<div dir="ltr"><p>                      In HamRadioNow edition 215 <strong>Gary Pearce KN4AQ</strong> explains the Emission Designator for D-STAR with the help of an email from <strong>Richard Wiglesworth K7RLW</strong><br><br>                      Emission Designators are poorly understood by many radio amateurs. The designator for D-STAR is 6K25F7W but what do those characters mean ?<br><br>                      Fast forward to 45:25 in the video for the emission designator explanation.<br><br>                      Watch HRN 215: Parity Rant on HamRadioNow <br><br><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRmmybvPpO8" target="_blank"><br></a><br><font color="#000000">                      ITU Classification of emissions and necessary bandwidths <br></font><a href="http://life.itu.int/radioclub/rr/ap01.htm" target="_blank">http://life.itu.int/radioclub/rr/ap01.htm</a><br><br><font color="#000000">                      D-STAR recommended channel space by Utah VHF Society<br></font><a href="http://utahvhfs.org/dstar_channel_spacing.html" target="_blank">http://utahvhfs.org/dstar_channel_spacing.html</a><br><br><font color="#000000">                      Previous editions of HamRadioNow<br></font><a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/HamRadioNow/videos" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/user/HamRadioNow/videos</a><font color="#000000"> </font></p></div>