home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- ------FREQUING------
- ********************
- * THE BASIS BEHIND *
- * RADIO HACKING *
- ********************
- PART II
-
-
- This article deals with Satellite hacking, CB info, and car phone
- systems.
-
-
- Satellite Control
- -----------------
- Companies try to build satellites to last for as long a time as
- possible. Unfortunately, for the companies, things in space can
- happen unexpectantly and suddently. Take that satellite released by
- the space shuttle. It's orbit carried it way off t he correct
- altitude. The company's only hope was to fire a rocket on it in order
- to bring it to the correct place.
- Now think...how does one on the ground fire a rocket in space?
- Radio! Gee, if the company could change the orbit, maybe we can too.
- Sound interesting? Of course we were not the first to think of this.
- The satellite companies have worried about this for a long time.
- There are stories about top secret codes, frequencies, and protocols
- required to 'nudge' one of those babies.
- The only problem is that-there is little information about this out
- there. If you have any info, make a text file, and let others know of
- your knowledge. But let me tell you all I know about a simple
- satellite whose telemetry is known well.
- OSCAR 6 was a satellite sent up in order to take in amateur signals
- between 145.9 and 146.0 MHz, and re-transmit them between 29.45 and
- 29.55 MHz using a transponder. Early in 1976, OSCAR 6 began to have
- battery problems. The telemetry allowed the ground command stations
- to shut the satellite off at regular intervals to prolong the useful
- life of the satellite.
- Now we know the satellite sent out telemetry reports at a certain
- frequency (OSCAR 7 was 29.502 and 145.972 MHz). And it sent them out
- in the form of Morse code at about 20 wpm. Information rate of spin,
- power use, and temperature were sent out at 20 wpm. This seems to
- suggest that the control might have also used morse code. Strangely
- enough, there was never any information in the American Radio Relay
- League magazine about just how they control the OSCAR satellites.
- (Hams know what's safe and what's crazy also)
- Suggestions: Don't overlook RTTY when trying to Satelhack
- (Satellite hacking). Also, chances are the owners will figure out
- what you did, so 'downing', the ultimate for a satelhack, is pretty
- difficult.
-
-
- Citizen's Band
- --------------
- CB is a very popular communications method. Again, you need a
- license from the FCC to operate legally. But it's so hard to track
- down a CB signal unless you have a massive amplifier or talk for hours
- straight, there is little use in getting one. Here is a list of
- channel frequencies:
-
- Channel Frequency
- (MHz)
- 1 26.965
- 2 26.975
- 3 26.985
- 4 27.005
- 5 27.015
- 6 27.025
- 7 27.035
- 8 27.055
- 9-emergency 27.065
- 10 27.075
- 11-contact channel 27.085
- 12 27.105
- 13 27.115
- 14 27.125
- 15 27.135
- 16 27.155
- 17 27.165
- 18 27.175
- 19-trucker's channel 27.185
- 20 27.205
- 21 27.215
- 22 27.225
- 22A (optional) 27.235
- 22B (optional) 27.245
- 23 27.255
-
-
- A Cheap Ghost-Interferance
- --------------------------
- How can you start a real cheap ghost or interferance station? Well,
- the Radio Shack wireless FM microphone (the clip on one) is pretty
- good for $19.95 (price may change). It's range is said to be 100
- yards, but actual tests show its range is about 100 ft. outside, 40
- ft. inside. However, in the instructions it says that increasing the
- battery power will make it stronger, but this would not be in
- compliance with the FCC (oh darn!). One problem with this is that
- with a stronger battery comes the risk of frying something inside.
- Instead of trying to upgrade the silly thing, just make a new one.
- Open it up and take a look at how it is made. Now, get a cheap
- microphone then feed it into an amplifier like that on your stereo.
- Then take the outputs of the amplifier and feed it into the same kind
- of circuit as the wireless microphone contains (use heavy-duty parts
- so they won't fry. The only parts are a varactor diode and three
- silicon transistors). You new transmitter can now block out stations
- in a relatively sized neighborhood (great in cities).
-
-
- Mobile Phones
- -------------
- Radio phones have been around for a while. The first mobile
- telephone call was made September 11, 1946 between a Houston Post and
- a St. Louis Globe reporter. An old mobile phone service in New York
- city had 700 subscribers, but could only handle 12 conversations at a
- time (because it had 12 channels). There are some 160,000 mobile
- telephones nationwide.
- The old service was doomed to fail. Each major city had one or two
- powerful transmitters to communicate with all car phones in a 30- to
- 50-mile radius. To make a call from a car, you must find a vacant
- channel, then call the operator and supply the number you want to
- call. The operator dials the number and connects you when the party
- answers. Only a few companies have dial-it-yourself service. If
- someone wants to call you, they must first find the mobile phone
- operator in your area. The operator finds a vacant channel and
- transmits a series of tones that correspond to your phone and make it
- ring-sort of as if it were a pager. Once you answer, the operator
- connects you and the caller.
- Clearly, the system was slow. Worse, it could only serve a few
- users at a time. During rush hour, there was little hope of making a
- call. Few channels could be added because of the dearth of
- frequencies for that kind of operation. So now you can't get a mobile
- phone of this type unless someone else gives one up.
- Enter the cellular mobile radio. Instead of only 1 or 2
- transmitters, an area is divided up into many small sections, called
- 'cells'. Each has it's own low-powered transmitter just strong enough
- to serve it's cell. An average cell covers from one to eight square
- miles and varies in shape from a circle to a squashed football. Each
- cell touches another, some overlap slightly.
- Adjacent cells use different channels-there are more than 600 in
- each city to choose from-and a channel may be re-used several times in
- the city if the cells are located far enough apart. All of the cell's
- transmitters hook into one network switching office, much like a
- central office handles calls form land-based telephones.
- Each transmitter constantly sends out a special signal, and as you
- drive from cell to cell, your telephone automaticly tunes in the
- strongest cell. When a call comes in for you, the network switching
- office uses the channel to send a digital pulse signal that
- corresponds to your ten-digit phone number (NPA+7 digits).
- When the phone hears it's number, it in effect says 'Here I am, in
- this certain cell'. That information is sent back to the network
- switching office, which scans vacant frequencies, and relays the
- information to your cell. Finally, your unit tunes to that voice
- channel, and the cell site rings you, and you talk.
- It sounds complicated-and it is. But it works in seconds. And it
- can be expanded. As more and more phones are added, cells can be
- split into smaller cells with less power. Cellular radio already
- exists in Japan, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. In Denmark, service
- began in 1981 and grew to 100,000 customers almost overnight. Within
- a few years all of Scandinavia will have compatable cellular systems.
- Australia, Canada, and Mexico also plan systems.
- Why has the U.S. lagged behind? Yep, it's our old freinds, the
- FCC. They studied the system for 12 years before okaying the service
- in 1982. The U.S. may be full celled by 1988. Now is the time to
- rent your backyard as a cellular station!
- The Bell companies will operate cellular service as the Cellular
- Service Company. Others such as GTE and MCI plan similar service.
- Even the Washington Post is trying to get into it. There are already
- two systems, one in Washington/Baltimore, and one in Chicago. Chicago
- users pay about $50 rent and $25 monthly use fee for 120 minutes, and
- 25 cents/minute hereafter. Average bills are $150/month.
- The main unit mounts in the trunk, and just the handset sits up
- front. The antennas are very small-about nine inches-and are hidden
- inside the car.
- Now freaking old car phone systems shoudln't be that hard if you
- really try. The following are the freq's to remember:
-
- 158.07-158.49 MHz (mobile)
- 152.81-153.03 MHz (base stations)
-
- You CAN listen in on these freq's. What I'm not sure about is
- whether you can place a call-I would think so. So Freq out!
-
- COMMING SOON: Repair trucks, installers, and linesmen, Marine
- Radio, and Airplane phones
-
- -the unknown freq
- (Formatted by: NEAT DUDE)
-
- Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253
-