The International Telecommunication Union uses an internationally agreed system for classifying radio frequency signals. Each type of radio emission is classified according to its bandwidth, method of modulation, nature of the modulating signal, and type of information transmitted on the carrier signal. It is based on characteristics of the signal, not on the transmitter used. An emission designation is of the form BBBB 123 45, where BBBB is the bandwidth of the signal, 1 is a letter indicating the type of modulation used of the main carrier, 2 is a digit representing the type of modulating signal again of the main carrier, 3 is a letter corresponding to the type of information transmitted, 4 is a letter indicating the practical details of the transmitted information, and 5 is a letter that represents the method of multiplexing. The 4 and 5 fields are optional. This designation system was agreed at the 1979 World Administrative Radio Conference, and gave rise to the Radio Regulations that came into force on 1 January 1982. A similar designation system had been in use under prior Radio Regulations.
Designation details
Bandwidth
The bandwidth is expressed as four characters: three digits and one letter. The letter occupies the position normally used for a decimal point, and indicates what unit of frequency is used to express the bandwidth. The letter H indicates Hertz, K indicates kiloHertz, M indicates megaHertz, and G indicates gigaHertz. For instance, "500H" means 500 Hz, and "2M50" means 2.5 MHz. The first character must be a digit between 1 and 9; it may not be the digit 0 or a letter.
Type of modulation
Type of modulating signal
Types 4 and 5 were removed from use with the 1982 Radio Regulations. In previous editions, they had indicated facsimile and video, respectively.
Type of transmitted information
Details of information
Multiplexing
Common examples
There is some overlap in signal types, so a transmission might legitimately be described by two or more designators. In such cases, there is usually a preferred conventional designator.
;A3E : AM speech communication - used for aeronautical communications ;F3E : FM speech communication - often used for marine radio and many other VHF communications ;20K0 F3E : Wide FM, 20.0 kHz width, ±5 kHz deviation, still widely used for Ham Radio, NOAAweather radio, marine, and aviation users and land mobile users below 50 MHz ;11K2 F3E : Narrow FM, 11.25 kHz bandwidth, ±2.5 kHz deviation - In the United States, all Part 90 Land Mobile Radio Service users operating above 50 MHz were required to upgrade to narrowband equipment by 1 January 2013. ;6K00 F3E : Even narrower FM, future roadmap for Land Mobile Radio Service, already required on 700 MHzpublic safety band ;J3E : SSB speech communication, used on HF bands by marine, aeronautical and amateur users ;R3E : SSB with reduced carrier speech communication, primarily used on HF bands by the military