Many of you already appear to monitor Huntington PD on:
452.7375 F1
451.8875 F2
However, we have no PL information submitted. To add to this, these frequencies are licensed to F & L Electronics for use on an LTR system.
The conventional frequencies are listed here in the DB:
Cabell County, West Virginia (WV) Scanner Frequencies and Radio Frequency Reference
The listing for the Huntington site of the suspected F & L Electronics trunked system is here:
F&L Electronics Trunking System, Various, West Virginia - Scanner Frequencies
Is thre any chance that Huntington PD F1 and F2 actually ARE on an LTR system and that somebody just found the frequencies active and submitted them as conventional frequencies? This would explain why there are no PL tones listed [you wouldn't find a PL tone on an LTR trunked system].
If there is anybody down in Huntington area that can sleuth out those frequencies for F & L Electronics (specifically the Huntington site) and determine if this is indeed an LTR trunked system, that sure would be great.
If there are no PL tones coming up on the transmitters for 452.7375 and 451.8875, then they likely are part of the LTR system. And if that is the case, somebody needs to determine the LCN order for the system so that we can get that updated.
Any takers? Anybody willing to try and sleuth out whether those are simply conventional repeaters with PL/DPL or if they are LTR repeaters?
If you are using a scanner that is capable of trunking LTR systems, you'll still have to do some sleuthing to determine LCN order. Although if you have a handy scanner with Auto-Move on it (like an RS PRO-197, PRO-106, GRE PSR-500, PSR-600, and possibly others), then you can just program it in as an LTR system, put the freuqencies in whatever order, turn on Auto-Move for the TSYS object, add a group wildcard, and then scan the LTR system and see if you can pull LCNs and talkgroups.
Of course, if the two frequencies listed at the top have a PL or DPL on them, then they aren't part of the LTR system.
IT is interesting that in the listing for the F & L Electronics trunked systems, there is actually a note where somebody submitted in the past that Huntington PD would be switching to the LTR system.
So, I have to wonder... are they conventional repeaters or are they just one part of an LTR trunked system. And if they are part of an LTR trunked system, there is probably activity on those other frequencies listed in the Huntington site of that LTR system and you may be missing communications if you guys don't listen on those frequencies.
Mike
452.7375 F1
451.8875 F2
However, we have no PL information submitted. To add to this, these frequencies are licensed to F & L Electronics for use on an LTR system.
The conventional frequencies are listed here in the DB:
Cabell County, West Virginia (WV) Scanner Frequencies and Radio Frequency Reference
The listing for the Huntington site of the suspected F & L Electronics trunked system is here:
F&L Electronics Trunking System, Various, West Virginia - Scanner Frequencies
Is thre any chance that Huntington PD F1 and F2 actually ARE on an LTR system and that somebody just found the frequencies active and submitted them as conventional frequencies? This would explain why there are no PL tones listed [you wouldn't find a PL tone on an LTR trunked system].
If there is anybody down in Huntington area that can sleuth out those frequencies for F & L Electronics (specifically the Huntington site) and determine if this is indeed an LTR trunked system, that sure would be great.
If there are no PL tones coming up on the transmitters for 452.7375 and 451.8875, then they likely are part of the LTR system. And if that is the case, somebody needs to determine the LCN order for the system so that we can get that updated.
Any takers? Anybody willing to try and sleuth out whether those are simply conventional repeaters with PL/DPL or if they are LTR repeaters?
If you are using a scanner that is capable of trunking LTR systems, you'll still have to do some sleuthing to determine LCN order. Although if you have a handy scanner with Auto-Move on it (like an RS PRO-197, PRO-106, GRE PSR-500, PSR-600, and possibly others), then you can just program it in as an LTR system, put the freuqencies in whatever order, turn on Auto-Move for the TSYS object, add a group wildcard, and then scan the LTR system and see if you can pull LCNs and talkgroups.
Of course, if the two frequencies listed at the top have a PL or DPL on them, then they aren't part of the LTR system.
IT is interesting that in the listing for the F & L Electronics trunked systems, there is actually a note where somebody submitted in the past that Huntington PD would be switching to the LTR system.
So, I have to wonder... are they conventional repeaters or are they just one part of an LTR trunked system. And if they are part of an LTR trunked system, there is probably activity on those other frequencies listed in the Huntington site of that LTR system and you may be missing communications if you guys don't listen on those frequencies.
Mike