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'''WAB''' : Worked All Britain. | |||
'''WAC''' : Worked All Continents. | '''WAC''' : Worked All Continents. | ||
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'''[[Electromagnetic Waves |Wavelength]]''' : The distance in metres between corresponding points on a wave. | '''[[Electromagnetic Waves |Wavelength]]''' : The distance in metres between corresponding points on a wave. | ||
'''WAXE''' : Worked All XE / México. | |||
'''[http://www.wia.org.au/ WIA]''' : Wireless Institute of Australia. The national organisation for Australian hams. | '''[http://www.wia.org.au/ WIA]''' : Wireless Institute of Australia. The national organisation for Australian hams. |
Revision as of 11:02, 18 June 2009
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W
WAB : Worked All Britain.
WAC : Worked All Continents.
WARC, WRC : World (Administrative) Radio Conference. Run by the International Telecommunications Union.
WAN : Worked All Neighbours. Used to refer to a powerful station in a densely-populated area where strong signals overload broadcast receivers in the immediate vicinity.
WARC Bands : Agreed to at the 1979 WARC, they consist of the 30m ( 10.100Mhz - 10.150MHz), 17m (18.086MHz - 18.186MHz) and 12m (24.890MHz - 24.990MHz) amateur bands.
WAS : Worked All States. In the US, contacts with stations in each of the fifty US states.
WAVE : Worked All VE. Contacts with stations in each of the Canadian provinces.
Waveguide : A hollow tube, typically square in cross-section, used to carry microwave signals.
Wavelength : The distance in metres between corresponding points on a wave.
WAXE : Worked All XE / México.
WIA : Wireless Institute of Australia. The national organisation for Australian hams.
WPM : Words per minute.
WSPR : Weak Signal Propagation Reporter.
WSJT : Weak Signal Joe Taylor - named after Joe Taylor who wrote the software.
WX : Weather. See weather spotting, APRS for transmission of current meteorological readings via amateur radio. Many 2 metre handheld transceivers are also capable of extended tuning to permit reception of forecasts over VHF bands assigned to other services, such as marine radio.