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David T. Hall Jr. (N3CVJ) wrote:
Any scanner user could do it. No David,,the last time this was brought up, you tried and failed with this excuse. When it was illustrated what a pervert you are, you come back with the defense that the incident occurred years and years ago, when you were a younger man. It appears you can remember vividly the details of such an incident that many years ago, but can not recal a simple Phelps antenna when inquired of a comment you made a few year's previous alluding to such. Nevertheless, back when you were that young, the scanners were not digital, but crystals, and contrary to your claim "any scanner user could do it", that simply was not the case back then. In fact, cordless phones came on the market in 1980 and were ALL 27 MHZ phones, a specific crystal that did NOT come imbedded in "any scanner". All of this coupled together with your oft-invoked "statistical probablility" factor, makes you to be one big freegin' liar! LMAO! Your lack of age and experience is glaringly apparent in this statement. First off, the first programmable scanners came out in the late 70's. Look into the Bearcat 101, the SBE Optiscan, the Regency "Whamo 10" and the Tenelec. My Bearcat 210xl was purchased in 1980 or 81, and you can clearly see it in the pictures of my station in 1985 and 1990 as shown on my website. Secondly cordless phones were not on 27 MHz (What idiot would put cordless phones on the already crowded CB band?). The same type idiot that comes out here pretending he knows all kinds of things about all kinds of things, but knows jack **** intimately. www.affordablephones.net/HistoryCordless.htm LMAO,,the feds did it, genius. They most certainly WERE on 27 in their beginning. The 1st 49 MHZ came about in or around 1986. Talk that smack, David. Wrong. The first 49 Mhz (with 1.7 Mhz return) was on the market earlier than 1986, because I was listening to them long before then. Sure, David,,"the info is wrong" again, eh? Instead of relying on the compiled history of the phones, one should rely on you....after all, your memory has proved astute regarding such things that normal ops remember, such as antenna brands they used over the years. I bought my Yaesu FT-757 in 1984 (I still .have the receipt), and I used it to catch the cordless phone base frequency, while the Bearcat scanner was tuned to the initial 10 (Later upped to 25) 49 Mhz frequencies. In fact, you've just given me the inspiration for another article for my website. I'll provide all the details there. Ah,,,so you were wrong claiming the first phones were 27 MHZ and I was wrong concerning the first programmable scanners..at least I can admit it. The pain you are experiencing over being wrong will go away as soon as you can accept it and move on from it instead of dwelling on it like you do so often. It's a darn shame that the cordless phones came along when they did. They pretty much ruined the 49 Mhz band as an unlicensed hobby band. Prior to about 1982, there was a budding group of low power experimenters running 100 mW (And in some cases modified 6 meter ham gear) radios and trying to work DX there. When the phones and baby monitors arrived, that was the death knell for that band for hobbyists and experimenters. I still have my old Lafayette HA-240 on 49.860 Mhz. The 46/49 Mhz phones (49 Mhz handset, 46 Mhz base) started around 1986. While I won't deny that the very first phones might have actually been on 27 MHz, You already denied it, David. Something is very wrong with you. I was not into listening to them then (It would have been a lot easier to do. Any modified CB could have done it). I don't think those early phones sold all that well. I never saw or heard one in my area. As usual, your lack of knowledge of the subject was illustrated perfectly. Such lack of knowldge of the subject prevents you from discussing it further. My knowledge was from direct personal .experience. I know you're too young to .remember back that far, but the first truly legitimate cordless phones used 49 Mhz for the handset and 1.7 Mhz (Just above the AM broadcast band) for the base unit. Wrong. The first available cordless phones were 27 MHZ. Find an old timer and ask them if you don't believe me. You're the one claiming the info is wrong, David, but that burden of providing for your claim is always to great a cross for you to bear. If the FCC or the phone lobby doesn't want people listening in, they need to block out those frequencies or scramble the transmissions. Then the same logic can be applied to use of the freeband. .=A0=A0How? The method was your idea. The fact that you once again speak before thinking is illustrated by no one better than yourself. .Which means what exactly? No one else is having trouble following. Ask for some help with just what it means. As usual, you are talking a bunch of circular .nonsense. Someday, I hope to read a nice long E-mail from you outlining just how your postings were all deliberate attempts at psychological tweaking. I can far better respect you for being that, than a unconscious dyslexic thinker. I'm a freebander, David, and that is your problem and has always been your problem ever since you claimed you were due respect by virtue of your license. Such arrogance practically guarantees you to be the punch clown of a cb group. My faith in humanity is greatly lowered knowing that such people exist and actually think they know something. Especially when their claims are all unsubstantiated like yours. It was always a crime to eavesdrop on one's private telephone conversation using electronic equipment, David. It violates federal wiretap law, but your position of "thinking like a criminal" (your words) is interesting. .Wire tapping did not apply to radio devices at that time. It was still considered a telephone and as such was subject to the rules and regulations governing telpephones.. .Nope. There was no provision in any wiretap law at that time that specifically addresses reception of cordless phones. Here is once again where your incompetence comes into the picture. The fact that they were cordless did not absolve them from the federal laws governing telephone devices. So by using your logic, if it isn't specifically called out as illegal, assume that it is legal. That was the glaring loophole in the wiretap law. No loophole at all, just another wrong claim from you. Then I'm sure you will provide the exact verbiage to substantiate your claim? Yea, well the group was sure you would provide for your technical competence claims concerning your unsolicited invocation of a tech school you felt important enough to mention, but, (sigh), as usual, you provide nada g/. There could be no reasonable expectation of privacy when you run unencrypted analog FM signals over a band that is generally easy to receive by "common" radio receivers (Such as a scanner). One's expectations of privacy has nothing to do with the law, David. .It has a great deal to do with it. Again, prove me wrong if you can (But I won't .hold my breath). I've proved you wrong so many times with radio law that it's downright dandy giving you the cord and watching you so eagerly jump to wrap it around your neck. You are so quick to jump these days that you rant on about things you have no clue. .The only thing I have been wrong on was the roger beep issue. And you didn't prove that. Right David, everyone else that tried to explain the law to you the manner in which I did was all a coincidence and collective lucky guesses. Feel better, dude? I had to get the info myself from the FCC. Yep, after you were instructed to becasue your ignorance and arrogance would not permit your ego to believe everyone else who was telling you that you were wrong. As for anything else, you're just blowing smoke. Now, I'll say this as directly and as succinctly as possible so that you will (hopefully) .understand it. It is you that is always begging repeat clairifications of those you disagree, David. Projection of your dilemmas soothers you temporarily. Please provide the exact verbiage in the federal wiretap law, as is was around 1984, that specifically addresses reception of cordless phones. (sigh) I am going to offer you the chance to stop filling the shoes of hypocrisy. Proper communication (something you have difficulties with) dictates when one makes a claim, it is up to that person to provide to substantiate the claim when challenged, as the burden of proof is usually on the claimant. When one is asked to provide for their claims, one is supposed to answer for those claims prior to demanding and foot stomping and begging others to so when you have failed to do so. You were asked several times by several people to provide for your ever-mounting lists of unsolicited claims. Your refusal to do so prevents you from asking the same of others. I am more than willing to post the links to the ECPA, showing the date that it became effective and what it covers. Yet for some reason, you have spasms when asked to do so for your past lies, such as your tech school, your LEO friends, everything -you- mentioned or brought up. Try reading what applied to your situation, not what you think gave you permission to violate the law. The ECPA is what specifically addresses wireless phone devices. Ignorance is no excuse for breaking the law. If you are going to break the law, you should at least be educated about the law you break and penalties you face. .Remember that each time you run your unlicensed transmitter on the freeband..... My Ten-Tec needs no license or acceptance. True, for the amateur bands where authority to operate is granted to a properly licensed amateur (Which BTW, are you one?), Irrelevant where you are concerned. and type acceptance of radio gear is not required. However, the radio is not authorized to operate anywhere other than the amateur bands except by license or authorization (such as MARS or CAP). Certain other bands require type acceptance of radio gear. The land mobile service (which is what the freeband was once part of) does (As does the CB band). So your Ten Tec is not type accepted to operate on the land mobile band, and you are not licensed as an operator on that band. That's two strikes. You said my radio was unlicensed on the freeband..this would be compared to what.......do you have an example of a licensed transmitter on the freeband besides the ones I already provided in the past? See, this is another example of your **** poor retainment skills, as you have been informed on repeated occasion that as an extra, you ought know such things, but then again you are the deviant exception to hammie ops, not the norm. You are the one who doesn't understand radio law. I'm not the one who denied roger beeps were legal based on my own personal feelings despite the contingency trying to correct your ignorance of the law,,,-you- were. No matter how many time you spew your convoluted understanding of the law, it will not make it right. Again, the only person that has illustrated a grave misinterpretation of any law has been yourself. You are not authorized to operate a transmitter on the freeband without a license. And after all these years you still can not convince yourself that it doesn't matter to me, only you. It is not a band authorized by rule, therefore the operator requires a station license. If you don't have one, you are not authorized to run there, Period. No one ever tried to say otherwise, David,,,where exactly is it that you became lost on such subjects? David T. Hall Jr. ."Sandbagger" http://home.ptd.net/~n3cvj |
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