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Finding Frequencies
There are MANY sources on the web to find frequencies in your area,
but ONE of the best I have found is the FCC. Go to http://svartifoss2.fcc.gov/reports/st_cty_freqrange.cfm Enter your State, your County, and then the frequency range. If you have a dial-up connection, be cautious of the frequency range that you enter. It can take a little while to search a large data base, and also display the results. Happy Hunting!! |
"Brandon" wrote in message om... There are MANY sources on the web to find frequencies in your area, but ONE of the best I have found is the FCC. Go to http://svartifoss2.fcc.gov/reports/st_cty_freqrange.cfm Enter your State, your County, and then the frequency range. If you have a dial-up connection, be cautious of the frequency range that you enter. It can take a little while to search a large data base, and also display the results. The same equivalent in Canada is Industry Canada's Strategis TAFL web site: http://sd.ic.gc.ca/pls/eng_alpha/web...raphical_input You need to key in the latitude (example: 490000) and longitude (example: 1230000) for Vancouver BC regional searches and also key in a radius (example 50 km or 20 km). This will give locations within 'x' km radius from the position provided. There is no "city" search, but this link will provide a regional search. It's not Industry Canada's but has been programmed to feed in appropite field data. You can search by provincial region. http://neon.polkaroo.net/~darkwing/tafl/index.html Industry Canada does not disclose RCMP, OPP or other police agency used frequences. The results from Industry Canada can be complex and very detailed. PK |
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