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  2. 15-meter band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/15-meter_band

    The 15-meter band (also called the 21-MHz band or 15 meters) is an amateur radio frequency band spanning the shortwave spectrum from 21 to 21.45 MHz. The band is suitable for amateur long-distance communications, and such use is permitted in nearly all countries.

  3. WARC bands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WARC_bands

    The World Administrative Radio Conference (WARC) bands are three portions of the shortwave radio spectrum used by licensed and/or certified amateur radio operators. They consist of 30 meters (10.1–10.15 MHz), 17 meters (18.068–18.168 MHz), and 12 meters (24.89–24.99 MHz).

  4. 13-centimeter band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/13-centimeter_band

    2,304.1 MHz Region 2 CW & SSB calling frequency [2]; 2,320.2 MHz Region 1 Narrow-band calling frequency [3]; 2.400–2.485 GHz: Spread Spectrum band for general radio-controlled aircraft recreational use (amateur radio license holders have 2.39–2.45 GHz licensed for their general use in the USA) and using both frequency-hopping spread spectrum and direct-sequence spread spectrum RF ...

  5. Amateur radio frequency allocations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio_frequency...

    Effective 5 March 2012 the FCC permits CW, USB, and certain digital modes on these frequencies by amateurs on a secondary basis. The FCC Report and Order permits the use of digital modes that comply with emission designator “60H0J2B”, which includes PSK31 as well as any RTTY signal with a bandwidth of less than 60 Hz. The Report and Order ...

  6. Stereophonic sound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereophonic_sound

    In this system all the low-frequency rumble was in the left channel and all the high-frequency distortion was in the right channel. Over a quarter of a century later, it was decided to tilt the recording head 45 degrees off to the right side so that both the low-frequency rumble and high-frequency distortion were shared equally by both channels ...

  7. Amateur radio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio

    Radio amateurs are limited to a specific set of frequency bands, the amateur radio bands, allocated throughout the radio spectrum, but within these bands are allowed to transmit on any frequency using a variety of voice, text, image, and data communications modes. This enables communication across a city, region, country, continent, the world ...

  8. Amateur radio repeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio_repeater

    An example of an inverting transponder would be a 70cm to 2m transponder which receives on the 432.000 MHz to 432.100 MHz frequencies and transmits on the 146.000 MHz to 146.100 MHz frequencies by inverting the frequency range within the band. In this example, a signal received at 432.001 MHz would be transmitted on 146.099 MHz.

  9. 80-meter band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/80-meter_band

    The nominal "80 meter" band begins at 3.5 MHz (85.7 m wavelength) and goes up to 4.0 MHz (74.9 m wavelength).The upper part of the band, mostly used for voice, is often referred to as 75 meters, since in Region 2, the wavelengths in that section are between 80–75 meters (adjacent to or overlapping a shortwave broadcast band called by the same name: "75 m").