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UHF-R peculiarity
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<blockquote data-quote="FredMerkle" data-source="post: 51949" data-attributes="member: 323"><p>Re: UHF-R peculiarity</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Yup. The lowest frequency being 470.125 on the G1 is due to keeping occupied channel bandwidth out of the adjacent band.</p><p></p><p>The offset on the highest frequency, 529.875, was a mistake. The G1 (and X1, etc.) was actually developed by a different team than did the original UHF-R frequencies. The original frequency bands start and stop exactly at the band edges, unless a regulatory requirement forced otherwise.</p><p></p><p>Have fun.</p><p></p><p>-Fred</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FredMerkle, post: 51949, member: 323"] Re: UHF-R peculiarity Yup. The lowest frequency being 470.125 on the G1 is due to keeping occupied channel bandwidth out of the adjacent band. The offset on the highest frequency, 529.875, was a mistake. The G1 (and X1, etc.) was actually developed by a different team than did the original UHF-R frequencies. The original frequency bands start and stop exactly at the band edges, unless a regulatory requirement forced otherwise. Have fun. -Fred [/QUOTE]
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