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- Newsgroups: alt.radio.scanner
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!umeecs!ais.org!tim
- From: tim@ais.org (Tim Tyler)
- Subject: Re: Tactical Callsigns (Military) Question.
- Message-ID: <By37vn.II3@ais.org>
- Organization: UMCC
- References: <8667@lee.SEAS.UCLA.EDU> <60330011@hpspdla.spd.HP.COM>
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 1992 22:30:57 GMT
- Lines: 55
-
- >>1) I was wondering if anybody know of the callsign, ICE07. I heard it on
- >> 8997 kHz, a frequency that seems to be used by the USN in Antarctica.
- An educated guess would be that this is a new callsign for the
- LC-130F aircraft. The aircraft are owned & flown by the USN, but are
- actually controlled by the National Science Foundation. Simple traffic
- analysis ought to tell you whether ICE 07 was an aircraft.
-
- >>2) Has anybody noticed the repeated use of the callsign FOXTROT TANGO on
- >> USN frequencies--11191kHz, 4735kHz, etc.? I have heard it used with other
- >> 3 character call signs (letter-number-letter and also one char. call signs
- >> (letter) Does anyone know what this is? Or what is the PLAYGROUND?
- >>
- FT is associated with USN airborne early warning & anti-submarine
- warfare operations in the Atlantic. FT seems to be a static callsign, &
- they've been heard on some of the well-known AEW/ASW freqs, as well as some
- discrete ones.
- "Playground" is actually a reference to a comms circuit -- either voice
- coordination, or also their JTIDS RF circuit.
-
- >>3) does anyone know the some of the following callsigns--LONGHAND,MANGNOLIA,
- >> BRONSON,BLUESTAR,PINSTRIPE.
-
- At least some of them are also associated with AEW/ASW ops in the
- Atlantic. I imagine you heard them on 8972? PINSTRIPE units are aircraft
- -- probably S-3B Viking ASW platforms. Some of the other callsigns you
- mentioned are land-based operations centers.
-
- >>4) Is there any good references on these military callsigns so I don't have
- >> to waste bandwidth asking questions like this.
- >>
- I don't know of any (UNCLAS, of course!) publications that would have
- listed ANY of the callsigns you asked about. The best thing to do is
- familiarize yourself with military ops, & do a lot of listening & traffic
- analysis. The USN is the most challenging service in this regard, because
- they absolutely have the best communications security discipline, but are
- also the largest U.S. user of HF spectrum.
-
- >>Once again, I am sorry for the HF intrusion on this newsgroup.
-
- Can you post/read rec.radio.shortwave??
-
- >I don't have the information with me right now but can get it for you.
- >I am going on vacation for a couple of weeks and will try to email it to
- >you then. I believe there is a book that lists many of the call signs
- >that you are hearing and I will try to find out what it is.
- >
- Perhaps you mean Van Horn's 'International Callsign Handbook'? It is
- decent & I'm glad I bought it, but it didn't have any of the callsigns he
- was asking about, & there are some pretty silly errors in the book, too.
-
- --
- Tim Tyler Internet: tim@ais.org MCI Mail: 442-5735
- P.O. Box 443 C$erve: 72571,1005 DDN: Tyler@Dockmaster.ncsc.mil
- Ypsilanti MI Packet: KA8VIR @KA8UNZ.#SEMI.MI.USA.NA
- 48197
-