bands-and-modes
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Table of Contents
Bands and Modes
This page is meant as a modern non-exhaustive high level reference of what kinds of propagation and activity you will typically find on the common amateur radio bands. It may be UK-centric.
Band | Daytime | Night-time | Comments | Traffic |
---|---|---|---|---|
160m | Ground wave (120km) | DX but antennas often compromised | Noisy with summer storms | Data modes, SSB and CW |
80m | Ground wave / NVIS | DX | Lots of long-winded chat. Massively busy during contests. | Everything, lots of SSB and CW and data |
60m | Ground wave / NVIS | DX and local | Channelised, shared with military, caution operating here | FT8, SSB. No contests. |
40m | Often open worldwide | Often open worldwide | Bread and butter HF band. Massively busy during contests. Mind the upper limit, we have less than the US. | Everything, lots of SSB and CW and data |
30m | Open worldwide | Generally closes after sunset | Very narrow HF band | Data/CW only, no voice allowed |
20m | Open worldwide | Closes after sunset | Bread and butter HF band. Massively busy during contests. | Everything here. A bit of a zoo. |
17m | “Polite 20m”. No contests. | SSB, CW, FT8 | ||
15m | Big wide allocation, not much traffic | SSB, CW, FT8 | ||
12m | No contests. | SSB, CW, FT8 | ||
10m | Generally closed but opens when the MUF gets up this high, then comes to life! | Generally closed, but try grey-line to Japan (AM), South America (PM) | Massive wide band, great for local experimentation, FM DX | All sorts, including more FM than the HF bands. New York 10m FM repeater from the UK anyone? Perfectly possible with good conditions. |
6m | Normally no atmospheric prop | Normally no atmospheric prop | “The magic band”. Sporadic E propagation makes this band look like 20m for really short periods in the spring. | FT8, SSB, FM, repeaters! |
4m | Normally no atmospheric prop | Normally no atmospheric prop | Pockets of activity around the country. Similar to 2m. | Mostly FM, but more SSB now the IC7300 exists. |
2m | Normally no atmospheric prop | Normally no atmospheric prop | Pretty much as high as sporadic E propagation ever gets. Tropospheric enhancements can open 2m up as far as southern Europe sporadically. | FM simplex, FM repeaters, APRS, FT8, SSB, pockets of AX.25 packet. There's a TV section you can request an NoV for above 2m. |
70cm | Normally no atmospheric prop | Normally no atmospheric prop | Shared with ISM / other users, some geographic restrictions on use, check your licence | FM repeaters, FM simplex, some amateur TV, lots of bleeps and bloops to decode |
23cm (1.2GHz) | Normally no atmospheric prop | Normally no atmospheric prop | Is present on IC-9700 | SSB, repeaters, beacons, ATV |
13cm (2.4GHz) | Normally no atmospheric prop | Normally no atmospheric prop | Used as the uplink band for QO-100 geostationary satellite ops. Unfortunately not open to Foundation licence holders | ATV, SSB |
Notes:
- All bands are open all the time within line of sight. This is different from “ground wave”.
- CW is Morse code
- Simplex is radio-to-radio
- NVIS is “near-vertical incidence skywave” - straight up, straight back down again. Only possible on low bands.
- For SSB, 80m and 40m are LSB. The remainder are USB. This is the convention. Data modes are generally USB regardless of band.
- There are two bands below 160m (2200m and 630m). These generally require highly loaded (compromised, lossy) antennas so lots of power in for hardly any power out.
- There are multiple bands above 13cm (9cm, 6cm, 3cm (the only microwave band available to Foundation licence holders), then 24GHz, 47GHz, 76GHz, 122GHz, 134GHz, 248GHz, then a series of Terahertz bands from 275GHz to 3THz available by NoV application). This is highly specialised territory.
- Both of those sets of bands are largely accessible using homebrew equipment only
- It can be somewhat of a surprise to newcomers that chatting around the UK can be surprisingly difficult. If this is your goal, try 160m, 80m, 40m NVIS and/or ground/wave, then VHF (6m, 4m, 2m). Use SSB and horizontal polarisation for more range up here.
Some interesting spot frequencies
Band | Frequency | What/why |
---|---|---|
20m | 14.230 | SSTV. 14.233 is digital SSTV too. |
20m | 14.074 | 20m FT8 |
30m | 10.000 | WWV, American time station |
80m | 3.76 | WAB net |
40m | 7.16 | WAB net |
… | … | … |
bands-and-modes.1643480714.txt.gz · Last modified: 2022/01/29 18:25 by m0lte