This is THE BEST explanation I have got on bandwidth, so much confusion on what it is..but this explains the frequency band being a RANGE of different frequencies (channels). Masterfully explained. I spent hours trying to understand it. There are sadly a ton of misconceptions online.
Thank you so much for your explanation! I want to clear my concept as i am struggling from last 2 days about it... Bandwidth is like the capacity,data rate is the data that is actually transmitted. Frequency band are allocated by providers. And each frequency bands has channels. Like have explain road example. But i am still confusing about frequency, frequency bands, and frequency channel...
Thanks for you comment, we hope this helps answer your question: Each operator has several radio frequencies they can operate on, these are typically called “channels” and are given a “channel number” to identify the centre of each. As an example, in 5G, the NR-ARFCN (New Radio Absolute Radio Frequency Channel Number) is used to represent the channel number. Now this channel will be in a “frequency band”. These are areas of the radio spectrum that have been reserved for 2G-5G operation. To help with bands and channels think about a car FM radio, this operates on one band, however there are a number of channels (radio stations) which you can tune to within the band (a range of frequencies). Cellular networks are the same, there are a number of bands, typically known as: 700MHz, 900MHz, 1800MHz, 24GHz etc. In each of these bands there are a number of channels (like car radio stations). These channels may belong to the same or a different operator. The last concept is bandwidth, each channel can also have a bandwidth (typically 5MHz, 10MHz ,15MHz, 20MHz, 40MHz, 100MHz or more…the greater the bandwidth the greater the capacity and potential throughput! In summary, each operator will have access to specific channels (frequencies), which will be in a frequency band. Other operators may also exist in the same band; however, they would be utilizing a different channel (frequency).
Thank you sir. I got the concept clear. But I have a doubt that Wifi operates in 2.4, 2.5, and 2.5 GHz bands. But why 5GHz band is showing in the example.
Hi, thank you for your comment. The supported bands mentioned were “2.4, 5 and 6 Gigahertz”, the 5GHz band is just one example chosen to demonstrate the concept of channels and bandwidths.
This is THE BEST explanation I have got on bandwidth, so much confusion on what it is..but this explains the frequency band being a RANGE of different frequencies (channels). Masterfully explained. I spent hours trying to understand it. There are sadly a ton of misconceptions online.
What fantastic feedback! Thank you! Glad you found it helpful.
Thanks. Now concept is clear.
I have watched 9 videos on this topic, but still not able to consolidate the differences. But this video did it perfectly...👌 Thank you Sir.
Thanks for your comment! Great to hear!
Finally a video on the physics behind LTE and 5G 🎉
Very well explained the frequency used thanks so much)
Thank you so much for your explanation! I want to clear my concept as i am struggling from last 2 days about it... Bandwidth is like the capacity,data rate is the data that is actually transmitted. Frequency band are allocated by providers. And each frequency bands has channels. Like have explain road example. But i am still confusing about frequency, frequency bands, and frequency channel...
Thanks for you comment, we hope this helps answer your question:
Each operator has several radio frequencies they can operate on, these are typically called “channels” and are given a “channel number” to identify the centre of each. As an example, in 5G, the NR-ARFCN (New Radio Absolute Radio Frequency Channel Number) is used to represent the channel number. Now this channel will be in a “frequency band”. These are areas of the radio spectrum that have been reserved for 2G-5G operation. To help with bands and channels think about a car FM radio, this operates on one band, however there are a number of channels (radio stations) which you can tune to within the band (a range of frequencies). Cellular networks are the same, there are a number of bands, typically known as: 700MHz, 900MHz, 1800MHz, 24GHz etc. In each of these bands there are a number of channels (like car radio stations). These channels may belong to the same or a different operator. The last concept is bandwidth, each channel can also have a bandwidth (typically 5MHz, 10MHz ,15MHz, 20MHz, 40MHz, 100MHz or more…the greater the bandwidth the greater the capacity and potential throughput!
In summary, each operator will have access to specific channels (frequencies), which will be in a frequency band. Other operators may also exist in the same band; however, they would be utilizing a different channel (frequency).
Thank you
Thank you sir. I got the concept clear. But I have a doubt that Wifi operates in 2.4, 2.5, and 2.5 GHz bands. But why 5GHz band is showing in the example.
Hi, thank you for your comment. The supported bands mentioned were “2.4, 5 and 6 Gigahertz”, the 5GHz band is just one example chosen to demonstrate the concept of channels and bandwidths.
hello sir, if there is gap between channels , how are datas transmitting between the channel gap please explain