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An ICOM IC-7300 Radio Tuned to the 20 Meter Band. The ICOM IC-7300 is a multimode 6 meter, 4 meter (ITU Region 1 only) and HF base station amateur radio transceiver. [1] The IC-7300 was announced to the public at the Japan Ham Fair in 2015. [2] The radio has 100 watts output on CW, SSB, and FM modulations and 25 watts of output in AM. [3]
The Icom IC-718 TS-2000X, same as the above with the addition 1.2 GHz capability; TS-B2000, a sleek "black box" unit requiring a computer or an optional mobile control panel for control TS-2000LE, limited production TS-2000 with a black finish to celebrate Kenwood's 60th Anniversary
The Icom IC-V82 is a VHF handheld transceiver with coverage in the two-meter band (144–146 MHz) and a maximum output power of 7 watts. [8] It was manufactured and sold by Icom from 2004 to 2014. [9] [10] [11] Following its discontinuation, Icom issued an advisory warning about counterfeit radios, including the IC-V82.
IQ imbalance is a performance-limiting issue in the design of a class of radio receivers known as direct conversion receivers. [a] These translate the received radio frequency (RF, or pass-band) signal directly from the carrier frequency to baseband using a single mixing stage.
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A low code-rate close to zero implies a strong code that uses many redundant bits to achieve a good performance, while a large code-rate close to 1 implies a weak code. The redundant bits that protect the information have to be transferred using the same communication resources that they are trying to protect.
SPLAT! (short for an RF Signal Propagation, Loss, And Terrain analysis tool [1]) is a GNU GPL-licensed terrestrial radio propagation model application initially written for Linux but has since been ported for Windows and OS X.
Amateur repeaters in the 144–148 MHz band usually use a 600 kHz (0.6 MHz) separation, in the 1.25-meter band use a 1.6 MHz separation, in the 420–450 MHz band use a 5 MHz separation, and in the 902–928 MHz band use a 25 MHz separation. Systems in the 450–470 MHz band use a 5 MHz separation with the input on the higher frequency.