Living in Boston, sometimes we got FDNY on the skip!So many places have switched over to those 800 mhz frequencies.
I'm with you "EnginePete" as our local fire department and police department switched to the 800 mhz.
Very limited distance range.
And those of us who remember the FDNY being on the 154's, those channels to listen to were excellent.
Not only the FDNY, but here in Connecticut and the Rhode Island area, I could easily hear busy fire and police depts 60-70 miles away, like Hartford, Bridgeport, Providence, R.I., even Springfield, Mass.
I think the days of tuning in to the action; "as it happens - when it happens" are coming to an end.
The lower the frequency is, the greater skip it would produce. So you would expect the 30-50 mhz to travel a longer distance.AMAZING the radio skip for the FDNY's 154's mhz would reach that far, a distance of over 200 miles from NYC to Boston.
Here at my home in Connecticut 100 miles from Boston, I would pick up Boston when they were on the low band of 33.74 mhz.
But of course sorry to say, those days are over now.
I thought that several years ago the FDNY tested digital radios and rejected them because of problems receiving the signal in basements and High Rise buildings. Why are they resurrecting a technology that they previously rejected ?Another drawback of the digital 800 frequencies is the issue of drop off. Meaning: with analog radio communications, as the signal gets weaker, eg basements, deep inside concrete buildings etc the radio transmissions you are receiving start to get staticky and start to break up. With digital you get a strong signal all the time until you cross over that distance line and then NOTHING! No warning that you are reaching the limits of the radio range. The new digital radios give an audible and visual warning that you have lost signal but no warning when it’s coming. You begin to develop an ear for the “marble mouth “ type digital transmissions versus analog. But still never the same.
The lower the frequency is, the greater skip it would produce. So you would expect the 30-50 mhz to travel a longer distance.
If the 800 Mhz frequency is encrypted how are members able to post about fires in Queens ? Do they used FDNY radios which decrypt the encrypted communications ?This has been mentioned before… the backup frequency is encrypted.
No, lol. Currently.. Don’t know the in depth details.. but the encrypted frequency (backup) units are operating on is “broadcasted” over regular boro frequencies.If the 800 Mhz frequency is encrypted how are members able to post about fires in Queens ? Do they used FDNY radios which decrypt the encrypted communications ?
So, does that in a way, convert the back to a simplex system? TX and RX on the same frequency?No, lol. Currently.. Don’t know the in depth details.. but the encrypted frequency (backup) units are operating on is “broadcasted” over regular boro frequencies.