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#1
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
I currently have a Sony ICF-7600GR, and was wondering, how you try to
hear activity on nets that are huge. I know on a shortwave radio that you can basically only really hear one channel at a time and can't scan like VHF/UHF but when I look at networks like the Mystic Star and some other huge ones, it's like how do you see if any channel has activity easily, when you have to basically type in each and every frequency to the radio. |
#2
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
On May 18, 3:23 am, RedPenguin wrote:
I currently have a Sony ICF-7600GR, and was wondering, how you try to hear activity on nets that are huge. I know on a shortwave radio that you can basically only really hear one channel at a time and can't scan like VHF/UHF but when I look at networks like the Mystic Star and some other huge ones, it's like how do you see if any channel has activity easily, when you have to basically type in each and every frequency to the radio. The Sony ICF-SW7600GR is not a scanner. It is a radio designed for listening to world band broadcasts and ham transmissions. If you try to listen to nets with this radio, you will be frustrated. That said, the best way to check is to tune to the bottom of the frequency band you wish to monitor and, while in the AM Mode "Norm," hold in the inner tuning button [ + - ] and manually scan that band. There will be no "chugging" or "muting" when scanning this way. You will then hear any transmissions available at your location and you can then stop and listen - only to one frequency at a time, however. You asked how to check easily: there is no way with this radio. It is not designed for that. For what you wish to do, you need a scanner. I hope this is not the main reason you bought this one! Best, Joe |
#3
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
On May 18, 11:47 am, Joe Analssandrini
wrote: On May 18, 3:23 am, RedPenguin wrote: I currently have a Sony ICF-7600GR, and was wondering, how you try to hear activity on nets that are huge. I know on a shortwave radio that you can basically only really hear one channel at a time and can't scan like VHF/UHF but when I look at networks like the Mystic Star and some other huge ones, it's like how do you see if any channel has activity easily, when you have to basically type in each and every frequency to the radio. The Sony ICF-SW7600GR is not a scanner. It is a radio designed for listening to world band broadcasts and ham transmissions. If you try to listen to nets with this radio, you will be frustrated. That said, the best way to check is to tune to the bottom of the frequency band you wish to monitor and, while in the AM Mode "Norm," hold in the inner tuning button [ + - ] and manually scan that band. There will be no "chugging" or "muting" when scanning this way. You will then hear any transmissions available at your location and you can then stop and listen - only to one frequency at a time, however. You asked how to check easily: there is no way with this radio. It is not designed for that. For what you wish to do, you need a scanner. I hope this is not the main reason you bought this one! Best, Joe Well, I like broadcasts also, but what would you use for nets because I heard there really are no HF scanners due to the fact of how much noise affects it. |
#4
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
On 18 May 2007 00:23:26 -0700, RedPenguin
wrote: I currently have a Sony ICF-7600GR, and was wondering, how you try to hear activity on nets that are huge. I know on a shortwave radio that you can basically only really hear one channel at a time and can't scan like VHF/UHF but when I look at networks like the Mystic Star and some other huge ones, it's like how do you see if any channel has activity easily, when you have to basically type in each and every frequency to the radio. You can practicefine tuning with these. They are pretty active. Find the ones near you. (NAT - A) North Atlantic Family A 3016.0 5598.0 8906.0 13306.0 17946.0 Canarias, Gander, New York, Paramaribo, Piarco, Santa Maria, Shanwick (NAT - B) North Atlantic Family B 2899.0 5616.0 8864.0 13291.0 17946.0 Gander, Iceland, New York, Santa Maria, Shanwick (NAT - C) North Atlantic Family C 2872.0 5649.0 8879.0 13306.0 17946.0 Gander, Iceland, Shanwick (NAT - D) North Atlantic Family D 2971.0 4675.0 8891.0 11279.0 13291.0 17946.0 Arctic Radio (Baffin), Bodo, Churchill (Emerg's Only), Gander, Iceland, Shanwick (NAT - E) North Atlantic Family E 2962.0 6628.0 8825.0 11309.0 13354.0 New York, Santa Maria (NAT - F) North Atlantic Family F 3476.0 6622.0 8831.0 11336.0 13291.0 Gander, Shanwick -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (CAR - A) Caribbean Area A 2887.0 5550.0 6577.0 8918.0 11396.0 13297.0 17907.0 Barranquilla, Boyeros, Merida, New York, Panama, Piarco (CAR - B) Caribbean Area B 3455.0 5520.0 6586.0 8846.0 11330.0 17907.0 Barranquilla, Boyeros, Cayenne, Georgetown, Maiquetia, New York, Panama, Paramaribo, Piarco -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (SAM - C) South American Central Area 3479.0 5526.0 8855.0 10096.0 13297.0 17907.0 Belem, Bogota, Brasilia, Iquitos, Leticia, Manaus, Maiquetia, Porto Velho, Rio de Janeiro (SAM - NE) South American North Eastern Area 3479.0 5526.0 8855.0 10096.0 13297.0 17907.0 Belem, Cayenne, Georgetown, Maiquetia, Paramaribo, Piarco, Recife (SAM - NW) South American North Western Area 2944.0 4669.0 6649.0 10024.0 11360.0 17907.0 Barranquilla, Bogota, Maiquetia, Lima, Quito (SAM - SE) South American South Eastern Area 3479.0 5526.0 8855.0 10096.0 13297.0 17907.0 Asuncion, Belem, Brasilia, Buenos Aires, Campo Grande, La Paz, Montevideo, Lima, Porto Alegre, Port Velho, Recife, Salvador, Santa Cruz (SAM - SW) South American South Western Area 2944.0 4669.0 6549.0 10024.0 11360.0 17907.0 Antofagasta, Asuncion, Buenos Aires, Cordoba, Easter Is, La Paz, Lima, Puerto Montt, Punta Arenas, Santa Cruz, Santiago, Talara, Ushuaia -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (SAT - 1) South Atlantic Area 1 3452.0 6535.0 8861.0 13357.0 17955.0 Brasilia, Canarias, Cayenne, Dakar, Manaus, Paramaribo, Recife, Rio de Janerio, Sal Island (SAT 2) South Atlantic Area 2 2854.0 5565.0 11291.0 13315.0 17955.0 Canarias, Cayenne, Dakar, Manaus, Johannesburg, Paramaribo, Recife, Rio de Janerio, Sal Island -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (AFI - 1) Africa Area 1 3452.0 6535.0 8861.0 13357.0 17955.0 Abidjan, Bamako, Bangui, Bissau, Bouake, Casablanca, Conakry, Canarias, Dakar, Freetown, Johannesburg, Kano, Niamey, Nouadhibou, Nouakchott, Ouagadougou, Roberts (AFI - 2) Africa Area 2 3419.0 5652.0 8894.0 13273.0 17961.0 Algiers, Kano, Gao, Niamey, N'djamena, Tamanrasset, Timimoun, Tripoli, Tunis (AFI - 3) Africa Area 3 3467.0 5517.0 10018.0 11300.0 13288.0 17961.0 Addis Ababa, Aden, Asmara, Bahrain, Benghazi, Bombay, Bujumbura, Cairo, Comoros, Dar es Salaam, Entebbe, Hargeisa, Djibouti, Jeddah, Khartoum, Kigali, Kisimayu, Male, Mogadishu, Nairobi, Port Sudan, Sana'a, Seychelles, Tripoli. (AFI - 4) Africa Area 4 2878.0 5493.0 8903.0 13294.0 17961.0 Accra, Bangui, Douala, Entebbe, Franceville, Garoua, Goma, Harare, Kano, Kinshasa, Kisangani, Lagos, Libreville, Luanda, Lubumbashi, Lusaka, Maiduguri, Maroua, N'djamena, Niamey, Niamtougou, Pointe Noire, Port Gentil, Roberts, Sao Tome, Windhoek, Yaounde -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (INO - 1) Indian Ocean Area 1 3476.0 5634.0 8879.0 13306.0 17961.0 Antananarivo, Beira, Bombay, Brisbane, Cocos Islands, Colombo, Dar es Salaam, Harare, Jeddah, Kigali, Lilongwe, Lusaka, Madras, Mahajanga, Male, Mauritius, Moroni, Nairobi, Perth, Seychelles, St.Denis, Toamasina -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (MID - 1) Middle East Area 1 2992.0 4669.0 5667.0 6631.0 8951.0 11375.0 17961.0 Aden, Amman, Ankara, Beirut, Cairo, Damascus, Jeddah, Kuwait, Manama, Odessa, Sana'a, Simferopol, Tehran, Tbilisi, Yerevan (MID - 2) Middle East Area 2 3467.0 5658.0 10018.0 11300.0 13288.0 17961.0 Abadan, Almaty, Ashkabad, Bishkek, Bombay, Delhi, Dushanbe, Kabul, Karachi, Kathmandu, Kuwait, Lahore, Male, Muscat, Odessa, Samarkhand, Seychelles, Tashkent, Tehran, Tbilisi, Urumqi, Yerevan (MID - 3) Middle East Area 3 2944.0 4669.0 6631.0 8951.0 11375.0 17961.0 Aktyubinsk, Almaty, Bishkek, Dushanbe, Kuybyshev, Kzyl-Orda, Moscow, Samarkhand, Tashkent, Uralsk, Yerevan -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (EUR - A) Europe Area A 3479.0 5661.0 6598.0 10084.0 13288.0 17961.0 Arkhangelsk, Beirut, Berlin, Kiev, Lvov, Minsk, Moscow, Murmansk, Odessa, Riga, Simferopol, Sofia, St. Petersburg, Syktyvkar, Tunis, Velikiye, Vilnius, Vologda -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (NCA - 1) North Central Asia Area 1 3019.0 5646.0 13315.0 17958.0 Ivdel, Khanty-Mansiysk, Moscow, Syktyvkar, Vologda (NCA - 2) North Central Asia Area 2 2851.0 4678.0 6592.0 10096.0 17958.0 Barnaul, Irkutsk, Khanty-Mansiysk, Kirensk, Kolpashevo, Krasnoyarsk, Novosibirsk, Podkamennaya, Surgut, Yeniseysk (NCA - 3) North Central Asia Area 3 3004.0 5664.0 10039.0 13303.0 17958.0 Chita, Chulman, Ekimchan, Irkutsk, Kirensk, Khabarovsk, Pyongyang, Ulaanbaatar, Ulan Ude -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (EA - 1) East Asia Area 1 3016.0 6571.0 8897.0 10042.0 17958.0 Beijing, Guangzhou, Hailar, Irkutsk, Jinan, Kunming, Lanzhou, Pyongyang, Shanghai, Shenyang, Taegu, Ulaanbaatar, Urumqi, Wuhan, Zhengzhou (EA - 2) East Asia Area 2 3485.0 5649.0 5655.0 8942.0 11396.0 13309.0 17907.0 Guangzhou, Irkutsk, Pyongyang, Ulaanbaatar -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (SEA - 1) South East Asia Area 1 3470.0 5670.0 6556.0 10066.0 13318.0 17907.0 Bali, Bangkok, Colombo, Calcutta, Dhaka, Guangzhou, Jakarta, Kathmandu, Kuala Lumpur, Kunming, Madras, Male, Singapore, Yangon (SEA - 2) South East Asia Area 2 3485.0 5649.0 5655.0 8942.0 11396.0 13309.0 17907.0 Bali, Bangkok, Guangzhou, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh, Hong Kong, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, Kota Kinabalu, Manila, Seoul, Singapore, Tokyo, Vientianne (SEA - 3) South East Asia Area 3 3470.0 5733.0 6556.0 10066.0 11396.0 13318.0 17907.0 Bali, Brisbane, Jakarta, Male, Singapore, Ujung Pandang -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (CEP - 1/2) Central East Pacific Areas 1/2 2869.0 3413.0 5547.0 5574.0 6673.0 8843.0 10057.0 11282.0 13261.0 13354.0 17904.0 San Francisco (CWP - 1/2) Central West Pacific Area 1/2 2998.0 4666.0 6532.0 6562.0 8903.0 11384.0 13300.0 17904.0 Hong Kong, Manila, Naha, Port Moseby, San Francisco, Seoul, Taipei, Tokyo -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (NP - 3/4) North Pacific Area 3/4 2932.0 5628.0 5677.0 6655.0 8915.0 10048.0 13294.0 13339.0 17904.0 17946.0 21925.0 San Francisco, Tokyo (SP - 6/7) South Pacific Area 6/7 3467.0 5643.0 8867.0 13261.0 17904.0 Auckland, Brisbane, Nadi, Pascua (Easter Island), Port Vila, Rarotonga, San Francisco, Tahiti, Wallis -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#5
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
On May 18, 9:38 pm, RedPenguin wrote:
On May 18, 11:47 am, Joe Analssandrini wrote: On May 18, 3:23 am, RedPenguin wrote: I currently have a Sony ICF-7600GR, and was wondering, how you try to hear activity on nets that are huge. I know on a shortwave radio that you can basically only really hear one channel at a time and can't scan like VHF/UHF but when I look at networks like the Mystic Star and some other huge ones, it's like how do you see if any channel has activity easily, when you have to basically type in each and every frequency to the radio. The Sony ICF-SW7600GR is not a scanner. It is a radio designed for listening to world band broadcasts and ham transmissions. If you try to listen to nets with this radio, you will be frustrated. That said, the best way to check is to tune to the bottom of the frequency band you wish to monitor and, while in the AM Mode "Norm," hold in the inner tuning button [ + - ] and manually scan that band. There will be no "chugging" or "muting" when scanning this way. You will then hear any transmissions available at your location and you can then stop and listen - only to one frequency at a time, however. You asked how to check easily: there is no way with this radio. It is not designed for that. For what you wish to do, you need a scanner. I hope this is not the main reason you bought this one! Best, Joe Well, I like broadcasts also, but what would you use for nets because I heard there really are no HF scanners due to the fact of how much noise affects it. I do not own or use any scanning radios.However, I believe you are incorrect when you state there are no HF scanners, but you'd have to double-check me. There are a number out there that would seem to be suitable for your desires. Unfortunately, of course, they are somewhat expensive. There are several models, made by AOR, Alinco, ICOM, or Yaesu that might be suitable. If you are seriously looking to scan the high frequencies, I suggest telephoning AES and/or Universal Radio and talking with someone there. (AES would probably be more helpful; they have been so, at least in my experience.) If you wanted a non-scanning radio suitable for utilities, there are two ways to go: the Sangean ATS 909 with an outdoor antenna and an AC power supply is a good one for utilities and hams because it has two bandwidths and good dynamic range. (It is not as good for broadcast reception as the Sony ICF-SW7600GR.) I am hesitant, however, to recommend ANY Sangean product as I have owned/still own four of their products, none of which is truly a good performer or constructed very well. Thus I have a sour taste in my mouth regarding Sangean. Others, of course, will have differing experiences. Note that I have never owned an ATS 909 so you'd want to inquire of people who do own this model for their opinions. The other, and better, way to go, in my opinion, would be the ICOM IC-R75 tabletop receiver, again with a suitable (and significant) antenna. With appropriate (optional) filtration, this radio should almost totally satisfy your needs. It is the least costly tabletop radio suitable for utility/ham reception that is currently being manufactured. The above is, of course, my opinion only, and you should get other opinions, especially from those who do actively monitor utility broadcasts. I do wish you the very best of luck. Radio is indeed a great deal of fun, isn't it? Joe |
#6
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
On May 20, 1:04 am, John Kasupski wrote:
On 19 May 2007 16:43:56 -0700, Joe Analssandrini wrote: I do not own or use any scanning radios.However, I believe you are incorrect when you state there are no HF scanners, but you'd have to double-check me. There are lots of radios into which you can program HF frequencies and then have the radio scan through the memory channels. You're not going to get one for chump change, though. This is not to say you can't enjoy utility station monitoring without a rig that scans a hundred or so memories, because I myself did it for years, the hard way, by wearing out the numeric frequency entry keys on a DX-394. Before that I tried it with a Sangean ATS-803A portable and doggone near drove myself nuts until I got the DX-394 and relegated the Sangean to SWBC listening use. If you really want to monitor a relatively large group of frequencies that's used for something in particular (Mystic Star, HF-GCS, COTHEN, MARS, or whatever) and not miss anything, you're going beyond casual listening and getting into some pretty serious utility monitoring. The typical inexpensive portable HF receiver simply isn't going to cut it, these radios are consumer-grade items designed with casual SWBC listeners in mind. They're for people who just want to listen to the news on the BBC or hear some German music on Deutsche Welle, and listening to utility stations is a whole different ballgame. Even some of the less expensive tabletop rigs aren't going to cut it. You really are a lot better off with a serious radio to do serious UTE listening. Some of the radios I know do this are the Yaesu VR-5000, Drake R-8B, the Ten-Tec Argonaut V and RX-340, and the Icom R9500, R-75, even the R-20 if you're after a portable for a specific reason. Most HF ham transceivers also seem do this, including both of mine (Kenwood TS-50S and TS-450SAT), and the Icom IC-706MKIIG and Yaesu FT-990 rigs the club I belong to has. John Kasupski, KC2HMZ, Contributing Editor Popular Communications Magazine Dear John, Your reply is spot-on accurate. I had recommended to "RedPenguin," the person who originated this thread, the Sangean ATS 909 as a relatively inexpensive way to go but really I would (and did) recommend the ICOM IC-R75, suitably filtered and with a proper antenna, as the least costly means of monitoring utility transmissions. Less costly radios, not designed for monitoring utilities, will cause more frustration than pleasure in that regard, at least in my opinion. Best, Joe |
#7
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
On May 20, 10:38 am, Joe Analssandrini
wrote: On May 20, 1:04 am, John Kasupski wrote: On 19 May 2007 16:43:56 -0700, Joe Analssandrini wrote: I do not own or use any scanning radios.However, I believe you are incorrect when you state there are no HF scanners, but you'd have to double-check me. There are lots of radios into which you can program HF frequencies and then have the radio scan through the memory channels. You're not going to get one for chump change, though. This is not to say you can't enjoy utility station monitoring without a rig that scans a hundred or so memories, because I myself did it for years, the hard way, by wearing out the numeric frequency entry keys on a DX-394. Before that I tried it with a Sangean ATS-803A portable and doggone near drove myself nuts until I got the DX-394 and relegated the Sangean to SWBC listening use. If you really want to monitor a relatively large group of frequencies that's used for something in particular (Mystic Star, HF-GCS, COTHEN, MARS, or whatever) and not miss anything, you're going beyond casual listening and getting into some pretty serious utility monitoring. The typical inexpensive portable HF receiver simply isn't going to cut it, these radios are consumer-grade items designed with casual SWBC listeners in mind. They're for people who just want to listen to the news on the BBC or hear some German music on Deutsche Welle, and listening to utility stations is a whole different ballgame. Even some of the less expensive tabletop rigs aren't going to cut it. You really are a lot better off with a serious radio to do serious UTE listening. Some of the radios I know do this are the Yaesu VR-5000, Drake R-8B, the Ten-Tec Argonaut V and RX-340, and the Icom R9500, R-75, even the R-20 if you're after a portable for a specific reason. Most HF ham transceivers also seem do this, including both of mine (Kenwood TS-50S and TS-450SAT), and the Icom IC-706MKIIG and Yaesu FT-990 rigs the club I belong to has. John Kasupski, KC2HMZ, Contributing Editor Popular Communications Magazine Dear John, Your reply is spot-on accurate. I had recommended to "RedPenguin," the person who originated this thread, the Sangean ATS 909 as a relatively inexpensive way to go but really I would (and did) recommend the ICOM IC-R75, suitably filtered and with a proper antenna, as the least costly means of monitoring utility transmissions. Less costly radios, not designed for monitoring utilities, will cause more frustration than pleasure in that regard, at least in my opinion. Best, Joe Hmmm, I really would love to get into hardcore utility monitoring, but it was hard enough for me to get my ICF-7600GR, so I don't think I will be able to get some of the nicer radios for a long time. The one was like almost $5000, I was like holy heck. Radio Monitoring of any kind seems nice, but it seems like it can get extremely expensive for the really nice stuff. |
#8
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
Joe,if I float that married Irish woman wayyyyy over yonder across the
big pond in Bognor Regis,England,,,,, moola for a ''scanner'' [[you know what I mean'']] would the U.S.fed govt Spies crap on me? I certainly don't want to get that married Irish woman in trouble! cuhulin |
#9
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
I don't go to hard core porn,,,, but,I like to LQQK at some nice naked
wimmins two or ten times every year.I am only human,I think. cuhulin |
#10
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Listening to many HF utility stations?
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