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MOREHINT.TXT Written by Nigel Ballard 28 Maxwell Road Winton, Bournemouth Dorset BH9 1DL England November 1990 Well I missed out some hints and tips from the last article, so here goes with MORE hints and scanning tips you never knew you needed! MAKING USE OF THE CAR STEREO As already mentioned in my first article, but certainly worth bringing to your attention once more. TANDY/RADIO SHACK and a whole host of other electrical retailers sell a cheap adaptor that allows you to connect your portable CD player through the car stereo by way of a dummy cassette tape. Basically, you insert the dummy tape into your player, the trailing lead plugs into your portable CD player, and hey presto you now have the audio boost that a good radio car stereo can give you. Also two or even four properly mounted car speakers is certainly going to be better than the teeny weenie one in most portable scanners. And yes, your scanner works great through these adapters. Although you may need to bridge over the left and right channel wires, or fit a mono jack unless you only want your scanner coming out of one channel in the car. THE DARK SIDE It appears that many of you liked the fact that I have in the past discussed what might be called THE DARKER SIDE of radio. I must confess myself to having a soft spot for anything covert. After all if THEY don't want us to know about something, then surely it must be worth knowing about! Am I right or what? Anyway to continue our travels through the darker side of radio, here's probably the most you have ever seen written about covert bodyworn radio installs. MORE ON COVERT KIT I have already told you how the pro's mount covert radio kit in their cars, but I never told you how the FOOTMAN or covert operative goes about communicating without attracting attention. There are many variants, and I will now outline the most popular. THE HARNESS This is the central piece of kit for the covert footman. What you have is a skin coloured nylon or leather harness that fits around your shoulders and has at least one pouch that hangs under the armpit. As most people are right handed, therefore an armed undercover person would want to reach for a side-arm on his/her left side. Thus most covert harnesses are slung under the right hand side. So in the rare case when a suited operative actually has his/her suit buttoned up, look out for a bulge where the radio is slung. I know of many services where covert radio users have their suits made to measure, they turn up for a fitting already kitted up with handgun and radio harness, and the tailor makes the measurements around the extra hardware. Double breasted suits are not favoured for two reasons, a. the normal style of a double breasted suit is rather tight around the midriff, and b. there are usually too many buttons required to correctly button up a DB suit, more importantly there are two many buttons required to undo such a suit in a hurry. If such an operative on close protection work noticed the finely machined barrel of a snipers rifle protruding from a window in the general direction of his PRINCIPAL, the last thing he needs to do is fumble about with a whole stack of fiddly buttons to gain access to his side-arm. Another fashion point worth mentioning is that DB suits worn open look very scruffy, and also leave a fairly large amount of cloth flapping around, which might also get in the way should weapons need to be drawn. A CASE IN POINT Very recently, I saw some news footage of Margaret Thatcher leaving a Sunday church service, it was a very windy day, and as the close protection man came down the stairs he was wearing an OPEN double breasted suit, clearly he had his left elbow held firm against his ribs thus stopping his side-arm getting a preview with the awaiting press cameramen. Trouble is the wind caught the other side of his jacket, the right hand side flew open revealing the covert radio and harness. WHAT GOES IN THE HARNESS? THE RADIO Of course there is a radio, it's horses for courses, ranging from single channel clear mode to multi channel DVP or CRYPTO secure modes. I won't dwell on the radio's in use other than to say the more important the PRINCIPAL under protection, the more secure the mode SHOULD be. Not always the case though. Also as the RF output is never higher than five watts, typically three. And as the human body quite happily absorbs a hefty chunk of the signal. Therefore, the transmissions do not travel very far. On occasions a mobile repeater is set up on a nearby roof-top to enable greater range, and an ALL INFORMED NET. This though is only usual if the mode is secure, as now the signal can travel some distance. SECURE The need for secure speech is paramount in the short term, and is only slightly less important after the principal had departed. The short term need is because the moves of both the principal and his/her watchers and protectors could be gauged, and weak links in the protection blanket could be made use of by any would be terrorist. The problem with the secure traffic being decoded after the event, is that pertinent operational tactics could be analysed and once again weak points could be exploited in the future. This is especially true of close protection, mainly because these people are trained to a fairly set pattern, which in itself is a rather risky approach. RECEIVING THE INCOMING TRAFFIC (THE THREE METHODS) 1/EARPHONE 2/EARMIKE 3/INDUCTION 1/ EARPHONE Not much needs to be said about this method other than wired earphones can get snagged, and are a dead giveaway to everybody else. 2/ EARMIKE This method is a bit more popular, but still has all the downfalls of the basic earphone. The only difference with the earmike is that through the patented method of bone transmission, the tiny vibrations caused by speech, and even whispers are picked up by the earmike and transmitted down to the radio. Obviously full duplex comms is out because you cannot get an earmike to receive and transmit at the same time. They do however work very well, and even very quietly spoken words are picked up well. This system is a natural for hands free VOX operated communications. If you are still a bit confused by this principle, very simply it looks like a standard earphone but also acts as a conductive microphone. This method is well favoured by the US Secret Service. 3/ INDUCTION For my money the best method. What you have is a flat induction coil set into your cloth harness. Stuck in your ear is the smallest earpiece you will ever see. Imagine a hearing aid so small that 90% of it is tucked round the bend, with only a very small part visible. They are moulded to fit snugly into the ear, and skin coloured so that a member of the public would have to be stood very close and at your side to see you had something stuck in your ear. They cost plenty, and have no volume or on/off controls. You simply open a little flap, insert a tiny hearing aid battery and off it goes. They only have a few down sides that I have ever come across. 1/ they hiss all the time, even if the matching radio is turned off 2/ people have been known to forget they had one inserted and try to insert a second one, thus standing a good chance of puncturing the ear-drum 3/ long time users have suffered high frequency deafness as a result of extended use 4/ they have been known to interfere with cinema induction sound systems (not very covert) 5/ because they are so small and rather expensive, if you loose one then you spend the next week filling out forms and explaining yourself. I have seen variants that use a clip that fits round the back of the ear and attaches to the induction earpiece by way of a short length of fine fishing line. So in essence you have a totally wireless earphone. COVERT SPEAK If your harness uses the induction method, the incoming traffic as taken care of, but what about the outgoing speech? There are two methods. Method one is a small electret microphone Wired directly to the h/held's mike socket. You can either have it stitched into the very top of your harness, or on the end of a long lead that runs down your arm. Covert operators using the first method always seem to cock their heads over to the mike side like an inquisitive parrot when speaking. Method two means you have to bring your hand up to your mouth when you want to speak. The microphone out of interest is usually held in place under the wrist by either a velcro strap or a clip that attaches to your wrist watch. THROAT-MIKE This is a spin-off from the military use of a transducer style microphone that is slung around the larynx (lower throat area) as you talk it picks up your speech and sends it to the radio. The down sides are 1/ if you have a large adams apple then they are bloody uncomfortable 2/ the speech quality is really crap, very muddy with lots of base response and no treble. It is very easy to determine covert users employing throat mikes by their muffled speech. Like the ear-mike, throat mikes are well liked by tactical firearms and SWAT units who need both hands free especially if they are handling firearms. They don't need to be so much covert as hands free. The ear-mike is by far the best solution as the hurried radio command to 'FIND' something or other can easily be interpreted as 'FIRE' if the adrenalin pumping person who issued the order is wearing a throat mike. SO THEN HOW DO YOU KEY UP YOUR COVERT RADIO? 1/microswitch 2/vox 3/pressure pad 4/switchplate 1/MICROSWITCH usually down the same arm as your microphone you have a small press to make switch in a little tube. Often they are attached to the same velcro strap. When you want to transmit you bring your hand up to your mouth, curl back a finger, push in the microswitch and speak into the mic. 2/VOX This is pretty obvious really, you might well have either an internal or external vox circuit with an adjustable gain control. Over a certain threshold, when you start to speak, the radio switches to transmit. Not very good in noisy environments. Possibly the biggest downfall of the vox principal concerns armed officers. If an armed officer gets involved in a firing incident, the vox will trip on each firing and deafen all others on the frequency. 3/PRESSURE PAD Just like those alarm mats you might have just inside your front door, when the house alarm is activated, if anyone steps on the mat, the air spaced contacts meet and the alarm is tripped. The same principle is employed for the covert operative. Usually they have a pressure strip strapped onto the elbow, when the arm is raised up past a certain point, then pressure switch is compressed in the elbow joint and the radio starts to transmit. I have found this to be the least used approach. 4/SWITCHPLATE This method is greatly favoured by firemen or anyone wearing heavy flame or NBC (Nuclear Chemical Biological) protective clothing. What you have is a switch that hooks onto your belt, it usually has an oversized pressel, thus making it easy to key-up a radio even if you have heavy gloves or mits on. This also works with covert radio users who can mount the switch on their belts underneath suit jackets. If you have thoroughly read and understood the last section, then I feel sure you now know as much, if not more on the subject than the people who actually use this type of kit! A LITTLE MORE ON COVERT CAR INSTALLATIONS As briefly mentioned in a previous article. I heard that certain OFFICIAL bodies were both experimenting and actually using the car's heated rear window element as a covert transmitting antenna. I have yet to find any written information on how to go about making such a modification. But within the last week a friend who owns one of the new Ford Granada's had his heated rear window go tits up. Tracing the wires back from the window, he found a diecast box marked FORD mounted on the inside tail-gate behind the trim. He opened it up and found it to contain several open coils and a number of capacitors etc. This has to be the blocking circuit that stops the 12 volts from the demist circuit from shooting back up to the radio. Remembering that a car radio is receive only, therefore the problem with transmitting up the wire as well as receiving must be quite a problem to overcome. Anyway I do think this area is worth some further experimentation. 1. Would a scanner work well through one of these boxes? 2. Could one of these FORD boxes be converted for scanner use? 3. Is it worth rummaging around the breakers yard looking for one of these boxes in a written off Ford and attempting to suss out how it works? Yes I think is the answer to question three anyway. I even believe there is a commercial market for any bright spark who understands chokes coils etc, and can produce a product JUST for covert scanner users. After all, the Ford box had no more than a few pennies worth of components in it. BASE ANTENNAS FOR SCANNING (reception only) Alright, so this is a subject hammered to death by everyone else, but as I feel sure that certain facts revealed in my articles will appear in the scanning press, therefore I thought it high time to say my piece. THE 16 ELEMENT DISCONE Everybody's favourite choice? Well maybe so, but it is only that by default. If you are lucky enough to have a scanner that covers 25 to 1,000 MHz without any major gaps then in all honesty, no one single omnidirectional antenna could do real justice to such a wide area of spectrum. HOW SO? Well basically, if you have a quarter wave cut to a specific frequency, then it resonates perfectly at that given freq. It has no gain, but not surprisingly no loss either. Now as we all accept that any and all coax has a loss factor, therefore by the time your feed from this imaginary quarter wave reaches the antenna socket, you WILL have a loss. So then your unity gain antenna will now be in a minus gain situation. All of you in agreement so far? OK forget pre-amps for the time being, we are talking antenna theory at present. Right, now if I swapped by quarter wave for a GAIN antenna such as a collinear, I might get 5DB gain over the quarter wave, allowing for cable loss I would still be in a plus gain situation by the time we got to the scanner. Still with the flow here? So take a discone, forgetting the top loaded element many now have, they all have one thing in common.....ZERO GAIN, in fact it is true to say that in certain areas the discone works less well than a resonant QW. So why does everybody buy them, and many pronounce them as the dogs whatsits? It's back to the matter of default. You can only afford one antenna, or maybe your landlord/parents will only allow one antenna, or maybe you think you only need one antenna? Either way the discone is a BIG compromise. And do not let smooth talking radio shop salesman tell you anything else. If you could only have one antenna, but you wanted a GOOD antenna, and gain, and the chance do to some very loose direction finding what would be your choice? THE LOG PERIODIC Most logs are sold to be used in the horizontal plane, whereas we want ours in the vertical plane, any problems with that? Only one, if you mount your log using a metal pole then the front lobe and ALL the logs inherent characteristics are going to get screwed up. Instead of a good front lobe pointing in the direction of the beam, you will instead have a pair of rabbits ears protruding either side of the beams direction. Also the gain will be affected. So rule one, use a non metal mounting pole like fibreglass. Although the log is directional, you still get a damn good signal off the sides of the beam. If you buy one of the smaller Japanese variants such as the CREATE CLP-5130, then you will have gain from 50 to a 1,000 MHz and not a pre-amp in sight. Add to your log, a good rotator and some meaty 100% screen coax and you have a scanning antenna set-up to be proud of. And as long as you didn't have a pre-amp in line, you could even transmit through it. Yes, the log is a big boys toy, but if you run something like the ICOM R7000 then don't you want to get the MAX? I have seen the grove scanner beam, it roughly copies a true log periodic, but there the similarity ends. I personally prefer the CREATE log, and for the money you get one hell of a lot of metal in the box, and the build quality is superb. I'm bored already with talking about antenna's, so now onto something else.