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-
- Posted from Usenet by W3VS...
-
- To rec.ham-radio and sci.electronics:
-
- Recent postings have asked about modifying scanners to receive the
- aircraft band. I use the following cheap/dirty (but educational)
- method whenever I go plane-watching or must kill time at an airport.
- This article was originally posted about 2 years ago on rec.ham-radio:
-
-
- RECEIVING AIRCRAFT FREQUENCIES ON TWO METERS
-
- Most 2-meter receivers and VHF scanners will detect strong signals
- from a portion of the VHF aircraft-communication band, by making
- constructive use of Image Response, a normally-undesirable attribute
- of superheterodyne receivers:
-
- 1. Consult the owner's manual to find the first intermediate
- frequency (i-f) of your receiver. It's usually near 10.7 MHz.
-
- 2. Multiply the i-f by 2 and add to the desired aircraft frequency.
- Set your receiver to the sum.
-
- Example: To listen to 124.15 MHz with an Icom IC-2AT handheld
- transceiver:
-
- The IC-2AT's i-f is 10.695 MHz.
-
- 2 x 10.695 MHz = 21.39 MHz.
-
- 124.15 MHz + 21.39 MHz = 145.54 MHz.
-
- Set receiver to 145.54.
-
- Aircraft radio is AM but most transmitters contain enough FM or
- incidental phase modulation so that they are easily readable on
- narrow-band FM receivers, depending upon the type of FM detector in
- the receiver. It's usually necessary to increase the volume-control
- setting. Of course, multimode receivers work better for this
- application than do FM-only types.
-
- The catch-- Sensitivity is very low. You must be less than a mile
- from the transmitter (2-3 miles with a beam antenna). Receiver
- designers do their best to eliminate image response; the poorer its
- image rejection, the BETTER a receiver works for intentionally
- receiving image frequencies.
-
- The tuned circuits in the front end of the receiver reject image
- frequencies. A sufficiently strong signal can overwhelm the filters
- or couple directly into the mixer. To deliberately degrade image
- rejection, try installing a temporary jumper to bypass the input
- filters, or couple the antenna directly to the receiver's mixer input.
-
- Even the low sensitivity can be turned to advantage: A friend who
- services aircraft radios uses his handheld 2-m ham transceiver tuned
- to an image frequency to make preliminary tests of transmitters in
- parked planes. If he hears nothing, the aircraft radio is faulty.
-
- The aircraft band (118-136 MHz) is much larger than the 2-meter ham
- band. The image response of a ham-band-only receiver covers only from
- about 122.6 to 126.6 MHz, a well-populated and interesting segment.
- VHF scanners can receive most or all of the aircraft band by the image
- technique, as can certain ham rigs which are modifiable for wider
- frequency range.
-
- Two-meter repeater owners are often dismayed and mystified by aircraft
- interference on "their" frequency. The only solution is to replace
- the receiver with one having a different intermediate frequency.
- Before establishing a repeater it is wise to calculate the receiver
- image frequency and check for activity there.
-
- FAA regulations prohibit operation of electronic devices by passengers
- aboard commercial aircraft, without permission from the operator.
- "Operator" means the airline management, not the pilot. Pacemakers
- and a few other devices are excepted. One reason for the regulation
- is that local-oscillator radiation from radio receivers can interfere
- with the plane's navigation or communications equipment.
-
- --
-
- Frank Reid W9MKV
- reid@gold.bacs.indiana.edu
-