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georger 245
'Quote'Results will be published at a later date...
Any feeding frenzy is premature. The whole story
could be true. I simply raised questions which need
to be answered. The answers may come. Or may
not. Galen has been working on this for months.
Only the announcement is new. Im simply asking
questions, not even the hard questions (yet), not
passing judgement out of the box, like you.
There is virtually nothing to agree or disagree about
yet.
377 22
QuoteRobertMBlevins continues his orgy of disinformation with:
“The problem isn't with the transmitter, it's with the receiver, which in 1971 would denote extreme expertise in its use and an ability to understand the equipment used to receive the signals, and then pinpoint the location where those signals originate, and then proceed to that location.”
DENOTE EXTREME EXPERIENCE IN ITS USE???
Really?? Wow, I guess when someone doesn’t have a clue what they are talking about, they then assume the planet doesn’t have a clue either, and it’s OK to publish bullshit. This is like the aft stairs being soooooo complex to operate that it would take an advanced degree in mechanical engineering to operate them. Geesh people, can you give it a rest?
First. If you prang some aircraft, the odds are the search will be conducted by the CAP. This is a great organization, but it is staffed with volunteers and a bunch of teen-agers. How complex would one expect the equipment to be? Of course I’m assuming one would use their superior investigative skills and logic to arrive at this assumption.
DF-ing (no it does not mean Dumb Fu) has been around as a hobby for decades before there was any DBers. The systems were simple to use, small and quite familiar to HAMs and electronics geeks.
You could make one yourself (Heathkit) or buy a Zenith, Bendix or any number of brands which are now owned by the Chinese.
Attached is a photo of a DF club getting some training. Look at the cars and guess how many years this was before the Cooper hijacking. The other photos are of various DF-ing receivers available to anyone. Complex equipment indeed.
This is yet another reason why no one takes this subject seriously (and shouldn’t) and why RobertMBlevins attracts venom. Why talk out of your ass like this? Does it make you feel important and all big man-ish? How many DF systems have you operated RobertMBlevins? How many have you seen? What the hell were you talking about? Clydesdales, Iditarod races, un-named software, backing down stairs, un-reported break ins, tree stump money, height distortion, the mystery of the color hazel, toupees on ELTs, Airstream buttseks, lighter than air water, Cooper demanding twenties, Tina being a cat, digging ditches, digging bourbon or is this another thing to add to the extensive pile of your crap?
I mean really, who does this?
Those DFs depicted in Farfs poster covered all or subsets of a range from 200 KHz to about 3 MHz. None of them would work on a VHF or UHF signal. It isnt all that hard, however, to make a crude VHF or UHF DF by just hooking up a directional antenna (like a Yagi beam) to a receiver and swinging the antenna for a maximum signal. Hams have been holding "fox hunts" since long before 1971. A fox hunt is an event where hams compete to find hidden beacon transmitters, often on VHF (144 MHz) or UHF (440MHz) bands.
Here is a ton of info on the subject: http://www.homingin.com/
I am still digging hard trying to find out what the MAC SOG guys used to rendevous after landing at night in the N Viet Nam wilderness. I get hints that it may have been as simple as Sony AM band transistor radios with ferrite bar antennas (very directional) and low power AM band beacons. You would get a 180 degree ambiguity in the bearing using a simple transistor radio but with a low power beacon you'd soon realize if you were walking in the wrong direction as signal strength would decrease rapidly. Whatever they used apparently worked well and doesnt seem to be documented in any Internet data that I could find. THAT's why we need Snowmman back, he'd find something.
377
377 22
Quote'How could anyone go to Tina Bar today and
locate the exact spot and "hole" that existed in 1980 but does not remotely exist in physical form today? Some 30 feet of beachfront has ceased to exist since 1980, according to Tom Kaye! Were Galen and the boys standing in the water? Galen needs to provide a map and a few more details if we are to take this seriously -'
Agree.
And what's a good explanation for the corners of twenties to be torn off and allegedly buried right next to
Ingrams find?
Cook's story that fishermen are just interested in fishing and cant be bothered with a red hot national news story that they may have scooped doesn't sound plausible to me.
Does anyone recall when the news broke about Ingram's money find? It was a VERY big deal.
377
Farflung 0
Using a guard freq for homing would be among the least intelligent designs I could imagine. Every aircraft for a radius of 100 miles would be picking up that signal and calling ATC. The military is already well equipped with DF receivers and techniques for locating the source. Using that would almost guarantee Cooper’s arrest.
Here’s a bunch of cheap LF equipment which was sold at Radio Shacks and Sears which is small, portable and tunable across a vast spectrum.
So IF (massively huge gi-normous IF) Cooper was using some sort of RF device, why not use some simple model from a fox hunt? You don’t care about directionality, so VHF and UHF offer no advantage, plus they are line of sight.
Take a roll of copper wire for your antenna and chuck it over some tree limb and start your short duration, omni-directional transmission, with a battery. You could extend the life and or increase power, by squawking at some predetermined schedule, like one minute every fifteen. Plus who is going to be monitoring some CW on the LF band?
At least try and use some scenario which is plausible and back it up with some data or examples of how this could be done (easily). How this got on to ELTs as a consideration is NOT thinking outside the box.
Even with walkie-talkies what would Cooper and his accomplice say?
Hey, I’m on the ground in some woods, there are trees and dirt, over.
Roger, copy trees and dirt, I’m on my way, don’t do anything till I show up.
Wilco.
OR…..
Hey, I made it! Wooooo HOOOOT! I’m on the corner of Thompson and Elm and hiding behind a shed, you can’t miss it.
Wilco.
Meanwhile at dispatch, near a scanner:
Car forty seven, car fifty four and car eighteen, we heard a person excitedly calling for a pick up at Thompson and Elm……. Suspect reported to be armed… over.
377 22
QuoteWhy Re-invent the wheel 377?
Using a guard freq for homing would be among the least intelligent designs I could imagine. Every aircraft for a radius of 100 miles would be picking up that signal and calling ATC. The military is already well equipped with DF receivers and techniques for locating the source. Using that would almost guarantee Cooper’s arrest.
Farflung, did your Twinkie feast cause you to miss my earlier post saying exactly this? Or were you wrapped up in a silk and nylon test with Marla?
Here is what I posted (emphasis added):
QuoteRobert 99 gave a good account of ELT beacons. If Cooper had used one on 121.5 MHz (its second harmonic is 243.0 MHz, a military distress freq) it would likely have been heard by military aircraft and reported. Common UHF radios carried by military aircraft in 1971 were the ARC 27 (older) and the ARC 51. Both had full time "guard" receivers that listened on 243.0 even when comms were being made on other frequencies.
Hand held direction finders for tracking ELTs and bailout beacons were available in 71. I have a working military surplus one used in Viet Nam.
Here is a type of DF for 121.5 used in civil aircraft:
http://bit.ly/SXZfSs
Similar ones were available in 1971. They weren't often found in normal private planes but were used by Civil Air Patrol aircraft.
Because 121.5 and 243.0 were "hot" distress freqs it would have been nuts for Cooper to use them.
He could have modified the gear to use alternate freqs but that's very unlikely
377
377 22
QuoteHere’s a bunch of cheap LF equipment which was sold at Radio Shacks and Sears which is small, portable and tunable across a vast spectrum
It takes a very long antenna to do justice to transmitted signals in the LF MF bands.
Short coil-loaded subsitutes are just so-so. When you are trying to get a DF shot on a weak LF or MF signal with a loop antenna if the signal is weak the null is very broad, giving you huge uncertainty in your bearing. Strong sigs give sharp nulls and good accuracy. I remeber shooting the Farallon Island beacon on 318 KHz from 100 miles out. The null was so wide that it was almost useless. As I got closer then signal got stronger and the bearing null became very sharp. As I recall the beacon was 100 watts and had a big tower vertical antenna.
That's why I am so interested in finding out if the MAC SOG jumpers in Nam were able to use essentially AM broadcast band very low power sigs to rendevous. Conventional wisdom would lead you to much higher freqs where small antennas work well. Maybe they thought out of the box and made it work.
377
Amazon 7
QuoteQuoteQuoteQuote8. Could Cooper have had a homing device on him
so that anyone within 5 miles of where he landed
could determine his location (Fank Heyl's profile)?
Very unlikely. No GPS back then. Best you could do is use a radio direction finder to get a bearing on a signal, but that doesn't work well over irregular terrain. Just gives you an approximate bearing, no range info.
McCoy's rigs had govt supplied beacons implanted by Perry Stevens, a rigger in Oakland CA. Most likely they were military bailout beacons on 243.0 MHz. Some USAF planes (eg HC 130H) were equipped with UHF ADFs that could get a bearing on that frequency. The problems of reflecting signals off terrain is minimized when the bearings are taken from aloft.
377
__________________________________________________
That answers that question -- two more questions for you 377: could DBC have brought on board 305, either in the briefcase or in the paperbag, a bailout type beacon (the flares maybe)? If so, could a land vehicle be equipped and capable of getting a bearing on that bailout beacon frequency? Thanks. MeyerLouie
MeyerLouie, Let me see if I can help answer your questions. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, emergency locator transmitter beacons (ELTs) were just being introduced into small general aviation aircraft.
I don't remember the year that they were mandated by the FAA, but some of the early ELTs were very small and could be, and were, mounted on the side of the baggage compartment of even the smallest aircraft (such as Cessna 150s). You could almost carry these things in your shirt pocket based on their size.
They had to be mounted in a direction such that longitudinal impact forces would force a weight forward to turn on the transmitter switch during accidents. And the pilot was responsible for seeing that the ELTs were not activated as a part of his shut down check list at the end of a flight.
These ELTs operated on 121.5 and 243.0 on the VHF and UHF bands, respectively, when activated.
To locate aircraft after an accident, the search aircraft would ideally have a VHF/UHF "direction finder" capability. Military search aircraft had such a capability. Perhaps 377 knows if such a piece of equipment was available to general aviation and ships in that time frame.
But Cooper could easily have had one of these ELTs in his paper bag or coat pocket. However, anyone who wanted to locate him would need the "direction finder" end of the system.
Robert99
My experience with quite a bit of usage of PRC 34 and PRC 90 survival radios.. and the small transmitters in parachutes that are set to go off on deployment or set off inadvertently ( by someone in life support or elsewhere near the flightline) is a whole lot of scrambling by any and everyone who monitors those frequencies in the area.
If anyone is suggesting those were used..please... put that thought to rest because. EVERY military reciever from Portland to Seattle ( and that is a WHOLE lot) would have been going off on active duty and guard and reservebases who monitor it for military aircraft emergencies.
Farflung 0
Why use that spectrum? It’s filled with comms already and DF systems were already available, off the shelf, for the low frequency spectrum.
If I had to improvise something, I would choose some low freq beacon on a small breadboard, powered by the batteries in the briefcase, with a wire antenna. In fact, I would use the beacon as part of the ‘bomb’ with wires and scary stuff in the briefcase. Killing two birds with one stone, I really am driven by my greed and laziness. Why spend that time and effort when something already offers the 80% solution? Foxhunt gear.
True statement about the nulls and antenna efficiency in the low frequencies. Also true about navigation being near worthless at greater distances. What should be the anticipated ambiguity of Cooper’s jump with an accomplice? Ten miles, twenty miles or one hundred? How much power and antenna height/efficiency would you need for something in the ten mile category? Is the beacon going to have different propagation requirements from a walkie-talkie? Why? Power and antenna efficiencies are relative to design requirements. What’s required for something to work in the Cooper environment?
I would like to see a simple and honest matrix, of how various RF devices would perform. But I know I’ll just see some select favorites, just like the money arriving at Tena Bar puzzle.
Unfortunately this is the same animal as what the subject of dredging does to money at Tena Bar. If someone doesn’t like it, they issue some baseless declaration (code for: lie) that it is impossible or too complex. Funny how walkie-talkies are so popular with such limited range and exposure to detection, or that beacons are implausible since, well, there hasn’t been a movie or TV show with beacons so they don’t exist.
No matter the device, I’m going to start with simple. Before designing the ultimate HF beam with a reflector, I want to know how a roll of copper wire would perform. Oh it’s a little inefficient, then gin up the dilithium crystals with watts till the wires melt. Remember in automotive terms, there’s no replacement, for displacement.
377 22
QuoteIf I had to improvise something, I would choose some low freq beacon on a small breadboard, powered by the batteries in the briefcase, with a wire antenna. In fact, I would use the beacon as part of the ‘bomb’ with wires and scary stuff in the briefcase. Killing two birds with one stone, I really am driven by my greed and laziness. Why spend that time and effort when something already offers the 80% solution? Foxhunt gear.
Hmmm... I think I see a new project to pursue in 2013. I've already made HAHO radio jumps with a walkie talkie and reached stations up to 100 miles away. I've jumped with an asymmetric bag strapped to me to test freefall stability. I've jumped from the rear stairway of a DC 9 passenger jet. OK, I admit it, I am obsessed.
I'm going to look through my junkbox and see what I can come up with for a low power BC band beacon. Then a field test to check reception distance and DF-ability. A wire antenna is a good idea for the transmitter. Stay tuned.
Again, zero proof that Cooper used radios. I'm just indulging a fantasy.
377
Robert99 50
QuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteQuote8. Could Cooper have had a homing device on him
so that anyone within 5 miles of where he landed
could determine his location (Fank Heyl's profile)?
Very unlikely. No GPS back then. Best you could do is use a radio direction finder to get a bearing on a signal, but that doesn't work well over irregular terrain. Just gives you an approximate bearing, no range info.
McCoy's rigs had govt supplied beacons implanted by Perry Stevens, a rigger in Oakland CA. Most likely they were military bailout beacons on 243.0 MHz. Some USAF planes (eg HC 130H) were equipped with UHF ADFs that could get a bearing on that frequency. The problems of reflecting signals off terrain is minimized when the bearings are taken from aloft.
377
__________________________________________________
That answers that question -- two more questions for you 377: could DBC have brought on board 305, either in the briefcase or in the paperbag, a bailout type beacon (the flares maybe)? If so, could a land vehicle be equipped and capable of getting a bearing on that bailout beacon frequency? Thanks. MeyerLouie
MeyerLouie, Let me see if I can help answer your questions. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, emergency locator transmitter beacons (ELTs) were just being introduced into small general aviation aircraft.
I don't remember the year that they were mandated by the FAA, but some of the early ELTs were very small and could be, and were, mounted on the side of the baggage compartment of even the smallest aircraft (such as Cessna 150s). You could almost carry these things in your shirt pocket based on their size.
They had to be mounted in a direction such that longitudinal impact forces would force a weight forward to turn on the transmitter switch during accidents. And the pilot was responsible for seeing that the ELTs were not activated as a part of his shut down check list at the end of a flight.
These ELTs operated on 121.5 and 243.0 on the VHF and UHF bands, respectively, when activated.
To locate aircraft after an accident, the search aircraft would ideally have a VHF/UHF "direction finder" capability. Military search aircraft had such a capability. Perhaps 377 knows if such a piece of equipment was available to general aviation and ships in that time frame.
But Cooper could easily have had one of these ELTs in his paper bag or coat pocket. However, anyone who wanted to locate him would need the "direction finder" end of the system.
Robert99
My experience with quite a bit of usage of PRC 34 and PRC 90 survival radios.. and the small transmitters in parachutes that are set to go off on deployment or set off inadvertently ( by someone in life support or elsewhere near the flightline) is a whole lot of scrambling by any and everyone who monitors those frequencies in the area.
If anyone is suggesting those were used..please... put that thought to rest because. EVERY military reciever from Portland to Seattle ( and that is a WHOLE lot) would have been going off on active duty and guard and reservebases who monitor it for military aircraft emergencies.
Amazon, 377, Farflung, and others:
Let me add a paragraph or two here that should have been added to my original post.
I am NOT recommending that ELTs or beacons of any kind that operate on 121.5 and 243.0 would have been used in the hijacking.
There are several very good reasons for this:
1. As Amazon points out, just about ever military aircraft radio communication set in existence automatically monitors those emergency frequencies and so do most air traffic control facilities. This probably makes them the most monitored frequencies on the planet. At the present time, they are also monitered by satellites.
2. And as Farflung and Amazon both point out, about 97 percent (I thought it was closer to 100 percent) of the alarms from ELTs and beacons during their initial introduction were in fact false.
3. The C-130 following the hijacked airliner was described as a "Search and Rescue" aircraft. Although I haven't seen it in writing anywhere, this probably means that it had direction finding capabilities for these emergency frequencies.
4. There is no record of anyone's transmitter going off on these emergency frequencies during the hijacking and flight to Reno.
5. Cooper rejected military parachutes from the USAF at McChord AFB. It was common knowledge at that time that the USAF pilots and crewmen in Southeast Asia were using parachutes with radio beacons and that they could be tracked by search and rescue aircraft. Cooper may have known this, guessed that the McChord chutes would be so equipped, and he would probably would have been right (thanks to the efforts of the FBI).
6. The poster that I was originally responding to essentially asked if it was possible to track a transmitter with a piece of equipment that had a direction finding capability. As 377 has pointed out, the short answer is "Yes" but it would be a dumb thing to do in the Cooper hijacking.
7. The Hale Boggs disappearance was only one factor in introducing ELTs into general aviation usage. In fact, Don Jonz, Bogg's pilot, had an ELT.
Searchers found it safe and secure on his desk back at the airport of departure. I suppose this helped the powers that be realize that it would be a better idea to put the ELTs in the aircraft. Sometimes science progresses rather slowly.
Robert99
377 22
QuoteThe C-130 following the hijacked airliner was described as a "Search and Rescue" aircraft. Although I haven't seen it in writing anywhere, this probably means that it had direction finding capabilities for these emergency frequencies.
If it was indeed a USAF/ANG SAR Herc then it was likely an HC 130 which DID have a good UHF ADF. It may even have been equipped with one of the the best airborne UHF ADFs ever made, the ARD-17, specially designed for tracking Apollo capsules and capable of DFing on 243.0 MHz.
http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19750010201_1975010201.pdf
I've always found it amusing that F 106 interceptors scrambled to find the 727 couldnt... and a lumbering Herky Bird did. Bet those fighter jocks had a hard time with that.
377
georger 245
Robert99
I think 5 above is a very good point.. I thnk we know??? the chutes from McChord were not forthcoming anyway, thus had to resort to a private supplier ?
georger 245
377
Im willing to bet they didn't. Efficiency very very low.
Distance zero. Natural Interference. Selectivity.
Antenna issues. etc etc. You might as well conduct
SETI on AM ... or VLF for that matter. Out of the box
at those wavelengths would be the submarine vlf
nets which require power like a small M-class star
and underground antennas strung from the North
Pole to the South Pole! And rattle the teeth and the
brain cells of reindeer herds. Something that could
tap into that system and be heard for a relay back ..
that would be 'out of the box' at those low freqs
and cost the GNP of Portugal!
377 22
Quote
That's why I am so interested in finding out if the MAC SOG jumpers in Nam were able to use essentially AM broadcast band very low power sigs to rendevous. Conventional wisdom would lead you to much higher freqs where small antennas work well. Maybe they thought out of the box and made it work.
377
Im willing to bet they didn't. Efficiency very very low.
Distance zero. Natural Interference. Selectivity.
Antenna issues. etc etc. You might as well conduct
SETI on AM ... or VLF for that matter. Out of the box
at those wavelengths would be the submarine vlf
nets which require power like a small M-class star
and underground antennas strung from the North
Pole to the South Pole! And rattle the teeth of
reindeer herds. Something that could tap
into that system and be heard for a relay back ..
that would be 'out of the box' at those low freqs
and cost the GNP of Portugal!
Generally I agree with your logic, but distance isnt "zero" G. I've heard these things up to a mile away and they are only running at 0.1 watts on AM BC band:
http://www.talkinghouse.com/realestateradio.php
http://www.iamradio.net/pdfs/iAMradioOperationsManual.pdf
Never tried to DF one. Going to try that sometime soon.
377
377 22
Quote1) http://www.don-valentine.com/...%20and%20Vietnam.htm
"When Delta was experimenting with infiltration methods for our recon teams, we tried using beacons to help assemble the team after they parachuted into the thick jungle. We packed all of the rucksacks into a bundle and rigged a radio beacon to the bundle with its antenna taped to one of the parachute suspension lines.
After the teams reached the ground, they were always scattered and disoriented. First of all, they had to survive a night tree landing in very tall trees, which is very risky, then they had to climb down the tree to reach the ground.
We issued each man a small civilian transistor radio to help them locate the beacon. We had the frequency range of the radio "stretched" so it would pick up the beacon signal. When you held the radio right side up with its narrow side pointing towards the beacon, the beacon signal was the loudest.
Unfortunately, either narrow side produced the same results so you could not tell which way was correct. The only way to know for sure was to walk a good distance and aim your radio again. If the signal was getting stronger, you were okay. If it was getting weaker, you had to turn around and go in the opposite direction.
It took three days to assemble an RT using this method. Delta dropped that idea and kept experimenting. Try as we might, we never came up with an effective way to surreptitiously insert an RT into a thick jungle canopy. The lurps had to find open spaces large enough for the chopper to land or blast an LZ with 2,000 pound bombs."
Link seems to be dead now.
377
Farflung 0
Cooper’s requirements would be different in that the DF unit is a car (knows where it is), roughly limited to roads, which sounds obvious, but drives the real need for azimuth accuracy. Which is relatively low in this application.
Initially you just need to know if you are heading towards Cooper and the road needs to head in that direction also. Aircraft and vessels don’t have this restriction.
After looking at the road network around Lake Merwin, I don’t see a massive advantage to having the lobes reduced to much less than 90 degrees. You only know if Cooper is fore or aft, then perhaps left or right of whatever road. It’s not like there are dozens of options or even dozens of miles between the roads.
From Lewis River Road (north side of Lake Merwin), you only have seven or eight options for traveling north. Once you’re on one of these roads, you really have left or right of the vehicle, then about two miles to walk to a parallel road. At that point you could haul out the walkie-talkie or honk the horn for such a short distance. But a very primitive system, used in a similar road network, appears to look like it could narrow things down to a few square miles.
No VC to dodge, no ground fire, no E&E stuff, unless that’s your normal mode of travel. Although it’s human nature to ‘gold plate’ everything, their budgets typically deliver something plastic, cheap and disposable. Look at your cell phone.
377 22
And the horn honk and walkie talkie comm idea is good. Hadn't thought of that.
Where were you on Norjack night? Can you prove it?
377
sailshaw 0
:
I'm going to look through my junkbox and see what I can come up with for a low power BC band beacon. Then a field test to check reception distance and DF-ability. A wire antenna is a good idea for the transmitter. Stay tuned.
Have you thought about the rescue beacon transmit/receive radio's used by mountain rescue skiers. They were good for short ranges but were cheep in those days ($100 to $)200 each.
I really don't think DB used radio beacons as I think he was and is a real loaner and was good at orienting and finding his way in the outback and mountains. He also probably jumped within 5 to 10 miles of where he left his car in North Vancouver.
As I have said before, I think he was long gone by mid-night and somewhere in Oregon preparing his four letters to the News Papers and left his DNA under the stamps/envelope flaps.
When are those FBI guys going to test the envelopes for the DNA and match with Sheridan?
They can then be well on their way to solving the crime. This is the only remaining evidence that the FBI has not looked into and it can solve the crime.
Bob Sailshaw
sailshaw@aol.com
377 22
I actually agree with you that its unlikely that Cooper used radios. I just like to fantasize that he did.
Sheridan Peterson, a veteran skydiver and smoke jumper and ex Marine knew plenty about wilderness landings and egress. He had night jump experience too.
I sure wish he could be interviewed, even if to just get his perpective on what it would take to do the jump successfully and who in 1971 knew about 727s being jumpable.
Somewhere he is quoted recommending the use of a flashlight to illuminate your landing area. He KNOWS that is BS, but why would he say it?
377
“The problem isn't with the transmitter, it's with the receiver, which in 1971 would denote extreme expertise in its use and an ability to understand the equipment used to receive the signals, and then pinpoint the location where those signals originate, and then proceed to that location.”
DENOTE EXTREME EXPERIENCE IN ITS USE???
Really?? Wow, I guess when someone doesn’t have a clue what they are talking about, they then assume the planet doesn’t have a clue either, and it’s OK to publish bullshit. This is like the aft stairs being soooooo complex to operate that it would take an advanced degree in mechanical engineering to operate them. Geesh people, can you give it a rest?
First. If you prang some aircraft, the odds are the search will be conducted by the CAP. This is a great organization, but it is staffed with volunteers and a bunch of teen-agers. How complex would one expect the equipment to be? Of course I’m assuming one would use their superior investigative skills and logic to arrive at this assumption.
DF-ing (no it does not mean Dumb Fu) has been around as a hobby for decades before there was any DBers. The systems were simple to use, small and quite familiar to HAMs and electronics geeks.
You could make one yourself (Heathkit) or buy a Zenith, Bendix or any number of brands which are now owned by the Chinese.
Attached is a photo of a DF club getting some training. Look at the cars and guess how many years this was before the Cooper hijacking. The other photos are of various DF-ing receivers available to anyone. Complex equipment indeed.
This is yet another reason why no one takes this subject seriously (and shouldn’t) and why RobertMBlevins attracts venom. Why talk out of your ass like this? Does it make you feel important and all big man-ish? How many DF systems have you operated RobertMBlevins? How many have you seen? What the hell were you talking about? Clydesdales, Iditarod races, un-named software, backing down stairs, un-reported break ins, tree stump money, height distortion, the mystery of the color hazel, toupees on ELTs, Airstream buttseks, lighter than air water, Cooper demanding twenties, Tina being a cat, digging ditches, digging bourbon or is this another thing to add to the extensive pile of your crap?
I mean really, who does this?
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