Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Following is a list of FCC-licensed community radio stations in the ... Call sign [1] Frequency City of license ... Austin County: Texas: 58: 2016 KLZL-LP: 90.7 FM ...
Church of God-Greenville, TX: Religious Teaching KCCP-LP: 102.3 FM: South Padre Island: Cameron County Texas: Emergency Information KCCT: 1150 AM: Corpus Christi: Radio KCCT, Inc. Classic Tejano: KCDD: 103.7 FM: Hamlin: Cumulus Licensing LLC: Top 40 (CHR) KCDF-LP: 96.1 FM: Houston: Centro Mundial De Fe Inc. Spanish religious KCDR-LP: 94.3 FM ...
(See discussion on the D9K call sign issued by Korea above – 'when 2 characters are needed'.) PPNS, 2×1 call sign prefix can be letter-letter, letter-digit, or digit-letter. A call sign composed of a letter, two digits, and one-letter is always a 2×1 call sign, meaning it has a letter-digit prefix and a single-letter suffix.
QRZ.com is an amateur radio website listing almost every callsign in the world. In 1992, QRZ founder Fred L. Lloyd accessed data from the FCC database to create a CD-ROM with all call signs issued in the United States. [1] A copy of the CD-ROM is carried on board the International Space Station and one was also aboard the Russian Mir space station.
FCC amateur radio station license of Al Gross. In the United States, amateur radio licensing is governed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Licenses to operate amateur stations for personal use are granted to individuals of any age once they demonstrate an understanding of both pertinent FCC regulations and knowledge of radio station operation and safety considerations.
The FCC has since extended K-prefixed translator call signs on channels 7 and 13 to three-letter suffixes; what is now KMNF-LD operated briefly under the six-character call sign K13AAR-D in 2018, [18] and was later granted a channel 7 construction permit with call sign K07AAH-D before changing to its current sign.
The American Radio Relay League (ARRL) is the largest membership association of amateur radio enthusiasts in the United States. ARRL is a non-profit organization and was co-founded on April 6, 1914, by Hiram Percy Maxim and Clarence D. Tuska of Hartford, Connecticut.
Repeater systems used in both the land mobile and amateur radio services often have provisions for announcing the repeater's call sign, either in voice or Morse code. Citizen's Band radio no longer [11] maintains a requirement for station or transmission identification, but operators are "encouraged to identify" transmissions using one of the ...