NFM vs FM?

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N_Jay

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Band---------------------------------------------Channel Step-----------Emission Width--------Deviation
Old FM LMR (1950's, 1960's) VHF --------------60 kHz------------------60 kHz------------------10kHz
Standard VHF-------------------------------------30 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Offset VHF-----------------------------------------15 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Standard UHF-------------------------------------25 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Standard 800 MHz--------------------------------25 kHz------------------25 kHz------------------5kHz
NPSPAC 800 MHz-------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------20kHz------------------4kHz
Narrowband VHF (w/offsets)-------------------7.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
Narrowband UHF-------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
900 MHz-----------------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
FRS----------------------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz



CRAP!!!!!!

Anyone good at making tables here?

EDIT:
Fixed (So-So)

Ok, so who wants to define "Wide", "Regular", and "Narrow"?
 
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zz0468

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20 K is WFM?? 5K Is NFM? Etc...

You're mixing occupied bandwidth (the 20K) with deviation (the 5K).

The FCC emissions designator depicts bandwidth, NOT deviation. They are not the same thing.

O
kay, so 1-5 is considered NFM 5 and higher is WFM? :lol:

If that floats your boat. But the real definition is based only on modulation index. By that standard, the old standard 5 KHz deviation FM, and 4 KHz deviation NPSPAC, and 2.5 KHz deviation channels are ALL "narrow band fm".
 

slicerwizard

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CRAP!!!!!!

Anyone good at making tables here?
Phear my skillz!

Code:
Band                            Channel Step  Emission Width  Deviation
Old FM LMR (1950's, 1960's) VHF    60 kHz         60 kHz        10 kHz
Standard VHF                       30 kHz         25 kHz         5 kHz
Offset VHF                         15 kHz         25 kHz         5 kHz
Standard UHF                       25 kHz         25 kHz         5 kHz
Standard 800 MHz                   25 kHz         25 kHz         5 kHz
NPSPAC 800 MHz                   12.5 kHz         20 kHz         4 kHz
Narrowband VHF (w/offsets)        7.5 kHz       12.5 kHz       2.5 kHz
Narrowband UHF                   12.5 kHz       12.5 kHz       2.5 kHz
900 MHz                          12.5 kHz       12.5 kHz       2.5 kHz
FRS                              12.5 kHz       12.5 kHz       2.5 kHz
 

poltergeisty

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Cool! Thanks for the explanation here.

Wondered about it because a I do have a two-way VHF that has two FM modes. The only difference I found is that the NFM ( I think it was ) causes the voice to be lower, but maybe more defined. (?)
 
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Band---------------------------------------------Channel Step-----------Emission Width--------Deviation
Old FM LMR (1950's, 1960's) VHF --------------60 kHz------------------60 kHz------------------10kHz
Standard VHF-------------------------------------30 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Offset VHF-----------------------------------------15 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Standard UHF-------------------------------------25 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Standard 800 MHz--------------------------------25 kHz------------------25 kHz------------------5kHz
NPSPAC 800 MHz-------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------20kHz------------------4kHz
Narrowband VHF (w/offsets)-------------------7.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
Narrowband UHF-------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
900 MHz-----------------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
FRS----------------------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz



CRAP!!!!!!

Anyone good at making tables here?

EDIT:
Fixed (So-So)

Ok, so who wants to define "Wide", "Regular", and "Narrow"?

Way back when radios had dynamotors and vibrators (more radio porn) I remember deviation as 15 KC not 10. Motorola provided "narrow banding kits" that contained several new parts including numerous resistors, capacitors and a new splatter filter for the TX and a new permakay filter for the RX; also you were supposed to replace the old black bakelite crystal ovens with the new gold ovens. The also provided you with a new FCC type acceptance sticker and a new dot sticker to indicate the deviation was to be set to 5 KC.
 
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N_Jay

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Way back when radios had dynamotors and vibrators (more radio porn) I remember deviation as 15 KC not 10. Motorola provided "narrow banding kits" that contained several new parts including numerous resistors, capacitors and a new splatter filter for the TX and a new permakay filter for the RX; also you were supposed to replace the old black bakelite crystal ovens with the new gold ovens. The also provided you with a new FCC type acceptance sticker and a new dot sticker to indicate the deviation was to be set to 5 KC.


You are probably right. 60 kHz was before I was playing with radios.

Yes, all my old Mocoms had those stickers.
 
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A little known fact, first gen (AMPS analog) cellular used channels spaced 30 KHz apart but transmitted voice at 15 KHz deviation.
 
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N_Jay

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12 indeed, but not 5 as most folks think.


The deviation is set to a peak value, but the average is quite a bit lower.

Additionally the average telephone is much further below peak than the average radio audio signal.

That is why you could get 720 channels of telephone traffic on a 600 channel analog microwave link.
 

zz0468

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That is why you could get 720 channels of telephone traffic on a 600 channel analog microwave link.

That takes me back quite a ways...

Don't forget to mention that those 720 channels crammed onto a 600 channel radio were measured in RMS deviation, not peak. And hopefully, the OP is not hopelessly confused.

Bessel nulls, anyone?
 
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N_Jay

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They still use analog microwave links? I'm think public safety in rural areas perhaps.

There is still some out there, but I don't think anyone sells it (or has for years).

Microwave radios run for a LONG time.
 

rico47635

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Band---------------------------------------------Channel Step-----------Emission Width--------Deviation
Old FM LMR (1950's, 1960's) VHF --------------60 kHz------------------60 kHz------------------10kHz
Standard VHF-------------------------------------30 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Offset VHF-----------------------------------------15 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Standard UHF-------------------------------------25 kHz------------------25kHz------------------5kHz
Standard 800 MHz--------------------------------25 kHz------------------25 kHz------------------5kHz
NPSPAC 800 MHz-------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------20kHz------------------4kHz
Narrowband VHF (w/offsets)-------------------7.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
Narrowband UHF-------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
900 MHz-----------------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz
FRS----------------------------------------------12.5 kHz------------------12.5kHz------------------2.5kHz



CRAP!!!!!!

Anyone good at making tables here?

EDIT:
Fixed (So-So)

Ok, so who wants to define "Wide", "Regular", and "Narrow"?

Wide would be my MIL's backside, regular would be wifes, and narrow would be my son's. Mine is just perfect. :D
 
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