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Listen! Secrets of the Airwaves
by M L Shannon and Steve Uhrig
© 2008 by M L Shannon ISBN 1-884451-93-2
Greetings and welcome to detailed description of Listen! Secrets of the Airwaves
.
This work started life as the cover article 'The Ear' which appeared in Monitoring Times TM a few years ago, and I have worked on it ever since, along with Steve. It was to be
published by Paladin Press, but some details couldn't be worked out, so I decided to rework it into an Ebook.
Listen! can be ordered exclusively from National Communications as either a download, or the CD version, which will be shipped by the author.
Price has not yet been determined, but will be less than the estimated $30.00 printed version.
In print, (8 ½ x 11) it was estimated to be 180 pages with some 60 photos. The Ebook will have additional information and about 100 pictures, mostly 'action' shots, rather than stock photos from equipment manufacturers.
Although a large number of frequencies are included, Listen! is not just another 'frequency guide'. It is all about scanning and short-wave listening (And
amateur radio) written by two people with many years experience who are passing on some of the things they have learned. For example, the ad in National Communications asks what can you do if something is happening
(you know it is or can see it going down) but the usual radio sources are encrypted. Here you can learn about alternative radio signals that may fill in the details. The idea is to learn to listen, to think quickly-
not only to get the information you seek- but to know when you have found it.
Like my other books, Listen has a few stories to tell, which I believe makes it more enjoyable to read, rather than just another text-book.
There may also be included a number of audio captures- examples of different types of data transmissions. Am working on permission to use them. And, maybe, the
sanitized recording of a hysterical woman calling 911 to report someone is spying upon her!
Also, there it may be possible to set up a database of these many transmissions, where readers can post comments and suggestions, corrections, and additions- If
someone might volunteer to take this on. It could be online to share with the entire scanning community.
Contents
What's Inside Why Listen? Disclaimer of Liability Radios and the Law Carrying a "Concealed" Radio Civil Liability Decoding Transmissions
How I Got Started
Many years of listening from the crystal set to the present, and a few stories to tell.
History and Development of Radio The (Many) Inventors- some you likelt haven't heard of
Types of Radios The Crystal Set The Super-Regenerative TRF Superheterodyne The Transistor Larger and Smaller and… The Spectrum and Frequency Allocations Transmission Modes
Frequency Allocations Bandwidth
Part One: Listen! Learning to identify what you are tuned to
A Head Start in Listening Signal Strength and Clarity Duplex and Full Duplex Length of Transmission Gender
Age Voice Quality Accents Terminology Emotion Laughter Profanity Phonetics Background Sounds Mode
Exercise: Put It All Together
Part Two: Hear! The Many Transmissions on the Airwaves
This is a long list (about 150 entries so far) of things you might hear. In addition to
the usual Police and Fire, it is a mix of agencies and types/modes of transmissions. A few examples:Aircraft- in addition to the tower and ground control and security, you
might hear interesting traffic from cab and shuttle van drivers, baggage handlers, etc. Auditoriums that use wireless, SCADA, MT63, LDP, Hellschriber, blimps and balloons, cable TV leakage, end Yosemite Sam!
Part Three: New Age Monitoring
CAS: Computer Aided Scanning The Computer The Interface Software RadioMax Delta-Comm ScanStar It's a Digital World! WinRadio
Online Scanners The Trunked Radio System Nearfield Monitoring Repeaters and Input Frequencies
Part Four: Short-wave Listening
Modes Monitoring What is there to listen to? Reception Interference, QRM, QRN and QSB Digital Radio Mondiale
Spy Numbers Stations Encryption: Simple Letter Substitution The One-Time Pad
Part Five: What You Might Not Hear
There are many signals that your radios might pass over, and without you even knowing they are there- unless you are fortunate enough to have a spectrum
analyzer.This chapter is also about encrypted signals, most of which, unfortunately, you will never be able to unscramble. But, maybe a few you can!
Part Six: A Virtual Radio Field Trip
A day spent wandering the streets of San Francisco with several radios and other
'Urban Survival gear': The many signals I might have heard and things I might have seen.
Part Seven: The Last Word- The Future of Monitoring
This country and indeed the world, is changing at a faster pace than ever before. More
and more laws are being passed, in the name of or threat of terrorism. There are restrictions on where we may or may not take photographs (Have you heard of the
guy who was arrested on a ferry boat for taking pictures of a plate of French fries? Similar laws concerning radios will eventually be passed, and by having the
information in this book, you will be in a better position to deal with them. Remember: much of what this publication is about is learning not just to listen, but
to learn about alternative sources of information that otherwise may not be available to you.
Part Eight: Tech Stuff
Amplification Repeater Offset Simplex Superheterodyne: Dual and Triple Conversion The Discriminator Output Wavelength and Frequency
The Electromagnetic Spectrum What is Intermod? Deviation: What is it? Two Radios in One? What is PL? What is 800 MHz Rebanding? Ducting Basic Electronics 101: Ohms Law
Article: How Far will it transmit?
A long article about just that- the many factors that determine the distances at which
a transmitter can be heard. Semi-technical, it contains a great deal of useful information. Written by Steve Uhrig.
Part Nine: On Buying and mastering a Radio
Scanner Modifications Recording Transmissions Antennas Antenna Connections Antenna Accessories Article: Grounding radio installations
Part Ten: Sources- Equipment and Information
Not everyone who reads this book has full-time Internet access. Some will have to share
dial-up with the family telephone. So, I have included these listings, as well as the many URLs throughout the text, to save them searching time.
Photo-essays:
Ham Radio field Day A Well Equipped Ham Shack, courtesy of K6JEB Building a Copper-Cactus J-Pole for 2 meters and 440
Product Reviews
TigerTronics radio-computer interface and decoder for packet radio Sangean ATS 818cs All band portable short-wave receiver
18 Jan 07: Listen! Will be available in about one week.
Questions and comments are always welcome and I will try to answer them all. An alternative address is seeker17@softhome.net It will be updated periodically and posted here on www.fusionsites.com for all readers.
M L Shannon
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