What makes you think it needs to be CW, and cannot be pulsed and
chirped?

All it has to do is confuse the receiver enough so that you can't
trust its readings.

-Chuck

Mike Monett wrote:
  Chuck Harris <[email protected]> wrote:

  > I guess the point you folks aren't getting is you can make  a very
  > effective local GPS jammer that runs off of a 9V  transistor radio
  > battery, and  will  last for several weeks. It can be  done  for a
  > total cost  of  a  few bucks per jammer....  search  the  web, the
  > designs are out there.

  > Toss the  GPS jammers indiscriminately around  the  landscape, and
  > you put GPS out of business for a very low cost.

  >-Chuck Harris

  I'm not so sure that would be very effective. A typical  9v alkaline
  contains about 900 milliamp/hours at low current drain.

  Two weeks  is  24 * 7 * 2 = 336 hrs. Assuming  100%  efficiency, the
  battery would  supply  0.9  / 336 =  0.00267A,  or  0.024  watt, not
  including the drop in voltage after the first few dozen hours.

  There are  quite a few commercial jammers  designed  specifically to
  jam GPS signals. These are extremely illegal, but they do  give some
  idea of the range that could be expected.

  Below is  a list of the specified range and power.  I  calculate the
  highest ratio to get the meters per watt.

  GMW12 Cellular & GPS L1 Jammer

  Block cellular signals and GPS L1 system in the same time

  Jamming Range : Average 40 meters radius
  Output Power  : Total 6.5 Watt

  ratio : 40/6.5 = 6.15 meters/watt

  <http://www.tayx.co.uk/gmw12-gps-mobile-jammer.html>

  KYG0014 Fixed Jammer

  Output Power  : 2000mw
  Jamming Range : 15~20 meters

  ratio : 20/2 = 10 meters/watt

  <http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/204091726/Fixed_GPS_jammer.html>

  KYG0017 Powerful GPS signal jammer

  Output power : 25W
  Range        : radius 100-300meters

  ratio : 300 / 25 = 12 meters/watt

<http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/213377763/Powerful_GPS_signal_jammer.html>

  KYG0013 Car GPS jammer

  Output power : 800mW
  Range        : radius 10-15 meters

  ratio : 15 / 0.8 =  8.75 meters/watt

  <http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/204037628/KYG0013_Car_GPS_jammer.html>

  KYP0050 Handheld GPS/GSM signal Jammer / blocker

  output power  : 300mw
  jamming range : 2~10 meters

  ratio : 10 / 0.3 =  33.33 meters/watt

<http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/206648711/KYP0050_Handheld_GPS_GSM_signal_Jammer_blocker.html>

  The average ratio is:

  (33.33 + 8.75 + 8.75 + 12 + 10 + 6.15) / 6 = 13.16 meters/watt.

  The highest claimed performance is the KYP0050, with 33 meters/watt.

  Assuming the  9V  battery jammer has 100%  RF  efficiency  and equal
  ratio, the  jamming range would be 33.33 * 0.024 =  0.799  meters or
  about 2.62 feet.

  However, a  jammer  would   require   crystal   control  to  stay on
  frequency. There  are no crystals for L1, so a  multiplier  would be
  needed. The  actual power output would be much lower,  so  the range
  would be much less.

  Another example,  a 1500mAh rechargable pocket jammer has a  5 meter
  range, and only lasts 2~3 hrs:

  GMT04 Pocket GPS Jammer

  Jaming Range      : Average 5 meters radius
  Current & Voltage : 200mA DC12V / AC120~140V
  Battery           : 1,500mAh

  battery life 2~3 hours, recharge needs 3~4 hours

  <http://www.tayx.co.uk/gmt04-pocket-gps-jammer.html>

  So a  9V transistor radio battery jammer doesn't seem like  it would
  present much of a danger.

  Mike Monett

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