petnrdx wrote:
Narrow banding and step size are not the same.
MANY people ( and radio makers/sellers ) have the two confused.
Most of VHF, UHF and 800 ( & 700 / 900) will have to go to narrow band by 2013.
The difference will be reducing the audio FM deviation from 5 khz to 2.5 khz maximum.
MOST agencies will stay on the same frequency(s), but have the reduced deviation.
Some will get new channels that are "between" the old steps.
That's the reason for the whole process, narrow the deviation, and make "empty" (sort of ) channels between the old channel spacing.
If you try to listen to narrow band transmissions on a wide band radio, the audio level (volume) will sound very low, but might be use able in some cases.
But, if someone goes to use the "in between" channel, your wide band radio won't filter it out, and you will suffer interference.
So, once things go to NB from WB, you really want to have a radio that does:
1) Narrow band or wide band BY CHANNEL. ( Not all one or all the other )
2) All the possible step sizes, also by channel.
This affects part 90 licenses, not marine band, GMRS, VHF-Low, or any of the Hambands.
The 2013 narrowbanding/refarming only applies to frequencies from 150mHz to 512mHz (with a few exceptions as you listed that are not under part 90), not above 512mHz.
I have not seen any radio manufactures that have bandwidth, and step size confused (resellers, yes but if they have that confused, then I would not want to deal with them). Some manufactures may refer to channel steps as channel spacing, it can be, and is confusing and some people miss-read that. Motorola may say a VHF radio is 2.5kHz, they are referring to the channel step, or spacing, not the deviation. With 2.5kHz steps the radio will let you program in 153.83000 (a valid channel in the FCC plan), 153.83250, 153.83500, 153.83750 (the next valid channel in the FCC plan, 7.5kHz up from the last) and so on. There are a lot of two way radios that will do narrow band 12.5kHz B/W but not 2.5kHz steps. When ODF went narrow band a few years ago they had to dump all of their Bendix King EPH radios (some were only a few years old) due to the fact the EPH would not do the 2.5 steps and they could not program in all of their new channels.
The narrow band bandwidth is 12.5KHz, and that will give you a max of 2.5kHz deviation on a FM transmitter.
Jim