2017 Shortwave Frequency Guide

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  1. 2017 Shortwave Frequency Guide (klingenfuss)

Klingenfuss Shortwave Frequency Guide 2017     Previous Editions: Books: Shortwave Broadcast Listening  2017 Shortwave Frequency Guide By Joerg Klingenfuss. This book covers the latest 2017 schedules of all clandestine, domestic, and international broadcast stations, compiled by a team of international experts assisted by more than 100 experienced collaborators and monitors worldwide. It features a giant with over 4900 entries and a superb of stations as well. With full details on the digital future and comprehensive. Another 8800 abbreviated entries cover worldwide from the international bestseller. Virtually two handbooks in one - at an affordable price!

21st Edition. Printed December 2016. This book is also available in. Out-of-Print    Click here to view. Copyright 2016-2017.

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, Steve, who notes that. I find it interesting that the ARRL also noted the following on their: NOTE: The new 630-meter and 2200-meter bands are not yet available for Amateur Radio use. The effective date of the recent FCC Report & Order granting these allocations has not yet been determined, and until the start date has been set, it is not legal under an Amateur Radio license to transmit on either band. The FCC will publish a notice in The Federal Register “announcing such approval and the relevant effective date.” ARRL will announce the UTC notification procedures and the effective date to use these new bands as soon as these are known. I’ve received feedback from SWLing Post readers noting a licensed amateur radio operator in Tennessee who had already set up an active beacon on the 630 meter band.

He eventually pulled the plug. No doubt, this was why the ARRL posted a special note. Downloading and printing the charts Download and print PDF documents using.

(grayscale). (black/white). (color). (11X17 gloss; color + WAS map).

2 thoughts on “ Updated Frequency Bands Chart from the ARRL”. Michael Black The LF bands can be confusing since some countries, including Canada, already have them. And there have been experimental licenses issued in the US, if not elsewhere, that have allowed hams to use the bands. Then there is the 160-190KHz slice of spectrum, allocated in the US and maybe elsewhere as a license free experimental band.

I remember reading about it in the seventies, memory says it was more intended for showing off radio principles, but nothing prevented it from being used for communication, other than power and antenna limits. So every so often there’d be some projects, but nothing extraordinary. But at some point in in the seventies people, mostly hams, got serious, not just better antennas and receivers, but slowly methods for weak signal reception.

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2017 Shortwave Frequency Guide (klingenfuss)

There was a proposal at one point, maybe as far back as WARC 79, to make 160-190KHz an international ham band, but that never actually happened. So even before the US gets this allocation, there is activity “down there” and people are primed.

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