Norwegian callsigns are used in these territories:
- LA-LN for use in mainland Norway
- JW is used on Svalbard and close-by islands Hopen and Bjørnøya
- JX is used on Jan Mayen
- 3Y is used on Bouvet Island, Peter I Island, and in Antarctica (Queen Maud Land)
Depending on where I go, my callsign may be LA3ZA, JW3ZA, JX3ZA, or 3Y3ZA. We don't have districts so the number does not mean anything, except for 0. Callsigns with 0 are were reserved for non-Norwegian citizens, but this has stopped so LA0 callsigns are no longer issued.
Usually the callsign starts with LA, but why do so many of the LA callsigns end in A?
The callsigns have been distributed with the last letter as the most significant letter, e.g. in this order for the two letter series: LA1AA, LA1BA, LA1CA, ..., LA9ZZ. In the 80's it was necessary to add a third letter and that series started like this: LA1AAA, LA1BAA, LA1CAA, ..., LA1ABA, LA1BBA, ... As an example LA9KTA was issued last year. With the 'TA' we are getting closer to the last one, LA9ZZA, in the series ending in 'A' now. Therefore in some years all new radio amateurs will get callsigns ending in B.
Usually the callsign starts with LA, but why do so many of the LA callsigns end in A?
The callsigns have been distributed with the last letter as the most significant letter, e.g. in this order for the two letter series: LA1AA, LA1BA, LA1CA, ..., LA9ZZ. In the 80's it was necessary to add a third letter and that series started like this: LA1AAA, LA1BAA, LA1CAA, ..., LA1ABA, LA1BBA, ... As an example LA9KTA was issued last year. With the 'TA' we are getting closer to the last one, LA9ZZA, in the series ending in 'A' now. Therefore in some years all new radio amateurs will get callsigns ending in B.
Some Norwegian radio amateurs have an LB callsign. LB was previously used for a novice license with a 5 WPM (words per minute) Morse requirement. That was when 12 WPM was required for a full LA license. The system was simplified to a single class when the Morse code requirement was abandoned in 2003. Those who had started with the novice license and later upgraded to a full license with LA callsign have been allowed to go back to their former LB callsign, and that's what some have done.
There is no vanity callsign system in Norway, but club stations were allowed by the Norwegian Post and Telecommunications Authority to get one of the rare single-letter callsigns that were issued to the very first radio amateurs (up to about the time of the second world war). There are only 26*9 = 234 of these callsigns and one example is LA4O for the Oslo group. But this practice seems to have ended now. It is also possible to inherit a callsign from family as I have done.
There are also a few special callsign series:
- LD: Packet radio repeater nodes for VHF and UHF, e.g. for APRS. An example is LD3GT
- LF: License issued to a company, e.g. LF2E
- LG: Only Norwegian-Swedish station LG5LG in Morokulien
- LN: Club stations may switch to this in some of the major contests, e.g. LA8W - LN8W
Map from Wikipedia, Norway
One comment:
ReplyDelete"Callsigns with 0 are reserved for non-Norwegian citizens." That is no longer the rule. Non-Norwegian citizens now a days get a "standard" callsign LA1-9 call sign
73 de LA8AW - Odd-Egil
Thanks, I didn't know that - do you know when that change occurred?
DeleteMust be close to 10 years ago....
ReplyDeleteI've updated the text, thanks.
DeleteI would like to recommend LA5EKA's searchable ham database for Norway. There's a discussion about it here on Scannernytt (in Norwegian and if you have a login identity there)
ReplyDeleteThe information in this post is a bit dated now as one has stopped issuing LA callsigns and instead use the LB-series with a digit and 2 letter suffixes (like LB1XY).
ReplyDelete