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I have no problem with it. Unless you already know, you probably already know, the formula for at least knowing the high and the low of your meters is the higher you go... Let me think about it. Yeah, the higher you go in frequency, the lower the meters are. The lower you go in frequency, the higher the meters are. So the highest in the ham portion would be like 160 and that's below AM. You could keep going though, but I don't know what those are because no one I know uses them. That's more like ship to shore, like you have the low frequencies, the LF bands. And that's way past even 160. Where mostly you're going to be concerned with the HF band, so let's see, 160 all the way up to 10 meters. And then as you start getting into the VHF, UHF, since that's way higher, then that's like 2 meters, 70 centimeters. I forgot what 900 megs is. I forgot what some of the gigs are. I'm never going to use them, what do I care? There's like 6 meters is like 50 MHz. The UK has 4 meters, which is like 70 something MHz, just a little bit below the FM broadcast band. That's a little bit of it anyway.
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