nzart-exam-generator/files/N1.TXT
2016-12-30 23:01:50 +13:00

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% FILENAME = N1.TXT
% Regulations
% Release version 4, October 2006
% Q44 modified 6 March 2012
% further mods 6 September 2012
%Question: 1
#1.1 The Amateur Service may be briefly defined as:
a private radio service for personal gain and public benefit
a public radio service used for public service communications
a radiocommunication service for the purpose of self-training, intercommunication and technical investigation
a private radio service intended only for emergency communications
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%Question: 2
#1.2 The organisation responsible for the International Radio Regulations is the:
European Radiocommunications Office
United Nations
International Telecommunication Union
European Telecommunication Standards Institute
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%Question: 3
#1.3 New Zealand's views on international radio regulatory matters are coordinated by the:
New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters (NZART)
Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment
International Amateur Radio Union (IARU)
Prime Minister's Office
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%Question: 4
#1.4 For regulatory purposes the world is divided into regions each with different radio spectrum allocations. New Zealand is in:
Region 1
Region 2
Region 3
Region 4
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%Question: 5
#1.5 The prime document for the administration of the Amateur Service in New Zealand is the:
New Zealand Radiocommunications Regulations
Broadcasting Act
Radio Amateur's Handbook
minutes of the International Telecommunication Union meetings
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%Question: 6
#1.6 The administration of the Amateur Service in New Zealand is by:
Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment Radio Spectrum Management Group
the Area Code administrators of New Zealand Post
the Radio Communications Division of the Ministry of Police
your local council public relations section
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%Question: 7
#1.7 An Amateur Station is a station:
in the public radio service
using radiocommunications for a commercial purpose
using equipment for training new radiocommunications operators
in the Amateur Service
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%Question: 8
#1.8 A General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency can be inspected by an authorised officer from the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment:
at any time
on any business day
before 9 p.m.
only on public holidays
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%Question: 9
#1.9 The fundamental regulations controlling the Amateur Service are to be found in:
the International Radio Regulations from the ITU
the Radio Amateur's Handbook
the NZART Callbook
on the packet radio bulletin-board
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%Question: 10
#1.10 You must have a General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency to:
transmit on public-service frequencies
retransmit shortwave broadcasts
repair radio equipment
transmit in bands allocated to the Amateur Service
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%Question: 11
#1.11 A New Zealand General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency allows you to operate:
anywhere in the world
anywhere in New Zealand and in any other country that recognises the Certificate
within 50 km of your home station location
only at your home address
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%Question: 12
#1.12 With a General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency you may operate transmitters in your station:
one at a time
one at a time, except for emergency communications
any number at one time
any number, so long as they are transmitting on different bands
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%Question: 13
#1.13 You must keep the following document at your amateur station:
your General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency
a copy of the Rules and Regulations for the Amateur Service
a copy of the Radio Amateur's Handbook for instant reference
a chart showing the amateur radio bands
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%Question: 14
#1.14 An Amateur Station is one which is:
operated by the holder of a General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency on the amateur radio bands
owned and operated by a person who is not engaged professionally in radio communications
used exclusively to provide two-way communication in connection with activities of amateur sporting organisations
used primarily for emergency communications during floods, earthquakes and similar disasters.
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%Question: 15
#1.15 If the qualified operator of an amateur radio station is absent overseas, the home station may be used by:
any member of the immediate family to maintain contact with only the qualified operator
any person with an appropriate General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency
the immediate family to communicate with any amateur radio operator
the immediate family if a separate callsign for mobile use has been obtained by the absent operator
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%Question: 16
#1.16 All amateur stations, regardless of the mode of transmission used, must be equipped with:
a reliable means for determining the operating radio frequency
a dummy antenna
an overmodulation indicating device
a dc power meter
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%Question: 17
#1.17 An amateur station may transmit unidentified signals:
when making a brief test not intended for reception by anyone else
when conducted on a clear frequency when no interference will be caused
when the meaning of transmitted information must be obscured to preserve secrecy
never, such transmissions are not permitted
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%Question: 18
#1.18 You may operate your amateur radio station somewhere in New Zealand for short periods away from the location entered in the administration's database:
only during times of emergency
only after giving proper notice to the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment
during an approved emergency practice
whenever you want to
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%Question: 19
#1.19 Before operating an amateur station in a motor vehicle, you must:
give the Land Transport Authority the vehicle's licence plate number
inform the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment
hold a current General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency
obtain an additional callsign
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%Question: 20
#1.20 An applicant for a New Zealand General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency must first qualify by meeting the appropriate examination requirements. Application may then be made by:
anyone except a representative of a foreign government
only a citizen of New Zealand
anyone except an employee of the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment
anyone
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%Question: 21
#1.21 An amateur radio operator must have current New Zealand postal and email addresses so the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment:
has a record of the location of each amateur station
can refund overpaid fees
can publish a callsign directory
can send mail to the operator
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%Question: 22
#1.22 If you transmit from another amateur's station, the person responsible for its proper operation is:
both of you
the other amateur (the station<6F>s owner)
you, the operator
the station owner, unless the station records show that you were the operator at the time
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%Question: 23
#1.23 Your responsibility as a station operator is that you must:
allow another amateur to operate your station upon request
be present whenever the station is operated
be responsible for the proper operation of the station in accordance with the Radiocommunications Regulations
notify the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment if another amateur acts as the operator
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%Question: 24
#1.24 An amateur station must have a qualified operator:
only when training another amateur
whenever the station receiver is operated
whenever the station is used for transmitting
when transmitting and receiving
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%Question: 25
#1.25 A log-book for recording stations worked:
is compulsory for every amateur radio operator
is recommended for all amateur radio operators
must list all messages sent
must record time in UTC
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%Question: 26
#1.26 Unqualified persons in your family cannot transmit using your amateur station if they are alone with your equipment because they must:
not use your equipment without your permission
hold a General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency before they are allowed to be operators
first know how to use the right abbreviations and Q signals
first know the right frequencies and emissions for transmitting
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%Question: 27
#1.27 Amateur radio repeater equipment and frequencies in New Zealand are co-ordinated by:
the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment
NZART branches in the main cities
repeater trustees
the NZART Frequency Management and Technical Advisory Group.
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%Question: 28
#1.28 A qualified operator of an amateur radio station may permit anyone to:
operate the station under direct supervision
send business traffic to any other station.
pass brief comments of a personal nature provided no fees or other considerations are requested or accepted
use the station for Morse sending practice
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%Question: 29
#1.29 The minimum age for a person to hold a General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency is:
12 years
16 years
21 years
there is no age limit
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%Question: 30
#1.30 If you contact another station and your signal is strong and perfectly readable, you should:
turn on your speech processor
reduce your SWR
not make any changes, otherwise you may lose contact
reduce your transmitter power output to the minimum needed to maintain contact
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%Question: 31
#1.31 The age when an amateur radio operator is required to surrender the General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency is:
65 years
70 years
75 years
there is no age limit
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%Question: 32
#1.32 Peak envelope power (PEP) output is the:
average power output at the crest of the modulating cycle
total power contained in each sideband
carrier power output
transmitter power output on key-up condition
% ans 1
%Question: 33
#1.33 The maximum power output permitted from an amateur station is:
that needed to overcome interference from other stations
30 watt PEP
specified in the amateur radio General User Radio Licence
1000 watt mean power or 2000 watt PEP
% ans 3
%Question: 34
#1.34 The transmitter power output for amateur stations at all times is:
25 watt PEP minimum output
that needed to overcome interference from other stations
1000 watt PEP maximum
the minimum power necessary to communicate and within the terms of the amateur radio GURL
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%Question: 35
#1.35 You identify your amateur station by transmitting your:
"handle"
callsign
first name and your location
full name
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%Question: 36
#1.36 This callsign could be allocated to an amateur radio operator in New Zealand:
ZK-CKF
ZLC5
ZL2HF
ZMX4432
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%Question: 37
#1.37 The callsign of a New Zealand amateur radio station:
is listed in the administration's database
can be any sequence of characters made-up by the operator
can never be changed
is changed annually
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%Question: 38
#1.38 These letters are generally used for the first letters in New Zealand amateur radio callsigns:
ZS
ZL
VK
LZ
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%Question: 39
#1.39 The figures normally used in New Zealand amateur radio callsigns are:
any two-digit number, 45 through 99
any two-digit number, 22 through 44
a single digit, 5 through 9
a single digit, 1 through 4
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%Question: 40
#1.40 Before re-issuing, a relinquished callsign is normally kept for:
1 year
2 years
0 years
5 years
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%Question: 41
#1.41 A General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency authorises the use of:
all amateur radio transmitting and receiving apparatus
a TV receiver
amateur radio transmitting apparatus only
marine mobile equipment
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%Question: 42
#1.42 General Amateur Operator Certificates of Competency and callsigns are issued pursuant to the Regulations by the:
New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters (NZART)
Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment Approved Radio Examiners
Department of Internal Affairs
Prime Minister's Office
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%Question: 43
#1.43 To replace a written copy of your General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency you should:
Apply to an Approved Radio Examiner to re-sit the examination
Download an application form from the Department of Internal Affairs website
Download an application form from the Ministry's website (or have an Approved Radio Examiner do this for you)
Download and print one from the official database (or have an Approved Radio Examiner do this for you)
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%Question: 44
#1.44 A General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency holder must advise permanent changes to postal and email addresses and update the official database records within:
One Calendar month
7 days
10 days
one year
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%Question: 45
#1.45 A General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency:
expires after 6 months
contains the unique callsign(s) to be used by that operator
is transferable
permits the transmission of radio waves
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%Question: 46
#1.46 A General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency is normally issued for:
1 year
5 years
10 years
life
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%Question: 47
#1.47 A licence that provides for a given class of radio transmitter to be used without requiring a licence in the owner<65>s own name is known as:
a repeater licence
a general user radio licence
a beacon licence
a reciprocal licence
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%Question: 48
#1.48 The holder of a General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency may permit anyone to:
use an amateur radio station to communicate with other radio amateurs
pass brief messages of a personal nature provided no fees or other consideration are requested or accepted
operate the amateur station under the supervision and in the presence of a qualified operator
take part in communications only if prior written permission is received from the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment
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%Question: 49
#1.49 International communications on behalf of third parties may be transmitted by an amateur station only if:
prior remuneration has been received
such communications have been authorised by the countries concerned
the communication is transmitted in secret code
English is used to identify the station at the end of each transmission
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%Question: 50
#1.50 The term "amateur third party communications" refers to:
a simultaneous communication between three operators
the transmission of commercial or secret messages
messages to or on behalf of non-licensed people or organisations
none of the above
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%Question: 51
#1.51 The Morse code signal SOS is sent by a station:
with an urgent message
in grave and imminent danger and requiring immediate assistance
making a report about a shipping hazard
sending important weather information
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%Question: 52
#1.52 If you hear distress traffic and are unable to render assistance, you should:
maintain watch until you are certain that assistance is forthcoming
enter the details in the log book and take no further action
take no action
tell all other stations to cease transmitting
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%Question: 53
#1.53 The transmission of messages in a secret code by the operator of an amateur station is:
permitted when communications are transmitted on behalf of a government agency
permitted when communications are transmitted on behalf of third parties
permitted during amateur radio contests
not permitted except for control signals by the licensees of remote beacon or repeater stations
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%Question: 54
#1.54 Messages from an amateur station in one of the following are expressly forbidden:
ASCII
International No. 2 code
Baudot code
secret cipher
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%Question: 55
#1.55 The term "harmful interference" means:
interference which obstructs or repeatedly interrupts radiocommunication services
an antenna system which accidentally falls on to a neighbour's property
a receiver with the audio volume unacceptably loud
interference caused by a station of a secondary service
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%Question: 56
#1.56 When interference to the reception of radiocommunications is caused by the operation of an amateur station, the station operator:
must immediately comply with any action required by the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment to prevent the interference
may continue to operate with steps taken to reduce the interference when the station operator can afford it
may continue to operate without restrictions
is not obligated to take any action
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%Question: 57
#1.57 An amateur radio operator may knowingly interfere with another radio communication or signal:
when the operator of another station is acting in an illegal manner
when another station begins transmitting on a frequency you already occupy
never
when the interference is unavoidable because of crowded band conditions
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%Question: 58
#1.58 After qualifying and gaining a General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency you are permitted to:
operate on any frequency in the entire radio spectrum
first operate for three months on amateur radio bands below 5 MHz and bands above 25 MHz to log fifty or more contacts
ignore published bandplans
make frequent tune-up transmissions at 10 MHz
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%Question: 59
#1.59 Morse code is permitted for use by:
only operators who have passed a Morse code test
those stations with computers to decode it
any amateur radio operator
only those stations equipped for headphone reception
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%Question: 60
#1.60 As a New Zealand amateur radio operator you may communicate with:
only amateur stations within New Zealand
only stations running more than 500w PEP output
only stations using the same transmission mode
other amateur stations world-wide
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%Question: 61
#1.61 As a New Zealand amateur radio operator you:
must regularly operate using dry batteries
should use shortened antennas
may train for and support disaster relief activities
must always have solar-powered equipment in reserve
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%Question: 62
#1.62 Your General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency permits you to:
work citizen band stations
establish and operate an earth station in the amateur satellite service
service commercial radio equipment over 1 kW output
re-wire fixed household electrical supply mains
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%Question: 63
#1.63 You hear a station using the callsign <20>VK3XYZ stroke ZL<5A> on your local VHF repeater. This is:
a callsign not authorised for use in New Zealand
a confused illegal operator
the station of an overseas visitor
probably an unlicensed person using stolen equipment
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%Question: 64
#1.64 The abbreviation <20>HF<48> refers to the radio spectrum between:
2 MHz and 10 MHz
3 MHz and 30 MHz
20 MHz and 200 MHz
30 MHz and 300 MHz
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%Question: 65
#1.65 Bandplans showing the transmission modes for New Zealand amateur radio bands are developed and published for the mutual respect and advantage of all operators:
to ensure that your operations do not impose problems on other operators and that their operations do not impact on you
to keep experimental developments contained
to reduce the number of modes in any one band
to keep overseas stations separate from local stations
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%Question: 66
#1.66 The abbreviation <20>VHF<48> refers to the radio spectrum between:
2 MHz and 10 MHz
3 MHz and 30 MHz
30 MHz and 300 MHz
200 MHz and 2000 MHz
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%Question: 67
#1.67 An amateur radio operator must be able to:
converse in the languages shown on the Certificate of Competency
read Morse code at 12 words-per-minute
monitor standard frequency transmissions
verify that transmissions are within an authorised frequency band
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%Question: 68
#1.68 An amateur station may be closed down at any time by:
a demand from an irate neighbour experiencing television interference
a demand from an authorised official of the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment
an official from your local council
anyone until your aerials are made less unsightly
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%Question: 69
#1.69 A General Amateur Operator Certificate of Competency:
can never be revoked
gives a waiver over copyright
does not confer on its holder a monopoly on the use of any frequency or band
can be readily transferred
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%Question: 70
#1.70 A person in distress:
must use correct communication procedures
may use any means available to attract attention
must give position with a grid reference
must use allocated safety frequencies
% ans 2