She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie heard something over the weekend that if the Marines ever fold up their organization, the Navy won't have a job..... Hmmm - now where did I hear that.... Moo
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie Gotta go to Nails R Us for a sharpening! Going to be a long week!
Quentin
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar Jen....No scanner...! With the seriousness of your railfanning, you should invest in that tool to increase the info flowing to you...There is quite a bit of data bouncing around on them all the time, especially in an area you describe to be watching with so much activity in the yard, etc....I'm not as serious at paying attention to rail movement details as you seem to be and I can hear chatter around Muncie almost anytime I turn it on...They are not as expensive as they once were either. It really would put more info at your fingertips...[ears...], as you and driver are at your favorite watching spot....Maybe driver wouldn't like to hear all that chatter though....Hmmmm. Can always use headphones. By the way a 200 channel portable scanner can pick up all kinds of civil service activity out there. And another thing....When you see that engineer talking on the "phone"....chances are you may be able to hear him...because in reality he's really talking on a "radio"...that you most likely can pick up on your scanner....Have fun.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod Be careful Jen -- in more than a few jurisdictions, it's technically illegal to listen in on police radio. (Originally intended as 'interference with police communications', but too many criminals started using scanners to monitor where the bulls were and what they were doing... and you know how it is when the laws supposedly have to apply to everyone 'equally'.)
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar ....Jen....The police force: "don't say it on the radio"....Cell phones are radios, and...well, use imagination..... Note in my photo a 200 ch. scanner.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod Another possible answer for la Mook -- reflecting the last half of the original question: There may be advantages to using several types of radio on the same train. For example, it may be important to keep yard 'chatter' off a main dispatching channel (i.e. using separate systems with different freqs or effective ranges might be much more convenient for crews doing different things in the same general area). So you would have walkie-talkies for crew communication, use the 'train phone' to talk to the dispatcher or track crews out on the main where you're planning to go, and keep a speaker 'hot' so you can hear incoming messages easily when outside the cab... but the speaker will cut off when you pick up your handset. Ah Ha! My thinking at the time. That was the reason for the question - I was running through my mind (quiet, Dan!) that maybe there were separate radios for separate places. Radio for dispatcher, phone for yard master or however it is set up? Anyone? Mook
QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod Another possible answer for la Mook -- reflecting the last half of the original question: There may be advantages to using several types of radio on the same train. For example, it may be important to keep yard 'chatter' off a main dispatching channel (i.e. using separate systems with different freqs or effective ranges might be much more convenient for crews doing different things in the same general area). So you would have walkie-talkies for crew communication, use the 'train phone' to talk to the dispatcher or track crews out on the main where you're planning to go, and keep a speaker 'hot' so you can hear incoming messages easily when outside the cab... but the speaker will cut off when you pick up your handset.
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