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40 Meters:
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One of the five original shortwave bands allocated to amateurs in 1926, 40 Meters is considered the most reliable all-season DX band. Most useful for inter-continental communication at night and extremely useful for local contacts out to a range of 1000+ miles, depending on conditions. For many years the portion of the band from 7100-7300 kilohertz has been allocated to shortwave broadcasters outside the Americas and not available to radio amateurs outside ITU Region 2. At the World Radio Conference WRC-03 in 2003 it was agreed that the broadcast stations would move out of the section 7100-7200 Khz on 29 March 2009 and that portion would become a worldwide exclusive amateur allocation afterwards. Discussions on releasing the remaining 100 kHz of the band to amateurs at a later date will continue in future conferences. Several European countries have now allowed amateur communication in the 7100-7200 kilohertz section on a shared non-interference basis as an initial act. |
793 results were returned in 80 pages from a total of 27032 records.
UP DN | Frequency | Callsign/Station | Short Info | Location | Randomize | |
7.115.000 | VOR | Power: 250 kW | Novosibirsk, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7115 kHz between 2200 UTC to 2300 UTC from Novosibirsk, Russia! | ||||||
7.130.000 | VOR | Power: 400 kW | Sankt Peterburg, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7130 kHz between 1500 UTC to 1600 UTC from Sankt Peterburg, Russia! | ||||||
7.245.000 | VOR | Power: 100 kW | Samara, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7245 kHz between 1730 UTC to 1900 UTC from Samara, Russia! | ||||||
7.130.000 | VOR | Power: 400 kW | Sankt Peterburg, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7130 kHz between 1830 UTC to 1900 UTC from Sankt Peterburg, Russia! | ||||||
7.175.000 | VOR | Power: 250 kW | Sertolovo, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7175 kHz between 1200 UTC to 1500 UTC from Sertolovo, Russia! | ||||||
7.230.000 | VOR | Power: 250 kW | Samara, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7230 kHz between 1800 UTC to 1900 UTC from Samara, Russia! | ||||||
7.230.000 | VOR | Power: 250 kW | Samara, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7230 kHz between 1730 UTC to 1745 UTC from Samara, Russia! | ||||||
7.180.000 | VOR | Power: 200 kW | Sankt Peterburg, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7180 kHz between 1800 UTC to 2000 UTC from Sankt Peterburg, Russia! | ||||||
7.130.000 | VOR | Power: 200 kW | Sankt Peterburg, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7130 kHz between 1700 UTC to 1800 UTC from Sankt Peterburg, Russia! | ||||||
7.185.000 | VOR | Power: 250 kW | Tchita, Russia | [40 Meters] [mapper] [stumbler] | ||
Voice of Russia (General Radio Frequency Centre) broadcasting on 7185 kHz between 1530 UTC to 1800 UTC from Tchita, Russia! |
© 2008 (KG6YPI, Brandon Hansen)