Years ago I was pulled over by the Police, when they stopped behind me all of a sudden I could hear their Radio on my car Radio.
@iainhewitt6 жыл бұрын
Sometime around 2005 (roughly), I picked up a police transmission on my computer speakers! I had a lamp on my desk with two metal prongs over the top of the left speaker and I picked up some quite clear chatter. I was confused and happened to look outside where there were 3 ARV units pointing guns at the house opposite. I was ordered back inside, but I never did understand why I'd managed to pick up the noise
@mrr28805 жыл бұрын
Can remember listening to the Police in the late 60s early 70s on a small Juliette transistor radio as a kid in my bedroom with an ear plug.. a great chase around New Cross and the Old Kent road, was so long ago when it cut to the police car it had bells rather than a siren.. got told to stop doing it by my parents who said the police would be round.... eventually they did come round but that was a few years later and nothing to do with the radio :)
@nosurrender43216 жыл бұрын
“THERES A MAN RUNNING ABOUT CASTLEMILK WITH A SWORD” - those were the days
@vvvvvv20865 жыл бұрын
No Surrender: He’s still there. :-)
@dermottyoung52675 жыл бұрын
Nowadays it would be a man with a knife stabbing everyone in sight. And it would not be reported on Police Radio. It would be reported on LBC.
@stuart73m5 жыл бұрын
@@dermottyoung5267 There's been several shootings passed off as stabbings it is being covered up, some youths on social media showing their arsenal of weapons and nothing seems to be getting done.
@k43mc735 жыл бұрын
YCMCT
@scottend52393 жыл бұрын
@@stuart73m lol
@zerg95232 жыл бұрын
I once took a scanner to a friends house in manchester, the plan was to chill and listen to the rozzers which went well… we also ended up tuning into strangeways nick for a while too.
@djquiko6 жыл бұрын
My interest in radio monitoring in NL started when I could listen to the local police relay with our family transistor FM radio. The frequency was 86.3 Mhz and normal FM broadcast band startrled at 88Mc. So if you scew on the internal oscillator of the radio you could tune to the police channel. For me it was the coolest thing back than.
@larkrahman6 жыл бұрын
I listened to the police this morning. I was really shocked some of their albums are good 🤣🤣🤣
@VideoMontaze5 жыл бұрын
Sdr + sdr sharp = tetra
@bobmirdiff20435 жыл бұрын
I always tell them that I have a Police Record! - 'Walking on the Moon!'
@dermottyoung52675 жыл бұрын
I listened to the Police this morning as well. They screamed at me while they battered my skull with trugeons. Mind you, I deserved it. I am an Ulster Catholic, after all.
@tykenminator5 жыл бұрын
@@VideoMontaze Hack RF is the ultimate model of SDR. Hack RF. You can listen to what you want. Few dollars more but not much.
@VideoMontaze5 жыл бұрын
@@tykenminator You are from States? Right? Can somebody make video how to listen European police Tertra with HACK RF? tnx
@RishayanPorMexico3 жыл бұрын
My question is: With the magic of You Tube and other video and audio services, does anyone have recordings of police radio transmissions during the years past when they were analog and transmitted in the FM and VHF bands?
@-The-Mon2 жыл бұрын
have a tape recording of a 110 mph chase of a stolen car through the outskirts of Liverpool in the 1980s
@loc47252 жыл бұрын
@@-The-Mon Did they ever catch you?
@andyhowlett22312 жыл бұрын
I never made audio recordings of the police, but I did make a number of VHS video recordings of the video downlink from India 99, the Manchester police video copter. I think I transferred some of them the DVD. I must see if I can dig it out!
@merlinonline677 жыл бұрын
Just to clarify on the history bit, I joined the plod in 1988, we had three channel UHF Burndepts, VHF was only used in vehicles and only had about 12 channels. In about 1989 the VHF channels which as you say were near Band II Broadcast (FM) were moved to a higher frequency. The UHF radios were changed to ones that had about 99 channels, Some police forces had Motorola, we had Phillips, interestingly the Fire Service had the same radio but they were badged PYE. The UHF radios were linked to Divisional Operation Rooms and you only used your collar number, no callsign. On VHF you used a vehicle (unit) callsign this was a Divisional identifier (Letter) followed by a number whuich denoted the station, then followed a letter which identified what type of unit, followed by a sequential number The VHF vehicle sets were referred to as "main scheme" after 1989 these sets were huge! The reason being that as well as a VHF radio they contained a UHF repeater, so if the crew were working away from the car in a rural location with no UHF coverage then they could still have comms. the main scheme went through to Force Operations Room. Both UHF and VHF radios would receive on one channel and transmitted on another, so if someone was using a scanner then they would only hear one side plus the busy signal unless they the OR's put talk through on. Airwave has been a bit of a financial disaster as the police are charged airtime per second so it is an expensive system!
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for the info! Great stuff.
@martynraynervlogs48206 жыл бұрын
The difference between Pye and Philips was age. The Pye PF85 or PocketFone 85 was the one you probably first saw it had xtals I think 3 channels in A band = high band VHF, E band =Low band VHF and finally U band which was UHF. Originally 25KHz channel spacing then later 12.5KHz. Later on exactly the same radio came out with the Philips Logo, same radio just a different logo. then the synthesised PFX came out with 99 channels in all the same variants as the PF85. there was also an analogue encrypted version for special operations. different counties had different schemes depending on their terrain. many of the cars also had Marconi repeaters fitted from VHF to UHF. Philips became Simoco and developed Tetra, later it became Sepura.
@dannymoore67376 жыл бұрын
How many establishment crimes did you cover ups or covering up for your corrupt copper mates do you do in the time you spent in the force? Genuine question
@arichp50326 жыл бұрын
@@dannymoore6737 I think you need to seek help...
@geoffpriestley70014 жыл бұрын
The pye boot mount still comes up at ham rallies it was a suit case size with a remote head the. fire service used ascoms in some vehicles operating around 70mhz as far as i can remember
@Dragon_Kin4 жыл бұрын
as a boy in the early 90's sometimes we would as a family gather round and listen to the police it was fun listening to things cops/robbers got up to we did not use it to get a 1 up on the police was just entertainment
@ShootDigital4 жыл бұрын
I use to love the car chases, especilly the ones that got away... 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@rossmckenzie24334 жыл бұрын
I used to do it too ...... on the VHF button on an old radiogram my parents had😂🤣😂
@SuperCanuck7772 жыл бұрын
Remember it all well. we even got out popcorn and cola LoL
@paulstubbs76782 жыл бұрын
One day I was listening to the police, they were looking everywhere for a particular individual, then the control room came on saying thet had received a call from somone who had been listening, and that the individual they were seeking was at the back of a pub at....... So the public listening to the police is not all bad This could really be the case during majour disasters, when they probably could use all the help thay could get. My thoughts is that the 'main' channel should be non-scrambled, but all the extra ones scrambled, so everyday traffic stuff etc. is easliy listened to, but any more involved stuff is not.
@MartinZero7 жыл бұрын
My God I remember listening to the police when I was a Kid on a basic radio gramophone thing we had, it played records to 😆
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
Haha nice one!
@MartinZero7 жыл бұрын
Now thats an example of innovation !!! If only kids did that today 👌😀
@petejammo887 жыл бұрын
0
@kentcyclist7 жыл бұрын
Did it have a big horn as a speaker ?. lol
@thra5herxb12s6 жыл бұрын
VHF Radiogram.
@JoeDurobot7 жыл бұрын
*Well you don't have to join to listen to the police in the UK.* *If you get close enough to two officers talking to eachother you can hear what they're saying. :D*
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
Hahaha yeah you're right!
@vvvvvv20865 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@bobmirdiff20434 жыл бұрын
As one reads the Letters and other reads the Numbers on a Car Registration Plate!
@yma0evelyn6 жыл бұрын
My Nan had a radio in the 90's and we loved to listen to the chases. The best was the night it went past her flat. I'll never forget that :)
@paulhargreaves91033 жыл бұрын
You had a top Nan......!
@g7vak6 жыл бұрын
Excellently done and thanks for this. The original VHF freqs were 80-84MHz mobile transmit and 97-101MHz base transmit. They were configured so the mobile set transmission could be heard on the base transmit frequency by switching to 'Talk Through.' With the PR system it was possible to link PR to Main set freqs and when the shift occurred the PRs were better linked as necessary. At the time [for METPOL] the mobile freqs were 143/152MHz and the PRs 155.1/147MHz. Indeed a special mount allowed a Mainset and PR to be hand carried [the batteries were heavy] but giving good coverage of the Mqainset channels and the designated/or command or public order channels afforded by the PR. The PRs used CTCSS to give the 25 channels four possible uses. There were also a number of channels reserved for command and public order. Other Forces/Constabularies did similar but with a variation in frequencies. Occasionally as the PR aged the CTCSS would drop out and you could hear the activity on another division across the MET. One memorable being Hackney on the same channel heard in South London. But the move to UHF for the MET was interesting. At the roll out at a private 'Police Personnel Exhibition' someone in the audience asked if the system was 'scanner proof.' The reply from the representative stated that at least eleven scanners would be needed to track the comms. That, it turned out, was rubbish. Judicial use of squelch/attenuators and utilising the 'directivity' of an antenna ensured a degree of control that allowed an easy 'squelch-open' tracking of talk groups. When Airwave arrived the die was set for the end of monitoring sensitive communications. Caught out in the open with a scanner always afforded the risk of being arrested for 'Going Equipped to Steal' [S25 Theft Act 1968] if police freqs were in the memory but with Airwave casual monitoring will not be possible. Rolling Algorithms form part of the security on both the PR and the Mainset. However, Airwave's days are numbered. With the onset of 5G new technologies are being tested; an officer can now do most of his *necessary* admin from a tablet, so imagine something smaller and with a voice comms capability for what's to come.
@RingwayManchester6 жыл бұрын
Cheers for the detailed info Bertie :)
@g7vak6 жыл бұрын
Ringway Manchester Thanks! Forgot to mention MI5 Watchers also used P Band until it was thought that the Russian facility at 16 KPG were intercepting the transmissions. That led to a change of frequency just below 2 metres and heavy encryption followed by enhanced Airwave.
@gavinreid83516 жыл бұрын
During the 90s my friend had a scanner. He would listen to the local police in Bridlington.. One day the police were at his house and heard themselves on his scanner. They confiscated it and never let him have it back.
@paulk52424 жыл бұрын
452.750 was juliet 1(stockports frequency) remember it well
@SuperCanuck7772 жыл бұрын
@@paulk5242 Worcester = 452.500
@barneybiggles3 жыл бұрын
When they were on UHF you could listen to them through your tv.
@inrico57353 жыл бұрын
Wishing you and your family health, happiness, peace and prosperity this Christmas and in the coming New Year!
@Dr.Gunsmith5 жыл бұрын
I remember listening to the police on our radio back in the day, it was great listening to them arresting the majority of my family every other week 😂
@SuperCanuck7772 жыл бұрын
In 1998 before they went over to tetra, i heard the local plod reporting over their local UHF channel that they were coming round to speak to me over a matter, they said my name and address over the air, apparently a rich old woman who had recently knocked me off my pushbike and drove off {there were reliable witness's} had all her car tyres "slashed" as the police acccused me of... i told em where to get off
@astrazenica77837 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid in the 80's I cut in on a Met police helicopter flying overhead with a Walkie talkie lol, they weren't best happy
@drspastic4 жыл бұрын
me too! used to really piss them off in the 90's. getting into car chases on purpose too. a dictaphone to record them then play back so they keep taking wrong turns or responding to old calls. aaah the statute of limitations is sweet!
@jonjohnson28446 жыл бұрын
I bought a scanner in the US in 2007, was absolutely amazed at the stuff I heard from the police on it, it's still brilliant for air band in the UK though.
@SuperCanuck7772 жыл бұрын
Yes, same here. I never ceased to be amazed that local plod were constantly stating informants names over the air live !!! one example was a disgruntled ex girlfriend phoned 999 on her violent boyfriend who'd just drove off in his car drunk. thing is every criminal in Worcester back then was privvy to everything said over the radio 24/7/365 because of a very large chain of "listeners" said information. shows how much the plod really care what happens to people ............
@jimawhitaker4 жыл бұрын
I stumbled across this and found it interesting. In the US we can still listen by using available decoding software. I think the argument is "the public should be allowed to listen". I miss the days when everything including cellphones were open and in clear FM :-)
@drspastic4 жыл бұрын
i see the argument but also they have to read out peoples private info that should be kept secret. say you get pulled over and the cop reads out your driving licence number, ss number, dob, full name and address. you could easily be a victim of fraud later. also vulnerable people, children, info about unoccupied houses, alarm status, all can harm innocents. for the plod, telling everyone where they are can give robbers the ideal time to rob a bank, or if the cop is an arse, then when he reports he is leaving the car to go down a back ally and wont have radio contact...he may get a deserved kicking. its better to have encryption, just less fun for us. uk were idiots (or back pocket stuffing criminals) for signing to dolphin/tetra. there were plenty of better systems available at a fraction of the cost.
@wes11bravo2 жыл бұрын
@@drspastic - Police comms in my area of the US are still UHF T-Band analog FM for 99% of all calls. Any sensitive information is sent directly to their CAD terminals so there's nothing for an identity thief to use. If there is any chance of an individual's security being compromised during a call, the officers will use their cell phones to call Dispatch directly. Of course, all tactical comms for SWAT/SRT are P25 and encrypted. That said, there's no reason why the general public shouldn't be able to listen to most public safety comms. It can even help them do their job. I have an old S-split XTS3000 that I have programmed to monitor only on police channels. In one instance, a guy had just beat up his girlfriend, took her Playstation and her bike. I saw the guy a few blocks away as I was traveling to my next job. I went to the scene and asked the Sergeant if she was looking for a guy with a Playstation pushing a 10 speed bike. "Why, yes. Yes we are!" I pointed them in his direction so they could have a chat with him.
@joedidit32332 жыл бұрын
Yes, a lot of people feel that if the radio signal travels onto your property without your permission, you should be able to listen to it. Especially since that those same radio signals can penetrate your home and even penetrate your body. We do understand that some sensitive transmissions should be encrypted, but everyday dispatch signals should be kept unencrypted. Most feel that the public can help police more by hearing those signals than hinder them.
@harbourwoodlandvisitor24452 жыл бұрын
in the early 90s i bought a scanner. it picked up the police. i used it a few times and put it back in its box. swapped it for a Vauxhall chevet which i got a lot of use out of then swapped that for a b reg citron bx in gold. it had the suspension that could raise the body up high off the ground if you ever needed to drive down a farm track or whatever.
@Shack-time7 жыл бұрын
Very interesting mate. Used to love listening to the rozzers when I was a kid. Bet it’s even more exciting now ...
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
I bet! Ah well maybe if we sign up we'll be able to listen haha. Cheers bud
@davidglc7 жыл бұрын
TETRA Encryption uses 4 algorithms covered by NDA (non-disclosure agreement) called TEA (Tetra Encryption Algorithm). From TEA1 to TEA4. DMR uses ARC4 or AES algorithms.
@technicalvault4 жыл бұрын
Given the age of the algorithm, equipment, and given it is not a type 1 algorithm with future proof key lengths (unlikely in lowest bidder mass distribution radios) then it may possible to use brute force to derive the keys by now. Probably also one of the reasons they’re moving on.
@Bertiesghost7 жыл бұрын
I used to listen in to the VHF (County/Force-wide) and UHF (Personal/pocket sets) channels back in the 90s, it was great! I even had a very old black and white television which would pick up VHF simplex when traffic cars were close by.
@kenh33442 жыл бұрын
Yeh listening to them in 1960s chef big radio with the old magic eye not chef vhs. Yeh great days.
@melvyndalley95583 жыл бұрын
One of the strategist transmissions i have ever heard was a police tetra radio channel which was being retransmitted on to the airband on nfm. It was in a moving vehicle, so some sort of bugging device ,it lasted a couple of days before disappearing.
@Bertiesghost2 жыл бұрын
Was it around 2002?
@SuperCanuck7772 жыл бұрын
Ahh bugging devices, there's a thing
@matnichol3 жыл бұрын
Our old record player would pick up police radio. I think the wires to the speakers acted as an aerial.
@-robster-robster-2 жыл бұрын
As a service engineer when we moved from 2 way radio we adopted dolphin telecom which is the first tetra band. Big old handset. Battery terrible , patchy coverage . Then mobile phones became viable shortly after. Was a radio phone hybrid , could call as a mobile at a hefty rate or use the side button push to talk at no extra cost ( which we were encouraged to use)
@ironeyes825 жыл бұрын
I miss listening to Manchester police in the 90’s early 2000s on my little Alinco. Me and the Mrs would listen to it at bedtime along with James stanitch.. the good old days
@RichDavey4 жыл бұрын
Always wondered if you could still listen in somehow. Very informative. Well done 👍
@richcampoverde5 жыл бұрын
"An individual has been spotted smashing car windows on kirkstall road with a rounders bat" how i loved listening to the police in leeds back in the day
@hasitcometothis74312 жыл бұрын
Remember the old black and white tvs that you'd tune yourself. They could pick up all sorts.
@porcusdiu4 жыл бұрын
I'm Italian, and in Italy the POLICE use a TETRA system with crypto key. And is impossible decrypt TETRA sygnal.. (In Italy..) In UK, POLICE TETRA system is possible decrypting??? :-o
@urb_infra4 жыл бұрын
it's not that hard if u know the right guys to get one of these keys too.. ;)
@porcusdiu4 жыл бұрын
@@urb_infra aaaaaah ok.. Off corse... In this world, with the "right guys", don't have any problems.
@69Phuket6 жыл бұрын
I was shocked and intrigued to find my 5 quid handheld FM /AM radio could pick up my neighbours phone conversations in 2 way! She had a cordless phone...She worked as a psychologist at the Mental Institution where Ian brady was held...She was chatting away to a depressed Canadian Pilot.. It was addictive for a few weeks...But my morals got the better of me and i gave it away....Moral is Don't use cordless phones!
@RingwayManchester6 жыл бұрын
Haha! I used to listen to those phones on 30mhz! INteresting stuff. Too bad they're disappearing now
@69Phuket6 жыл бұрын
@@RingwayManchester Imagine if she ordered a pizza...? I'd have her card number, expiry date & CVC code.. ! CRAZY!
@Georgey01215 жыл бұрын
very informative and straight to the point, Great job!
@deanoallen50964 жыл бұрын
Former 911 operator I hated digital because when I used analog VHF even when there was static you could hear the officer, digital it’s not the same. Can you purchase the Uniden SDS 100 in the UK? Because in order to hear P25, or EDACS Provoice.
@pteppig2 жыл бұрын
Calling 128aes "massive encryption" was an exaggeration 4 years ago. Since tetra2 mapping and decoding was possible with SDR years ago, tetra 3 recordings were decoded on 1080 GPU as well soon later. Now with RTX and the right software, individual groups are open within minutes. And it's so nice of the police to transmit their position
@welshgoldferret51076 жыл бұрын
144.200mHz AM was West Wales police, I remember listening on my Yupeteru scanner. :)
@RingwayManchester6 жыл бұрын
I used to listen to north wales police whilst camping at Dinas Dinlle, Caernarfon in the early 2000's on my Gre PSR-282. happy days
@originaldegu7 ай бұрын
Used to have a basestation in the 90s and could receive from Liverpool to Blackpool, plus mobile phone conversation aswell!!
@aidy60004 жыл бұрын
I have memories of my grandad listening to the Highland Constabulary in late 90s. One particular memory was when a woman tried to off her self by dangling off the Kessock bridge in Inverness. I wonder if she got the help she needed & got better.
@faumnamara51812 жыл бұрын
I was at sea on a fishing boat and we picked up highland constabulary call for a Mrs Mcginty who's flower pots had been smashed at her front door. It was like crime of the centaury the way the police were carrying on. Epic and funny. These days all the buggers do is hide with speed guns. Sod all the other crime going on.
@johnnylt827 жыл бұрын
I miss my scanner:(
@homerdasmoker7 жыл бұрын
yes me two ive still got mine but they no loner pick up anything shame
@MM0SDK6 жыл бұрын
The glory days of listening to mobile phones and police are over im afraid.
@colinmcnab61456 жыл бұрын
You can listen to the American Police Fire and air traffic on you're phone with various apps. Can be very interesting especially the Police in New York and Chicago. The police in this country now use frequency hoping technology so you need a scanner that can do that they are available but at a very high price.
@EnglishLaw4 жыл бұрын
You can get setup again for little cost, using SDR.
@incrediblemichael2 жыл бұрын
im in germany and i manage to decode the local police via hackrf one airspy studio and a decoder in airspy studio
@RingwayManchester2 жыл бұрын
Do they use tetra ?
@incrediblemichael2 жыл бұрын
yes they do with a bit tweaking from the airsoy studios tetra demodulator i manage to bear police firebrigades and ambulances the handsets are actually from sepura what i think they didnt use the network capabilitys of the tetra network i guess they use them in a way i cant tell
@chrisultrabeatuk2 жыл бұрын
What happened to the old repeaters, are they still active.. I also can't find a legit listing of the 99 PR homeoffice channels online
@hunterwolf68986 жыл бұрын
i used to have one around 1996/97 in the UK. we used to listen to the captains of a plane if it flew overhead. We could pick up the police too
@RingwayManchester6 жыл бұрын
Great stuff :)
@thefiestaguy88316 жыл бұрын
Slight correction, Tetra airwave used to be owned by BT, known as BT Tetra, then it was sold to O2, and became O2 Airwave, in Feb 2016 Motorola completed and fully acquired AIRWAVE and now owns and operates it.
@JohnSmith-ze6jm5 жыл бұрын
So Google (a US company) now operates the UK EMS network? Scary!
@zachdemand45085 жыл бұрын
@@JohnSmith-ze6jm That depends on if airwave is owned by motorola solutions or motorola mobility. Motorola mobility was owned by google and was sold to lenovo, a chinese company. Motorola solutions is a independent company based in the US.
@JohnSmith-ze6jm5 жыл бұрын
@@zachdemand4508Having done a little digging after your comment, it turns out Airwave is owned by Motorola Solutions. Mobility was indeed sold to Lenovo ~2014. Thank you for providing me with insight and a step in the right direction.
@richardjohnson50543 жыл бұрын
Big municipalities in America typically use 800 Mhz yet Yolo County dispatch uses 154.800 Mhz
@baronedipiemonte39903 жыл бұрын
Where I am in the U.S., my FD dispatches on 154.xxxx but all the other traffic is 800mhz P25. I think they are keeping VHF in case of a disaster or incident which takes out the repeaters (like 9/11, and Hurricane Katrina). At least they can stage strategically and talk simplex (Katrina). 800 isn't worth sh"t for simplex.
@richardjohnson50543 жыл бұрын
@@baronedipiemonte3990 they definitely need repeaters for 800 MHz
@digitalmediafan7 жыл бұрын
Very clear explanation. It's crazy to think they used part of the FM band but I think it was AM mode ?
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
Possibly, that bit is before my time, people have told me they heard it on their FM radios in the broadcast band which makes me think it was FM. I'm not sure though
@digitalmediafan7 жыл бұрын
PHILL DIXON Yes AM on the Band II FM band...a ridiculous frequency to use that's for sure. What do you mean employed by them ? You were a copper you mean ?
@digitalmediafan7 жыл бұрын
PHILL DIXON aha so employed by ??
@digitalmediafan7 жыл бұрын
PHILL DIXON it's not bad I guess...there's a lot on there now...some good fm dx and sporadic e reception clips also. So who was your employer not understanding you !
@g7vak6 жыл бұрын
The MET used FM; The freqs in the Broadcast band were in what was known as 'P' Band and split: 83.60MHz to 83.675MHz for mobiles with stronger base stations 98.90 to 101.275MHz in 13 channels. This set up predated the 88 to 108MHz broadcast band. The experiments for stereo transmissions occurred in the early 50's between MW radio and the BBC station on the TV. When the FM Broadcasting arrived the Police still maintained their 'P' Band transmissions. MI5 also used the 'P'Band and were listened to by the Russian Embassy facility down KPG. When this was discovered they predated the police move and went to 142.5000MHz and were heavily encrypted. With Airwave and customer dissatisfaction the move to 4G will be delayed for five years to ensure a decent rollout and first class service.
@HamTechRadioScannerDrones Жыл бұрын
Can u listen with the New firmware /Tetra on the AOR DV1 ?
@oldmanandguitar2 жыл бұрын
I remember listening to Australian police through a web site, they was so relaxed it was unbelievable, base station contacted car telling them about a location and a guy looking "suss". I listened to Australian ambulance, the driver said we just bringing the deceased out now, the base station went nuts, put them back n the house it's the coroner's job, so they put the body back.
@Bertiesghost2 жыл бұрын
What about N.I prior to the Digital rollout? I do remember being told that the RUC in Northern Ireland operated an encrypted or scrambled network from the 1980s due to the security situation. I would love to know what they used.
@-robster-robster-2 жыл бұрын
Used to pick up the taxi ( operator only) on the house radio tuned as far left as it could crank the needle
@ACELog2 жыл бұрын
Actually, when the police were on the 97-101Mhz, it wasn't always possible to listen clearly. Why? Because that band fell in the middle of the 88-108Mhz FM broadcast band, which used wide-band FM. The police used narrow(er) band FM. Hence, you could sometimes hear more than one police channel at the same time, leading to a "squegging" sound, which made it difficult, if not impossible, to hear what was being said. It was fine if there was only one channel being used. I did prove this point by using a narrow-band Ham FM receiver to cover that range; I just changed the crystals. Then, you could select and clearly hear each channel, just like on a scanning receiver. Amazing, when you think about it, why they left it so late to move off those channels. The same applied to the local police channels - I think they were on the 147Mhz band, just above the 2m Amateur Radio band. Around 45 years ago, there was the case of police being fatally shot; the getaway car was listening to their being persuing using a standard FM radio. I can't find anything about that case on google: please let me know if you do.
@harrycoffeynield69416 жыл бұрын
Didn’t need a scanner in the 70s. Could get Greater Manchester Police CK control broadcast on 101.0 FM in normal transistor radio as a kid. Loved the little high pitch pips. The CK controller directing traffic cars. Then later a scanner could get all the local police. Quebec one and two in Oldham. Now you can’t get anything.
@markfaz8689 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video Thanks, back in the 90's I had a CB radio with the 10 foot or so ariel on my roof and listened to the emergency services etc, I thought it would be nice to try and listen to these again.. but as you said this can't happen now. On the plus side you may have saved me some money as I was thinking of getting a scanner from eBay. 🎙📻
@definitelyhexedАй бұрын
The TEA1 algorithm has a backdoor that reduces the original 80-bit key to a key size which is trivially brute-forceable on consumer hardware in minutes.
@Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming5 ай бұрын
When I first joined the police, we used Motorolas which were very reliable. They were nice solid units that came in handy for putting a window in or knocking the odd nail into something. They didn't often break either. When we switched over to the Tetra system we had so many problems in rural areas, particularly when one was in deep cuttings and the dip between two hills. The other issue was because data wasn't fast enough, you would carry a PR (Personal Radio) and a mobile phone. It was a right pain. The second generation of the Motorola is a lot better, but you still end up using a mobile to connect any data service such as a mobile finger print scanner, DVLA uplink etc. Our force will be getting a new system in 2025 and we are reliability told the new devices will also have a dual use as PR and faster mobile. I do not understand why they dont future-proof the system and spec 5G mobile/4G Tetra so the units have a bit of life in them.
@joelmarcott32822 жыл бұрын
The next best thing you can do is to listen to ShopWatch security which is around the 450Mhz band in analog or digital DMR. Sometimes the police will carry a shopwatch radio or security will have a police radio in the CCTV room.
@vainparasite4 жыл бұрын
I loved listening to Chorley police at night on my scanner, one time they were after a work colleague after a bad argument with his ex. They were chasing him all over Chorley and I finally got hold of him on his phone telling him where they were looking for him, it went to digital shortly after that 😟
@drspastic4 жыл бұрын
good boy.
@RAMO_243 жыл бұрын
You can listen to it on a website
@RingwayManchester3 жыл бұрын
Not the uk police
@RAMO_243 жыл бұрын
@@RingwayManchester yeah you can but I’m not sure if it old Recording
@RAMO_243 жыл бұрын
It’s on broadcastify I’ve not done it tho too scared
@RingwayManchester3 жыл бұрын
It will be an old recording. So no, you can’t
@baronedipiemonte39903 жыл бұрын
@@RAMO_24 I'm a yank, and listen to it (Broadcastify) all the time. You can hear the police and fire departments (Live) across the USA
@dsldude11523 жыл бұрын
A video about the type of radios MI5, Police CID etc would have used pre Airwave, would be very interesting, was it Racal Couger?
@stoneheart96795 жыл бұрын
In my country police radio can be heared on my old television
@pp3k075 жыл бұрын
So if i can't listen to them can I at least scan for the Tetra signal to know when they're near by?
@johnmacleod44812 жыл бұрын
Years ago I used to have a communications receiver and could hear police fire mountain rescue ship to shore and taxis and utility broadcasts but now I have a short wave with airband
@NE-Media.inc.7 жыл бұрын
Some info I knew and some info I didn't. Thanks for great vid! Keep up the good work.
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
Cheers James
@rmz16615 жыл бұрын
This’s such a useful video mate, a lot of good information. Thanks for the upload
@Pedro8k2 жыл бұрын
Technically very difficult as it is encrypted legally no you are only allowed to listen to open transmission such as aircraft marine or radio hams
@chubbychubbs55526 жыл бұрын
In the late 80’s I had a separates hifi system and unintentionally picked up the police as the arm came across before coming into contact with the vinyl, was great to listen to on nights...
@RingwayManchester6 жыл бұрын
Haha great stuff Mark!
@baronvonmaximillionsnell27574 жыл бұрын
What's a good base scanner for home.?
@RingwayManchester4 жыл бұрын
Whistler trx2
@tonycummings92112 жыл бұрын
Cheers for the info!!👍
@wisteela5 жыл бұрын
Very informative. Subbed. I used listen in in the late 80s, and it's amazing that they made it so easy like that. You could discover them by accident. Does anybody know why they did that?
@alan67 жыл бұрын
Great video mate, good to see some younger people like ourselves interested in this
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
Cheers mate
@xelitecash_kid32494 жыл бұрын
Yea probably sound dumb saying this but can you listen to. The Military M8
@alan64 жыл бұрын
@@xelitecash_kid3249 Only military air craft I would have thought. Im not sure about anything else.
@xelitecash_kid32494 жыл бұрын
@@alan6 cheers m8
@alan64 жыл бұрын
@@xelitecash_kid3249 No problem, you got a scanner?
@ianmcgarrigle84924 жыл бұрын
Damn great mast, crummy little AE what prat planned that ?
@TheKingOfInappropriateComments3 жыл бұрын
The days of listening to the police are coming to an end pretty much everywhere. Here in the US, small cities would end up paying fortunes they didn't have to migrate to a digital trunking system while most of the rest of the world didn't see the need to do that. But now with LTE radios in every price range and PTT over cellular that's where everything else is going end up without the enormous infrastructure costs. And they can operate in complete secrecy without anyone listening on a scanner. And at the end of the day, that's the number one selling point for them.
@sadface5 жыл бұрын
it all makes complete sense though and is exactly what you would expect. I am surprised that unencrypted analogue equipment is still used so widely.
@T800-k5b5 жыл бұрын
My dad was a kid in the 60s and 70s and he used to mess around and build his own radios and listen to the police and emergency services.
@g1fsh7 жыл бұрын
Ah those were the days mate
@RingwayManchester7 жыл бұрын
Ceetainly were mate :)
@Bertiesghost7 жыл бұрын
Defo were!
@kaliblake25632 жыл бұрын
So if I bought an up to date police scanner it wouldn’t pick anything up
@umakanthbojanapalli32402 жыл бұрын
How to calculate antennas design plz send one video
@allanegleston49314 жыл бұрын
i live in the us. where i live the city police and the sherrif are unscrambled and in the clear. i used to listen to them along time ago. bonus, when my late mom was a little girl , she lived in sanfransisco ca and at that time the police there used both radiotelephony and morse . they were on the frequencies of 1600 kc am ( uall call it medium wave ) and 1700 kc as well. calling car 54 , kids squirting seltzer water at mrs jones . during halloween time mom said it got interesting ,this was in the 1930s.
@lenniecapuano60105 жыл бұрын
great vid spent times listening in years gone by
@SouthWestCarpHunter3 жыл бұрын
I remember listening to the police on my scanner back in the 90s. Those were the days. If I remember rightly you could only hear one side of the conversation then? I could be wrong but that’s what I recall?
@-robster-robster-2 жыл бұрын
Autocom on bike helmet , used to pick up store security and crane operators and night club bouncers etc
@explorewithant3 жыл бұрын
I remember the days when someone I no hacked the police radios and he use to play Roy chubby brown videos on there lines and the police could not speak to each other
@mattcurtis30192 жыл бұрын
Thanks 👍🏻
@TyrannicalDictatorAudits Жыл бұрын
you can listen and i have. they have an open frequency which is accessible. They also have the encrypted one which isn't. It is only illegal to broadcast lol
@richardashworth4003 жыл бұрын
"in other countries you can" - partially true. Most countries now have tetra or digital radio system for official use. Old analog systems can still be listened to, if you have the correct CTCSS codes etc.
@sloopycat19542 жыл бұрын
£40 for a realistic brand scanner from Tandy in the uk you were good to go back in the days.
@definitelyhexedАй бұрын
I had a scanner in 1996 when the IRA bombed Manchester. I tuned in that morning without knowing what had happened. They thought there were multiple devices. I'll never forget it, it was frenetic. But apart from that day, it was pretty boring listening to the cops. The helicopters were more interesting. But at the same time you could tune into mobile phones that were on ETACS, so that's where I spent most of my time.
@arthurtwoshedsjackson62664 жыл бұрын
The only police you can listen to is the U.K. band called The Police
@seanmichael71666 жыл бұрын
we used similar in northern Ireland called cougar net which now sounds like a granny dating site
@RingwayManchester6 жыл бұрын
Hahaha cheers Sean
@SuperCanuck7772 жыл бұрын
i can see the local TETRA mast 130 meters from my bedroom window
@jamienoonan11862 жыл бұрын
That's a bit of a defeatist attitude. A bright young man like you, I'm sure you could find a way.
@RingwayManchester2 жыл бұрын
There isn’t a way!
@G7OEA2 жыл бұрын
Nope you can't. Speaking as an airwave operator and trainer. The airwave sets used by the UK emergency services are encrypted. I can't tell you how there encrypted because it is a secret. But rest assured the level of encryption used cannot be broken due to the length of the key used. The only way to listen to the UK emergency services would be to aquire a live airwave terminal. You would then have about 30 min max to listen in before the terminal is stunned. If it is not recovered with an hour it is killed. But bear in mind the location is being tracked by GPS and by triangulation between airwave masts. I hope that answers your question.
@jamienoonan11862 жыл бұрын
@@G7OEA very insightful, thank you.
@definitelyhexedАй бұрын
@@G7OEA there is a way. It was cracked years ago. GPU's are powerful things ;)
@AnthonyChopra5 жыл бұрын
i just want to have my radio be able to have a link to some public police service so i can use it for public safety if ever the cops are needed in a major accident or if i was ever lost in a forest or so .
@LoveLestat5 жыл бұрын
My mate luckily heard that the police where coming to his house for a raid thru the radio
@autistictechgirl3 жыл бұрын
When you mention that you have a scanner a specific firmware update to decode and listen to the signals do you sell these
@morganrichardson16455 жыл бұрын
My town shops uses radios to monitor shoplifting if I bought a radio and found there channel could I listen in ?
@radiosnmore Жыл бұрын
i can listen to our police tac one dispatch useing digital P25. with a NAC code of 2AF. 866 MHZ
@DEELAD55515 жыл бұрын
Funny when you said it was buzzing back in the 90s with scanners that exactly how I remember it. I’m 36 now and when I look back we had some carryons as teenagers with our handheld scanners. I think we all had them in our back pockets when out and about 😂 miss them old days
@RingwayManchester5 жыл бұрын
Cheers mate!
@SomeMadRandomPerson6 жыл бұрын
Excellent Info, great to know some of that in detail, it was only the other day I was thinking about my scanner from years ago and wondered what u could pick up nowadays, hence how I stumbled across your video, now I know, nothing 😩 is this the same for Fire Brigade and Ambulances I take it?