What is the difference between channel & frequency & band in RF?

I am reading about wireless networks basics. I found three terms I cannot find exact definition for: channel, frequency band, frequency. Can anyone give exact definitions for them?

4,649 1 1 gold badge 17 17 silver badges 30 30 bronze badges asked Nov 29, 2015 at 9:27 221 1 1 gold badge 2 2 silver badges 3 3 bronze badges

5 Answers 5

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If you don't know what a frequency is, you need to read up on waves-in-general and radio waves. But the other two terms can be defined in terms of frequency; frequencies are the “natural” thing and everything else are things people invented on top of that.

A frequency band, or band, is a range of frequencies with a specific least frequency and greatest frequency. Generally bands are used to describe some relevant range:

Channel has two different meanings:

answered Nov 29, 2015 at 17:22 Kevin Reid AG6YO ♦ Kevin Reid AG6YO 24.8k 7 7 gold badges 53 53 silver badges 104 104 bronze badges $\begingroup$

A channel is a generally accepted stopping point - somewhere that we know other people or devices will be listening. For example, in the United States, amateurs get access to 5 distinct channels on the 5 MHz band. Or your WiFi router uses several channels, but most of those channels overlap.

A frequency band is a range of frequencies. They're usually referred to by the wavelength (e.g. 40 meters is the band from 7000 KHz to 7300 KHz).

A frequency is the reference point for tuning your transceiver. Depending on how you're communicating, you'll be using far more than that single frequency, but when people mention a frequency, that's what they're referring to - where you should set your transceiver.

answered Nov 29, 2015 at 14:47 $\begingroup$ 3.5 MHz band or 5 MHz band? $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 29, 2015 at 21:09 $\begingroup$ D'OH! I'll fix that. $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 30, 2015 at 14:14 $\begingroup$

For regulatory purposes, a frequency is usually used to refer to a carrier frequency, which has a specific meaning related to the mode of transmission (for example, in an SSB transmitter the carrier frequency is in theory never actually transmitted, but in a morse code CW transmitter it is the only frequency ever transmitted).

A frequency band is a range of frequencies with a lower and upper limit. If the regulations state that you must only transmit signals within a specified band, then you must make sure that your transmitted signals never go outside that range of frequencies - again, very easy to determine when transmitting CW, not so easy with SSB, AM or FM (requires knowledge of the bandwidth of the transmitted signal on each side of the carrier).

A 'channel' is an agreed-upon set of specific frequencies with additional information included in the agreement. For example, in the amateur 2m and 70cm bands, a portion of the band is 'channelised' and set aside for repeaters. These repeaters use specific spot frequencies for both their inputs and outputs, and have certain other requirements regarding mode (FM), deviation (for example, max. 3kHz) and other requirements for CTCSS tones and the like.