• Takatakatakatakatak@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    We use the same licensed VHF network at work for the last 30 years. Ever since our local cops switched to ‘digital’, ‘encrypted’ radio comms, we regularly pick them up on our VHFs across the entire district, regardless of what frequency we are on.

    It’s like their whole thing is leaking across the bands, which should not be possible given that it’s encrypted but here we are. If it were anyone else, we’d be pursuing them for abusing the frequency band that we pay for but it doesn’t feel like a battle that we want to start.

      • Takatakatakatakatak@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        We have a similar organisation to the FCC that deals with these matters. I will take this up with our radio specialist first though.

        The bit that has me scratching my head is that it is our analogue VHF system that is picking up these communications.

        All emergency services are supposed to have moved to digital, encrypted channels and yet I am sitting here listening to the police despatch co-ordinate units to chase an agitated man with a bat as we speak. It’s happening daily, especially early in the morning but it just doesn’t make any sense to me.

        Unless some part of their network is still analogue, we shouldn’t be hearing anything.

        I do not know enough about the technical side of these technologies to understand this, I just use them regularly.

        We have an extensive network of private repeaters set up all over the state on our own land. I just hope it is not us that are somehow causing this problem. We have the requisite licenses for all of our bands and nothing has really changed for us. Trouble only started when they went digital.

            • nik282000@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              Digital is noisy af. When we switched from analog to digital at work (same radios, just a software upgrade) they started to interfere with loads of equipment.

              • Takatakatakatakatak@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 year ago

                It also seems kind of a bad choice for emergency services.

                I know when we trialled going digital for fire response at my old company it was an absolute failure.

                At least with analogue when there was interference from smoke or terrain, we could mostly get the gist of what had been said.

                With digital it seemed to either work or not work, there was no in-between.

                It was more akin to transmitting a short audio file or recording than a live communications medium. Not a single one of us thought it was an improvement on our existing system but of course they rolled it out anyway. Can’t fight progress.

                • nik282000@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  For sure, digital dont on do well outside of ideal conditions. There are a few women in the plant who’s voices are above 1/2 of the sample frequency so their calls come across as 100% aliasing after it gets compressed and encoded.

                  I think digital was chosen for us because they can have dozens of virtual channels on one frequency where as on analog they were paying for a licence transmit on several.

                  /edit: a typo