Coast radio station explained

A coast (or coastal) radio station (short: coast station) is an on-shore maritime radio station which monitor radio distress frequencies and relays ship-to-ship and ship-to-land communications.

A coast station (also: coast radio station ) is – according to article 1.75 of the International Telecommunication Union's (ITU) ITU Radio Regulations (RR)[1] – defined as «A land station in the maritime mobile service

Coast Radio Station had an important role in the history of wireless radio communication as well as in maritime and war history.

Recent costal radio station provide medical advice services for ships, transmitting meteo messages and navigational warnings (NAV-Notice) on a regular base and all of them do a distress chanel watch (DSC-Watch) on VHF Chanel 16. Not all station monitore 2182 kHz shortwave anymore.

Coast radio stations

Caption text
Name CallsignLocationOperator Periode of activity
Kystradio RadioBodø, Norway.Telenor Maritim Radio, 1938 - ongoing
Scheveningen RadioPCHScheveningen, NetherlandsPTT1904-1999
Navy Coast Station MarlowDHO26Marlow, Rostock, Germany German Navy1990this - ongoing
Bern RadioHEBBern, Switzerland1941-2016
PNS HameedKarachi, Sindh, Pakistan2016 - ongoing
Isfjord RadioKapp Linné, Spitsbergen, Svalbard, NorwayNorwegian Polar Institute1933 - ongoing
DANOsterlood, Norden, Germany1907-1998
KPHKPHIverness, California, USARCA1930-1998
WCCOriginally Cape Cod, USARCA, Western Union 1903-1997
Shanghai RadioXSGXSG21Shanghai, PR Chinaongoing
Taupo Maritime RadioZLMLake Taupō (tx), Lower Hutt (HQ), New ZealandMaretime New Zealand[2] ongoing

See also

References / sources

Notes and References

  1. ITU Radio Regulations, Section IV. Radio Stations and Systems – Article 1.75, definition: coast earth station / coast earth radio station
  2. Web site: Our home page - Maritime NZ . 2023-08-07 . www.maritimenz.govt.nz.