Scanner Tales: The Magazines

As an old guy I still remember getting monthly magazines printed on real paper every month. Some of these were special and anxiously awaited. Monitoring Times, the RCMA Scanner Journal and Popular Communications were the “Big 3” in the scanner community. There have been and are still some others but for better or worse these were the biggest by far. Of course, all three are long gone now.

My personal favorite was The Scanner Journal published by the Radio Communications Monitoring Association (RCMA). This was what RadioReference is today, but in a paper format. Every month there was a magazine printed and mailed to your home, chock full of frequencies and information gathered by the best volunteers in the hobby. I joined and subscribed in the early 1980’s and was able to obtain back issues for many years before that. RCMA was started in the mid 1970’s in southern California. In the mid 80’s I was invited to a meeting of the Chicago Chapter of the RCMA by a friend and was hooked instantly. I became IL-370 when I joined RCMA and often submitted info for many of the Midwest states.

The Journal that RCMA published was a small format (5x7 or 6x9 inch) but later it grew to a standard 8.5x11 inch format. When it folded in 1996 remaining memberships were transferred to Popular Communications who had purchased the mailing list. At the time I had a complete collection of RCMA Journals that I wish I still had. As far as I know there has not been an organized effort to digitize the RCMA Journal but if you know of a source, please let us know!

Here in the Chicago area we had to rename our Chicago Chapter due to instructions from RCMA in California. Apparently, they were afraid of liability issues if a remote chapter did something wrong. We renamed ourselves to the Chicago Area Radio Monitoring Association (CARMA) and for several years produced our own newsletter. I was the editor of this newsletter throughout much of its existence and still have copies of the complete set electronically and on paper. CARMA still exists with an email list, Facebook page and occasional meetings.

After the RCMA Journal, my next favorite was Monitoring Times. This was originally published in 1982 with 8 pages and lasted thru 2014. During those 30 years or so it was a great source of information about scanners, shortwave, broadcasting and other radio related topics along with some off-topic stuff humorously tossed in. Bob Grove was the editor the entire time and it was a byproduct of his Grove Enterprises business selling radios and accessories. It was always informative and if one of my friends got his copy before I did, I would often go and read it as I couldn’t wait to get it. I was lucky enough to get published there a few times including a feature article or two. I was bummed when Bob Grove retired and shut down the magazine but as soon as he did Ken Reitz and others came forward and started The Spectrum Monitor with a similar feel and quality.

When the RCMA quit operations, they sold the mailing list to Popular Communications. PopComm, as it was known, was a product of its publisher, Tom Knietel. It was part of the CQ Magazine family. Tom wrote the editorials, some of which actually made sense, and wrote many of the articles and columns under his own name and several others (Alice Branigan, Shannon Hunniwell among others). Later Harold Ort took over as editor and the tone of the magazine became more geared towards general consumer products rather than the radio hobbyists. It was a far less serious publication than MT was, the “reviews” tended to be more of a shill to the advertisers, often an ad for the product would appear next to the “review”.

Tom Kneitel had other schemes going during the PopComm years. One of the most notorious was the “Registered Monitor” certificates he sold with derived “callsigns”. While meaningless, they were a cash cow, and I knew several people who spent good money for a certificate to hand in their office. All-in-all though it was meant to be an entertainment thing rather than anything serious.

PopComm started in 1982, the same year as MT and lasted thru 2013. Some of the content was incorporated into a web-based operation called CQ Plus, which only lasted a short while itself. CQ lasted a while longer, albeit sporadically, until about 2023.

I had a couple bylines in PopComm over the years and enjoyed reading it. It was more entertainment rather than an information source but fun to read.

National Communications is actually still around. Chuck Gysi still produces it, albeit in electronic form only. They ended print publishing in 2012 and last year converted to an article based subscription format. Check them out at National Communications Magazine | Chuck Gysi | N2DUP | Substack

The Spectrum Monitor is a great publication that produces a monthly magazine in electronic (PDF) format that contains a boatload of scanning info by many of the same writers that wrote for MT in the past. I have been a subscriber of TSM since day one and read it from (virtual) cover to cover each month. They have been around since 2014, right after MT left the building. Check them out at www.thesepctrummonitor.com

A couple others were around for a while. Scanning USA lasted a few years. While light on content it made up for it in big fonts and data dumps to fill up the pages.

The Scanner Digest, published by Lou Campagna, seems to have been abandoned since 2015. This was an informative newsletter in electronic form geared mostly to the Northeast. At some point the All-Ohio Scanner Club’s newsletter was merged in the Scanner Digest, AOSC itself had a great newsletter for many years.

I am sure I am missing some others. Incidentally if you go to WorldRadioHistory: Radio Music Electronics Publications ALL FREE you can download many of the magazines I spoke of here and hundreds of other titles. This is an amazing resource for magazines having to do with many facets of the radio hobby.

While paper magazines are only a small fraction of what they once were there are still some still making a go of it. Like printed books however electronic distribution has been making huge inroads. This is true for all kinds of specialty magazines, I get “Trains” magazine as a PDF every month instead of paper. The difference now is that you need to keep an iPad in the bathroom in order to read your favorite magazine.
 

a727469

Active Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2003
Messages
693
Reaction score
562
Location
Maine
I know many of us are used to paper mags etc…I was trying to make a transition to my Ipad, but as an example, QST and related ones are available now at significant extra cost in paper which I will not pay, but this is the third month I have forgotten to go on line to try and read. It’s too much work to download and keep organized. And the frightening thing is, I don’t really miss them! I now pick and read individual articles about specific topics online but no mags.
 

ladn

Explorer of the Frequency Spectrum
Premium Subscriber
Joined
Oct 25, 2008
Messages
1,656
Reaction score
1,880
Location
Southern California and sometimes Owens Valley
I was a faithful subscriber to PopCom for many years. Not always the best journalism, but certainly (for me) the most interesting. I also read MT if there was something of interest. Like other oldsters here, I enjoyed monthly visits to the radio stores to browse the magazines and see what was new in electronics.

Police Call (mainly the SoCal detail edition) was invaluable to me as a news photographer, although Gene's "UXX" listings for FBI, USS (Secret Service) and other three letter government agencies got childishly tiresome after awhile.

Tom Kneitel's writings and publications filled in a lot of Gene's "UXX" gaps, especially the Top Secret Registry of US Government Frequencies. I still have a couple of copies that I use for reference occasionally.

There was another author/publisher, whose name escapes me at the moment, who published thick, computer printout books of California frequency guides in the 1980's or '90's. I think I still have a couple of them in the file cabinet.

The internet has removed a lot of the mystery and intrigue that was once a part of the scanner scene for better or worse. Conversely, agencies has adapted by going BIG E or adopting technologies like LTE.
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2021
Messages
2,312
Reaction score
2,778
Location
Washington State
Yeah, I really miss all those old magazines, Radio & Electronics, Popular Communications, Monitoring Times. The world was not so fast paced, you could anticipate the magazine arriving in the mail with all those neat informative articles, advertisements and believable reviews, and all without "personalities".

Now days The Spectrum Monitor is the only thing of value I can find. It has one major drawback though...

BUMMER.JPG

... still it's a great magazine, and is a suitable replacement for Monitoring Times in my book. Even though it's in PDF only format, it's enabled them to keep the cost down and in the final analysis it is about the content.

sSetLvI.png


If you're interested, buy the last four months of the year individually, then subscribe in January.
Where else are you going to get such a great e-magazine for $3.00 an individual copy in this day and age?
 

NYAirOne

Member
Joined
Nov 16, 2019
Messages
245
Reaction score
497
Location
Western, NY
A local radio store always had MT and Pop Comm. Used to go there every month to pick them up and look around in the store. They also published their own freq book too with local information. Got to know the one guy there from going in all the time. He introduced me to the Milair band. Our local military base had fighters at that time and they used to train at least twice a day. He gave me some freqs to check out to hear them and i was hooked after that. We would trade info every time i went in the store. He also made up a local milair freq book and gave me a copy when it came out. I have been listening to milair for probably 30+ years now. The store is long gone now and i tired to look up the guy to see if he was maybe on facebook, but i heard from a local radio guy that he had passed away. Spent alot of time in the store and chatting with him. I miss having paper magazines to read. I used to get 5 car magazines, out of all of them the only one left in paper is Hot Rod magazine. Now it only comes out 4 times a year. I like to sit down with a actual magazine like at work when i eat my lunch and read through it. I stare at a computer most of the day at work, so i like the break to read paper. I still get 2 gun magazines and i also get Trains magazine in the mail. Im sure its just a matter of time before everything goes to digital only.
 

jaymatt1978

Member
Joined
May 18, 2003
Messages
2,406
Reaction score
1,130
Location
Cape May,NJ
As a write I got my big break with ScanningUSA when Ed Muro gave me an opportunity to introduce myself in his column. It was my first time writing and I was horrible a t editing my own work, it's still hard. It was nerve racking but the reward was seeing my name in pr int! I then contributed a few more articles, including one on the communications during 9/11 which was the first time I ever monitored military aircraft. I had a ball writing. I then expanded my resume to include Scanner Digest where I had a bi-monthly column, unfortunately I didn't have enough material to keep the column going. I also wrote an article for the ARRL website which came down when they redesigned their website. Great memories
 

PACNWDude

Member
Joined
Oct 15, 2012
Messages
1,531
Reaction score
764
I liked Popular Communications as they often had a Military Band monitoring section, and sometimes articles about odd radio intercepts. Being in the military at the time, it would often give me a larger picture of the compartmentalized projects and operations I was part of.

Always interesting to find out the "real" story after the fact. Or, find out what the public thought was going on from the radio traffic that could, and sometimes could not be heard (early 1990's before almost everything went encrypted, or P25 Phase II in 2012).

The Pro-2006 and later Pro-2042 with OS-535 board came in very handy in those days. Popular Communications is how I found out about that Optronics OS-535 board initially.
 

krokus

Member
Premium Subscriber
Joined
Jun 9, 2006
Messages
6,238
Reaction score
1,695
Location
Southeastern Michigan
I liked Popular Communications as they often had a Military Band monitoring section, and sometimes articles about odd radio intercepts. Being in the military at the time, it would often give me a larger picture of the compartmentalized projects and operations I was part of.

Always interesting to find out the "real" story after the fact. Or, find out what the public thought was going on from the radio traffic that could, and sometimes could not be heard (early 1990's before almost everything went encrypted, or P25 Phase II in 2012).

The Pro-2006 and later Pro-2042 with OS-535 board came in very handy in those days. Popular Communications is how I found out about that Optronics OS-535 board initially.
Similar experience. I discovered PopComm in Korea, at Stars & Stripes Newsstand, or whatever it was called, at the main PX on Yongsan. I can't remember when I subscribed, but I think it was after I got to my next duty station, in Hawaii, and had trouble finding issues.
 

IC-R20

LoBand Nation
Joined
Nov 19, 2018
Messages
732
Reaction score
506
My fav was PopComm. Had a subscription for years. Also had 2 pics of my radios published in the mag back in 1992 and 93. Miss the radio magazines.
I miss the forum. It was a great place for GMRS discussion and probably the only serious place. After it fell I remember there was a facebook group made for former forum users. No idea if it's still there or not, I stopped using using a lot of junk sites after 2017.
 

jmp883

Member
Premium Subscriber
Joined
Jan 7, 2005
Messages
604
Reaction score
121
Location
Northern NJ
I was a subscriber to both Monitoring Times and Pop Comm. I miss them both and wished I had saved them. I did scan various articles to hard drive as I was getting rid of the print versions, I just need to find the drive they are on (really need to label my hard drives!). I also enjoyed the radio magazine that Radio Shack put out for a brief period in the late '80s'-early '90's.
 

N9JIG

Sheriff
Moderator
Joined
Dec 14, 2001
Messages
6,358
Reaction score
5,473
Location
Far NW Valley
You can download all the past issues of PopCom at:

Monitoring Times Is at:

They download as PDF's. I have downloaded the complete set of PopCom and MT to my iPad and can read them anytime and anywhere!
 

JDKelley

Just call me "Sparks." Or "Lucky."
Joined
Aug 31, 2019
Messages
112
Reaction score
108
Location
Milpitas, CA
Gene Hughes published a frequency guide, called police call, I'm really trying to remember the year of the first one and I think I have it in the scanner graveyard in the garage.

Without going into the details it was handed around amongst popular editors and purchased by Radio Shack under the name of police call.
That was a book, tho, wasn't it? Ran about a half-inch thick, I want to recall...

I had subs to PopComm and Radio-Electronics as a kid. Greatly enjoyed 'em both! Had to save up for my Uniden, which took me a bit (since, in my old man's mind, "family don't get paid." I had to seek alternate income, as and when available.)
 

wqmg930

Member
Joined
Jun 30, 2022
Messages
28
Reaction score
21
Location
Riverside
RCMA was the better choice. BUT Police call - If you gave them information you would get a free set ( ALL ) of them
 

dlwtrunked

Member
Premium Subscriber
Joined
Dec 19, 2002
Messages
2,683
Reaction score
1,549
Is Bob still among the living?
I have not seen anything from him in a couple years but has not published much radio things in recent years. No obituary has appeared. He would be 86.
 

GlobalNorth

Active Member
Premium Subscriber
Joined
May 2, 2020
Messages
2,625
Reaction score
2,802
Location
Fort Misery
'Operation Snowcap' was DoD, DoJ, and USBP BorTac / DEA's anti-drug effort in South America, specifically Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Guatemala, and five other Latin American nations. There were a lot of assets thrown at the effort such as aviation, law enforcement, intelligence, naval ships and watercraft, diplomatic, economic, and propaganda efforts.

When I was at DEA, we had HF SSB transceivers in briefcases and a very high end transceiver [it may have been a Watkins-Johnson] at the F/D office that was monitored about 14 hours each day for the HF Net. Some firefights were captured in real time and enforcement groups would often rush to radio to listen in. We had several S/As assigned and rumour had it that if you were young, single, and ambitious - you were on a list to attend Ranger school and SF classes prior to reassignment.

At the end of 1990, over 53 tons of cocaine and 3/4 of a million precursor chemical had been intercepted and destroyed according to a DoJ briefing I got; but it had a unintended consequence of moving the trade from S.A. to Mexico thanks to the pressures and thanks to the profits that Norteno cartels made from meth production for the SoCal markets.

I bought an Icom R-71A just to hear the action from home.

I miss the printed mags as I could monitor things that weren't often openly discussed by classic media of the era.
 

kc2asb

Member
Joined
Dec 31, 2015
Messages
1,957
Reaction score
2,974
Location
NYC Area
Very enjoyable history. Thanks! As a young high school kid interested in radio, a salesman at our local Radio Shack told me about Pop Comm. Left the store and immediately bought my first issue from a local magazine/newspaper store (Feb '88 issue) I soon got a subscription and read it cover to cover. I did notice the change in the magazine after Tom Kneitel stepped down as editor. I stopped subscribing well before it stopped publishing.
 
Top