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#1
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I have a funny problem here. I am using my dual band radio, a Kenwood
TM-G707 as a simple scanner and I have a problem in isolating a signal. If I open the squelch manually most of the way, I receive a signal from 400 to 523 mhz everywhere. This signal is on 24 hours a day but seems to be modulated only part of the time. When it is modulated, in FM mode, I hear a tv station crew doing their stuff to mount a program. I can hear the producer giving orders to the cameramen and also the script girl. The mikes are on all the time and not switched. I can't identify what station it is but this has been going on for many years. what I would like to do is identify the exact frequency they use but they splatter all over the band. Is there a way to really zero on them? Since I live in the Montreal area, it could come from everywhere but Iknow it's not coming from my town because no one does that kind of free lance work around here. I am really baffled and would appreciate some sugestions. Thanks. Mike. |
#2
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Hi Mike
An intermod product? Fundamental overload? Modern broadband design amateur radios arent renown for good selectivity in strong signal environments... I doubt they "splatter all over the band", its most likely your receiver possibly in tandem with some other strong signal mixing in the front end. It may even be coming direct to the IF. First suggestion is to use a smaller antenna (thinking its an overload situation). A directive antenna would be next with an inline attenuator and scan around. Keep in mind that the signal you want to hear may not even be in the radio's normal band coverage. Next is to try a different radio (design) and scan with that. It is probably also worthwhile listening to determine who they might be, then do a online database lookup (if Canada has it) for that organisations name! Cheers Bob VK2YQA VE2CJW wrote: I have a funny problem here. I am using my dual band radio, a Kenwood TM-G707 as a simple scanner and I have a problem in isolating a signal. |
#3
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VE2CJW wrote:
I have a funny problem here. I am using my dual band radio, a Kenwood TM-G707 as a simple scanner and I have a problem in isolating a signal. If I open the squelch manually most of the way, I receive a signal from 400 to 523 mhz everywhere. This signal is on 24 hours a day but seems to be modulated only part of the time. When it is modulated, in FM mode, I hear a tv station crew doing their stuff to mount a program. I can hear the producer giving orders to the cameramen and also the script girl. The mikes are on all the time and not switched. I can't identify what station it is but this has been going on for many years. what I would like to do is identify the exact frequency they use but they splatter all over the band. Is there a way to really zero on them? Since I live in the Montreal area, it could come from everywhere but Iknow it's not coming from my town because no one does that kind of free lance work around here. I am really baffled and would appreciate some sugestions. Thanks. Mike. Hi, Mike - I've heard a similar signal just above the 70 cm band (above 450 MHz) but I don't remember the exact frequency. It was a local AM radio station using that frequency for remote broadcasts like, say, a little league baseball game. While not actually rebroadcasting the game, I could hear all sorts of stuff going on. They even occasionally used the frequency as one half of a duplex communications link as an aid in getting everything set up. The other half of the duplex link was the AM radio station! Sounds like you might have something similar in your area, but perhaps the signal is so strong that your receiver is overloading so as to make the signal appear wide. Or, maybe they're also broadcasting the video as well. As you know, video is very wide (but not 123 MHz wide). You could try a different location to monitor them and see if the signal narrows down some. Otherwise, try to zero in on the voice frequency. Just a guess. Cheers, John |
#4
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On Fri, 14 Jul 2006 00:10:34 -0400, "VE2CJW"
wrote: I have a funny problem here. I am using my dual band radio, a Kenwood TM-G707 as a simple scanner and I have a problem in isolating a signal. If I open the squelch manually most of the way, I receive a signal from 400 to 523 mhz everywhere. This signal is on 24 hours a day but seems to be modulated only part of the time. When it is modulated, in FM mode, I hear a tv station crew doing their stuff to mount a program. I can hear the producer giving orders to the cameramen and also the script girl. The mikes are on all the time and not switched. I can't identify what station it is but this has been going on for many years. what I would like to do is identify the exact frequency they use but they splatter all over the band. Is there a way to really zero on them? Since I live in the Montreal area, it could come from everywhere but Iknow it's not coming from my town because no one does that kind of free lance work around here. I am really baffled and would appreciate some sugestions. Thanks. Mike. Mike I am an ex-broadcast TV worker. To me it sounds like a studio talkback system that is left on all the time - not uncommon in regularly used control rooms - but only has modulation when in use. From what you describe of your neighbourhood it is unlikely to be front end overload on your Kenwood. To help track down the source it may be possible to figure out what sort of programming is being produced by listening to the talkback; if the same stuff happens at the same times of the week/day it is obviously a regular show of some kind. It is most likely to be a prerecorded show; the only live broadcasts are news programmes and sporting events and the timing will give a big clue. "Run tape. OK, we got three minutes, reset for the singing sheep". If it is a regular show, the direction will be fairly laconic because the crew will be doing the same stuff over and over again - but you might get the presenters' first names: "Two, tight closeup on Tom. Three, loose two on Dick and Harry". If it is a game show, anything up to six progarmmes might be recorded in a day: "Next is programme three. Autocue, can we change line four to 'our new defending champion from last week is John Doe' " Either way, your next step should be to Google TV production companies in the Montreal area, starting close and working outward. I suspect there will not be many with a regularly used studio. It is a small community so a very few calls may well help you zero in on the source. In each case ask for the technical director and explain what you are receiving; in my experience he would be very concerned about the emission and take steps to suppress it as quickly as possible for a variety of reasons: "OK three, gimme a two shot. One, frame a single on that visiting political asshole once makeup has made him vaguely human". Good luck. Pete |
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