Long distance opportunities via F2 seem to follow the Sun across the globe.
band | Nirvana (band) | Kiss (band) | The Band | Queen (band) | Rush (band) | rock band | Rock Band | Blondie (band) | Santana (band) | Journey (band) | band (music) | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | Misfits (band) | Styx (band) | Eagles (band) | Genesis (band) | Tool (band) | Chicago (band) | Rock Band 3 | E Street Band | Anthrax (American band) | The Fall (band) | Steppenwolf (band) | Rainbow (English band) | The Allman Brothers Band | Franz Ferdinand (band) | Public Enemy (band) | Uriah Heep (band) | Sparks (band) |
Much of 2-meter FM operation uses a radio repeater, a radio receiver and transmitter that instantly retransmits a received signal on a separate frequency.
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By speeding up Morse code using an audio tape recorder (this is an obsolete method), or using a computer and digital modes such as JT6M or FSK441, very short high speed bursts of digital data can be bounced off the ionized gas trail of meteor showers.
In some parts of the UK the band is little utilised, while in others, notably Belfast, Bristol, South Wales, North London and Hertfordshire, there is extensive local FM operation.
It also carried a PSK31 Linear/FM Satellite translator accepting 3 kHz SSB channel in the 10 meter band at 29.4 MHz and repeating that in baseband on a VHF or UHF narrow-band FM downlink.