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Passport to Romance is an American radio series that was broadcast on the Mutual Broadcasting System [1] beginning on April 5, 1946. [2] The trade publication Variety described it as a "musical romance with current Broadway stars".
The Honda Navi (often stylized as NAVi) [2] is a compact automatic motorcycle produced by Honda as part of the miniMoto range of small, sub-125cc machines. [3]Lending to its simple design, mechanisms, and construction, the Navi is one of the lowest-priced in the range. [4]
CQ Amateur Radio United States: English Monthly 1945–2023 National Communications Magazine United States: English Bimonthly 1988-present CQ VHF Magazine United States: English Quarterly 1996–2013 Electronics Illustrated United States: English Monthly 1959–1961 ham radio United States: English Monthly 1968–1990 K9YA Telegraph United States
IRIB Radio Iran (National Radio); IRIB Radio Farhang (Culture) IRIB Radio Payam (Info & Entertainment); IRIB Radio Quran (Holy Quran) IRIB Radio Maaref (Education) IRIB Radio Javan (Youth)
The signal is received by the repeater from the originating radio and re-broadcast so the receiving radio(s) can receive the radio signal. A repeater site gives approximately a 50-mile radius of coverage. Trunk ed radio is a method of using a bank of channels (frequencies) to repeat for multiple "Talk Groups" or fleet of radios.
John Francis Rider (1900–1985) was an American radio engineer best known as publisher and author of over 125 books for radio and television servicing. He founded John F. Rider Publisher Inc. and was responsible for annual volumes of the Perpetual Troubleshooter's Manual from 1931 to 1954.
The General Electric Passport is a turbofan developed by GE Aerospace for large business jets. It was selected in 2010 to power the Bombardier Global 7500 and 8000, first run on June 24, 2013, and first flown in 2015. It was certified in April 2016 and powered the Global 7500 first flight on November 4, 2016, before its 2018 introduction.
FuG 304: Distress Radio Buoy. FuG 305: Jammer - details lacking FuG 308: Radio Sonde Numerous different Radio Sonde systems were deployed by both the Army, Air Force and Navy. An example of a ground station would be the FuG 502 Mouse . This used a transponder system working at 300 MHz to track the radio sonde and received values from it on 27 MHz.