Hi i am trying to find out what frequency these run?? also am or fm?? i have 2 of these and want another couple of them, or another type of radio that is on the same frequency??? i am in New Zealand
ok so are there any other types of radios about that operate on the same frequency??ok so are there any other types of radios about that operate on the same frequency??
thanks for that, i am in New Zealand and have 2 of these radios, but i cant seem to hear anyone else overhere on them??? im guessing we obviously dont use that frequency over here??? are there likely to be any other types of radios that operate on that frequency over here??? thanksthanks for that, i am in New Zealand and have 2 of these radios, but i cant seem to hear anyone else overhere on them??? im guessing we obviously dont use that frequency over here??? are there likely to be any other types of radios that operate on that frequency over here??? thanks
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Nearly all 40 channel CB's made for the US Market operate on the same frequencies. You can google CB Radio Frequencies and it should give you some sites that have frequency charts of the 40 US Government Approved Frequencies imported/Channels. There are many multi band radios made that are illegally imported into the US. They may have 3 to 8 or 9 bands of 40 channels HOWEVER, they are illegal to use in the US. That being siad, there are millions in use in Feel free to ask more questions if you'd like. Nearly all 40 channel CB's made for the US Market operate on the same frequencies. You can google CB Radio Frequencies and it should give you some sites that have frequency charts of the 40 US Government Approved Frequencies imported/Channels. There are many multi band radios made that are illegally imported into the US. They may have 3 to 8 or 9 bands of 40 channels HOWEVER, they are illegal to use in the US. That being siad, there are millions in use in Feel free to ask more questions if you'd like.
I'm not sure! I do see US CB's listed on ebay by people in New Zealand and Australia. There are a lot of CB that were made for the US Market since the 1970's. I'm not sure! I do see US CB's listed on ebay by people in New Zealand and Australia. There are a lot of CB that were made for the US Market since the 1970's.
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The Midland radio you have is NOT capable of FM transmit & receive. It is a Citizen's Band radio that operates on channels 1 thru 40 that are assigned to the 26.965-27.405 MHz frequency range. These are the standard 40 Ch CB frequencies in the U.S. (and may not be legal for use in other parts of the world without a license from your country's communications authorities). It also offers Weather Band reception - again these are US frequencies that may or may not even be used at all in the UK. Since the radio only displays a channel number, you don't actually know the frequency you're monitoring or transmitting on. Your friends on CH 5 may be in a completely different band.
Even if they are on the same frequency, the fact that they are operating in FM mode means that you would hear something - but it may not be intelligible - and the same would be for them listening to you transmit in AM mode. If you could have them switch their radio to AM, all would be fine. I suspect they use FM as there is much less static when compared to AM.
If they won't change to FM, you'll either have to stop trying to talk to them or buy a radio capable of FM (and make sure it has the same frequencies as theirs!).
12 volt 2 amp kinds or any 0.5 amps even. You want it to blow fast to save radio from damage. So, any type 0.1 amp to 1 amp or 2 even. It doesn't matter; but a fast blowing one will save radio from damage later on.
The most common reason is that the electrical power is not supply to the air conditioners. If the air conditioner operate for period of time then only it trips. Then , it could be possible that the MCB is under-sized. Please check the recommended MCB size. Rate it.
It may be possible that the FM frequency chosen during setup, is in use in your area by a strong signal from a local station. Change to another frequency and see if the situation improves.
The following is from the Operation's Manual:
FM Modulator Setting
You can adjust FM Modulator frequency and output level.
7 Frequency
If output from the FM Modulator is hard to hear due to interference from a strong broadcast
station transmission, you can switch to another frequency.
You can adjust frequency between 87.9 and 90.1MHz.
7 Level
If the output sound is too quiet, too loud or distorted, you can adjust FM Modulator output
level.
You can adjust level between “LEVEL–1” and “LEVEL–7”. 1. Press the POWER button for 2 seconds to enter the FM Modulator Setting mode.
2. Select the desired frequency with the left/right arrowbuttons.
3. Increase or decrease the Level with the up/down arrows (buttons).
4. To cancel the FM Modulator Setting mode, press the POWER button again for 2 seconds. Note:
• After entering the FM Modulator Setting mode, if you do not perform an operation within about 8 seconds, the FM Modulator Setting is automatically canceled.
Go to device settings - FM Frequencies - select the FM 1 or FM 2 or FM 3, turn the dial to move the FM frequency to that which you want. Press the Sirius Dog to enter this frequency. That's it.
The Realistic PRO-2052 is an old (vintage) scanner receiver with fixed
AM and FM modes on the bands it cover, as specified by the U.S. band
allocation. The PRO-2020 covers only the VHF and UHF frequencies and
modes AM and FM is not user selectable. Frequencies can be programmed
into any of the 20 memory channels
U.S. Coverage: (varies from state to state and other countries. We
don't use 30-50 Mhz here in the Philippines for 2 way mobile
communications, except for cordless phones)
30-50 Mhz Lower VHF at FM narrowband only (covers mobile, emergencies, businesses, etc. and
cordless phones)
108-136 Mhz Aircraft band at AM narrowband only
138-174 Mhz Amateur and Commercial band at FM narrowband only (2 meter band)
410-512 MHz Amateur and Commercial band at FM narrowband only (70 cm band)
If you're trying to select AM or FM for a specified frequency, I'm afraid you can't do that as it is not selectable.
If you are trying to program AM Broadcast frequencies (mediumwave (MW)
or FM Broadcast frequencies (FM radio stations), those were not covered
by your PRO-2020's microprocessor. Even if you modify your scanner to
receive those bands, you will not hear radio transmission properly
since the receiver do not decode FM wideband, which is the standard
mode for FM broadcast and Television band.
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SoundMagik Home Studio
Manila, Philippines
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ok so are there any other types of radios about that operate on the same frequency??
thanks for that, i am in New Zealand and have 2 of these radios, but i cant seem to hear anyone else overhere on them??? im guessing we obviously dont use that frequency over here??? are there likely to be any other types of radios that operate on that frequency over here??? thanks
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