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Many Japanese radios are designed to be capable of receiving both the Japanese FM band and the CCIR FM band, so that the same model can be sold within Japan or exported.. The radio may cover 76 to 108 MHz, the frequency coverage may be selectable by the user, or during assembly the radio may be set to operate on one band by means of a specially-placed diode or other internal compone
Since 2024, commercial radio broadcasters have begun temporarily shutting down AM radio broadcasts, as a trial-run to FM-only broadcasts in 2028. [5] Initially, at least 34 radio stations (which would start from February or July 2024 and end in 2025) will participate in this move, with additional broadcasters joining in the coming months. [6]
NHK FM started broadcasting officially in 1969, soon followed by FM Aichi Music; a year later it was the turn of FM Osaka, FM Tokyo and FM Fukuoka Music. [24] Initially, the government did not allow more than one private radio station per prefecture, but from 1988 some of these restrictions were relaxed.
Love FM (Japan) M. MBS Radio (Japan) N. NHK Broadcasting Center; ... Niigata Kenmin FM Broadcast; O. Onomichi FM; Osaka Broadcasting Corporation; R. Radio Fukushima ...
Broadcasting area(s) Station Frequency Start date of broadcast Date of affiliation Dual affiliation with NRN Note(s) Prefecture Region On air branding Abbr. Call sign AM FM Hokkaidō: HBC Radio: HBC JOHR 1287 kHz 91.5 MHz 10 March 1952 2 May 1965 Yes Core station Aomori: Tōhoku: Aomori Hōsō: RAB JOGR 1233 kHz 91.7 MHz 12 October 1953 2 May ...
Nagasaki Broadcasting; Nankai Broadcasting; National Radio Network (Japan) New Heisei station; NHK; NHK FM Broadcast; Nippon Broadcasting System; Nippon Cultural Broadcasting; Nishinippon Broadcasting
Japan FM Network (JFN; Japanese: 全国FM放送協議会, romanized: Zenkoku Efu Emu Hōsō Kyōgi-kai, lit. 'National FM Broadcasting Council') is a Japanese commercial radio network. It was founded in 1981. Tokyo FM is the flagship station of the network.
The FM broadcast band in Japan uses 76 to 95 MHz, and in Brazil, 76 to 108 MHz. The International Radio and Television Organisation (OIRT) band in Eastern Europe is from 65.9 to 74.0 MHz, although these countries now primarily use the 87.5 to 108 MHz band, as in the case of Russia .