On a recent SLC business trip, I logged and recorded all UTA frequencies with my laptop and Proscan software. I let it run overnight at the hotel.
1. TRAX uses two conventional repeaters for dispatching purposes. RR identifies them as TRAX Control 1 (939.9500) and TRAX Control 2 (938.4125). I heard the identical locations and types of radio traffic on both frequencies. So what's the difference between TRAX 1 and 2?
2. Around dinner time, the dispatcher gets on TRAX 1 (939.9500) and tells all trains to switch to TRAX 2. This was bizarre because nobody listened, or so it seemed. TRAX 1 got busier after those instructions were issued. This has me wondering, are the RR labels for TRAX channels reversed by mistake? In other words, is TRAX 1 (939.9500) really TRAX 2, and vice versa?
FWIW, that night TRAX 2 (938.4125) was dead between 8:26pm and 4:48am.
Thanks!
-seligman
1. TRAX uses two conventional repeaters for dispatching purposes. RR identifies them as TRAX Control 1 (939.9500) and TRAX Control 2 (938.4125). I heard the identical locations and types of radio traffic on both frequencies. So what's the difference between TRAX 1 and 2?
2. Around dinner time, the dispatcher gets on TRAX 1 (939.9500) and tells all trains to switch to TRAX 2. This was bizarre because nobody listened, or so it seemed. TRAX 1 got busier after those instructions were issued. This has me wondering, are the RR labels for TRAX channels reversed by mistake? In other words, is TRAX 1 (939.9500) really TRAX 2, and vice versa?
FWIW, that night TRAX 2 (938.4125) was dead between 8:26pm and 4:48am.
Thanks!
-seligman