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I think using radio broadcasts as a means to communicate information to a
global 'spy' network has become passe. Modern spy and terrorist networks increasingly use a method called 'Steganography' to hide messages and data inside picture files or other media files that are easily posted through the internet. Lot's of free software to do this can be found on the net. Here's a link to a tutorial: http://elonka.com/stego/StegoLR.htm Joe W3JDR "Michael Black" wrote in message ... Dave Platt ) writes: In article , Clark Magnuson wrote: Could a spy modify an AM radio by adding a few capacitors? Possibly, but I doubt that it would work well if you started from a standard US-type AM broadcast-band receiver. The frequencies that this article speaks of are up in the HF band, roughly 10 times higher than the AM broadcast-band frequencies, and these radios' built-in loopstick antennas are not well suited to receive these sorts of signals. A spy in most Western countries could simply buy an off-the-shelf AM/FM/shortwave receiver (very widely available). Simple but very effective direct-conversion or superheterodyne receivers (capable of receiving CW, SSB, and AM) can be built out of "junk box" parts by anyone with a modest amount of training and experience. Many of the popular QRP receiver designs could be tweaked to receive on these sorts of frequencies with very little difficulty. Now, if somebody had an old "7-transistor" AM radio (circa 1960 or so), it would likely be possible to salvage enough parts from it to build a simple direct-conversion shortwave receiver. I doubt that this would be possible (or at least not easy) for today's highly-integrated IC-based radios. First, a "spy" is not going to need to build a radio. They will be able to get their hands on something locally, or (as in WWII), they'll be parachuted in with the needed equipment. And in this day and age, with so many means of communication (and at least for the moment, no all-encompassing wars), there are all kinds of mainstream means of contacting spies without being tracked. Traditionally, spies were not radio experts, unless their job was to accumulate information on radio matters. But, if someone really did need to assemble a shortwave radio, I suspect it's far easier today than in the past. At the very least, no more difficult than in the past. Thirty years ago, magazines were full of simple superhets based on standard AM radios. Some would rework the front end circuitry to tune a shortwave band, and the fact that ICs are used rather than transistors isn't likely to make that really difficult. I can remember in 1971 when RCA introduced the CA3088 AM radio IC, and QST ran an article pointing out how it could be used. Obviously not the best choice, but an IC instead of transistors isn't likely to make a worse receiver. The limitations would come from image rejection and lousy selectivity (and maybe lack of IF gain), and those were all there with transistor based radios. Others would strip off the front end tuned circuits, and simply use the AM broadcast receiver as a 455KHz IF, building a mixer and oscillator to feed into it. And of course, many would add a converter to an existing AM broadcast radio. Sacrifice one radio to build a converter for another. Then you get double conversion, which would be a good thing given the common 455KHz IF for most AM broadcast radios. For best results, use a car radio for the radio, since they often have better selectivity and of course are well shielded compared to portable AM radios with their loopstick antennas. Need a BFO? Those can be tossed together easily with a transistor off some scrap board, and an IF transformer from a scrap radio (and I seem to recall some using ceramic filters as the frequency determining element in a BFO, and if those work, they are easily available out of scrap radios, compared to ceramic resonators). ICs may offer better performance. Since transistors in an IC are cheap, they may be more likely to use a balanced mixer. Grab an IC out of a radio, and you've got your mixer (and you have a choice of the mixer from the AM or the mixer from the FM section). Some have put together SSB receivers out of narrow-band FM receiver ICs (they simply ignore the FM detector), and someone used merely the mixer out of a more complicated receiver IC for a direct conversion receiver. A lot of FM broadcast radios use IF strip ICs that don't allow for separate use of the IF amplifiers from the limiters, but I've stripped at least one car radio that offered up an MC1350 IF amplifier. For that matter, use the FM IF strip as a quasi-synchronous detector for AM, or if it's of the right design, feed a BFO into the limiter input and you've got your product detector. Find a CB set, and you get better IF selectivity, and many will be double conversion. Retune the front end, and replace the synthesizer with a tuneable oscillator. Get really lucky, and the garage sale will offer up an SSB CB set, for even narrower selectivity and of course CW/SSB reception with no mods. Circa 1942, you'd have far more trouble getting parts. Oh, I suppose there were more local electronic stores, but there was hardly any consumer electronic equipment. Nowadays it's really really common. And that supplies so many useful parts. Michael VE2BVW |
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