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    TobiasWooldridge

    frequency-lookup

    TobiasWooldridge/frequency-lookup
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    About

    SKILL.md

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    About

    Look up frequency allocations, band plans, and known stations for radio services (marine, aviation, amateur, broadcast, NOAA weather)...

    SKILL.md

    Frequency Lookup for WaveCap-SDR

    This skill helps find frequencies and band plans for various radio services.

    When to Use This Skill

    Use this skill when:

    • Finding frequencies for marine/aviation/amateur bands
    • Looking up broadcast stations by location
    • Verifying frequency allocations
    • Discovering what's on a frequency
    • Planning SDR monitoring scenarios
    • Creating new recipes for specific bands

    Common Frequency Bands

    VHF Marine (156-162 MHz)

    Channel 16 (156.800 MHz) - International Distress/Safety/Calling Channel 9 (156.450 MHz) - Recreational calling (US) Channel 6 (156.300 MHz) - Intership safety

    Full band plan: https://www.navcen.uscg.gov/marine-communications-channel-table

    Aviation (118-137 MHz)

    121.500 MHz - Emergency frequency Typical ranges:

    • Tower: 118.0-121.4 MHz
    • Ground: 121.6-121.9 MHz
    • ATIS: Varies by airport

    Find local frequencies: https://www.airnav.com

    NOAA Weather Radio (162-163 MHz)

    WX1: 162.550 MHz WX2: 162.400 MHz WX3: 162.475 MHz WX4: 162.425 MHz WX5: 162.450 MHz WX6: 162.500 MHz WX7: 162.525 MHz

    Coverage map: https://www.weather.gov/nwr/

    FM Broadcast (88-108 MHz)

    US band: 88.1-107.9 MHz (odd tenths only) Europe/Asia: 87.5-108.0 MHz

    Find local stations:

    • https://radio-locator.com
    • https://fmscan.org

    Amateur Radio (Ham)

    2 meters: 144-148 MHz (FM repeaters typically 145-147 MHz) 70 cm: 420-450 MHz HF bands: 3.5, 7, 14, 21, 28 MHz

    Repeater directory: https://www.repeaterbook.com

    Public Safety / Trunking

    VHF: 150-174 MHz UHF: 450-470 MHz, 806-824 MHz

    Database: https://www.radioreference.com

    Online Resources

    RadioReference.com - Comprehensive frequency database

    • Trunked systems
    • Talkgroup IDs
    • Local agencies

    SignalWiki - Signal identification

    • Decode unknown signals
    • Modulation types

    WebSDR - Remote SDR receivers

    • Listen without hardware
    • Check propagation

    FlightAware/FlightRadar24 - Aviation tracking

    • Find airport frequencies
    • Track aircraft

    Usage Examples

    Find Marine Channels

    VHF Marine channels are spaced 25 kHz apart
    Channel number = (Frequency - 156.000) / 0.025
    Channel 16 = 156.800 MHz
    Channel 9 = 156.450 MHz
    

    Find Local FM Stations

    Visit https://radio-locator.com and enter your ZIP code

    Find NOAA Weather

    Find nearest transmitter at https://www.weather.gov/nwr/

    Find Aviation Frequencies

    Visit https://www.airnav.com and search for airport code (e.g., KSEA)

    Integration with WaveCap-SDR

    After finding frequencies, create a recipe:

    recipes:
      my_frequencies:
        name: "My Frequencies"
        capture:
          center_hz: 156800000  # Center on Ch 16
          sample_rate: 250000
          gain_db: 35
        channels:
          - {name: "Ch 16", offset_hz: 0, mode: "fm"}
          - {name: "Ch 9", offset_hz: -350000, mode: "fm"}
    

    Or use presets for quick tuning.

    Band Plan Quick Reference

    Service Frequency Range Typical Use
    AM Broadcast 530-1700 kHz Radio stations
    Ham 160m 1.8-2.0 MHz Amateur HF
    Marine SSB 2-4 MHz Long-range marine
    Ham 80m 3.5-4.0 MHz Amateur HF
    Ham 40m 7.0-7.3 MHz Amateur HF
    Ham 20m 14.0-14.35 MHz Amateur HF
    Ham 10m 28-29.7 MHz Amateur HF
    CB 26.965-27.405 MHz Citizens Band
    Ham 6m 50-54 MHz Amateur VHF
    FM Broadcast 88-108 MHz Radio stations
    Aviation 118-137 MHz Air traffic control
    Ham 2m 144-148 MHz Amateur VHF
    Marine VHF 156-162 MHz Maritime
    NOAA WX 162.400-162.550 MHz Weather
    Ham 70cm 420-450 MHz Amateur UHF
    GMRS/FRS 462-467 MHz Personal radio

    Files in This Skill

    • SKILL.md: This file - frequency reference and lookup guide

    Notes

    • Frequencies vary by country (this guide is US-centric)
    • Always check local regulations before transmitting
    • Some frequencies require licenses (ham, marine, aviation)
    • SDR receiving is legal, transmitting requires proper licensing
    • Band plans change - verify with official sources
    • Use RadioReference.com for most comprehensive database
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    Repository
    tobiaswooldridge/wavecap-sdr
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