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[edit] Uses and applicationsNon-directional navigational radio beacons (NDBs) for maritime and aircraft navigation occupy a band from 190 to 435 kHz, which overlaps from the LF into the bottom part of the MF band. 500 kHz was for many years the Maritime distress and emergency frequency, and there are more NDBs between 510 and 530 kHz. Navtex, which is part of the current Global Maritime Distress Safety System occupies 518 kHz and 490 kHz for important digital text broadcasts. In recent years, some limited amateur radio operation has also been allowed in the region of 500 kHz in the USA, UK, Germany and Sweden.[1] Medium waveband radio broadcasts are allocated an AM broadcast band from 530 to 1610 kHz with an extension to 1700 kHz in the Western Hemisphere. Many home-portable or cordless telephones, especially those that were designed in the 1980s, transmit low power FM audio signals between the table-top base unit and the handset on frequencies in the range 1600 to 1800 kHz.[2] There is an amateur radio band known as 160 meters or 'top-band' between 1800 and 2000 kHz (allocation depends on country and starts at 1810kHz outside the Americas). Amateur operators transmit CW morse code, digital signals and SSB voice signals on this band. There are a number of Coastguard and other ship-to-shore frequencies in use between 1600 and 2850 kHz. These include, as examples, the French MRCC on 1696 kHz and 2677 kHz, Stornoway Coastguard on 1743 kHz, the US Coastguard on 2670 kHz and Madeira on 2843 kHz.[3] RN Northwood in England broadcasts Weather Fax data on 2618.5 kHz.[4] 2182 kHz is the international calling and distress frequency for SSB maritime voice communication (radiotelephony). It is analogous to Channel 16 on the marine VHF band. Lastly, there are aeronautical and other mobile SSB bands from 2850 kHz to 3500 kHz, crossing the boundary from the MF band into the HF radio band.[3][5] [edit] See also
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