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UHF-R peculiarity
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<blockquote data-quote="Cameron Stuckey" data-source="post: 4439" data-attributes="member: 281"><p>Hey everyone, I had an oddity pop up today that I have never seen before. I had 22 channels of UHF-R and coordinated them using IAS(I'm unsure of the version). Out of the 8 channels in the G1 range(470-538), the first frequency that IAS gave me to use was 470.025 MHz. Using the jog wheel I scrolled all the way to 470.125, and that's as low as the receiver would go. I decided to take a look at the top, and same thing, 469.875MHz was the highest possible frequency. I wasn't able to check receivers in other ranges, but another G1 receiver stopped at the same limits.</p><p></p><p>Is this normal for UHF-R receivers, to chop of the outside 125KHz limit of the range? Can someone verify on their receivers for me? And if so, does anyone have the most updated version of IAS to verify that the software reflects these actual frequencies?</p><p></p><p>Thanks.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cameron Stuckey, post: 4439, member: 281"] Hey everyone, I had an oddity pop up today that I have never seen before. I had 22 channels of UHF-R and coordinated them using IAS(I'm unsure of the version). Out of the 8 channels in the G1 range(470-538), the first frequency that IAS gave me to use was 470.025 MHz. Using the jog wheel I scrolled all the way to 470.125, and that's as low as the receiver would go. I decided to take a look at the top, and same thing, 469.875MHz was the highest possible frequency. I wasn't able to check receivers in other ranges, but another G1 receiver stopped at the same limits. Is this normal for UHF-R receivers, to chop of the outside 125KHz limit of the range? Can someone verify on their receivers for me? And if so, does anyone have the most updated version of IAS to verify that the software reflects these actual frequencies? Thanks. [/QUOTE]
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