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Naval Communication Station Harold E. Holt; U.S. Naval Facility Keflavik, Iceland; Naval Radio Transmitter Facility Aguada; Naval Radio Transmitter Facility Grindavik; Naval Radio Transmitter Facility LaMoure; Naval Radio Transmitter Facility Niscemi; Naval Security Group Activity, Winter Harbor; Naval Station San Miguel
Radio GTMO, officially titled AFN Guantanamo Bay, is the United States military radio station at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base (GTMO), in Cuba. Operated locally by Mass Communication and Interior Communications Electrician sailors of the U.S. Navy assigned to the American Forces Network Europe, the station serves approximately 6,000 American ...
Naval Computer and Telecommunications Area Master Station Atlantic, Detachment Rota, Spain Naval Computer and Telecommunications Area Master Station Pacific Naval Radio Transmitter Facility Aguada
NBA Summit Naval Radio Station [9] Summit, Balboa, Canal Zone, Panama: 18.6 kHz, 24.0 kHz [10: megawatt naval VLF station, demolished NPO Sangley Point Naval Radio Station: Cavite, Philippines: 21.5 kHz
Much of the site is devoted to the enormous overhead wire antenna array that is necessary to efficiently radiate the VLF waves. The antenna, shown above, consists of ten catenary cables, 5,640–8,700 ft (1,719–2,652 m, 1.1–1.6 miles) long, suspended in a zigzag pattern over the valley between Wheeler mountain and Blue mountain on twelve 200 ft. towers on the mountains' crests.
Naval Radio Transmitter Facility Aguada is a tall guyed radio mast erected by the United States Navy. It is used as a facility of the US Navy for ashore and U.S. and NATO ships, planes, and submarines operating at sea in areas of broadcast coverage near Aguada, Puerto Rico at 18°23′55″N 67°10′38″W / 18.39861°N 67.17722°W ...
Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS) is a 150 MHz wide broadcast band of the 3.5 GHz band (3550 MHz to 3700 MHz) in the United States. [1] In 2017, the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) completed a process which began in 2012 to establish rules for commercial use of this band, while reserving parts of the band for the US Federal Government to limit interference with US Navy radar ...
This radio station continued its operation until its deactivation in 1916. On March 3, 1915, the United States Congress passed an Appropriations Act that authorized $400,000 for the construction of a high-powered, long distance radio station at Pearl Harbor. In 1916, this new station, NPM, began operations at Hospital Point, Pearl Harbor.