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  2. Yaesu FT-891 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaesu_FT-891

    A Yaesu FT-891 Radio Tuned to the 10 Meter Band. The Yaesu FT-891 is a HF and 6 meters all mode mobile amateur radio transceiver. The FT-891 was first announced to the public by Yaesu at the 2016 Dayton Hamvention. [1] The radio has 100 watts output on CW, SSB, and FM modulations and 25 watts of output in AM. [2]

  3. List of amateur radio transceivers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_amateur_radio...

    The TS-2000 was marketed as a feature-rich transceiver. As an "all-band" transceiver, the TS-2000 offers a maximum power output of 100 watts on the HF, 6 meters, and 2 meters bands, 50 watts on 70 centimeters, and, with the TS-2000X or the optional UT-20, 10 watts on the 1.2 GHz or 23 centimeters band. The (American version) radio's main ...

  4. Amateur radio repeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio_repeater

    Repeaters are found mainly in the VHF 6-meter (50–54 MHz), 2-meter (144–148 MHz), 1.25-meter band (1 1 ⁄ 4 meters) (220–225 MHz) and the UHF 70 centimeter (420–450 MHz) bands, but can be used on almost any frequency pair above 28 MHz. In some areas, 33 centimeters (902–928 MHz) and 23 centimeters (1.24–1.3 GHz) are also used for ...

  5. 10-meter band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10-meter_band

    Since 10 meters can frequently open up to propagate globally, most 10-meter repeaters use a CTCSS sub-audible access tone. 16 kHz-wide signals with 5 kHz deviation is normal in this band. 8 kHz-wide signals with 2.5 kHz deviation can also be found. 2.5kHz deviation is mandated by FCC rules below 29.0 MHz.

  6. D-STAR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-STAR

    Starting in April 2004 Icom began releasing new "D-STAR optional" hardware. The first to be released commercially, was a 2-meter mobile unit designated IC-2200H. Icom followed up with 2 meter and 440 MHz handheld transceivers the next year. However, the yet to be released UT-118 add-on card was required for these radios to operate in D-STAR mode.

  7. Yaesu FT-One - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaesu_FT-One

    The receiver is filtered by a 22 pole crystal filter with switchable extra 8 and 6 pole narrow band CW filters, a 14 pole SSB filter and a separate 14 pole CW filter. The RF circuit is based on a – manually or automatically – microprocessor controlled PIN diode attenuator with 2 bipolar power transistors used as a high level RF amplifier in the receive mode and as a double RF output pre ...

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  9. Yaesu FT-101 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaesu_FT-101

    A Yaesu FT-101EE tuned to 7.180 (LSB) MHz.Many users left the protective plastic covering on to protect the face from scratching and dirt. Yaesu FT-101 is a model line of modular amateur radio transceivers, built by the Yaesu Corporation in Japan during the 1970s and 1980s.