70 CM Repeaters

Place your mouse pointer over the
's to see information about the repeater.
Offsets
The repeater listings show the repeaters' output frequencies.
Repeaters have standard input frequency offsets as shown in the table
below. If a repeater does not conform to the standard, the non-standard
input frequency is displayed in the "Notes" field.
| Output Frequency | Input Frequency Offset |
| 51-52 | - 0.5 MHz |
| 52-54 | - 1.0 MHz |
| 144.51-144.89 | + 0.6 MHz |
| 145.11-145.49 | - 0.6 MHz |
| 146.0-146.39 | +0.6 MHz |
| 146.61-147.0 | -0.6 MHz |
| 147.0-147.39 | +0.6 MHz |
| 147.6-147.99 | +0.6 MHz |
| 223-225 | - 1.6 MHz |
| 435-445 | + 5.0 MHz |
| 445-450 | - 5.0 MHz |
Abbreviations in Notes Field
Some of the coordinators databases use abbreviations in the
"Notes" field. Here's what the abbreviations mean;
| C | closed |
| O | open |
| L | Has links to repeaters on other bands |
| T-nnn/mmm | Transmitter has a 'nnn' Hz tone Receiver requires a 'mmm' Hz tone |
| e-xxx | Emergency (type of power sometimes indicated by 'xxx') |
| ca | closed autopatch |
| X, z | repeater used for RTTY |
| R | RACES affiliated |
| # | uncoordinated repeater |
| exp | experimental |
| pkt | packet |