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#1
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Is it really possible to use a scanner without being exposed? I heard
from few sources that scanners produce internal oscillator signals that can be detected. I suppose there is no "stealth" way to listen a scanner. Any ideas? |
#2
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Jim wrote:
Is it really possible to use a scanner without being exposed? I heard from few sources that scanners produce internal oscillator signals that can be detected. I suppose there is no "stealth" way to listen a scanner. Any ideas? Not sure exactly what you're asking... You can put the innards of the scanner into a Faraday cage and just run in the (shielded) antenna cable (perhaps with a notch filter to hammer the IF frequency(ies)) and run out (very low pass filtered) audio cables. Sure you'll have some small coupling back to the antenna and audio leads, but you could knock it way down. It really depends on what you consider the threat to be... I have a hard time imaging it to be an issue without serious cloak and dagger stuff going on. (In which case, there is probably specialized equipment...) -Donald -- "One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words." - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
#3
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![]() Jim wrote: Is it really possible to use a scanner without being exposed? I heard from few sources that scanners produce internal oscillator signals that can be detected. I suppose there is no "stealth" way to listen a scanner. Any ideas? Trying to sneek a scanner (or other computing device) into a Casino???? Good Luck! George http://www.MilAirComms.com |
#4
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"GeorgeF" wrote in message
.. . Trying to sneek a scanner (or other computing device) into a Casino???? Good Luck! Sneak? I've walked for hours through the Trump Taj Majal in Atlantic City with a scanner on my belt. |
#5
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Okay so if it is the fact that scanners produce IF, what is the range
of such signals produced by local oscillator? |
#6
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Is it really possible to use a scanner without being exposed? I heard
from few sources that scanners produce internal oscillator signals that can be detected. aqnd my question is, does this screw up Smartsignmedia and Mobiltrak to detetrmine which radio station you're listening to? They're using machines to read the local osciallator on your car radio and looking 10.7 MHZ away to determine which radio station you're listening to. But they're looking for which radio station between 88 and 108 mhz you're listening to, so advertisers can target their advertising to you on freeway signs. But if you're listening to a scanner in your car instead of the car's radio, and if their machines can handle it, they'l get a frequency readout such as "144. 250 mhz" or "455.325 mhz", in which case they'll probably be scratching their heads and going "huh?" ![]() Since this would be an accurate readout of which station or frequency you're listening to, it doesn't really screw them up. It just confuses the heck out of them. ![]() However, my own scanner uses a local oscillater of 240.1 mhz, which I imagine probably would screw them up since their machines are looking for and reading as 10.7 mhz away from the local osciallator frequency. They would probably get a completely wrong readout of what station I'm listening to. Of course, this also has it's possible drawbacks |
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