The 2-meter ham band has been around since the service was reauthorized right after World War II; this radio was probably made in the '70s. Think of it as a bonus for listeners curious about that "police" band. I had a radio much like this that I picked up at a flea market, and it also included part of 2 meters at the low end of its VHF band. The radio was total crap, made in Hong Kong (where most of the bottom-of-the-barrel portables were made in those years), with a front end that was easily overwhelmed by local signals.The PB is also interesting. That's the modern ham band. And a bit beyond. I wonder if there was a vhf ham band at the time and location this was manufactured
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Look more closely at the dial... what it calls "sports" is just the 1100 - 1600 kHz portion of the normal AM broadcast band. Maybe because stations carrying local sports (high school football, etc.) tended to be "graveyard channel" stations, higher up on the dial?
The 108-136 MHz aircraft band, still in use today, and still using AM:What was “Air” between 110 to 135 mHz.
While most NDB beacons operated from 190 to 425 kHz, there were a few that used 515 to 529 kHz. Here in Houston one of the private airports used 521 and was easily heard on old style mechanically tuned AM radios. That NDB shut down some years ago.There are/have been airport beacons that can be heard in the lower part of the AM band (530). There used to be one audible in the KC area on that frequency about 25 years ago, but I don't know what airport it was for or if it's still active.
The 2 meter ham band is 144 to 148 MHz.The 2-meter ham band has been around since the service was reauthorized right after World War II