Difference between revisions of "Offset"
From The RadioReference Wiki
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
|UHF T||470-512||+3 MHz|| | |UHF T||470-512||+3 MHz|| | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | |700 MHz|| | + | |700 MHz||746-806||+30 MHz|| |
|- | |- | ||
|800 MHz||806-896||-45 MHz|| | |800 MHz||806-896||-45 MHz|| | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |900 MHz||896-940||-39 MHz|| | ||
|- | |- | ||
|33cm Ham||902-928||-12 MHz or -25 MHz||1 | |33cm Ham||902-928||-12 MHz or -25 MHz||1 | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | + | |23cm Ham||1240-1300||-12 MHz or -20 MHz||1 | |
− | |||
− | |23cm Ham||1240-1300||- | ||
|} | |} | ||
'''Notes''' | '''Notes''' | ||
*'''1.''' Ham radio offsets can vary in certain areas of the country. | *'''1.''' Ham radio offsets can vary in certain areas of the country. | ||
− | *'''2.''' There are some paired channels in the VHF high band (paging, taxi, old RCC mobile phone channels) but | + | *'''2.''' There are some paired channels in the VHF high band (paging, taxi, old RCC mobile phone channels) but no standard offset. |
*'''3.''' The 406.1-420 federal land mobile band began changing to a +9 MHz offset a few years ago. Some older systems still remain with non-standard offsets. | *'''3.''' The 406.1-420 federal land mobile band began changing to a +9 MHz offset a few years ago. Some older systems still remain with non-standard offsets. | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
[[Category:RR Glossary]] | [[Category:RR Glossary]] |
Revision as of 03:04, 6 June 2010
Offset is the difference between receive and transmit frequencies of a radio channel. Most commonly it refers to the separation between the input frequency and output frequency of a repeater or other type of full duplex system.
For example, a mobile radio receives on 146.94 and transmits on 146.34 in order to operate on a repeater.
146.94 - 146.34 = .6 (.6 MHz or 600 kHz). Since in this case the transmit frequency is lower than the receive frequency, it is said to have a negative offset of 600 kHz or -600 kHz.
Certain bands and frequency ranges in the United States have fixed standard offsets.
Band | Frequency Range | Offset | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
10m Ham | 29.5-29.7 | -100 kHz | |
VHF Low Band | 30-50 | No standard offset | |
6m Ham | 50-54 | -500 kHz or -1 MHz | 1 |
2m Ham | 144-148 | +600 kHz or -600 kHz | |
VHF High Band | 138-174 | No standard offset | 2 |
220 MHz | 220-222 | +1 MHz | |
1.25m Ham | 222-225 | -1.6 MHz | |
380 MHz | 380-400 | +10 MHz | |
Federal UHF | 406.1-420 | +9 MHz | 3 |
70cm Ham | 420-450 | +5 MHz or -5 MHz | 1 |
UHF | 450-470 | +5 MHz | |
UHF T | 470-512 | +3 MHz | |
700 MHz | 746-806 | +30 MHz | |
800 MHz | 806-896 | -45 MHz | |
900 MHz | 896-940 | -39 MHz | |
33cm Ham | 902-928 | -12 MHz or -25 MHz | 1 |
23cm Ham | 1240-1300 | -12 MHz or -20 MHz | 1 |
Notes
- 1. Ham radio offsets can vary in certain areas of the country.
- 2. There are some paired channels in the VHF high band (paging, taxi, old RCC mobile phone channels) but no standard offset.
- 3. The 406.1-420 federal land mobile band began changing to a +9 MHz offset a few years ago. Some older systems still remain with non-standard offsets.