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  2. Trailer park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trailer_park

    A trailer park, caravan park, mobile home park, mobile home community or manufactured home community is a temporary or permanent area for mobile homes and travel trailers. Advantages include low cost compared to other housing, and quick and easy moving to a new area (for example, when taking a job in a distant place while keeping the same home).

  3. Mobile home - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_home

    Mobile homes are often sited in land lease communities known as trailer parks (also 'trailer courts', 'mobile home parks', 'mobile home communities', 'manufactured home communities', 'factory-built home communities' etc.); these communities allow homeowners to rent space on which to place a home. In addition to providing space, the site often ...

  4. List of house types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_house_types

    Travel trailer, camper or caravan: a trailer designed to be used as a residence (usually temporarily), which must be towed regularly by a vehicle and cannot move under its own power Tiny house : a dwelling, usually built on a trailer or barge, that is 500 square feet (46 m 2 ) or smaller, built to look like a small house and suitable for long ...

  5. Manufactured housing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manufactured_housing

    From the same source, mobile home "is the term used for manufactured homes produced prior to June 15, 1976, when the HUD Code went into effect." [2] Despite the formal definition, mobile home and trailer are still common terms in the United States for this type of housing.

  6. 'It's not your grandma's trailer': Mobile homes are ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/not-grandmas-trailer-mobile-homes...

    In the 1940s, mobile homes looked more trailer-like and often housed transient employees. But in 1976, the federal government established the Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards ...

  7. Diplexer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplexer

    The diplexer is a different device than a passive combiner or splitter. The ports of a diplexer are frequency selective; the ports of a combiner are not. There is also a power "loss" difference - a combiner takes all the power delivered to the S port and equally divides it between the A and B ports. A diplexer does not.

  8. Duplexer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplexer

    These are effectively a higher-performance version of a diplexer, typically with a narrow split between the two frequencies in question (typically around 2%-5% for a commercial two-way radio system). With a duplexer the high- and low-frequency signals are traveling in opposite directions at the shared port of the duplexer.

  9. Talk:Diplexer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Diplexer

    A diplexer is to allow two signals to be carried over a single path - i.e. to provide two-channel multiplexing. Generally a diplexer consists of a pair of filters with non-overlapping pass-bands, so it implements frequency-division multiplexing. I agree that a device can be both a diplexer and duplexer - if it is a diplexer where the two ...