Re: [Spooks] VHF Number Stations.

2006-04-28 Thread Utility World (Hugh Stegman)
Visit http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/spooks to unsubscribe from this list The ten-meter amateur band is in between, 28.000 - 29.700 MHz. I don't know who gets the extra 300 kHz at the top. ITU allocates the bottom 100 kHz to land-mobile, and the rest to fixed and aviation/space,

[Spooks] VHF Number Stations.

2006-04-25 Thread KD7JYK, 49H7KR
Visit http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/spooks to unsubscribe from this list On very rare occasion, last I saw was 4-6 years ago, there is a log of a 4F group station on 30.050. In a radio reference from 1983, this is listed as a Spy station with 30.250, 30.420 and 30.470 also mentioned

Re: [Spooks] VHF Number Stations.

2006-04-25 Thread Jeff Wilson
Visit http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/spooks to unsubscribe from this list That's just barely VHF. Just above CB radio isn't it? I imagine VHF spy stations could be fairly useful if you wanted your signal to remain relatively local. I would boradcast on 6 meters or so, however, not

Re: [Spooks] VHF Number Stations.

2006-04-25 Thread Zack Widup
Visit http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/spooks to unsubscribe from this list The ten-meter amateur band is in between, 28.000 - 29.700 MHz. I don't know who gets the extra 300 kHz at the top. I used to work in an electronics repair shop. We had a lot of freebanders bring in SSB