•
Citizens band (CB) radio (not available in all countries) • Emergency channels 9 (27.065 MHz AM) and 19 (27.185 MHz AM) • GMRS: 462.675 MHz is a UHF mobile distress and road information calling frequency allocated to the
General Mobile Radio Service and used throughout Alaska and Canada for emergency communications; sometimes referred to as "Orange Dot" by some transceiver manufacturers who associated a frequency with a color-code for ease of channel coordination, until the creation of the Family Radio Service, in 1996, "GMRS 675" or Channel 6/20 on mobile radios today. Its bandwidth can vary between 12.5, 25 and 50 kHz, and is also allocated to
Ch. 20 on 22-channel FRS/GMRS "blister pack" radios. It can have a repeater input frequency of 467.675 MHz, and a tone squelch of 141.3 Hz. After FCC deregulation of simplex FRS/GMRS radios, FRS users may transmit up to 2 watts on the GMRS emergency channel 20 (462.675 MHz) with 141.3 Hz CTCSS, or channel 20-22. •
MURS: 151.940 MHz (only available in the United States) • FRS:
FRS channel 1: 462.5625 MHz (carrier squelch, no tone or sub-channel), channel 3: 462.6125 MHz and channel 20: 462.6750 MHz (141.3 Hz CTCSS - channel 20, code 22 or channel 20-22). •
UHF CB (Australia): Emergency channels 5/35 (476.525/477.275 MHz). Channel 5 is the designated simplex and repeater output emergency channel, while channel 35 is used as the repeater input frequency for duplex operation. UHF CB is only available in Australia and New Zealand. •
PMR446 (Europe): Channel 1 analog (446.00625 MHz, CTCSS 100.0 Hz, channel 1/12), Channel 8 analog (446.09375 MHz, CTCSS 123.0 Hz, channel 8/18). • PMR446 (Europe): Mountain Rescue Channel 7 analog (446.08125 MHz), CTCSS 85.4 Hz (Channel 7/7 in most radios, not all) • CB245 (Thailand): VHF Citizen Band Channel 1 (245.0000 MHz) and Channel 41 (245.5000 MHz) • CB78 (Thailand): VHF-LOW Citizen Band Channel 41 (78.5000 MHz) ==See also==