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Any Airband Enthusiasts?

Mudfoot

Elmer
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Jun 17, 2009
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Southeast Ohio
Just curious what ur using in the mobile. Radio and antenna?

I'm using a BC125AT portable with wideband magnet mount antenna. It seems to do fine. I'm always interested in anything that can improve my listening abilities. So far, I'm really impressed with the BC125AT. Nice little with with great receive and audio that's loud and clear.
 

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I live between two major airports—Midway and O'Hare—and have several radios that pick up the airband. My primary setup is an older RadioShack scanner connected to a discone antenna mounted on my tower. The antenna sits about fifty feet up, and with it, I can easily hear the tower at O'Hare, which is twenty miles away, as well as all airport operations at Midway, just five blocks from my home
 
I have 3 tiny airports near me. I think they only have limited tower traffic. I mostly hear planes talking to towers at the bigger Cities. Still interesting, though.
 
It's always fun to listen. There maybe a tracon center near you as well. Chicago center is about thirty miles west of me and I can pickup both sides of converstation.
 
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What model scanner are you using? I have the BC125AT in my truck. For base, I picked up a Uniden BCT15X. Out of all the scanners I've owned, it's the most challenging to manually program. I got the RT Systems software for it. Way easier now.

The BCT15X is supposed to be good for airband, but my little BC125AT handheld gives it competition. Our area is poor, so all local police and fire are still analog. Only digital encryption near me is State Police. I don't listen to public service anyways. I find airband, local highway crews, school bus and businesses more interesting.

I haven't entered or searched for military aircraft yet. Getting ready, though. Rickenbacker AFB is 70 miles away. I should hear something.
 
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uniden bct7, factory single wire with suction cups on the inside of window. picks up pretty good. base and mobile. sds200 is used for trunking in my county, it rarely goes anywhere else
 
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This reply is going to get a bit convoluted. So bear with me.

If you're monitoring a handful of known frequencies there are many options to choose from. Searching the entire air band - especially the UHF Mil allocation - gets into some specialized hardware, software and techniques.

There are 4 "S"es to be concerned with here: Scan Speed, Sensitivity and Selectivity. Not many scanners or receivers excel in all categories. As an example, an Icom R-7000 is fairly selective and sensitive yet scans very slowly. My BCT-15X is a fast scanner but its adjacent channel rejection leaves a bit to be desired.

Some software packages (e.g., Spectrum Commander) allow setting up a primary receiver and one or more secondaries. This is what I've done. Each of the R-7000s I've deployed in the setup has had IF modifications - replacing the stock Murata "cube" filters with better quality CFJ units. Two also have SGC ADSP units installed, though an external unit such as a DSP-599 works here too.

My fast scanners - the primaries - are Optoelectronics Optocoms. A Pro-2035/2042 w/ OS-535 is an equivalent. Pro-2006 w/ OS-456 boards are another - albeit slower - option, are are PCR-100/PCR-1000s. Other supported receivers can also be tried.

Each "pod" has one Optocom, one PCR-1000 and one R-7000 connected. The R-7000 uses one of the CI-V ports on the Optocom for its interface so I can save a COM port. A custom Squelch Detect adapter allows stopping on a busy channel. The systems themselves are WinXP-Pro running in VMs on a Linux hypervisor.

I configure the Optocom as Primary and the R-7000 as Secondary. If a lot of spectrum is to be covered the PCR-1000 can be set up as Secondary 1 and the R-7000, Secondary 2. Program a Search range of, say, 118-136MHz with the appropriate channel spacing as the Step Size then let the Primary search. When it finds an active channel a handoff is performed to the Secondary (or Secondaries, in sequential order) and searching continues.

VHF Air gets one dedicated pod when scanning and UHF Mil Air gets two - one for each portion of the band. I have a total of six pods and a handful of Pro-2004/OS-456 scanners to throw at the problem if there's something major going on. Additionally, a pair of NRD-525s w/ V/UHF converters can scan known area airport frequencies or monitor the distress frequency.

Not sure about contemporary SDR software packages and what they allow. I'm planning to work with the developers of a couple open-source packages to add scan, search and multi-radio capabilities to their offerings so we'll have more options still.
 
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Sounds like you have an impressive setup. I can only hear tower traffic from Ohio University Airport. No others are close enough. I do a search occasionally to find additional frequencies. Mostly, I just scoured the net and Radio Reference to program frequencies.

I still use by BCT15X with outdoor antenna and my SDS100 beside my chair with a rubber duck. I do pick up a lot of interesting stuff.
 

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