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Lyndon Nerenberg |
June 23rd 04 06:02 PM |
(Patty Winter) writes:
In article ,
Greg wrote:
6315 kHz - choose your mode. What is it? A beacon of some kind? Never
heard this before.
I don't know what the data transmission is, but the station is NMN,
which is a Coast Guard station in Virginia. (Sorry if you already
knew that part and were just asking about the three data bursts.)
This is ITU channel 604, and it's used primarily for maritime
SITOR traffic. The coast side is on 6316 KHz, with the ship side
at 6264.5 KHz (subtract 1.7 KHz for carrier frequency).
Other USCG SITOR can be found at:
Chan. KHz[1] Station
------------------------------------------------------------
404 4212 NMN (Portsmouth), NMO (Honolulu)
407 4213.5 NOJ (NMC via Kodiak relay)
412 4215.5 NMC (Pt. Reyes), NRV (NMC via Guam relay)
604 6316 NMN, NMO
607 6317.5 NOJ
612 6319.5 NRV
620 6323.5 NMC
807 8419.5 NOJ
812 8422 NRV
820 8426 NMC
824 8428 NMN
827 8429.5 NMO
1212 12585 NRV
1220 12589 NMO
1227 12592.5 NMN
1242 12600 NMC
1612 16812.5 NRV
1620 16816.5 NMC
1627 16819.5 NMN, NMO
2212 22382 NRV
2220 22386 NMC
2227 22389.5 NMN, NMO
[1] Subtract 1.7 KHz for carrier frequency.
--lyndon (S.V. Bandido I CFG7344)
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