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Yes.
A walkie-talkie refers to a portable radio. VHF range is usually 136 to 172 mhz and a portable will pick up if tuned to this range.
the high frequency, it is in VHF band.
If you're referring to commercial FM "music, news, and talk" broadcasts, the answer is 'No'.Those stations all transmit on carrier frequencies between 88 MHz and 108 MHz. Your VHF receivermost likely doesn't cover those frequencies.Even if it does overlap the commercial FM band, at the end of its dial, the VHF receiver won't deliveranything worth listening to.A). It's basically an AM receiver, not FM.B). It might deliver a recognizable voice from a narrowband FM signal, but it isn't designed toeven admit the comparatively wide-band commercial FM signals.
its a n channel jfet(field effect transistor) manufactured by Motorola
I wouldn't think so. The uhf coupler is made NOT to pass vhf freqs. The transmitter and the coupler are made to operate in different bands.
As FM is transmitted using VHF, the transmitting range is more a matter of Line of Sight than transmitter power as these frequencies only follow straight lines.
I have a whole inventory of used television transmitters in VHF and UHF. Please write to pattroni@abctranslations.net
Head toward them to help and alert the Coast Guard.
FM stations are assigned to a part of the VHF band. VHF only travels in straight lines. It cannot follow the earth's curvature or get past mountains. That limits the range. Its not FM thats the issue, but the assigned transmitter frequencies.
You need a VHF radio antenna, a VHF radio receiver and of course a station broadcasting on the VHF frequency.
Getting a VHF antenna will allow the TV to have a strong signals and get the programs that you would need. Also, UHF could be another alternative to VHF.
70
Line of sight communication is in the VHF and higher frequencies of the RF spectrum where the wavelength is to short to pass over structures and hills, the transmitter and receiver antennas must be in line of site
When in imminent danger
history of vhf radio
VHF