Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello,
There are a couple of Police repeaters in my area that have a contant "beeping" carrier on them all the time, except when it is actually repeating something. The repeaters are fully monitorable if you don't mind the constant beep in between, but obviously a scanner will never skip past them. I suspect the purpose for this is to make is so annoying for scanner listeners that they just forget about it, so.... I am wondering how the radios of the intended audience (police officers in this case) work. They obviously aren't listening to this beep all the time. I was thinking that maybe they were doing something with CTCSS and/or DCS tones, as until recently scanners with this capability were not commonplace, but so far I haven't figured out how it works. One of the two does transmit the same CTCSS tone regardless of whether it is the beep or voice, so that doesn't appear to be how that one works. The second does not appear to transmit any CTCSS tone at all at any time. I haven't done any DCS searches yet, but I do have the capability of decoding DCS if anyone thinks that's how they are doing it. If it isn't DCS or CTCSS, I would have to assume it is some specialized feature of their radios. By the way, these are both regular old UHF frequencies. Thanks for any input. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FS: scanner stuff | Scanner | |||
Advice on buying a scanner | Scanner | |||
Constant bandwidth TRF circuit | Shortwave | |||
Coax signal deteriotion to Scanner | Scanner | |||
FS: scanner stuff | Scanner |