-meter repeaters is to use a 100 kHz negative offset for repeater operation. Due to the very few available repeater channels, "odd-splits" (offsets differing from 100 kHz) and non-standard frequencies are rare and uncommon. Since 10 meters can frequently open up to propagate globally, most 10-meter repeaters use a
CTCSS sub-audible access tone. 16 kHz-wide signals with 5 kHz deviation is normal in this band. 8 kHz-wide signals with 2.5 kHz deviation can also be found. 2.5kHz deviation is mandated by FCC rules below 29.0 MHz.
FM simplex channels 29.300 MHz is a common frequency to find JA hams on. British hams commonly use the 29.400 to 29.500 MHz band for FM as well with 29.400, 29.450, and 29.500 MHz being common. USA hams can be found on FM anywhere above 29.000 MHz, commonly on the above frequencies talking to overseas hams. 29.200 to 29.300 MHz is set aside in some area band plans for FM simplex use. == Organizations and enthusiasts ==