141 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
141 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
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ADVANCED SIGNAL ACQUISITION FOR PRIVATE SCANNER OPERATORS
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By Nigel Ballard 28 Maxwell Road Winton Bournemouth
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Dorset BH9 1DL ENGLAND. 20 July 1990
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There is more than one way to skin a cat. So if we put our brains into
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top gear, let's consider some alternative ways to hunt down those
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illusive spot frequencies.
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The first and most obvious way is to let the scanner do the work by
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searching up or down the band. Not very scientific, but if you split a large
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area up into small segments, then concentrate on that one single area
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for say two days, mathematically your chances of coming across active channels
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are greatly increased. Repeating this process across the band over a
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period of several months will reap great rewards. Okay, you know all
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this right? So on we go with some different approaches.
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THE PLAN OF ATTACK!
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Firstly, get hold of a trade magazine that covers PMR business radio.
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Make up a good sounding company name and tick all the boxes relating to
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antenna's and two way radio's. The company name is to ensure they bother
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in replying. When all the info arrives you will have the start of your
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identification file. The more companies you get info from, the greater
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the chance that if you spot a radio or antenna, you will be able to
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determine it's mode, frequency area and general capabilities. Read
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through and inwardly digest the look of various antenna designs, even
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though different companies make them, a low band folded dipole pretty
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much looks the same who ever you buy it from. Excepting a few strange
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variants you cannot change the laws of physics, a uhf yagi is a uhf yagi
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and they all look pretty much identical. Catalogues covering handheld
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rubber ducks (helicals) are also of great use. Icom as an example
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produce the H-16 (136 to 184MHz) and the U-16 (422 to 473MHz) and apart
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from the antenna is long and thin on the UHF, but long and fat on the
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VHF there is no real physical distance. So if you spot someone
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interesting walking around with a h/held, you try and identify the make,
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match that to the antenna, and already you have narrowed down the
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search.
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Gathering similar information on two way radio's, although useful is not
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quite as productive. However some producers have different front panels
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for different bands. Also if you peer in a car and spot a tone pad or a
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series of selcall buttons then this will help you confirm this radio's
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operating frequency, as monitoring a possible allocation and never
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hearing any tones would seem to indicate you are sat on the wrong
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channel. Remember that CTCSS tones used to open repeaters etc are below
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the usual range of the human ear, so you won't hear them. DTMF however
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is familiar to everyone. And five tone signalling is equally easy to
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recognise due to it's musical content ( a fast series of five up and
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down tones).
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MOBILE ANTENNA'S
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After a while experience will immediately tell you that the antenna on
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the car in front is a quarter wave on high vhf, a centre loaded collinear
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on uhf, or the familiar cellular antenna etc etc. About two years ago a
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friend introduced me to a man who wanted to pay me some serious amount
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of cash to locate the frequency of a competitor. After a moments thought
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I took the assignment not so much for the money but more for the
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challenge. So off I drive to the competitors head office, luckily enough
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they had a two way radio on the roof, unluckily it was one of those
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popular collinear types protected in a white fibreglass tube. These are a
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bitch to identify because low gain, high gain, low band and frequencies
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up to 950MHz are all catered for in these tubes of various lengths. Using
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a frequency counter was out because the roof was too far away from any
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point I could get to. And so I waited for one of their vehicles to
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arrive. Ten minutes later a car pulled into their yard with an unloaded
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whip on the roof. I recognised it as a quarter wave on vhf high-band. In
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the UK the limits for PMR users in this area are BASE TX 164.5 to
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169.9875. Back home now I pulled my high band vhf log book, as it
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happened I already had two loggings for companies operating in a similar
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line of work, so I discounted these. I then entered in every gap or
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suspect allocation not confirmed as someone or other. About 87 freqs in
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all. One by one I heard traffic that didn't fit the bill, until much
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later in the day the scanner stopped on a conversation that looked
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promising, a quick phone call to my customer confirmed that I had the
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buggers. Case closed and another gold star for this frequency detective.
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COVERT ANTENNA'S
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There are certain people out there who for one reason or another who would
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not want it known that they are radio equipped, and as such they go
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covert. The radio is either well under the dash, mounted in the glove
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box or remoted from the trunk. But they still need an antenna. Over the
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years I have seen allsorts of approaches from antennas mounted in the
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wing mounted rear view mirrors, in the mudflaps (hopeless approach this
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was), under the vinyl on the rear parcel shelf, even a circle of
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tuned printed circuit board stuck on the roof and covered with a smooth
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layer of body filler or a vinyl roof was layed over the top. The latter
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is still very much in use, the only way to tell is to spot two identical
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cars parked side by side, the one with the covert antenna will have a roof
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about 4mm higher than the other car, or a non standard cloth top. But
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without doubt the most popular choice just has to be the disguised radio
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antenna. Basically what you have is an exact replacement for the factory
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radio antenna. the antenna lead splits via a diplexer to supply signal
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to both the car and two way radio. Filtering in the diplexer stops the
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RF shunting up the car radio lead. They work better than any other type
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currently available, the signal is vertically polarised and most of the
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signal is clear of the car's bodywork. They are very difficult to spot.
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Some types however are actually thicker than the standard unit, so get
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those micrometers out boys and girls. The only other spanner in the
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works is that a great number of car producers are now incorporating the
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car antenna into the rear window defroster wires by way of a large
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choke. This causes problems to the covert unit. I know of one such car,
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a Ford Granada that has the so-called covert antenna mounted on the rear
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wing. To me this really stands out as Granada's just do not have
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external antenna's. I have heard that some people are experimenting with
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using the rear demist wires as the transmitting antenna, but so far the
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results have been rather poor.
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GETTING BOLDER
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Pen and paper in hand you set off to your local Police open day, try and
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find an older and more layed back officer, approach him with a look of
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admiration, say hello and remark, 'your handheld looks heavy don't you
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mind lugging it around all day?' with this the macho officer will yank
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it off his/her belt and hand it over so you can be suitably impressed.
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My first course of action is to flip it over and see if any of the
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channels are etched on the back. Some crystal controlled radio's come
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with a little plate where the engineer writes the TX and RX frequencies.
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I lose count of the amount of info gained from public service open days
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using this innocent approach. Having a good memory helps greatly. This
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method works for both public services and private companies. Those
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private security guards just love the power a uniform and a handheld
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seems to give them. Just remember to approach them with a sense of awe,
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and you might get lucky.
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RADIO RALLIES
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PMR radio's get old and scruffy, companies sell them off at cheap prices
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to amateur radio dealers who sell them on as seen, many work and many of
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the older one's still have the crystals installed. Once again I have
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gained piles of previously unknown freqs from hunting through the radio
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wreckage at these rallies.
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Well that's about it for now. Once again I hope I have given you a few
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pointers in the right direction. In a later article I hope to cover
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emitter density, radio location methods and the little known I.F.
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detection principle. If I have missed any obvious methods of frequency
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detection then I look forward to hearing from you. Until next time
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Best Regards Nigel.
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