Usually on lots of frequencies 24 hours a day. Best Perth freqs are:
7125Khz
9645Khz
Voice of America
Moderator: Tyranus
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- Site Admin
- Posts: 2610
- Joined: Thu Feb 24, 2005 10:33 pm
- Amateur callsign: VK6HGR
- Scanners and Receivers: Various Yaesu, Kenwood, Tait, Simoco and Philips'
- Location: Perth, Western Australia
- Contact:
Voice of America
Gavin Rogers; VK6HGR
http://vk6hgr.ampr.org/
WARSUG forum administrator
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http://vk6hgr.ampr.org/
WARSUG forum administrator
Site and stream donations: https://www.paypal.me/vk6hgr
Yeah, if your scanner covers that range, program it straight in.
The decimal goes after the first digit. Eg. if the frequency was 7150khz then put in 7.150mhz into your scanner.
May I advise you to also get your self a long piece of insulated single strand wire (1-2mm is OK) wire and string it up between a couple of poles or trees (longer the better, but short should still do the trick) and solder/crimp a BNC plug directly onto the end of the wire (centre pin is all that is needed) and hook it straight into your scanner.
You wont have much luck with a rubber duck or a normal 25-1300mhz scanner whip.
The decimal goes after the first digit. Eg. if the frequency was 7150khz then put in 7.150mhz into your scanner.
May I advise you to also get your self a long piece of insulated single strand wire (1-2mm is OK) wire and string it up between a couple of poles or trees (longer the better, but short should still do the trick) and solder/crimp a BNC plug directly onto the end of the wire (centre pin is all that is needed) and hook it straight into your scanner.
You wont have much luck with a rubber duck or a normal 25-1300mhz scanner whip.