[Spooks] Typical Freq Ranges

Shutaro Highwind shutaro at bunnyfetish.com
Wed Aug 30 23:17:59 EDT 2006


For what it's worth:

I'm a newbie as well, and I've found the best approach is to watch the
various lists (I watch this one, UDXF, and Enigma2000) and build up my own
schedules and timetables based on the posted observations. It seems like the
only real way to get started is to dive in to the data and start
researching. I'm located in Folsom, CA, and I can tell you the only station
I've been able to receive, with any reliability, is V2a (though it is
frequently very weak). So I would start with that (if you want, I can send
you the schedule I've compiled for the hours I'm listening). However, I
would think that you'd also have good luck with other stations that tend to
broadcast over the pacific; such as E03a and V13 (I've had very bad luck
receiving stations that originate from Europe, E10 and E03 mostly, but that
may be due to an inferior antenna setup).

Hope this helps,

-Shutaro

-----Original Message-----
From: spooks-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:spooks-bounces at mailman.qth.net]On Behalf Of Falls, Jim
Sent: Wednesday, August 30, 2006 8:51 AM
To: Spooks at mailman.qth.net
Subject: [Spooks] Typical Freq Ranges


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I am a newbie and am wondering if there are typical freq ranges these folks
use? A couple of stations seem to use set freqs and schedules (per the
internet sites) but are the majority just out there "somewhere" and you find
them by tooling around at the top of the hour? I imagine things shift w/the
seasons as propagation changes.

Jim Falls
KG6FWT
Eureka, CA


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