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  2. Spektrum RC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spektrum_RC

    Spektrum is a division of Horizon Hobby. The R/C hobby in the United States, Japan, and Europe typically used to employ FM radio control in HF and VHF bands such as 27 MHz, 35 MHz, 49 MHz, and 72 MHz. Most manufacturers of radio gear (all non-toy manufacturers) now use the 2.4 GHz band for their transmitters and receivers.

  3. Buddy box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddy_box

    Buddy box or buddy boxing is a colloquialism referring to two R/C aircraft radio systems joined together for pilot training purposes. [1]This training system is universal among the six major R/C radio manufacturers (Spektrum, Futaba, JR, Hitec, Sanwa/Airtronics and KO Propo) which means that transmitters do not have to be the same brand in order to be joined via an umbilical cable.

  4. List of software-defined radios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_software-defined...

    2/1/3 Embedded or True IQ data via 1 x or 2 x USB 3.0. Optional 1 x USB 3.1 GEN2 (power only). Internet remote via HTTP / JSON Yes Yes No 1 x XC7A200T-2 (930 GMACs) Aaronia SPECTRAN V6 Command Center [3] €24,980 EUR Pre-built Active 10 MHz – 8 GHz (planned extensions for 9 kHz – 26 GHz; 9 kHz – 55 GHz, and 9 kHz – 70 GHz)

  5. 2.4 GHz radio use - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2.4_GHz_radio_use

    Bluetooth devices intended for use in short-range personal area networks operate from 2.4 to 2.4835 GHz. To reduce interference with other protocols that use the 2.45 GHz band, the Bluetooth protocol divides the band into 80 channels (numbered from 0 to 79, each 1 MHz wide) and changes channels up to 1600 times per second.

  6. Radio transmitter design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_transmitter_design

    [2] Typically a transmitter design includes generation of a carrier signal, which is normally [3] sinusoidal, optionally one or more frequency multiplication stages, a modulator, a power amplifier, and a filter and matching network to connect to an antenna. A very simple transmitter might contain only a continuously running oscillator coupled ...

  7. Short-range device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-range_device

    A short-range device (SRD), described by ECC Recommendation 70-03, is a radio-frequency transmitter device used in telecommunication that has little capability of causing harmful interference to other radio equipment.

  8. 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 ]

  9. Two-ray ground-reflection model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-ray_ground-reflection...

    The 2-ray ground reflection model is a simplified propagation model used to estimate the path loss between a transmitter and a receiver in wireless communication systems, in order to estimate the actual communication paths used. It assumes that the signal propagates through two paths: