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#1
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Fishing boats?
Around 0600 UTC last night on 2958 kHz USB I heard what appeared to be
Canadian fishermen chatting for a long time. Anyone have some similar fishing freqs in their logs? -- Anti-Spam address: my last name at his dot com Charles Gillen -- Reston, Virginia, USA |
#2
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There are a lot of frequencies in use by commercial vessels and fishing
vessels scattered in the lower bands. 4.368 0:309 utc coastal station 13.088 17:32 utc USB automated weather 2.053 13:01 utc USB tofino coast guard canada 6.500 03:35 utc USB CAMSLANT chesapeake, VA automated weather 6.500 02:08 utc USB CAMSPAC Pt. Reyes, Calif. USB automated weather 15.033 21:29 utc USB Trenton military weather 14.29920:11 USB maritime mobile 4.124 03:10 utc USB live marine weather 4.142 12:38 utc USB ship at sea 4.368 03:00 utc USB WLO New Orleans marine radiotelephone station s/off (weather ship traffic) 5.546 02:54 utc USB San Francisco Radio aeronautical communications 6.675 13:51 utc USB Vancouver Radio s/off 6.678 13:55 utc USB Honolulu Radio aeronautical communications 3.484 03:43 utc USB New York Radio aeronautical communications weather 0.530 18:27 utc AM KNCL 518 Tukwila Highweay Advisory Radio (Washington) 0.530 12:48 utc AM KNEZ 390 Northup (Bellevue, Washington) 14.324 23:13 utc AM Hurricane watch network 4.723 08:35 utc USB Offut air force base Global High Frequency System If I went through some much earlier logs I might find many references to fishing vessels, but this gives an idea what's out there S. "Charles Gillen" wrote in message ... Around 0600 UTC last night on 2958 kHz USB I heard what appeared to be Canadian fishermen chatting for a long time. Anyone have some similar fishing freqs in their logs? -- Anti-Spam address: my last name at his dot com Charles Gillen -- Reston, Virginia, USA |
#3
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"Maximus" wrote in message link.net...
There are a lot of frequencies in use by commercial vessels and fishing vessels scattered in the lower bands. 4.368 0:309 utc coastal station 13.088 17:32 utc USB automated weather 2.053 13:01 utc USB tofino coast guard canada 6.500 03:35 utc USB CAMSLANT chesapeake, VA automated weather 6.500 02:08 utc USB CAMSPAC Pt. Reyes, Calif. USB automated weather 15.033 21:29 utc USB Trenton military weather 14.29920:11 USB maritime mobile 4.124 03:10 utc USB live marine weather 4.142 12:38 utc USB ship at sea 4.368 03:00 utc USB WLO New Orleans marine radiotelephone station s/off (weather ship traffic) 5.546 02:54 utc USB San Francisco Radio aeronautical communications 6.675 13:51 utc USB Vancouver Radio s/off 6.678 13:55 utc USB Honolulu Radio aeronautical communications 3.484 03:43 utc USB New York Radio aeronautical communications weather 0.530 18:27 utc AM KNCL 518 Tukwila Highweay Advisory Radio (Washington) 0.530 12:48 utc AM KNEZ 390 Northup (Bellevue, Washington) 14.324 23:13 utc AM Hurricane watch network 4.723 08:35 utc USB Offut air force base Global High Frequency System If I went through some much earlier logs I might find many references to fishing vessels, but this gives an idea what's out there S. "Charles Gillen" wrote in message ... Around 0600 UTC last night on 2958 kHz USB I heard what appeared to be Canadian fishermen chatting for a long time. Anyone have some similar fishing freqs in their logs? -- Anti-Spam address: my last name at his dot com Charles Gillen -- Reston, Virginia, USA On 6507 you can also hear Olympia Radio from Greece, a radiotelephone relay service. Only if the props are good though. |
#4
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I remember something similar when I was in high school in Germany (Fed
Republic then). I used to love listening to their test broadcasts as they tuned stuff up. Thanks for the memory RedOctober90 "RedOctober90" wrote in message om... "Maximus" wrote in message link.net... There are a lot of frequencies in use by commercial vessels and fishing vessels scattered in the lower bands. 4.368 0:309 utc coastal station 13.088 17:32 utc USB automated weather 2.053 13:01 utc USB tofino coast guard canada 6.500 03:35 utc USB CAMSLANT chesapeake, VA automated weather 6.500 02:08 utc USB CAMSPAC Pt. Reyes, Calif. USB automated weather 15.033 21:29 utc USB Trenton military weather 14.29920:11 USB maritime mobile 4.124 03:10 utc USB live marine weather 4.142 12:38 utc USB ship at sea 4.368 03:00 utc USB WLO New Orleans marine radiotelephone station s/off (weather ship traffic) 5.546 02:54 utc USB San Francisco Radio aeronautical communications 6.675 13:51 utc USB Vancouver Radio s/off 6.678 13:55 utc USB Honolulu Radio aeronautical communications 3.484 03:43 utc USB New York Radio aeronautical communications weather 0.530 18:27 utc AM KNCL 518 Tukwila Highweay Advisory Radio (Washington) 0.530 12:48 utc AM KNEZ 390 Northup (Bellevue, Washington) 14.324 23:13 utc AM Hurricane watch network 4.723 08:35 utc USB Offut air force base Global High Frequency System If I went through some much earlier logs I might find many references to fishing vessels, but this gives an idea what's out there S. "Charles Gillen" wrote in message ... Around 0600 UTC last night on 2958 kHz USB I heard what appeared to be Canadian fishermen chatting for a long time. Anyone have some similar fishing freqs in their logs? -- Anti-Spam address: my last name at his dot com Charles Gillen -- Reston, Virginia, USA On 6507 you can also hear Olympia Radio from Greece, a radiotelephone relay service. Only if the props are good though. |
#5
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"Maximus" wrote:
There are a lot of frequencies in use by commercial vessels and fishing vessels scattered in the lower bands. Thanks for the list, but what I had in mind are the non-official simplex freqs which real fisherman use to chat and swap notes while at sea, and not to communicate with shore stations or the coast guard. I used to hear many such boats years ago, similar to the 2958 I mentioned. Similarly, many foreign ship-board radio operators chat off-channel on non- official freqs scattered in the marine and aero SSB bands. -- Anti-Spam address: my last name at his dot com Charles Gillen -- Reston, Virginia, USA |
#6
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I have to hunt further to find the frequencies I have. But I found them by
accident. The FCC surely has a detailed list of frequency allocations. Examining such a map may reveal what frequencies they would likely use if they do not use regular amateur equipment. "Charles Gillen" wrote in message ... "Maximus" wrote: There are a lot of frequencies in use by commercial vessels and fishing vessels scattered in the lower bands. Thanks for the list, but what I had in mind are the non-official simplex freqs which real fisherman use to chat and swap notes while at sea, and not to communicate with shore stations or the coast guard. I used to hear many such boats years ago, similar to the 2958 I mentioned. Similarly, many foreign ship-board radio operators chat off-channel on non- official freqs scattered in the marine and aero SSB bands. -- Anti-Spam address: my last name at his dot com Charles Gillen -- Reston, Virginia, USA |
#7
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In each of the marine bands -- 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, and 22 MHz -- there are both
simplex ship-to-ship and duplex ship-to-shore sub bands. There's a set for each mode. Bill, K5BY |
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