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USA VIDEO SURVEILLANCE & DETECTION DIRECTORY
2004 Edition 1. The 2004 edition now is available for those individuals interested in this interesting new facet of monitoring. The directory contains over 4,200 USA 50 state frequency listings and their probable use in state, frequency and city sequence in MS EXCEL format. Users include but are not limited to aircraft manufacturer's flight testing, special event contractor's (aircraft/blimp air to ground ttransmissions for baseball, football, other sporting events), remote traffic monitoring (construction sites, urban streets, law enforcement covert air to ground video/audio surveillance, ground video/audio covert surveillance, private enterprise covert video surveillance, oil companies (off shore platforms), public transportation (may include subway station surveillance), race track surveillance, fire departments using infra red imaging technology, videosender video/audio transmissions of satellite tv or other video/audio signals to other rooms within a structure or to another structure, bomb squad remote control robots, helmet cams and other unidentified video users. 2. Included in the directory package are photos showing a typical live video microwave transmission configuration. "How to" informational files are included that show/discuss configuring a mobile equipment system to receive the video transmissions of interest using off the the shelf equipment available to the public. The recommended 2 ghz. scanning receiver is the Videoscanner. Go to www.videoscanner.co.uk for technical specifications and ordering information. Text documentation in MS WORD accompanies each picture with detailed and explanatory comments pertaining to the photo subject matter. It is very easy to configure a mobile video scanning monitoring system. The system components include the mobile wireless antenna with appropriate coax cable and connector, microwave scanner receiver, and if you desire a color picture, a portable tv with baseband audio/video cables to connect to the microwave scanner receiver. That's all there is to it. The concept is comparable to monitoring police, fire, rescue and business radio transmissions on a vhf/uhf scanner/receiver mobile configuration. The main difference is a microwave frequency range is use; an antenna and a receiver capable of tuning analog in the clear frequency transmissions are required for reception. The detected and processed signal is video instead of audio. If an analog in the clear audio subcarrier is present, it also will be detected and processed. 3. Contrary to common belief, a significant number of microwwave signals have a much greater ground wave coverage area than one would believe as you soon will discover when using the aforemention microwave receiver monitoring configuration. Reception distance varies from hundreds of feet to 10ths to 1/2 to 1, 2 or more air miles depending upon the electronics, transmitter antenna gain and location, transmitter power and mobile reception equipment. Some law enforcement transmitter input watts can be as hight as 35 to 50 watts. An air to ground transmission from a 1,500 to 2,000 ft. height may allow reception 20-30 miles away. 4. All directory listing information is sourced from the public domain or obtained from actual off air monitoring. The USAVS&DD is available on CD ROM for $20 plus $5 USPS shipping/handling. No credit cards, Paypal, personal or business checks can be accepted. Payment is by USPS, Western Union or bank money order. 5. If interested email for specific USAVS&DD ordering information. |
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