When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. KSNO-FM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KSNO-FM

    KSNO-FM (103.9 FM), is a radio station broadcasting a classic rock format. Licensed to Snowmass Village, Colorado, United States, it serves the Aspen and Roaring Fork Valley area, broadcasting from Glenwood Springs to Aspen and into the Snowmass Creek Valley, Redstone and beyond.

  3. Amateur radio repeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio_repeater

    An SSTV repeater is an amateur radio repeater station that relays slow-scan television signals. A typical SSTV repeater is equipped with a HF or VHF transceiver and a computer with a sound card, which serves as a demodulator/modulator of SSTV signals. SSTV repeaters are used by amateur radio operators for exchanging pictures.

  4. Radio repeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_repeater

    A radio repeater is a combination of a radio receiver and a radio transmitter that receives a signal and retransmits it, so that two-way radio signals can cover longer distances. A repeater sited at a high elevation can allow two mobile stations, otherwise out of line-of-sight propagation range of each other, to communicate. [1]

  5. RFinder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFinder

    RFinder's main service is the World Wide Repeater Directory (WWRD), which is a directory of amateur radio repeaters. RFinder is the official repeater directory of several amateur radio associations. RFinder has listings for several amateur radio modes , including FM , D-STAR , DMR , and ATV .

  6. M17 (amateur radio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M17_(amateur_radio)

    M17 uses Codec 2, a low bitrate voice codec developed by David Rowe VK5DGR et al. Codec 2 was designed to be used for amateur radio and other high compression voice applications.

  7. Repeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repeater

    The digital repeater is used in channels that transmit data by binary digital signals, in which the data is in the form of pulses with only two possible values, representing the binary digits 1 and 0. A digital repeater amplifies the signal, and it also may retime, resynchronize, and reshape the pulses.

  8. United States Army Ordnance Munitions and Electronic ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army...

    Provisional Redstone Ordnance School (1952) In March 1952, the Provisional Redstone Ordnance School was established at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama.In December 1952, the Ordnance Guided Missile School (OGMS) was established, taking over the provisional operation.

  9. Repeater insertion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repeater_insertion

    An active circuit used for such a purpose is known as a repeater. In a CMOS integrated circuit, the repeater is often a simple inverter. Reducing the delay of a wire by cutting it in half and inserting a repeater is known as repeater insertion. The cost of this procedure is the additional new delay through the repeater itself, plus power cost ...