Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Buck" wrote in message
... In WWII the allies were able to pinpoint the locations of German HF transmissions very accurately. They were able to pinpoint the locations of U-boats, etc. when they transmitted. (or so I have been led to believe). What methods did they use to do this? Is it something duplicatable with Radio Amateurs in general or does it require some special type equipment? I hear lots of amateurs describing interference and other problems on HF, but no one seems to be triangulating the offending stations. I am guessing that the real secret was in their communications with the 'spotters' to triangulate the positions. Any suggestions? Thanks -- 73 for now Buck N4PGW Triangulating and so on, can and does work. You're talking a difference between "war" and the need to know - vs - finding an offending station - to shut it down, etc. The FCC isn't as involved as many would like to think. They can't keep up with it. For others to do so, would be nothing short of vigilante-ism. It's not worth being jailed or shot - trying to shut down an offending station. Not to mention, most signals heard over hundreds or thousands of miles away. Who really cares? Would you be willing to travel the 1000 miles to put a stop to it? Probably not. Most new people can't change a fuse - let alone triangulate. They're lucky they recall what a resistor or capacitor is or does or even looks like once they put the book down. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FS: Bendix Navigator 555 Direction Finder | Swap | |||
Finding center freq for UHF 225 MHz - 400MHz | Scanner | |||
Attenuators for Direction Finding??? | Antenna | |||
Direction finding antenna technology | Antenna | |||
Smith Chart Quiz | Antenna |