User:Ninly/BandPlans
Because I recognize that a great deal of tedious work went into compiling and tabulating band plan data for several of the amateur radio bands, I'm copying all of that content to this page in case it should be needed for subsequent article revisions. That said, I believe (and have the support of at least one WP:HAM member) that band plans are inappropriate to the wiki because
- they are voluntary,
- they are regional, and (perhaps most importantly)
- Wikipedia is not a guide book.
I hope making these changes won't ruffle too many feathers. If you'd like to discuss them, please do so at the WikiProject talk page.
160 m
[edit]US Band Plan
[edit]By "Gentlemen's agreement", US amateurs voluntarily limit their 160 meter emissions according to the following suggested bandplan:
1.800 MHz–1.830 MHz | CW, RTTY and other narrowband modes |
1.830 MHz–1.840 MHz | CW, RTTY and other narrowband modes, Intercontinental QSOs only |
1.840 MHz–1.850 MHz | CW, SSB, SSTV, other wideband modes, Intercontinental QSOs only |
1.850 MHz–2.000 MHz | CW, phone, SSTV and other wideband modes |
IARU Region Band Plans
[edit]160 Meters | 1810 1838 | 1838 1840 | 1840 1843 | 1843 2000 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
IARU Region 1 | |||||
IARU Region 2 | 1800 - 1840 | ||||
IARU Region 3 | 1800 - 1840 | ||||
Note: Region 2 QRP/DX window is 1830-1850 |
80 m
[edit]United States
[edit]3.560 | CW QRP calling frequency |
3.579 | CW QRP calling frequency (colorburst crystal frequency) |
3.590 | RTTY/data DX (< 1 kHz Bandwidth) |
3.570–3.600 | RTTY/data (< 1 kHz Bandwidth) |
3.790–3.800 | DX window |
3.845 | SSTV |
3.885 | AM calling frequency |
3.985 | SSB QRP calling frequency |
40 m
[edit]United States
[edit]7.030 | CW QRP calling frequency Accepted GB & Euro QRP calling.(QRP-L) |
7.040 | RTTY DX & CW QRP calling frequency |
7.080-7.100 | RTTY |
7.110 | CW QRP calling frequency (Novice) |
7.112 | CW QRP calling frequency (NorCal crystals) |
7.171 | SSTV |
7.285 | SSB QRP calling frequency |
7.290 | AM calling frequency |
15 m
[edit]United States
[edit]21.000-21.080 | CW (< 1 kHz bandwidth) |
21.080-21.100 | RTTY, data (< 1 kHz bandwidth) and CW |
21.100-21.120 | RTTY, data (< 1 kHz bandwidth) and CW |
21.120-21.150 | CW (< 1 kHz bandwidth) |
21.120-21.150 | CW (< 1 kHz bandwidth) |
21.200-21.450 | Radiotelephone (< 3 kHz bandwidth) and CW |
21.340 | SSTV |
70 cm
[edit]Below is the ARRL US band plan for the 70 cm band, although many local variations exist:
420.00 - 426.00 MHz | Amateur TV repeater or simplex, and experimental |
426.00 - 432.00 MHz | Amateur TV simplex |
432.00 - 432.07 MHz | CW EME (Moonbounce) |
432.07 - 432.10 MHz | Weak-signal CW |
432.10 MHz | 70-cm calling frequency |
432.10 - 432.30 MHz |
Mixed-mode and weak-signal |
432.30 - 432.40 MHz | Propagation beacons |
432.40 - 433.00 MHz | Mixed-mode and weak-signal |
433.00 - 435.00 MHz | Auxiliary/repeater links |
435.00 - 438.00 MHz | Satellite only (internationally) |
438.00 - 444.00 MHz | ATV repeater input and repeater links |
442.00 - 445.00 MHz | Repeater inputs and outputs (local option) |
445.00 - 447.00 MHz | Shared by auxiliary and control links, repeaters and simplex (local option) |
446.00 MHz | National simplex frequency |
447.00 - 450.00 MHz | Repeater inputs and outputs (local option) |
It is common to find repeater inputs and outputs from 438 to 450 MHz, as sanctioned by ARRL-approved frequency coordinating groups such as Northern Amateur Relay Council of California. The local band plan takes precedence over the ARRL band plan.
33 cm
[edit]While the national band plan as well as many State band plans call for a -12 MHz split for FM repeaters, an increasing number of States are changing their band plans to reflect the growing number of FM repeaters using -25 MHz splits. Many amateurs feel that eventually the -25 MHz split will become commonplace and all State and national band plans will adopt it.
Below is an example of a more modern 33 centimeter band plan that allocates a -25 MHz repeater split while also grandfathering existing repeaters with a -12 MHz split. This band plan is roughly based on the one developed by the New England Spectrum Management Council.
Sample Band Plan
[edit]902.0000 - 902.3000 MHz | CW and SSB
|
902.3000 - 902.4000 MHz | Beacons |
902.4125 - 902.9875 MHz | FM repeater inputs (25 MHz splits)
|
903.0000 - 904.0000 MHz | CW and SSB
|
904.0000 - 907.0000 MHz | Digital communications |
907.0000 - 909.0000 MHz | FM repeater inputs (12 MHz splits)
|
909.0000 - 915.0000 MHz | ATV |
915.0000 - 919.0000 MHz | Digital communications and Experimental |
919.0000 - 921.0000 MHz | FM repeater outputs (12 MHz splits)
|
921.0000 - 927.0000 MHz | ATV |
927.0125 - 927.3875 MHz | FM Simplex
|
927.4125 - 927.9875 MHz | FM repeater outputs (25 MHz splits)
|
23 cm
[edit]Below is the ARRL US band plan for the 23cm band:
1240-1246 MHz | Amateur television channel 1 |
1246-1248 MHz | Narrow-bandwidth FM point-to-point links and digital, duplex with 1258-1260 MHz |
1248-1258 MHz | Digital Communications |
1252-1258 MHz | Amateur television channel 2 |
1258-1260 MHz | Narrow-bandwidth FM point-to-point links and digital, duplexed with 1246-1248 MHz |
1260-1270 MHz | Satellite uplinks |
1260-1270 MHz | Wide-bandwidth experimental, simplex A.T.V., F.M. A.T.V. |
1270-1276 MHz | Repeater inputs, FM and linear, paired with 1282-1288, 239 pairs every 25 kHz, e.g. 1270.025, .050, etc. |
1271-1283 MHz | Non-coordinated test pair |
1276-1282 MHz | Amateur television channel 3 |
1282-1288 MHz | Repeater outputs, paired with 1270-1276 |
1288-1294 MHz | Wide-bandwidth experimental, simplex ATV |
1294-1295 MHz | Narrow-bandwidth FM simplex services, 25-kHz channels |
1295-1297 MHz | Narrow bandwidth weak-signal communications (no FM) |
1295.0-1295.8 MHz | SSTV, FAX, ACSSB, experimental |
1295.8-1296.0 MHz | Reserved for EME, CW expansion |
1296.00-1296.05 MHz | EME-exclusive |
1296.07-1296.08 MHz | CW beacons |
1296.4-1296.6 MHz | Crossband linear translator input |
1296.6-1296.8 MHz | Crossband linear translator output |
1296.8-1297.0 MHz | Experimental beacons (exclusive) |
1297-1300 MHz | Digital Communications |
6 m
[edit]IARU Region 1 50 MHz Band Plan
[edit]
(with the UKSMG's recommended change to the adoption of the term
"inter-regional" rather than "inter-continental")
50.000 - 50.100 CW only 50.020 - 50.080 Beacons 50.090 CW calling frequency 50.100 - 50.500 SSB and CW only 50.100 - 50.130 DX window 50.110 Inter-Region calling frequency 50.150 SSB centre of activity 50.185 Cross-band activity centre 50.200 MS reference frequency (CW and SSB) 50.500 - 51.000 All modes 50.500 - 50.700 Digital communications 50.510 SSTV 50.550 Fax 50.600 RTTY 50.710 - 50.910 FM repeater outputs (UK) 51.000 - 51.410 All modes 51.210 Emergency communications priority 51.210 - 51.410 FM repeater inputs (UK) 51.410 - 51.830 All modes 51.430 - 51.590 FM, 20 kHz channel spacing 51.510 FM calling 51.830 - 52.000 All modes 51.940 - 52.000 Emergency communications priority
(Source: VOLUNTARY OPERATING CODE OF PRACTICE for 6m operators UKSMG 16 February 2003)
US/North American 6m Band Plan
[edit]50.0-50.1 | CW, beacons |
50.060-50.080 | beacon subband (US only) |
50.1-50.3 | SSB, CW |
50.1-50.125 | DX window; 50.125 calling freq |
50.125 | US continental SSB calling |
50.3-50.6 | All modes (50.29 PSK31) |
50.4 | AM calling |
50.6-50.8 | various modes communications |
50.8-50.98 | Radio remote control (Ten 20 kHz channels) |
51.0-51.1 | Pacific DX window |
51.1-54.0 | Repeaters/various plans (-1 MHz and -1.7 MHz most popular) |
52.525 | Primary FM simplex |
53.1-53.8/100 kHz spaced | Old radio remote control, NO LONGER accepted
by the AMA, due to increasing use by amateur radio repeater stations. |
(Source: Academy of Model Aeronautics, Western Washington Amateur Radio Association, ARRL ARRL Band Plans)
IARU Region 3 Band Plan
[edit]The Band Plan for IARU Region 3 may be found in their Band Plan Document
4 m
[edit]Radio Society of Great Britain 70 MHz Band Plan
[edit]
70.000 - 70.050 Beacons only 70.030 Personal Beacons 70.050 - 70.250 Narrow Band modes 70.085 PSK31 centre of activity 70.185 Cross-band activity centre 70.200 SSB/CW calling 70.250 - 70.300 All modes 70.260 AM/FM calling frequency 70.300 - 70.500 All modes channelised operation with 12.5 kHz spacing 70.300 RTTY/fax calling/working 70.3125 Digital modes 70.325 Digital modes 70.3375 Digital modes 70.350 Digital modes 70.3625 Digital modes 70.375 FM Simplex 70.3785 Internet voice gateway 70.400 FM Simplex 70.4125 Internet voice gateway 70.425 FM Simplex 70.4375 Digital modes 70.450 FM Calling frequency 70.4625 Digital modes 70.475 FM simplex 70.4875 Digital modes
(Source: The Four Metres Website)
2 m
[edit]Below is a common band plan for 2 meters. Note that in some areas (generally whole states) the channel spacing is 20 kHz. Some areas use 15kHz spacing.
Please note, this is the band plan for the USA.
In the UK, the band extends from 144 MHz to 146 MHz.
To summarize:
- 144.000 to 144.400 narrowband modes.
- 144.500 to 145.000 is an "all mode" section.
- 145.000 to 145.200 are VHF repeater inputs.
- 145.200 to 145.600 are Simplex channels (12.5kHz spacing).
- 145.600 to 145.800 are the repeater outputs.
Space communications are above 145.800 to the band edge.
Sample band plan
[edit]144.000–144.100 MHz | CW only, as restricted by FCC Part 97 |
144.100–144.275 MHz | CW and SSB |
144.275–144.300 MHz | CW propagation beacons |
144.300–144.500 MHz | Satellite |
144.510–144.890 MHz | FM repeater inputs (600 kHz splits)
|
144.910–145.090 MHz | Packet and FM simplex
|
145.110–145.490 MHz | FM repeater outputs (600 kHz splits)
|
145.510–145.790 MHz | FM simplex, digital and satellite
|
145.800–146.000 MHz | Satellite |
146.010–146.385 MHz | FM repeater inputs (600 kHz splits)
|
146.400–146.595 MHz | FM simplex
|
146.610–146.985 MHz | FM repeater outputs (600 kHz splits)
|
147.000–147.390 MHz | FM repeater outputs (600 kHz splits)
|
147.405–147.585 MHz | FM simplex
|
147.600–147.990 MHz | FM repeater inputs (600 kHz splits)
|
1.25 m
[edit]Below is an example of a band plan for the 1.25 meter band.
Sample Band Plan
[edit]219.000–220.000 MHz | Data backbones (see 47CFR97.303 for further details) |
222.000–222.025 MHz | EME (Earth-Moon-Earth) |
222.050–222.060 MHz | CW propagation beacons |
222.100–222.150 MHz | CW and SSB |
222.160–223.380 MHz | FM repeater inputs (1.6 MHz splits)
|
223.400–223.520 MHz | FM simplex communication
|
223.540–223.640 MHz | Packet |
223.660–223.740 MHz | FM control links and remote bases |
223.760–224.980 MHz | FM repeater outputs (1.6 MHz splits)
|
Frequencies of Note
[edit]- CW and SSB calling frequency is 222.100 MHz.
- FM simplex calling frequency is 223.500 MHz.
Band Plan (Canada)
[edit]Industry Canada has officially abolished the use of 220–222 MHz for amateur use, effective January 2006. This leaves 3 MHz of usable spectrum in the 222–225 MHz range.
222.000–222.025 MHz | EME (Earth-Moon-Earth) |
222.050–222.060 MHz | CW propagation beacons |
222.100–222.150 MHz | CW and SSB |
222.160–223.380 MHz | FM repeater inputs (1.6 MHz splits)
|
223.400–223.520 MHz | FM simplex communication
|
223.520–223.640 MHz | Packet |
223.640–223.700 MHz | FM control links and remote bases |
223.760–224.980 MHz | FM repeater outputs (1.6 MHz splits)
|