conve36
Member
Why am I hearing CHP on 154.570 with a PL of 67.0? Sounds like there mobile extender, but I thought that is on 154.905??
Why am I hearing CHP on 154.570 with a PL of 67.0? Sounds like there mobile extender, but I thought that is on 154.905??
Why am I hearing CHP on 154.570 with a PL of 67.0? Sounds like there mobile extender, but I thought that is on 154.905??
154.570 is a MURS frequency. Most likely someone is running a feed of CHP so they can hear it elsewhere.
No. So if the traffic you are hearing on the GURS frequency is delayed, it sounds to me like someone is picking it up off of an Internet feed, not a radio/scanner.Are the extenders radio traffic delayed at all?
I can hear it when I am mobile (but not all the time)... sometimes miles away from my home and I live in hilly terrain, it sounds exactly as if it were an extender DUE to the fact that the signal varies. Are the extenders radio traffic delayed at all? Because I figured out that it is only the radio traffic from Temecula/Oceanside 39.80mhz. Becasue if I have my scanner tuned to 39.80mhz and my HT (hooked to an external antenna) tuned to 154.570 the radio traffic is real-time, no delay what-so-ever.
No. So if the traffic you are hearing on the GURS frequency is delayed, it sounds to me like someone is picking it up off of an Internet feed, not a radio/scanner.
The legality is questionable, as FCC rules say you can't run a repeater or "store and forward" operation on MURS frequencies. However, MURS is a license free service and in real life that means that as long as this use of those frequencies isn't bothering/interfering with anybody else's communications, its fine.
I personally think its a cool idea to have MURS set up to a scanner feed.
154.570 is a MURS frequency. Most likely someone is running a feed of CHP so they can hear it elsewhere.
Tow truck company poaching ??