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#1 |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonborough, NH
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Where can I find a updated area frequencies on the net? Does anyone know Stewarts Ambulance local frequency? (not lakes region)
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#2 |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Kuna ID
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Try this link- http://www.fordyce.org/cgi-bin/yabb1/YaBB.cgi#NH
There is a section in there for NH split up by county. You may find what you're looking for in there. I used this site to punch in my local area police into my HAM radio transciever so I can listen in when I'm bord. Pretty cool stuff! |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Alton Bay on the mountain by a lake
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The site mentioned (FORDYCE) is a great locator for frequencies, but they are not always up to date. It is a try and find out if it is a resent frequency or an old one. I used then to sent up my scanner and worked off of it to find newer updates. I even made calls to the group even police stations and explained that I was a scanner buff and would like their frequence and 9 out 10 times they gave them to me. I have stopped into many police stations and asked and only a very few said no. However, they don't give out their so called private frequencies.
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#4 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Meredith
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Your Forum profile is set up to not allow email to be sent to you, so if you want to send me an email off-forum I may be able to help you.
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#5 | |
Deceased Member
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: 1/2 way between Boston & Providence
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154.5150 and 155.2800 MHz according to the FCC database. I assume that's the information you want. Don, "DRH" is a wealth of information and has a list of good scanner frequencies. You may want to take him up on his offer to exchange e-mail. ![]() |
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#6 |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
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I am a retired firefighter and enjoy listing to my fire radio. I am a property owner in Gilford and believe that I have all the Gilford fire freq's however I
can only receive lakes region dispatch and I never hear the apparatus responding, arriving, or returning to quarters. Does anyone know the freq they use when they are on the road or at the scene. If it is a private channel I understand why they want it that way, and will get off this subject. |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Alton Bay
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George, I asked a similar questions several years ago, and I think the answer was something like this: What you are hearing from dispatch is VHF frequency talk from an antenna that your unit can receive direct line-of-sight transmission from. The remote unit's transmissions are received by the antenna and then back to the dispatch center via landline.
Perhaps "Al from the Sea que" can enlighten us both. ![]()
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#8 | |
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: 1/2 way between Boston & Providence
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Remote Base means that the 2-way radio (transceiver or transmitter and receiver) and antenna are located in a prime (usually high up, often isolated) location some distance away from the business, office, agency or dispatcher. The desk console the dispatcher uses connects to the remote 2-way radio at the Remote Base site via special phone line or by other methods. This allows use of the Remote Base as if the dispatcher were at that “high up” remote spot where the 2-way radio is located – it’s just remote controlled. The received audio gets to the dispatcher from the off premises Remote Base receiver while the dispatcher’s voice is sent from his desk (when they push their talk button) to be broadcast from the remote base transmitter. Remote Base systems usually operate on the same transmit and receive frequency. So, Scanner listeners may always hear the Remote Base dispatcher (transmitting from the high antenna of the remote base). The dispatcher will hear the mobile units because they “hear” with the Remote Base receiver and antenna. The scanner listener does not have that listening advantage. Your antenna is probably mounted right on top of your scanner – not as efficient as an antenna mounted high on a hill and/or tower. With this system your scanner can only hear mobiles that are CLOSE enough for direct pick-up (signal path from the mobile to your scanner). All that said, the list below shows fire “dispatch” on it’s own frequency and maybe that’s why you hear only dispatch. (ask DRH). Note: With NH Marine Patrol, scanner listeners could hear the dispatcher on one frequency but most of the units used a separate frequency (and system) to reply. Their units were using digital (APCO-25) protocol, which can not be decoded by the average (analog) scanner. There are a few newer scanners on the market that receive digital systems. By comparison to remote base, many systems use REPEATERS at the prime antenna location. These 2-way radios listen to one frequency and automatically transmit what they hear on a different frequency – all from a “prime” location. As the name suggests, it REPEATS what it hears. This allows everyone in the system the ability to hear everyone else on that repeater. The repeater hears the mobile units on the “input frequency” and the mobiles hear the repeater on the repeater “output” frequency. It ties up 2 frequencies to do this but is a very popular method for VHF and UHF 2-way radio systems. If the scanner user can hear the repeater (output) then they hear the dispatcher and the mobile units. The dispatcher is using a 2-way radio to talk through the repeater. I won’t delve into shared repeater systems or other derivations of the basic systems. From the Fordyce.org web site: Fire 159.900 - Lakes Region Mutual Fire Aid Association - F-1 (Dispatch) 160.110 - Lakes Region Mutual Fire Aid Association - F-2 (Fireground/Operations) 160.155 - Lakes Region Mutual Fire Aid Association - F-3 (Fireground/Operations) 154.280 - Lakes Region Mutual Fire Aid Association - F-4 (Statewide Fireground) 154.3025- Lakes Region Mutual Fire Aid Association - F-5 (Fireground - Mobile Only) 154.9875- Lakes Region Mutual Fire Aid Association - F-6 (Fireground/Repeater Direct) 154.9875- Lakes Region Mutual Fire Aid Association - F-7 - F9 (A,B,C Operations Repeaters) For a complete list of Fire and EMS frequencies and their functions see the following web page. http://www.fordyce.org/cgi-bin/yabb1...num=1047860842 DRH has much more experience scanning in the Lakes Region area than I do – I suggest you take him up on his offer to exchange e-mail. I programmed a bank of channels in my digital capable, trunk tracking scanner based on info from DRH and another well known forum member for my Lake scanning. There are many more public service agencies in NH that use Digital 2-way radio than we have around here in MA. Good luck.
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#9 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Meredith
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Your Forum Profile doesn't allow me to email you, so if you send me an email I'll be glad to send you a file with all the local emergency frequencies I have.
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#10 |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
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DRH My E=Mail address is baja252@comcast.net Thank you for your help.
George |
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#11 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Meredith
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