The RF Spectrum - UK Allocations

last meddled with : 21may98


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Bigears would like to thank the original owner of this page as all credit for it goes to him and not Bigears.
A guide from 1 Hz to 30 EHz (DC to Gamma rays). The main bands, all frequencies in MHz unless otherwise stated. With grateful thanks to the UK Radiocomms Agency for so openly publishling all you need to know... even if actually tuning in to anything other than Broadcasting/CB/Ham is not allowed, that's the rules, folks. Which is why there are no details of Private systems here...

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It doesn't line up in Netscape! (View source in WordPad)

DISCLAIMER: This page is provided for interest/curiosity only. Private services should remain that way, if you listen without a licence (you can't get them) to anything other than licenced Broadcasting or Amateur Radio (& CB) you are breaking the law. Even having a private frequency stored in a receiver's memory channel is considered to be proof of intercepting messages that are not intended for you. Penalties include heavy fines and/or imprisonment.
You have been warned.

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So what's the point of this page? Personally, I've been fascinated by the magic of radio all of my life, fiddling around with radios since primary school, and over the years having read a fair bit about communication systems and the radio spectrum, I've now got a lot of radio information rattling around in my head. I thought it would be nice to share it with the world, via the web, to show what a crowded resource the RF spectrum is; how every nook and cranny is allocated to some service or other; how the RA has to balance the needs of various services when they are asked for more spectrum. Also, with all that RF energy passing through your body, don't you think you have a right to know exactly what sort of emissions are zapping through you? (I'm not saying you have a right to know the content of the messages, only the nature of the delivery). Also, Amateurs should be aware of the services that could be affected should their equipment not be up to the required standard. Likewise to anyone foolish enough to consider operating an unlicenced pirate station - just don't - there really isn't any point is there? And lastly, because published books are often out of date or plainly wrong in these matters.

So if you've ever wondered what's beyond the dial on your ordinary radio, this is the page for you. Just be aware that you shouldn't tune in to anything private - if someone is talking loudly in the street and you can easily overhear, you still don't morally have the right to listen do you? If the vast amount of broadcasts and ham radio conversations aren't enough to amuse you (and the rest of what life in general has to offer) then that's quite sad. If I ever have time to switch on my receiver (to see what the propagation's like) the only bands I need to go to are amateur ones. And good music is much more satisfying. If you can find it.

In a decade or so there may not be all that much else to listen to anyway on current scanners, with FM broadcasters moving to DAB, analogue TV making way to DTV, PMR and emergency services changing to TETRA, and both Marine and Aero traffic increasingly using digital modes and satellites for routine traffic, cellphones all digital. Maybe the spectrum will one day consist of just one system for mobile access to THE NET which provides for all possible communication needs - a load of buzzing noises wherever you tune, except for the long-established amateur bands! Then you scanner owners can relax, you won't be able to do anything illegal with them if you try - unless you decide to throw them through someone's window...

I would say that if you have an interest in these matters, devote your energies to Amateur Radio PLEASE! We need more activity in the bands. Amateur radio covers bands from Low Frequencies (with 2km wavelengths) to ultra-high micro-wave bands (wavelengths in millimeters) with modes ranging from good old-fashioned morse code (CW) to AM/FM speech (communications bandwidths) to advanced narrowband speech (Single Side Band) to Television (slow scan like FAX through to full motion/definition FMW broadcast quality) to digital/data modes like RTTY and Packet. Transmissions can be direct, fixed and mobile (and Maritime Mobile), via satellite, bent through the troposphere, bounced off various layer of charged particles in the upper atmosphere, or even bounced off the moon (EME), or shooting stars (MS)! And all for just 15 quid per year - bargain. Go on - prove you know what you're talking about - take the RAE examination soon. Even if you don't ever use it...     See the RA web-page info, or the Radio Society of Groovy Britain site for more details, or the UK Ham Radio FAQ. And the G7KPF Quick Links. Join and support the RSGB too, it's a good idea as they do tend to negotiate new bands for us.

Here then, is my quick tour of the spectrum of 1998, with links to other sites where appropriate.
All information sourced from freely published books, magazines and web-sites (RA,ERO), without the need for a scanner, as part of an ongoing quest to figure out what lies beyond the broadcasting bands...

Bands (MHz)

NOTE 1: SAB,SAP,PMSE - when TV/radio/film/programme makers use radio - like the military and many low-power devices, they seem to crop up all over the spectrum; so they are not included here (or not as main items unless primary), as that would clutter up the listing and make it more confusing.
As Bands I, III, IV and V are designated BROADCASTING it seems logical that broadcasters may also use these bands for Outside Broadcasts, microphones, comm.s and links etc., either in the VHF bands that are no longer used for broadcasting, or at UHF on locally unused channels. In the mobile bands, "well-knowns" are around approx. 69.9 (0.2), 74.75, 75.25, 78.2 (0.1), the 141 band, the 455-455.45 band being very well used amongst other UHF1/UHF2 sections, 860 MHz (ch69), and microwaves.
Mics at near 174 are very popular, as well as other parts of Band III that coincide with French TV carriers and so are not used for PBR.

NOTE 2: Home Office for the Emergency Services - previous versions of this document did not mention these allocations, but as the bands are shown on RA pages, and in various books, some are now included for the sake of clarity. Only the BANDS are shown, not actual frequencies in use. Do NOT listen in!

NOTE 3: Military - various web pages will show that there is a world market for equipment operating in the bands such as HF, 30-87.5 (25kHz FM), 116-155 & 225-400 (25kHz AM), 470-512 etc. Note that whilst the odd Combat Net here and there may be "in the clear" any serious tactical use would be very hard to find. Frequency hopping and scrambling are used - after all, would you want your country defended by forces that could be easily monitored?
Operational use (like PMR) for base security, training, Mil. Police, MOULD etc. involves fixed frequencies, and various books show that Low VHF, Low Band, Mid Band, 406.1-420 and UHF1 are heavily used for these purposes. This type of radio traffic is still not to be listened to!


MHz


            lower than 1Hz? Slowly-changing DC more like.

--0.000001--(1Hz, 1 per sec.)---
             Natural "Earth waves"

  Hz         Brainwaves... (Electrical activity in your thinking-gear)
   0.1...    Delta - Sleep
   3...      Theta - Sluggish, day-dreaming
   7...      Alpha - Relaxed and receptive
  13...      Beta  - Very alert
  30...      High Beta - Paranormal powers!



--0.00002---(20Hz)--------------
             Audible if converted to soundwaves (like with, er, speakers)

  0.000050     UK mains AC electricity (50Hz, 240V) - 6000 km wavelength

  0.000067     CTCSS (Tone squelch) tones
               67 69.3 71.9 74.4 77 79.7 82.5 85.4 88.5 91.5 94.8 97.4 100 103.5 107.2 110.9 
               114.8 118.8 123 127.3 131.8 136.5 141.3 146.2 151.4 156.7 162.2 167.9 173.8
               179.9 186.2 192.8 203.5 206.5 210.7 218.1 225.7 229.1 233.6 241.8 250.3 254.1Hz
               (150 Hz is a military standard)

  ---music---
  0.000016,35  C-1 nice and bass-y (16Hz)
  0.000261,63  C3  note "middle C"  (see Piano Tuning)
       277.18  C# (these in Hz)
       293.66  D
       311.13  D#    To double a frequency in 12 equal steps (semi-tones) to complete
       329.63  E     one octave, multiply a note by 2 to the power of 1/12th to obtain
       349.23  F     the next note.    440 (A) x 1.059463094 = 466.16 (A#)
       369.99  F#
       392.0   G
       415.3   G#
       440.0   A   used for main reference
       466.16  A#
       493.88  B
  0.000523,25  C4  the note C again. Only an octave higher. (x2, yeah?)
      4186.00  C7  a really annoying 4kHz note C
      7902.13  B7
  0.012543,85  G8  highest midi note

  0.002700..   above 2.7 kHz not neccessary for comms speech, phones etc, and so for 
               phones it's filtered out. Hence too the 3kHz channel spacings on HF.
  0.015...     FM broadcast audio is filtered out above 15kHz
  0.019        FM stereo "pilot tone"
  0.020        approx. limit of human hearing. Bats, on the other hand...



--0.003------(3kHz)-------------
          VLF,LF: Mobile, Fixed, Navigation, DGPS, Time Signals (20,25,50,60,66.6,75kHz)
          Enormous wavelengths are very useful for penetrating rock (cave to surface - molephones) and
          the oceans (for submarines) but the antennas need to be rather large, or magnetic loops.

  0.0102  Omega hyperbolic fix Nav. (& 11.05 & 11.33 & 13.6 kHz)  ** ceased sep97 **
  0.060   MSF British Time signal 
  0.070...Decca Nav. purple slaves, to 72kHz   Llancarfan
  0.073   Ham 4km band ( 71.6- 74.4 kHz)       ** UK only, until 30.June.2000 **
  0.084...Decca Nav. masters, to 86kHz         Bolberry Down
  0.100   NELS Loran-C Navigation.  pulsed.    Loophead,Lessay,Sylt,Soustons
  0.112...Decca Nav. red slaves, to 117.6kHz   Jersey
  0.126...Decca Nav. green slaves, to 129kHz   St.Marys
  0.13675 Ham 2km band (135.7-137.8 kHz)       ** new Euro band, 1998 **
       


--0.1485------------------------          
  0.153.. LW AM Broadcasting, to 0.279 - 9kHz channels (ITU Region1) + some Nav. (NDB)
          See the British DX Club's Lists.

    153   Germany, Romania, Algeria
    162   France, Turkey
    171   Russia, Morocco,  
    177   Germany
    183   Germany
    189   Italy
    198   UK BBC Radio 4
    207   Germany, Morocco
    216   France,  Norway
    225   Poland,  spare UK allocation
    234   Luxembourg, Russia
    243   Denmark
    252   EIRE Atlantic 252, Algeria
    261   Moscow
    270   Czech
    279   Belarus, Isle of Man (soon)



--0.2835------------------------ 
          Marine/Aero Navigation (NDB beacons) + Maritime Mobile (CW)

  0.500   Calling, Distress (CW)
  0.518   Navtex, (& 490 & 4209.5 kHz)



--0.5265--MF--------------------
  0.531.. MW AM Broadcasting, to 1.602 - 9 kHz channels (10kHz to 1.700 in USA)
          See the British DX Club's Lists.

  0.648   BBC World Service
  0.693   BBC Radio 5 
  0.909   BBC Radio 5
  1.053   Talk Radio UK
  1.089   Talk Radio UK
  1.197   Virgin Radio
  1.215   Virgin Radio



--1.6065-------------------------
          MF mobile, Maritime and Aero. (OR)

  1.642...Cordless phones (base), to 1782 (8x 20kHz FM), 
          handsets at 47.443-47.543 MHz (12.5kHz spacing, 6.25 offsets)

          Amateur Radio 160m "Top Band" (1.81-2.0) (SSB used is mainly LSB)

  2.182   Calling, Distress



--2.85----HF--------------------    the "real shortwave bands"!
          mobile, fixed, military, ISM, SRD, and...            "numbers stations".   More.
 
          AM Broadcasting 
          (around 2.4, 3.3, 3.975, 5, 6, 7.2, 9.7, 11.8, 13.7, 15.3, 17.8, 21.6, 25.8)

          Amateur Radio
          80m   ( 3.5 - 3.8)   (SSB mainly LSB)
          40m   ( 7.0 - 7.1)   (SSB mainly LSB)
          30m   (10.1 - 10.15) (SSB not recommended) (WARC)
          20m   (14.0 - 14.35)
          16.5m (18.068-18.168) (WARC)
          15m   (21.0 - 21.45)
          12m   (24.89- 24.99)  (WARC)

          Standard Frequency references, and Time signals
          (at 2.5, 5.0, 10.0, 15.0, 20.0, 25.0)



          Maritime (3kHz SSB channels)    more  more 

   2046+ 2049  intership (kHz)
   2053+ 2056  intership
   2241        British intership
   2246        British intership
   2301        British intership
   4146+ 4149  intership
   4357- 4435  shore chs  401- 427 ( -292kHz split:  4065- 4143)    4417/ 4125 calling
   6224- 6230  intership
   6501- 6522  shore chs  601- 608 ( -301kHz split:  6200- 6221)    6516/ 6215 calling
   8291        ch 833 GMDSS
   8294+ 8297  intership
   8707- 8716  chs 834-837
   8719- 8812  shore chs  801- 832 ( -524kHz split:  8195- 8288)    8779/ 8255 calling
  12353-12365  intership
  13077-13197  shore chs 1201-1241 ( -847kHz split: 12230-12350)   13137/12290 calling
  16528-16546  intership
  17242-17410  shore chs 1601-1656 ( -882kHz split: 16360-16525)   17302/16420 calling
  18825-18843  intership
  19755-19797  shore chs 1801-1815 ( -975kHz split: 18780-18822)   19770/18795 calling
  22159-22177  intership
  22696-22852  shore chs 2201-2253 ( -696kHz split: 22000-22156)   22756/22060 calling
  25100-25118  intership
  26145-26172  shore chs 2501-2510 (-1075kHz split: 25070-25097)   26172/25097 calling



          Aeronautical R or ER (En-Route on fixed airways; so mainly civil)  (3kHz SSB channels)   more

   2851- 3019 kHz
   3401- 3497
   4651- 4696
   5481- 5676
   6526- 6682
   8816- 8960
  10006-10096
  11276-11396
  13261-13357
  17901-17967
  21925-21997



          Aeronautical OR (Off-Route; so mainly military)  (3kHz SSB channels)      GHFS

   3023- 3152 kHz
   4700- 4995
   5680-      GMDSS SAR
   5684- 5726
   6685- 6763
   8965- 9037
  11175-11271
  13200-13257
  15010-15097
  17970-18027
  23200-23350




--26.175--------------------------
          Fixed & Mobile (not aero)

  26.243..Paging, to 26.8625

          SRD, models, ISM
  26.995  "Brown" (AM) 1mW
  27.045  "Red"  
  27.095  "Orange"
  27.120  Test/Dev., ISM
  27.145  "Yellow"
  27.195  "Green"
  27.245  "Blue"
  

  26.965..CB, to 27.405 (40 CEPT "EURO" FM channels : 10kHz spacings with gaps) (PR27)
          27.41...                  Alarms
          27.5 ... Mobile, to 28    Weather balloons (sondes)
  27.601..CB, to 27.991 (40 UK FM 10 kHz channels) (27/81)
  27.731  UK calling: Channel 14
          CB can be fairly useful (when you want to speak to normal people, not just radio 
          nutters), but what a pity we're stuck with an HF allocation clogged up with 
          foreign SSB rather too often...   We need a system that allows silent monitoring, 
          like CTCSS, or (even better) a 460 MHz system as they do in the USA, Australia etc.

  28...   Amateur 10m band, to 29.7   CW,USB,Satellite,FM
  29.6    FM calling
  29.55...overseas FM repeaters, to 29.7
          The use of HF spectrum as we know it changes near 26.1MHz, where usage becomes more 
          like VHF/6 meters. You'd think that if any Tom, Dick or Harriet can use 4W on 26 MHz, 
          that a licenced Class B amateur would be able to use at least 3W (novice level) 
          somewhere in this band, wouldn't you? But no, 30MHz is the cut off point (despite
          not corresponding to the edge of any practical band usage) where you need to pass a
          Morse test just to be able to use SSB! And who do they survey, to see if things
          should change? The very people who have already suffered the ordeal!
          SELFISH B*****DS. Don't get caught up in the way things happened in the past, riding
          waves of nostalgia, but concentrate on the present, the future, what today's very
          different generations could enjoy - share your precious bands with those who can
          already do the same thing at 50MHz when the conditions are right. When ever we're at
          work, that is. Or make the Morse test need to be re-taken every five years, we'll
          see how quickly it gets dropped then!

          Suppose there was no Amateur Radio, but such a service was being planned, to start
          next year, with the rules and regulation we currently endure. There would be an uproar,
          wouldn't there? Nobody would seriously suggest a morse requirement. I rest my case.
          We do not NEED different licence classes apart from Novice and Full. And don't use that
          tired old "wally filter" argument, I've already gone to the trouble of passing the RA Exam.
          Don't interfere with MY life, go and live your OWN.

          I do acknowledge the "true spirit of amateur radio" (homebrew and experimentation) IS
          different from the fanatical pursuit of "radio DXing". I'd settle then for a two class
          system where existing Novices and Class B licencees could use HF SSB on restricted parts
          of the bands using type-approved equipment. With DXing available to the public with properly
          regulated callsigns maybe 27MHz would become a peaceful haven for local FM comms, and the
          Aero (R) 6.6MHz channels could be clear at last.

          And I DO realise that CW can get through when all else fails, and that if I ever reached
          12 words per minutes I might get to enjoy it. Maybe. But I object strongly to HAVING to.
          Similar argument - you've no right to force someone to drink something that you're sure
          they'll like. And if you disagree with that, change the subject to sex then try again.
          Again, the Golden Rule in life - don't live someone else's life for them - live your own!

          Glad I've got that off my chest...



--29.7----VHF-------------------
          Mobile     (French splits 4.4, -15)
          military + SRD Short Range Devices, R/C Models, Cordless Phones, Alarms, Hospital Paging

          On rare occasions ion layer conditions allow the reception of FM business/police signals here from the USA.

  35.0... Model aircraft,  to 35.25   (25x 10kHz)  100mW
  39.9375.Cordless phones, to 40.1125 (split -8.9: 31.0375-31.2125)
  40.500  Distress (often wrongly listed as 40.050)
  40.665..Surface models,  to 40.955  (33x 10kHz)  100mW cars and boats



--47---------------------------
          Band I - TV Broadcasting (not in UK since 1984 - so, great for TV DXing!)
          UK: Mobile - SRD, Radio Mics, Alarms

          Euro TV 7MHz ch.: E2 47-54, E3 54-61, E4 61-68
          Old UK  5MHz ch.: B1 41.25-46.25, B2 48-53, B3 53-58, B4 58-63, B5 63-68 (snd. @ +0.25, vis. @ +3.75)

  47.3... Cordless phones & alarms, to 47.55
  47.550..SAB, to 48.550
  48.975..Paging, to 49.4875
  49.82...SRD, to 49.98  baby alarms etc.


  50...   Amateur Radio 6m band, to 52 (varies in other countries).  Primary.  See GJ4ICD site.
          Beacons...
  50.09...CW/SSB...
  50.11   Inter-continental SSB DX
  50.15   SSB centre-of-activity
  50.71.. UK Repeaters, to 50.88    (split +0.5)
  51...   secondary...
  51.21.. repeater inputs, to 51.39 (both UK and Euro systems)
  51.41.. FM simplex, to 51.59      (20 kHz channels)
  51.51   FM calling channel
  51.81.. Euro. repeaters, to 51.99 (split -0.6)

          52...
  53.75.. SAB, to 55.75
          55.75 ... PBR, see 62.75
  57.5... CBS (planned), to 60.75 (split +7: 64.5 -67.75)
  60.75.. SAB...
  62.75.. PBR (planned), to 64.5  (split -7: 55.75-57.50)
          64.5 ... CBS, see 57.5
          67.7625...


--68------Low Band-------------
          Mobile, military, emergency services    (French splits -4.05, -5, -3)
          Military PTARMIGAN access links

          Various countries overseas allow FM radio broadcasting from 65 to 87.5 (OIRT), this often reaches us.

  68.0875.PBR, to 69.9875  single, dual: see 81.5875


  70...   Amateur 4m band, to 70.5   Secondary
          Beacons...
  70.03.. CW/SSB
  70.15   Meteor Scatter calling
  70.185  Cross-band centre-of-activity
  70.2    SSB calling
  70.25.. FM simplex, to 70.4875 (12.5 kHz channels)
  70.26   old AM frequency still in use
  70.3    RTTY/FAX
  70.3125 Packet, to 70.3375
  70.45   FM Calling channel
  70.4875 Packet


  70.5... Home Office - Fire Service mainscheme, to 71.5 (with 80-81.5)
 
  71.5125.PBR, to 72.7875  single, dual: see 85.0125
          72.8 ... MoD

  75.0    CAA ILS runway marker beacons (Guard band 74.8-75.2) 200ft, 1 & 3.5 miles from touchdown
          75.2 ... MoD

  76.7125.PBR, to 77.4875  single, dual: see 86.7125 ...
  77.5... PBR, to 77.9875 (used to be paired with 87.5 to 88), Cordless phones

          78... MoD
          80... H.O.

  81.5125.PBR, to 81.575
  81.5875.PBR, to 83.4875 (split -13.5: 68.0875-69.9875)  new for the 1990s
 
          83.5 ... H.O.
          84   ... MoD

          PBR listed so that you can avoid tuning in by accident.
          (same info can be found on Radiocomms Agency site anyway)  
          12.5kHz channels. (Started in 1947 with 100 kHz channels, 25 kHz from 1960)
  85.0125.PBR, to 86.2875 (split -13.5: 71.5125-72.7875) 
  86.3....PBR, to 86.7
  86.7125.PBR, to 87.4875 (split -10:   76.7125-77.4875)

  87.34.. Eurosignal paging, to 87.415 (4 x 25kHz channels A-D) heard in UK from Europe



--87.5-------------------------
          Band II - FM Broadcasting (100 kHz channels) 87.6-107.9   RDS, more
          See the British DX Club's Lists.    Tuners.
          Latest news : Newstide.

  87.6... RSLs (Restricted Service Licences)
  88.0... BBC Radio 2
  90.2... BBC Radio 3
  92.4... BBC Radio 4, BBC Wales/Scotland
  94.6... BBC Local Radio, Radio 4, ILR
  96.1... Independent Local Radio
  97.6... BBC Radio 1
  99.8... Independent National Radio - Classic FM, ILR
 102.0... Independent Local Radio
 103.5... BBC Local Radio, Radio 4, ILR
 105.0... Independent Local Radio, RSLs
 107.0... RSLs and other low power broadcasting, to 107.9

          87.5 to 88 MHz was once used for base PMR (split -10: 77.5-77.9875).
          97.6 to 102.1 MHz was used by the Home Office for Emergency Services AMRT base, 
          until the late 1980s (split to 82.5-84).
          105 to 108 MHz used from 1969 until the early 1990s for mobile JRC PBR (split to 138-141),
          and became available to Broadcasting in 1995.

          Long distance reception is more common via the troposphere here, rather than the ionosphere...
          i.e  a "lift" rather than "sporadic-E". "Tropo" tends to improve the higher the frequency, and lower
          frequencies are not affected; whereas ionospheric "skip" builds up from HF, maybe reaching as high as
          150 MHz rarely - but leaves higher bands unaffected.



-108---------------------------
          Aero. Navigation

 108.05.. ILS/VOR/ATIS, to 117.95 (50 kHz channels)



-117.975-----------------------
          Aero. Mobile "Civil Air Band" - NATS National Air Traffic Services, Volmet
          See Javiation's list.  RTCA. ICAO.

 118.0... AM comms, to 136.975  (25 kHz channels)
          Until recently 50kHz channel spacing was used, and soon the channels will be three
          times closer with 8.333kHz spacings; in Europe in 1999, in the UK in 2000.
          So will the first channel be 117.983 or 118.0?

          The use of 136 - 137 dates from 1990, and it's still shared with satellite services.

 121.5    Distress, EPIRBs
 121.6    airport Fire Services
 121.9    common Ground frequency
 122.475  Balloons and Hangliders
 123.1    SAR Search and Rescue
 129.7... many private airline channels, to 132
 130.1    Gliders, +130.125 +130.4
 131.725  ACARS Packet data  (Europe & USA) Air Comms Addressing/Reporting System
 135.375  London VOLMET (main)



-137------Mid Band-------------
          Mobile, military, Aero OR, emergency services      (French splits +/-4.6)
          Military PTARMIGAN access links

 137...   Weather Satellites, to 138
 137...   LEO MSS Sat. downlinks, to 138 (up at 148-149.9)   Orbcomm (4800 bps FSK)
 137.975..Paging, to 138.2
 138.2... future Euro. SRD band, to 138.45
 
          138... MoD

 139.5... JRC Joint Radio Co. PBR, to 140.5 (split 8.5: 148-149)  Trunked.
          139.51875-140.48125 J22-J99, main channels 12.5kHz spaced (no J01-J21)
          139.525  -140.475   K22-K98, interleaved (J+6.25kHz)
 140.375  JRC paging (simplex use of J90 below & J91 above)
          Fuel and Power industries. 
          From 1969 until the early 1990s AM was used in the band 138-141 (split -33: 105-108).

          140.5... MoD

 141...   SAB Services Ancillary to Broadcasting, to 141.5 (previously 141.9)   6.25 kHz offsets
 141.006..ILR, to 141.193
 141.206..BBC radio, to 141.256
 141.268  not available to BBC - & 141.281
 141.293..BBC radio, to 141.318  (.318 BBC News)
 141.375  BBC 75kHz wideband
 141.418  BBC
 141.4625 BBC 75kHz wideband 

          141.5 ... MoD
          143.0 ... H.O., to 144 - see 152
 143.625  Space - MIR station


 144...   Amateur 2m band, to 146   Primary - IARU Bandplan:
          EME (Moonbounce)...
 144.035..CW
 144.150..SSB - calling 144.3
 144.4... Beacons, to 144.49
 144.5... All modes
 144.725  in the south - you'll appear on F5ZBF when there's a lift...
 144.8... Digital, to 144.99
 145.0... Repeater inputs, to 145.1875
 145.2... FM Simplex, to 145.5875 (12.5 kHz channels) older 25kHz channels listed:

 145.2    S8,  V16   Raynet priority, MIR (with 145.8)
 145.225  S9,  V18   Raynet priority
 145.25   S10, V20   Slow Morse
 145.275  S11, V22
 145.3    S12, V24
 145.325  S13, V26   + French R8b/RV26   F5ZBF repeater Caen (split normal -0.6)
 145.35   S14, V28   + French R9b/RV28
 145.375  S15, V30   + French R10b/RV30
 145.4    S16, V32   + French R11b/RV32
 145.425  S17, V34   + French R12b/RV34
 145.45   S18, V36
 145.475  S19, V38
 145.5    S20, V40   FM calling channel
 145.525  S21, V42   GB2RS news, Sundays
 145.55   S22, V44
 145.575  S23, V46
 145.5875      V47
          (Repeaters 145.6 - 145.7875, split -0.6)
 145.600  R0,  RV48  FZ3VHF St.Brieuc
 145.6125 R0x, RV49  F5ZBL  Evreux
 145.625  R1,  RV50  FZ3VHD Quimper
 145.6375 R1x, RV51  F5ZDE  Chateauroux
 145.650  R2,  RV52  
 145.6625 R2x, RV53  F5ZCR  Vernon
 145.675  R3,  RV54  F1ZBX  Rennes
 145.6875 R3x, RV55  FZ2VHF Lille
 145.700  R4,  RV56  F6ZCE  Alencon
 145.7125 R4x, RV57
 145.725  R5,  RV58  FZ2VHC Le Havre
 145.7375 R5x, RV59
 145.750  R6,  RV60
 145.7625 R6x, RV61
 145.775  R7,  RV62  FZ3VHB Les Herbiers
 145.7875 R7x, RV63 
 145.8... Satellite Service, to 146


          146... H.O., see 154
          148... JRC,LEO, see 139.5 and 137
          149... MoD
 149.9... Satellite Navigation, to 150.05
 150.05.. Radio Astronomy, to 152    + Oil-slick markers
 152...   Home Office - Emergency Services, to 153 (with 143-144)
 153.025..Paging, to 153.475  (25kHz channels)   POCSAG (bursts)
 153.025  FLEX paging (continuous)
          153.5... MoD
 154...   Home Office - Emergency Services, to 155.975 (with 146-148)



-156---------------------------
          Mobile,  Marine VHF (SAR, MBR/CSR)
          PMR/PBR + CBS + STH, Ambulances, Paging (ERMES), SRD, Packnet, Civil Defence


 156...   Marine, to 163 - International and private 25kHz channels, single and dual (split -4.6).
          was 50 kHz spacing until SOLAS 1972, new channels were fitted in between old...
          Some sets may be set from "international" to "USA" mode, and then some
          of the dual frequency channels can be used as single (ship channel) frequencies;
          which could be handy for a "private" channel, no-one else would hear you! (apart
          from coast stations that use that channel. So you'd want to pick a clear one - and
          bear in mind that if you don't you won't be able to hear them telling you to move!)
          Maybe it's best not to, then. Interesting thought though, isn't it?


156.0-158.4 lines up with 160.6-163.0 at 4.6MHz higher, the lower section being the ship/mobile side of dual-freq. channels, the higher side being for shore/base. 156.375-156.875 and 160.975-161.475 are not joined, and have single-freq usage with international channels at 156 and private at 161. The international channels finish at 157.425/162.025 and the rest are private channels, which may be dual or single. Between 158.4 and 160.6 the mobile channels of a PBR band can be found. As this 163.0375-165.0375 band utilises a 4.5 MHz split, the mobile side covers 158.5365-160.5375 - the gap at the bottom is used for a few more single-freq. private marine channels, and at the top there are three local authority alarm channels. Let's track this in two columns 4.6 MHz apart... ** First, two single freq.s... --------------------------- ------- 160.600 99 Coastguards 156.000 0 Coastguards (99 was 00 but they couldn't dial that!) ** Now dual freq. pairs Shore/Base Ship/mobile 4.6 MHz lower -------------------------------------- 160.625---156.025 60 160.650---156.050 1 160.675---156.075 61 160.700---156.100 2 160.725---156.125 62 160.750---156.150 3 160.775---156.175 63 160.800---156.200 4 160.825---156.225 64 160.850---156.250 5 160.875---156.275 65 160.900 ?reserved? 156.300 6 SAR/intership 156.925---156.325 66 156.950---156.350 7 ** Now single freq.s ---------------------------- ------- 160.975 - 161.475 156.375 67 Safety MBR, CSR, Paging returns 156.400 8 intership 156.425 68 156.450 9 intership/Pilots 156.475 69 intership/Customs 156.500 10 intership/SAR 156.525 70 DSC Digital SelCall ONLY, GMDSS 156.550 11 SAR 156.575 71 156.600 12 Ports 156.625 72 intership 156.650 13 intership 161.275 Marine 10mW Alarms 156.675 73 intership/SAR 161.300 On-board handhelds 156.700 14 Ports 156.725 74 Ports 161.350 On-board handhelds 156.750 15 intership --16 only-- 156.775 75 not yet used (guardband) 161.400 Radio Nav. 156.800 16 Calling, Distress 161.425 M2 (marinas) 156.825 76 not yet used (guardband) ----------- 156.850 17 intership 161.475 CSR 156.875 77 intership ** Now dual freq. pairs again -------------------------------------- 161.500---156.900 18 161.525---156.925 78 to (19-27, 79-89) 162.000---157.400 28 162.025---157.425 88 No more "Radio Lighthouses" ** Private channels, single or dual Marine Business Radio ** and some land-based PMR, same split -4.6 ---------------------------- ------- 162.050 MBR single... 157.450 29 MBR single OR 162.050---157.450 29 MBR dual to 162.450 Diff. GPS 157.850 35/M marinas to 162.825 104A Telex 158.225 104B Fax. to 163.000 MBR single 158.400 48 MBR single OR 163.000---158.400 48 MBR dual ** Now private single freq.s ---------------------------- ------- 163.025 Diff. GPS 158.425 108 MBR 158.450 49 MBR 0.1 MHz gap where 158.475 109 MBR "4.6 split" and 158.500 50 MBR "4.5 split" systems meet ** We'll change now to a 4.5 MHz difference for the land mobile band, and 12.5 kHz spacings --------------------------------------- 163.0375---158.5375 PBR/CBS (split -4.5) to... The first 70 per cent used to be used for the old BT RadioTelephones : 163.0375... BT System 4, to 164.425 (split -4.5: 158.5375-159.925) channels U001-U111 and before that : 163.050 ... BT System 3, to 164.400 (split -4.5, 25kHz channels 55-1 in reverse!) ch17 was control (until the 1980's saw the arrival of TACS at 935-950 MHz) 164.4375... the top section, to 165.0375, was mainly Private Message Handling - operators speaking to mobile doctors etc, and is now seeing more Common Base Stations (PBR via a dealer who supplies equipment and airtime) including some multi-channel trunked CBS. (PAMR Public Access Mobile Radio is mainly confined to Band III, and as with other trunked systems the control channels are continuous). 163.900... now PMR dual and single, to 164.2 (159.4-159.7) with many S.T.Hire channels. 164.225... now used by the Paknet system, to 164.3875 (base continuous) The lowest portions are filling up with CBS and PBR. Despite this section only being allocated to LAND MOBILE, (12.5 kHz PMR) in some books and magazines you may find extra marine channels given (channel number greater than 50), either single or -4.6 dual, in the first 150kHz or so. Seems a bit odd, that. Marine channels are 25kHz bandwidth too, so that ruins half of the 12.5kHz channel above and below. How wasteful. And was 160.9 just forgotten about? How sad that it would make my day to find out. Another mystery is the continued appearance in lists of the top channels 165 to 165.0375 being paired with 4.8 higher, rather than 4.5 lower. An RA document clearly shows 165.050 as channel 1 in the high band. And 169.8375 is a simplex channel, etc. Makes you wonder... to 165.0375---160.5375 ---------------------------- -------- 165.050 start of high band 160.550 - 160.575 Alarms (3x 12.5kHz) ** the end of this 2nd column now joins the start of the 1st. now we've covered 4.6MHz ** ** We'll change now to a new 4.8 MHz difference UPWARDS --------------------------------------- 165.0375 end of mid band 169.8375 end of single freq simplex section 165.0500---169.8500 ch 001 PBR High Band to... Private Mobile Radio channels are allocated in all bands to different categories such as : National exclusive (53 dual, 12 single here in high band), CBS (8 dual here), On-site shared (5 dual, 31 single here - 3km range), Wide Area Shared (189 dual - 30kms, taxis etc), Short Term Hire (4 - 169.0125, 169.1375, 169.1625, 169.1875), STH/demo/"parking"/Test&Dev (1 - 167.2000---172.000), Road Construction (1 - 165.075---169.875), UK General (5 single - mobile only, anywhere in UK, 5W ERP max, for not more than 12 months in one place). Which explains why that "spare channel" can't be used for anything else in your area! to... 168.2375---173.0375 ch 256 PBR ** single freq.s ---------------------------- -------- 168.2500 PBR 173.050 PBR to to 168.2875 Alarms 173.0875 PBR 168.3000 PBR 173.100... H.O. + low power / short range devices (LPD/SRD) -168.3125--boundary---------- 168.325 Home Office to 168.825 -168.8375-------------------- 168.8500 PBR to 168.9375 Alarms to 169.0500 JRC to 169.3875 PBR -169.39375------------------- 169.4250 ERMES Paging (25kHz, continuous) - PBR being cleared? to 169.8000 -169.81875------------------- 169.825 PBR 169.8375 PBR which is where we started the second column this time
or in my usual format... 156.0... Marine, to 158.525 single OR dual: see 160.625 158.5375.PBR, to 160.5375 single OR dual: see 163.0375 ... alarms 160.6... Marine, to 163.025 single OR dual (split -4.6: 156.025-158.4) 163.0375.PBR, to 165.0375 (split -4.5: 158.5375-160.5375) Mid Band 165.05...PBR, to 168.2375 (split +4.8: 169.850 -173.0375) High Band (French splits -4.6) 168.25...PBR, to 168.3 single 168.3125... H.O. 168.85...PBR, to 169.8375 single - with ERMES paging 169.425 to 169.8 (25kHz channels) 169.85...PBR, to 173.0375 single OR dual: see 165.05 173.05...PBR, to 173.0875 single 12.5kHz channels. Talkthrough... ** These are your main business radio bands, mate. So I'm told. ** D on't ever listen here. It's not nice to eavesdrop. ** The technology might be fascinating, but there's no point listening, is there? 173.1... SRD, to 177.2 Mics, SAB, Theatres, Telemetry, Alarms, Telecommand, Deaf-aids -174--------------------------- Band III - TV Broadcasting (Not UK since 1984), DAB Digital Audio UK: Mobile - PAMR/PBR/SAB/SAP/PMSE (mics) + RMR French TV: 8MHz ch. F5-F10 vision at 176, 184, 192, 200, 208, 216 sound at +6.5 Euro TV (7MHz) E5 174-181, E6 181-188, ... E11 216-223, E12 223-230 Old UK (5MHz) B6 176-181, B7 181-186, ... B13 211-216 174.0 ... mics 177.2125.PAMR/PBR, to 183.4875 (split +8: 185.2-191.5) except 181.7-181.8 183.5 ... RMR Remote Meter Reading (183.8875) 184.5 ... SAB 185.2 ... PBR, see -8 191.5 ... SAB 193.2 ... PBR, see +8 199.5 ... SAB, SRD 200.5 ... mics 201.2125.PAMR/PBR, to 207.4875 (split -8: 193.2-199.5) 207.5 ... SAB, mics 209.26... PBR, see +3.3 210.26... SRD 210.97... PBR,SAB, see +3.3 212.2 ... SRD 212.5625.PAMR/PBR, to 213.55 (split -3.3: 209.26-210.25) 213.56... ?SRD? 214.275..PAMR/PBR, to 215.2625 (split -3.3: 210.97-211.96) Narrowband modes 215.275..SAB, to 215.4875 (split -3.3: 211.97-212.18) 215.5 ... SRD 217.5... DAB, to 230 (1.536 MHz bandwidth) Vertical Pol. (more) Eureka 147 - COFDM - Umpteen hundred narrowband carriers all sharing the bits... 218.640 (E11-B) LOCAL n/a 220.352 (E11-C) LOCAL/INR Isle of Man + Channel Islands 222.064 (E11-D) LOCAL/INR England + Wales 223.936 (E12-A) LOCAL/INR Scotland 225.648 (E12-B) BBC UK + Gibraltar (224.88-226.416) 227.360 (E12-C) LOCAL n/a 229.072 (E12-D) LOCAL/INR Northern Ireland A whopping 6 programmes carried on each transmission. That's 12 in any one location then. And that's supposed to be more efficient than the current FM system? But I can get two or three times that many stations already, check the FM band in London or Paris for example. Progress. Ah, they'll say, but we can also use BandII when the analogue signals are phased out, and there's L-band too (1.5 GHz). Yee-ess, I'll say, but try fitting the processing power needed into a walkman, and make the batteries last more than half an hour. Ha. Oh, silly me, I nearly forgot. We don't really need more than ONE music station anyway, as they all play the same 500 tired worn out "hits" over and over again. And there's never enough advertising revenue to support TWO stations in the same area, is there? Am I the only person in the UK who wants to listen to good new music, rather than the same old Simply Red/Phil Collins/Toto/60's/kiddie pop/REM/Peter Gabriel etc? Most people I mention this to usually agree (willingly, too) and would rather feel more "up to date" than all this living in the past. It is after all a great pleasure to hear a fresh bit of pop and find you really like it - that is what makes us go out and buy the stuff isn't it? Trouble is, when they do play the latest releases, they play them every hour until you're sick if them - if you have the radio on all day at work it'll drive you nuts. So, from my experience most people are fed up with it, but as there's no alternative the audience figures will remain high, that pleases the advertisers, nothing needs to change, keep it bland, and the vicious circle continues... How DO they manage to make even music I LIKE sound so awful? 224.0125.SAB, PMSE, to 224.4875 -230--------------------------- NATO military band (Equipment). ARFA/DRFB/FMSC/NJFA/CEAC Air-Ground-Air, Air-Air AM comms (25kHz channels) Radio Relay, Satellite, PTARMIGAN multi-channel trunk links 243.0 Distress, EPIRBs 326.5... Astronomy, to 328.5 - deuterium spectral line 328.6... Aero. Nav., to 335.4 - ILS, glideslopes 390.0125.PSRCP H.O. TETRA, to 392.9875 (digital 25 kHz channels) (split -10: 380-383) more. Base continuous. may eventually extend to 395 & 385. -399.9----UHF------------------ Mobile (French splits +/-10) 400.15.. Met. sondes, Satellite, EPIRBS, to 406.1 406.1 ... MoD UHF1: 420 to 450 - military (shares with PBR), SRD, SAB 420... PBR: civil TETRA, to 425 (split -10: 410-415) 425... PBR, see 440 429... MoD 430... Amateur 70cm band, to 440 Secondary 430.025. RU1 French/Neth. repeaters, to 430.375 (RU15) (split +1.6: 431.625-431.975) 432.0... Narrow band CW/SSB 433.0... RB0 UK repeaters, to 433.375 (RB15) (split +1.6: 434.6-434.975) 433.475 SU19 433.5 SU20 FM calling channel 433.525 SU21 434.6... Euro. repeaters, to 434.975 (split -1.6: reverse of UK) 438.2... Euro. repeaters, to 439.475 (split -7.6: 430.6-431.875) Germany/Swiss/Austria UHF1 PBR limited mainly to large cities - London, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Glasgow, Edinb., Manchester Coventry, Bristol, Cardiff, Swansea, Newport. 12.5kHz channels. 440.0125.PBR, to 442.2625 (split -14.5: 425.5125-427.7625) 442.275 ... SAB 442.525..PBR, to 443.4875 (split -14.5: 428.025 -428.9875) 13 JRC ch. 443.5 ... MoD 445.5125.PBR, to 445.9875 (split -20.5: 425.0125-425.4875) 446.0... PBR, to 446.4 - future Euro SRBR 446-446.1 446.425 ... SAB 447.525..PBR, to 449.4875 448... PBR, to 449 (split -17: shared with amateur 431-432) London. 6.25kHz offsets 449.5 ... MoD UHF2: 450 to 470 - emergency services, PBR, Paging, Telemetry, SRD, SAB PBR mobile segments may contain single frequency simplex use. 12.5kHz channels. 450... Home Office - Emergency Services, to 453 (with 464-467.25) 453.0125 PBR 453.025..PBR, to 453.9875 (split +6.5: 459.525-460.4875) 454.025 ... Paging 454.85...PBR, to 454.975 (some Railways split -6.5) 454.993 ... SAB, to 455.456 (with 468.018-468.506) 455.475..PBR, to 455.85 (split +5.3: 460.775-461.25) airports only ... H.O. 456.0... PBR, to 456.9875 (split +5.5: 461.500-462.4875) 456.0625... 21 JRC ch., to 456.3125 457.0 ... H.O. (+5.5?) 457.256 ... SAB JFMG short term / OB, to 457.468 (with 467.293-467.531) 6.25 kHz offsets 457.475 ... H.O. 457.5... Scanning Telemetry, to 458.5 (split +5.5: 463-464) 457.525..Marine on-board comms, to 457.575 (may be split +10) 458.5... Telemetry, SRD, to 459.1 458.85.. On-site paging / local comms, to 459.475 ... H.O. 459.525 ... PBR, see 453.025 460.500 ... SAB, H.O. 460.775 ... PBR, see 455.475, 461.2375... SAB, & 461.25 (split +7.2875: 468.525 & 468.5375) 461.2625.PBR and SRBR, to 461.4875 461.500 ... PBR, see 456 462.500 ... H.O. 462.756 ... SAB JFMG fixed sites (split +6.7375/+6.875: 469.493-469.868) 6.25kHz offsets 463.000 ... ST, see 457.5 464.000 ... H.O.,see 450 467.275 ... SAB, see 457.25 467.525..Marine on-board, to 467.575 single, or dual: see -10 467.600 ... SAB 468.018 ... SAB, to 468.5375, see 455 and 461.237 469.493 ... SAB fixed sites, see 462.756 469.875 ... H.O. -470--------------------------- Band IV - TV Broadcasting in 8MHz channels (21 to 35) + mobile (SAB) UK System I (PAL) : Offsets of +/- 25 kHz may be used to alleviate co-channel interference AM Vision carrier at +1.25 (Lower Sideband vestigial) FMW Sound carrier at +7.25 (sound 6 higher than video) Nicam digital sound at +7.802 French System L (Secam) : Offsets of +/- 37.5 kHz may be used. AM Vision carrier at +1.25 (inverted video) AM Sound carrier at +7.75 (sound 6.5 higher than video) Nicam digital sound at +7.55 470-478 21 477.25 sound 478-486 22 485.25 486-494 23 493.25 494-502 24 501.25 502-510 25 509.25 510-518 26 517.25 518-526 27 525.25 526-534 28 533.25 534-542 29 541.25 542-550 30 549.25 550-558 31 557.25 558-566 32 565.25 566-574 33 573.25 574-582 34 581.25 582-590 35 589.25 -590--------------------------- UK Aero. Navigation 594 Radar 50cm 590-598 (36) VCRs / Computers etc -598--------------------------- Band V - TV Broadcasting in 8MHz channels (37 to 68) + mobile (SAB) 598-606 37 605.25 606-614 38 613.25 610 Radio Astronomy 614-622 39 621.25 622-630 40 629.25 630-638 41 637.25 638-646 42 645.25 646-654 43 653.25 654-662 44 661.25 662-670 45 669.25 670-678 46 677.25 678-686 47 685.25 686-694 48 693.25 694-702 49 701.25 702-710 50 709.25 710-718 51 717.25 718-726 52 725.25 726-734 53 733.25 734-742 54 741.25 742-750 55 749.25 750-758 56 757.25 758-766 57 765.25 766-774 58 773.25 774-782 59 781.25 782-790 60 789.25 790-798 61 797.25 798-806 62 805.25 806-814 63 813.25 814-822 64 821.25 822-830 65 829.25 830-838 66 837.25 838-846 67 845.25 846-854 68 853.25 854-862 (often refered to as channel 69, a proposed extension) - SAB -854--------------------------- Mobile, military 854... SAB, mics, SRD, CT2 cordless phones, to 870 915... Base section, to 960 (split -45: 870-915) Cellphones - GSM Global System for Mobility 917.0125.ETACS/TACS, to 949.9875 (25 kHz channels, 12.5kHz offsets) to be phased out by 2005 921... UIC, to 925 (by 2005) Euro. Railways GSM system 925.2... EGSM - Extended GSM, to 935 935.2... GSM, to 959.8 (124x TDMA 200kHz channels) Digital. Scrambled. Base continuous. 933... DSRR, to 935 (Digital Short Range Radio), will NOT happen, Euro plans withdrawn 934.0125.UK CB, to 934.9625 (934/81) (20 channels, 50kHz spacing) band to end 31/12/98 -960--------------------------- Aero. Navigation (DME/IFF), military JTIDS 966 Astronomy +/-4 MHz 978.... DME Ground reply X channels, to 1087 (paired with 1xx.x0 MHz) (to +63) 1025... DME Air mobile channels, to 1150 (1-126 x 1 MHz channels; 1-16 and 60-69 not used) Selected in aircraft by tuning to a paired channel between 108 and 118 MHz Pulses transmitted by the aircraft, returned by the ground station & time difference measured. 1104... DME Ground reply Y channels, to 1213 (paired with 1xx.x5 MHz) (to -63) 1030 SSR/IFF (Squalk) Ground (secondary radar - rotating), air reply on 1090 -1,215----microwaves----------- Mobile, military, radar 1246... Russian GPS GLONASS (GLObal NAv. Sat. Sys.) L2, 0-12: 1246+n(0.4375) see 1602 1240... Amateur 23cm band, to 1325 CW,SSB/FM/TV 1296... narrowband modes, beacons, to 1297 1297... FM repeaters RM0 to RM19 (split -6: 1291..) 1297.0 RM0 1297.05 RM2 1297.075 RM3 1297.125 RM5 1297.15 RM6 1297.225 RM9 1297.375 RM15 1297.475 RM19 (not in use) 1297.5.. FM simplex, to 1298 1297.50 FM calling 1298.275.German repeaters, to 1298.65 (split -28: 1270..) -1,325----(1.325 GHz)----------- Mobile, Satellite, Fixed, Navigation etc... Rather specialist, wavelengths of less than 30cm really do allow for high gain antennas, with very narrow beamwidths. Cable losses become very noticeable and/or untenable. Mobile "flutter" quite severe, mobile systems need many more base stations to cover a given area. Most useful uses are direct fixed links, point to point, satellite (line of sight), low range etc. So - mostly un-interceptable and/or digital. 1,400 Astronomy, Space Research, SETI, Hydrogen Line. Certain frequencies around here propagate very well through the universe, so the boffins listen here for extra- terrestial transmissions. But surely the little grey men are doing the same thing? 1,452... L-Band DAB, to 1492 1,525... Satellite comms downlinks, to 1559 Inmarsat GMDSS etc (uplinks 1626.5-1660.5) (+101.5?) 1,575.42 Navstar GPS Nav L1 C/A (military accuracy with 1227.6 L2) (L3 1381.05 used) 1,602... Russian GLONASS L1, 0-12: 1602+n(0.5625) spread spectrum 1,610... LEO MSS, to 1626.5 (up&down) CDMA i.e. Globalstar, Iridium (TDMA, 780km up) 1,800.30.TFTS in-flight digital phones (air-ground), to 1804.969 (164 x 30.303 kHz channels : ground at -130) 1,690... Weather Satellite HRPT (Hi-res pics), to 1710 NOAA, GOES, MeteoSat 1,825... PCN mobile phones, to 1875 (split -95: 1730..) Orange etc. 1,880... DECT Digital Euro. Cordless Telephones, to 1900 1,900... future UMTS, to 2025 (with 2110-2200) IMT-2000, FPLMTS 3rd generation mobile (-190?) 2,310... Ham 13cm band, to 2,450 2,450 ISM Industrial/Scientific/Medical, your microwave oven. Really. 3,000 Radar 10cm 3,400... Ham 9cm band, to 3,475 3,675... C-Band satellite TV, to 4,200 5,650... Ham 6cm band, to 5,850 9,400 Radar 3cm 10,000... Ham 3cm band, to 10,150 - and 10,300 to 10,500 -10,700---(10.7 GHz)----------- Satellite TV, Ku band - Astra,Eutelsat,Intelsat etc. (35,800km up) 10,700...FSS 11,700...BSS DBS (Band VI) 12,500...Telecom -12,750------------------------ These are really small radio wavelengths... 24,000...Ham 12mm band, to 24,250 40,500...future ITC 7mm MVDS Multipoint Video Distribution, to 42.5 GHz 47,000...Ham 6mm band, to 47,200 75,500...Ham 4mm band, to 76,000 142,000..Ham 2mm band, to 144,000 248,000 Ham 1.2mm band, to 250,000 - 248 GHz, hmmmm. Radio or Far Infra-Red? There's a bit of overlap near 1mm wavelengths... -275,000------(275 GHz)-------- Far Infra-Red, to 25,000 GHz (over 1mm to 12µm) -25,000,000---(25 THz)--------- Infra-red -441 THz----------------------- Visible wavelengths. Otherwise known as "Light". Red to Violet (680-420nm) Some of my favourite frequencies. Green is rather nice. -714 THz----------------------- Near Ultraviolet. 300nm-180nm -1,666 THz--------------------- Far Ultraviolet 180nm-91nm -3,289 THz--------------------- Extreme Ultraviolet 91nm-10nm 912-100 Angstroms -30,000,000,000---(30 PHz)----- X-rays 10nm-10pm 100-0.1 Angstroms -30,000,000,000,000--(30 EHz)-- Gamma rays 10pm-100fm and beyond That's enough. Obsessive? Me?
Frequency multiplied by wavelength gives 300,000,000 m/s - the speed of light... or 299,792,458 to be more exact. 300 mHz > 3000 mHz 1Gm > 100Mm easier to count s/cycle than c/s ! 3 Hz > 30 Hz 100Mm > 10Mm VERY long waves! Natural 'Earth' waves 30 Hz > 300 Hz ELF 10Mm > 1Mm Bass! 300 Hz > 3000 Hz ILF 1000km > 100km Voice frequencies (sound) 3 kHz > 30 kHz VLF 100km > 10km 30 kHz > 300 kHz LF 10km > 1km 300 kHz > 3000 kHz MF 1km > 100m 3 MHz > 30 MHz HF 100m > 10m 30 MHz > 300 MHz VHF 10m > 1m 300 MHz > 3000 MHz UHF 1m > 10cm 3 GHz > 30 GHz SHF 10cm > 1cm 30 GHz > 300 GHz EHF 1cm > 1mm mainly experimental 300 GHz > 30 THz THF 1mm > 10um limits of radio / far infra-red 30 THz > 300 THz 10um > 1um infra-red light 300 THz > 3000 THz 1um > 100nm infra red > visible > ultra violet (near & far) 3 PHz > 30 PHz 100nm > 10nm extreme ultra violet 30 PHz > 30 EHz 10nm > 10pm x-rays 30 EHz > 10pm > Gamma rays 1 micron = 1 micrometer = 1um = 1000nm = one thousandth of a mm 10 Angstrom = 1 nanometer i.e. 5000A=500nm 1A=0.1nm=100pm X unit (Xu) = approx. 0.001002 angstrom, or 100.2 femtometers, defined by M. Siegbahn in 1925. Formerly used for measuring the wavelength of X rays and gamma rays now measured in picometers (pm) or femtometers (fm). 1 Fermi = 1fm = about the size of an atom's nucleus

Metric prefixes

Ten to the power of -27 vimto v -24 yocto y -21 zepto z -18 atto a Greek: atten = eighteen -15 femto f Greek: fempten = fifteen -12 (trillionth) pico p 'little bit' -9 (billionth) nano n nanos = dwarf -6 (millionth) micro u mikros = small -3 (thousandth) milli m mille = thousand -2 (hundredth) centi c centum = hundred -1 (tenth) deci d decimus = tenth 1 (ten) deca da deka = ten 2 (hundred) hecto h hekaton = hundred 3 (thousand) kilo k Greek: Khilioi 6 (million) mega M megas = great 9 (billion) giga G gigas = giant 12 (trillion) tera T teras = monster 15 (quadrillion) peta P 18 (quintillion) exa E 21 (sextillion) zetta Z 24 (septillion) yotta Y 27 (octillion) 30 (nonillion) 33 (decillion 36 (undecillion) 39 (dodecillion) These American terms obviously increment by one per 42 (tredecillion) thousand. In Europe however, we prefer to do it by 45 (quattuordecillion) millions. Thus a Euro billion is a million millions 48 (quindecillion) and not a thousand millions. 51 (sexdecillion) 99 (dotrigintillion) 100 (googol) 120 (novemtrigintillion) 303 (centillion) googol (googolplex)


International Allocation Tables




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