A Little correction. Shanwick is fairly unique as the Controllers that separate the aircraft from each other and the radio operators that talk to them are in different countries. The Crontrollers are in Presrwick and the radio operators are in Ballygirren, 3 miles north of the Shannon Volmet site.
@RingwayManchester7 ай бұрын
Hey all, I sometimes follow inaccurate sources. I’m here to learn too. Thanks for the correction.
@Scotscan7 ай бұрын
I've always thought that the HF radio ops for Shanwick oceanic probably have the most cushy jobs in ATC, definitely not the most taxing of roles
@nickaxe7717 ай бұрын
MMMMmmm not sure thats correct......last time I looked at the Shanwick web site it said the HF operator's are based in Eire....but things could have changed.
@LennartWennberg7 ай бұрын
After my first travel to Africa I began to listen to ATC on 11.300 MHz USB. One of the controllers was the screaming Lady in Karthoum. The next trip to Africa was with Kenya 117, from Amsterdam to Nairobi. I asked if I could join the pilots in cockpit. No problem, as it was before 9/11. I sat in the cockpit for hours! The first officer was Ms Barbara Green. I told her about the screaming Lady of Khartoum, and guess who was on duty that night! "Let's see if we can wind her up a little!" said Barbara. When back in Sweden I continued to listen, and lo and behold: I was able to hear the very same aircraft with Barbara Green operating the radio! i have recordings on casette. Unforgettable!
@allwayskesse42667 ай бұрын
I listen to it 11.395 Mhz USB almost every day 😊
@chaffycrayfish43 ай бұрын
That’s a pretty wicked experience man
@arcticradio7 ай бұрын
Here in Finland I can hear Bombay, Bangkok, Shannon, Pearce, Gander, Karachi, Australia, China, Singapore……I haven’t done a serious listen for all of them but maybe one day for a box ticking exercise. The location here is superb even LRA36 in Antarctica came through really well!
@247TravelYT7 ай бұрын
I'm from Karachi city of Pakistan
@fretlessfender7 ай бұрын
There has been few great reissues of formats past decade... to name a few: vinyl records and film photography... that last one I am partly responsible 😂. Radio is another one and it is save to say that you Lewis are single handedly responsible for this... I take my hat off... Thank you my friend!
@ricequin7 ай бұрын
Shannon VOLMET is one of the most broadcast voices in history. Even longer lived than the Lincolnshire Poacher.
@MrToonfish7 ай бұрын
And longer than the DUGA-1 OTH radar obviously ! 🙂
@andrewwhittaker66227 ай бұрын
As a young boy in the 1960's i used to love litening to aircraft such as Pan Am clippers crossing the pacific To here in OZ and trying to work out their location from position reports Which you can still do with todays aircraft Just another feature to make the hobby more interesting But totally relying on satellites maybe not such a good idea because of solar activity And i guess military actions first target would be satellites for eyes ears a gps Like the closing of Shortwave stations to change to the easily bloked, censored and destroyed internet just cutting the under sea cable Good video Cheers
@barrieshepherd76947 ай бұрын
Excellent research Lewis. I used to listen / track the north atlantic aircraft on Shanwick / Gander but also spent a lot of time monitoring BA Speedbird Control on 5535 kHz. Speedbird Control used to handle company traffic for a number of airlines in addition to BA. There would be lots of interest from ordering supplies, reporting passenger loads, technical issues and medical emergencies. Speedbird Control had doctors on hand to give advice to Captains and aircrew. I remember one instance of a person ill on a Qantas flight heading for London and over Russia at the time. A doctor on the flight had determined a heart condition and that the patient needed treatment ASAP - when discussion about the nearest airport determined it was a Russian one London Control said words to the effect "The doctors here think it will be better for the patient to fly the extra hour and divert to Copenhagen" - the Captain agreed and diverted. Such was the faith in the Russian medical services!
@haydenbrown57257 ай бұрын
I had on many occasions heard the BA and Air France Concordes crossing the Atlantic from my receiver down here in New Zealand. Back then I had a Phillip PL2999 and latterly a JRC NRD-525. Not so much HF aeronautical traffic but have the odd tune-in for old times sake.
@Hiram88667 ай бұрын
As a radio nerd, when I visited Ireland a few years ago I went to to Shannon Radio site to have a look at the antennas.
@stephenjones91537 ай бұрын
Blimey the bit about SELCALL brought back memories of one of my job's as a Field Service Technician. We had Radios in our Vans and later Car's that had a SELCAL light on the front of the radio that would let me know i had been called by the Service desk Girls so i could call them back to see what they wanted me for. It worked really well. We later got given Pager,s aswell. We didn't have Mobile phone's back then 😊
@alastairbarkley65727 ай бұрын
I used to listen to Shannon back in the late 1960s. No automated speech synthesisers then - it was normally an Irish M/F duo reading out reports (? off a Telex) with occasional talking and ringing telephones in the background. The Irish fellow was particularly distinctive, announcing the station as "Shannon Air Radio" (not Volmet). One New Year's Eve, he sounding distinctly well lubricated. The long distance air corridors back then were much more sparsely populated, a certain romance (to this young lad) about aircraft making the long hops from the Americas, hopefully listening out for Shannon as a marker of journey's end. That's the magic of SW listening - a pity radio waves didn't propagate as that boy imagined; I expect 5kW Shannon could often have been heard in New York.
@mattbates68877 ай бұрын
I remember listening to Shannon ATC back then to, with both the male and female air traffic controllers. Their Irish accent was always a delight to listen to, fab times!
@cloudmansteve7 ай бұрын
This bring back memories! I well remember the RAF used to have an airfield colour state transmission using the callsign Architect. My most exciting communications I heard (and still have them on tape!) was Helen Sharman on board the MIR space stion, and Richard Branson whilst on his Virgin Flyer Balloon crossing the Atlantic.
@Mortthemoose7 ай бұрын
Blimey!!!
@JJiMedia7 ай бұрын
In addition to VOLMET's saying "NO SIG" from time to time, you sometimes also get "CAV OK", meaning "Ceiling And Visibility OK".
@kissingbanditt7 ай бұрын
My favourite band to monitor and listen too is the air band. Local and long distance. Excellent video. Thumbs up 👍🏼
@donbunson50317 ай бұрын
I like to pair it up with flight radar. It's relaxing. I use to hate the noise as the planes go over my house but I make the best of it now and can tell what's up there just by ear.
@RCAvhstape7 ай бұрын
I find air traffic radio to be very relaxing for some reason. I sometimes put my Eton radio on the local airport control tower frequency, set the off timer, turn the volume down a bit and drift off to sleep to it. Almost like listening to distant train horns, it's somehow comforting to hear people traveling through the skies at night communicating.
@dougtaylor77247 ай бұрын
You are a bottom pit of interesting subjects and information. I never know what you are going to pull out next. Loved the content! Thanks.
@zainon-c5o7 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video with the technical specifications. I am a SWL from Rome and I listen to the main Volmet and HF voice stations almost every evening. Good job.
@petermainwaringsx7 ай бұрын
I worked on Collins Rockwell HF Transmitters, in the middle east, in the early 80's. Many KW into huge log periodic antenna mounted on rotators. I also had a pal who was a ham and an airline pilot who used to work HF aeronautical mobile, and I believe many of pilots who were hams did the same. I can't see that happening these days. Thanks for refreshing my memory with this interesting look at present day HF comms with an aeronautical twist.
@arthurtwoshedsjackson62667 ай бұрын
It still happens today. There are a few pilots who have an amateur radio licence and operate HF from a commercial airline
@petermainwaringsx7 ай бұрын
@@arthurtwoshedsjackson6266 Thanks for the heads up.
@kieranhiggins70317 ай бұрын
VOLMET stations are also very handy propagation beacons, useful for testing conditions and receivers. Another frequency pair worth monitoring aree the SAR frequencies on 3023kHz and 5680kHz. Used to be very busy when RAF had SAR role, Kinloss Rescue always especially busy during Scottish winter mountaineering season.
@stillthakoolest7 ай бұрын
Great synopsis Lewis. One of my favorite things to listen to. HF ACARS and marine DSC transmissions are also fun to look for and can be decoded using free software.
@rogerlafrance63557 ай бұрын
Right, most airlines and such use digital satellite backed up with HF ACARS so you don't hear many position reports on voice.
@brenstratters20267 ай бұрын
This was a "blast" from the past. Back in the 80s I use to go to sleep listening to London VOLMET main and London VOLMET South on VHF. Thanks for posting. All the best.
@danihensley7 ай бұрын
This is some great nostalgia that brings back years of great memories from the time when radio actually had relevance in the world and actually had a use. Sadly, radio has been replaced with electronic communications via the internet that nobody can monitor.
@rjy89607 ай бұрын
This is absolute gold, Lewis! I didn't know how Volmet worked regarding allocation and where I could hear it. I do use Shannon for getting an idea of conditions on 60m but was unaware of the other frequencies they use. Well done on Oz!
@oldmanc27 ай бұрын
Absolutely excellent video. Amongst other activities, I process inbound and outbound ACARS MVT (movement) messages to and from our company aircraft worldwide. Your well-written structured video is a pleasure to watch and I learnt a lot new information. Thank you!
@Nick20118817 ай бұрын
I wish this channel had a Discord server to discuss all things radio and shortwave
@ivandubinsky18577 ай бұрын
Not VOLMET but 8891 kHz, USB, Gander, Newfoundland is interesting to listen to. They work all the North American - European flights flying a great circle route in the Arctic regions.
@boilerroombob7 ай бұрын
Sqawk sqawk!! Great video lewis ...its alway good to leave on the hf coms in the background as your doing paperwork 😊😊
@gregorydobson43077 ай бұрын
That Australian volmet was a great qsl.
@sivoltage7 ай бұрын
Brilliant, been watching your channel for years, always very interesting. So much so I got my self the foundation license!! Passed it on weds. Im just waiting for my call sign now, then hopefully catch you on the hills round Manchester.
@fretlessfender7 ай бұрын
That would be something! Congrats!
@sivoltage7 ай бұрын
I’m in west Leeds near Otley so I might have to climb some trees 😂
@Kamikazepinguin7 ай бұрын
for the fans of digital modes: DWD (german weather service / Deutscher WetterDienst) broadcasts maritime weather-information on HF over RTTY, HFFax, and some marine-specific protocolls. they have some handy PDFs with timetables and frequencys on their homepage. the TX is located in Pinneberg near Hamburg and has a sortiment of transmitters for the different frequencies, ranging from 1kW to 20kW.
@G8HCB7 ай бұрын
Shannon is always clear here in the UK. Other VOLMET freq reports are great for checking HF propagation. Never ventured out to the other HF aircraft/weather freqs. Great research as always. VOLMET is well explained. Gives us radio people something to check out giving all those regions and transmitter locations you pointed out. Cheers de G8HCB
@jameyevans297 ай бұрын
I listen to ARINC in the U.S. Always wondered what their station looked like. Thanks for the video
@StreakyP7 ай бұрын
It used to be fun listening to Shandwick when concord was around as in those days everyone reported knots but speedbird concord reported Mach. Also worth noting a quick ref to all the freqs is in the Klingenfuss book. A useful ref for everything that moves.
@Brother_Pugz7 ай бұрын
Very instructive for most aircraft, but If you are attempting to listen to the voice traffic from a United Airlines flight, it's easier to walk out your front door and pick up the cockpit voice recorder from off your front lawn. Love the vids man!
@brendancooney94017 ай бұрын
Ouch!😂
@alabamared25687 ай бұрын
I want to thank you lewis for giving me the right information on listening to airband. I tried 7 different airband receivers. 3 were airband prominent the others were radios that had airband with other bands and for my area and me which I'm about 40 miles in-between 2 busy airports the only thing that worked was a bcd996p2 that worked flawlessly on picking up both airports and aircraft. I did use the Moonraker desktop discone antenna I had a portable yeasu Sony and Midland airband receivers that did not pick up anything. I had my bearcat BCD996P2 programmed with proscan I can get both airports. Ty very much lewis for the helpful information cheers!!!
@donbunson50317 ай бұрын
Someone has just pinged me on the mesh from 30000 feet. Seems to be genuine as they said what height they were at and a Newcastle to Tenerife flight matched. They were over the wirral when I got the ping. They were gone in seconds too. There is also a kite or two been launched in the last two days. My first week on the mesh has been great fun. Random and quirky but fun.
@donbunson50317 ай бұрын
TUI Airways 4GT. It was 30'000 feet above the Wirral when they messaged 'Greetings from 30'000 feet people' They were going close to 500mph too.
@Allan_aka_RocKITEman7 ай бұрын
*_"kite"?_* {And YES, I know what the word _"Kite"_ means...😊 I just do not understand in this context.}
@DarkSygil6667 ай бұрын
Airplane pilots are able to send messages to people on shortwave radio? How do they do that?
@JamieCrookes7 ай бұрын
Ah, you're a good lad Lewis. Proud to have you as a fellow notherner.
@RingwayManchester7 ай бұрын
Thanks brother
@BenTrem427 ай бұрын
Bringing back memories! 🙂 cheers --VE6IU (VO1LQ Gander, 1973)
@ramjet4025Ай бұрын
When I was a kid in the 1950's I used to listen to AM HF aircraft and sent off letters and got back real QSL cards from even the flying doc aircraft
@NJF607 ай бұрын
Thank you for the excellent breakdown of these Aero Frequencies
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
Some of my earliest SSB listening on HF when I got a radio in the early to mid 1980s was HF airband. The frequencies of 5598, 5616 and 8891 are ingrained on my memory.
@mattbates68877 ай бұрын
As a shortwave listener in the 70s, I listened to both Shannon and Shanwick Oceanic and other aircraft using an Ekco AM broadcast tube receiver, plus 100 ft end fed wire plugged into the external aerial socket. With the much lower band noise of the time , down to atmospheric backround noise, meant it was very easy to hear the much weaker aircraft transmissions on AM. Fast forward later to the complete switch over to USB in the following decades, and improved communications RX FRG7, proved to be a listening delight. Heard many interesting aircraft transmissions, from all over the world during sunspot maxima. All you had to do was listen at the right time of day or night, and know the primary frequencies. Much more information was passed over the airwaves back then, so it was always very busy and interesting to listen to. Sometimes with the lightning static crashes, it got even more interesting lol! Lots of man made electrical noise around these days though, spoils listening quite a bit on HF, unless you live well away from LED and SMPS QRN .
@357Shakey6 ай бұрын
Just happened to catch this video while searching SWL vids. Really informative and well produced. I just subscribed to your channel - nice!
@RingwayManchester6 ай бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@nofider17 ай бұрын
Thanks Lewis, Been listening to HF long haul traffic since the early 80's. My better half thinks I'm bonkers.... She may be right. :-)
@thomassabia57507 ай бұрын
The US Coast Guard Weather Iron Mike is the same voice that the weather service uses
@Allan_aka_RocKITEman7 ай бұрын
It amazes me you can receive an aviation transmission from Australia in the UK with just an outdoor longwire antenna
@alasdair41617 ай бұрын
The magic of skip. I recall in the early 80's talking to guys in the US from my home in Adelaide Australia using a 12 watt SSB CB radio and a home made 3 element yagi. Some nights they'd hit 9x5 and with them would come a wave of chatter noise from all the others dotted around the propagation path. That was another solar peak time making skip incredible after sundown.
@apc1087 ай бұрын
Nice introduction and overview. I'm near London and I've never picked up the Alice Springs broadcasts, but I have picked up two weather broadcasts from Australia, which, in a forum online, were explained firmly to me, 'are definitely not Volmets'! They are two stations broadcasting general and maritime weather from the Australian BOM, or Bureau of Meteorology. On 12365 kHz, usually in the afternoon hours in the UK, you can sometimes pick up VMC Charleville, Queensland, broadcasting weather for Australia East. Often, just nearby, on 12362, you can hear VMW, from Wiluna in Western Australia, broadcasting weather for, you guessed it, Australia West. A rabbit-hole that your viewers might want to enjoy are the maritime weather reports from all around the Mediterranean. These are often low-power broadcasts for specific areas of the Med. The Italian service has many such frequencies and there several for Greece and Turkey. They do broadcast in their native language mostly, but there are scheduled English broadcasts at times throughout the day. Handy if you fancy taking your yacht our for a cruise. Generally between 2500 kHz and 2900 kHz. Keep up the good work!
@vu3mes7 ай бұрын
My favorite is 5505 Shannon volmet..it's also a pointer to propogation towards Europe. I have many video recordings of ATCS worldwide in my youtube channel. Also have a flightradar24 nod at home where I can track every aircraft in the sky anywhere in the world.
@WyeindependantMedia7 ай бұрын
thanks for giving us the courage to experiment !
@W8RIT17 ай бұрын
@4:11 are you sure that a Gander Volmet freq is at 3745? That would put it in the 75M ham band for voice.
@paulsradiohacks7 ай бұрын
Again excellent video and I will give these frequencies a listen too.
@nightw4tchman7 ай бұрын
Thank you for reminding me what VOLMET was. I remember hearing it years a go but couldn't remember the name.
@subarubrat2 ай бұрын
Karachi and Bangkok are the ones I hear most regularly.I use them as a good indicator to see if the Echo Charlie 45m band is open.
@LexieAssassin7 ай бұрын
I remember finding an online radio thingy many months back that was in I think Utah (closest I could find to me) and there were some weird things I heard. I recall getting what appeared to be military air traffic control briefly, and various bits of weird sounds that were probably data of some kind. I tried to record some of it, but going back to the recording I found there wasn't any audio for some reason.
@LimestoneCoastCustoms7 ай бұрын
As a mobile HF operator (not that often) here in Australia, I used to be able to tune into Radio Australia, ABC to hear news etc. Unfortunately I believe that service has now been discontinued. I mainly use my radio when travelling remotely so services like that were great! I found some weather forecasting but they all seem to be the other side of the country & I've been unable to find local stuff which is a shame. I'm only licenced to use the frequencies that my radio club has but at least I can listen to others but not being able to ask for info on air is a pain. I realise you are in a different country, but i was wondering where a good place might be to find out what frequencies I might be able to use? I have Googled it extensively but have not found much. I must try the Australian frequency to see if I can pick that up. Cheers!
@markt.34547 ай бұрын
Love this! And thanks for the origin of the word "Volmet".
@CarolineFord17 ай бұрын
I remember listening to Shannon Volmet as a teenager.
@WHNorthcote7 ай бұрын
Look at NAVTEX on 490 and 518 KHz as that is coastal WX and comes from places like St. Bees, Portpatrick ETC. 518 is a general message and gives out warnings of UXB and danger to shipping while 490 is offshore WX. As it is coastal I have picked up French TX and some northern Germany and Norwegian signals as well.
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
I was going to mention NAVTEX and WEFAX as perhaps the next thing to delve into. Obviously requires some sort of computer.
@WHNorthcote7 ай бұрын
@@paulsengupta971 Fldigi for WEFAX and seaTTY for NAVTEX. It is more dedicated than some other programs.
@graphicventures5 ай бұрын
Nice video Lewis, cheers from the UAE
@johnnorth93557 ай бұрын
Blimey and theres me still stuck on classic hits !
@Mortthemoose7 ай бұрын
This channel JUST appeared on my recommendations. I know nothing about radios! 😅 QUESTION: I'm 59. Back when i was a kid, the most exciting thing for my friend and I to do, was to listen in to aircraft pilot transmissions on the radio! 😅 It was just an ordinary radio... I'm guessing short wave and long wave? Could someone please explain to me why we were able to pick these transmissions up? I have a feeling that we also got faint police conversations too, but I'm not sure. I think we picked them up, but they were too fuzzy to really hear any details. I loved listening to pirate radio too! It always fascinated me, to think that they were broadcasting from the North Sea! My other favourite thing to listen to was the shipping forecast! 😅 ....imagining all these shipping areas out there, and what sort of conditions fishermen were working in! PS. We would have been listening from Norfolk, Endland, uk. Thanks 💐
@SpinStar19567 ай бұрын
Great video! 😊 HF is to me the most wonderful band, and one I grew up with. It’s sad to see so much decommissioning of stations, when they hold the ultimate in decentralized-reliability. When I was a kid, there was hardly a clear space; and you could see the frequency shifts with time of day. I was a bit taken aback in the spread of aircraft frequencies (even within each band of propagation); I’d think they’d be much more closely spaced for optimizing the aircraft’s antenna system. Do you know the details of the aircraft’s HF antennas and/or tuning/matching networks? Do the aircraft actual have just a simple single fixed antenna? Maybe another video idea? Thanks & 73 to you… 😊
@dcmoisan7 ай бұрын
Not a VOLMET, but Canadian military has its aero weather broadcasts on 6754. They identify with "Trenton Military".
@omlandjim7 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Thanks! I noticed the your your Icom receiver was set up for LSB. Aren't most if not all of the frequencies you mentioned operating on USB?
@RingwayManchester7 ай бұрын
That was just stock footage
@arabianrailfan77627 ай бұрын
Before the collapse of maritime HF use, there were extensive broadcasts of MET information to ships. Mostly in Morse - often using a number code - with a few audio such as the USCG signal you mentioned. For an example, listen to the opening few bars of Planet Claire by the B52s which features a recording of a MET transmission from CFH Halifax, Canada
@MirlitronOne7 ай бұрын
The St Eval VOLMET on 5450 kHz is a great way of assessing propagation on the 60m amateur band.
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
And Shannon on 5505.
@raymondmartin67377 ай бұрын
Did you get a Gander, and Goose Bay it, ir, Newfoundland and Labrador? 😊
@cutrer017 ай бұрын
Very informative. Thank you!
@Zacmowerman7 ай бұрын
Awesome video, i do abit of SWL in the evenings here in NZ i listen to Auckland radio on 8867 as well as Brisbane radio on 13261 and san Francisco on 8834 or 8836 i believe its somewhere around that
@KrisHerzog7 ай бұрын
listening to Trenton Military VOLMET on 6.745 MHz USB - I just got my RM recommended GA800 Active Loop on a RTL-SDR V4. Antenna is away from electronics, using SDR#, Sturtevant, WI, USA
@mosmix66807 ай бұрын
There is also HFDL or HF ACARS that you can decode with software like PC-HFDL and then plot it on the map using DX Atlas which i find more fun than just listening to weather info
@BlackHoleForge5 ай бұрын
I have been using an old dish TV satellite and an FM antenna to listen to the planes that fly overhead. I have been using it with a digital SDR and an online database. It tells me the call name of the aircraft, its destination, and with the database I get a little bit of information about the aircraft as well as pictures.
@ArnieDXer7 ай бұрын
I used to enjoy looking for ATC transmissions popping up on various HF frequencies both on my own receivers and online SDRs around the world. However, it's been a while since the last time I did it. Still though, I found a few errors in your video: 1) the "Australian" Volmet you recorded is actually Thai. Bangkok Volmet broadcasts at 10 & 40 minutes past the hour on 6676 kHz, while Australian is on the air at both TOH & BOH on the same frequency. This also applies to 2965 & 11387 kHz but these are active part-time. 2) You wrote 3745 kHz for a frequency for Gander Volmet, whereas it actually uses 3485 kHz. 3) SELCAL used two pairs of audio tones, but your recording captures only one. I don't know if it was an error on the station's side or a glitch in your recording, but something's definitely wrong. And you repeated it a couple times! Lewis, I appreciate your effort introducing shortwave radio to the general public, but please, be more accurate! 73 :)
@Sterlingjob7 ай бұрын
I like playing with the HF on the aircraft at Heathrow though haven’t found any broadcasts except Shannon! Was hoping to find a radio ham to chat to!
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
When a friend installed a (widebanded) ham radio set in his aeroplane ready for a transatlantic crossing, I tested it out on the ham bands first.
@SDR-DXobserver7 ай бұрын
Friends ask me frequently how to track an aircraft from its departure to its arrival. Maybe that is a tip for a future video. Like your video's for some time and always like them as they are very informative. Keep up the nice job. 73'
@G0RXA7 ай бұрын
Well done, cracking video. Big subject which as you say could fill a series, would that be a good idea? As well as my own kit I use the websdr in Enschede which I find has excellent coverage especially 8879 where both Mumbai and Shanwick can be heard. It’s interesting listening to the holiday flights to places like Tenerife using the oceanic routes all tracked at the same time on FR24. Good work Lewis 👍
@Ztbmrc17 ай бұрын
Thanks for this information. I have been listening to hf aviation already since the 80's. However not much in recent times. Good to see the 52450 kHz RAF Volmet location. Recently I received it here in the south east of the Netherlands stronger than Shannon Volmet.. What I found interesting is the selcal you let us hear. Apparently they use a different system nowadays. The ones I use to know is those with the double tone, a low and than a higher tone. What you have let us hear here, is a short tone follow by a digital burst. I will keep an eye on that!
@GeorgeLiquor7 ай бұрын
I hear aircraft transmitting on the NATs, but I never hear VOLMETs. I can pick up Gander and RCAF Trenton VOLMETs easily though
@mapavus4 ай бұрын
I am a complete newbie with all of this. I know hardly anything, but it's mighty interesting. Question. If you are in the UK using your short wave radio, how are you picking up Australian and Canadian Signals? Are the radio waves going across the oceans?
@ramjet4025Ай бұрын
Volmets are now 99% redundant, 30 years ago, it was a different story. HF frequencies are pretty much also overtaken by Satelite and internet. Its in places like PNG where HF still is used on a day to day basis. In Canada for example the only place I've ever seen an aviation HF radio was Baker Lake and they told me they could not recall when they received the last message. Back 30 years go, yes, HF was used in Canada and that frequency went back to the 1930's You mentioned Australia In about 1979 the HF was AM, and changed to USB its still used there for remote coms but overtaken by text messages via internet and mobile phone.
@typograf625 ай бұрын
I sometimes listen to from Aarhus Airport (approach). It is on VHF and quite clear (it's aound 12 km away). Can be funny some times.
@michaelellard46647 ай бұрын
I have a poor site but I love the challenge to receive them. Doing since I was a lad.
@boweandrew37 ай бұрын
Fascinating video
@paulstubbs76787 ай бұрын
Interesting, I first though I would be unlikely to hear a lot of these as I'm on the wrong side of the planet, then one of your first was in Australia, where I am, so I'd better have a listen, However with a S9 suburban noise floor I'm not expecting much. Actually as the vid started I kind of assumed it'd be about using remote listening stations via the internet, probably a better solution for me given my noise floor.
@TomSmith-ls5rn7 ай бұрын
Another wonderful video. Thank you!
@BlackHoleForge5 ай бұрын
4:12 are all those small circles around the main building the actual antennas?
@giovafra617 ай бұрын
A very interesting video. Good job !!!
@DarkSygil6667 ай бұрын
When they list the wind speed atmospheric pressure dew point, it sounds like the ATIS information you use before take off.
@charleshunziker74167 ай бұрын
I once heard British Airways flight 292 Concorde talking to Santa Maria and New York
@KarlWitsman7 ай бұрын
Quite the catch to pick up an Australian station!
@Aengus427 ай бұрын
I remember selcal tones as being two toned. One after the other... Buy the one you played was s single tone. Have they changed?
@dodo1opps2 ай бұрын
Do you ever cover the "Shipping Forcast"?
@smorrisby7 ай бұрын
At 5:39you described the call sign as United November November. I assume you meant Uniform November November?
@Allan_aka_RocKITEman7 ай бұрын
_Chesapeake, Virginia, USA?_ I live not too far from there...😊
@kreuner117 ай бұрын
I also heard ACARS on HF bands
@bobz37795 ай бұрын
Why don't they use SSB instead of AM? I know SSB is a little distorted but you can get more range.
@VidsWotIMade7 ай бұрын
Very interesting stuff. Can I ask what you use for an HF antenna? Ron G6IWK and EI8GMB
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
According to an answer below, a 25m length of speaker wire.
@dan_from_australia7 ай бұрын
Amazing that HF can be used for aircraft comms. I would have assumed that the band was too noisy for this purpose.
@dieterbuschbaum69047 ай бұрын
fantastic
@Everythingallthetime6667 ай бұрын
I can get rostov all the way here in Maine USA. Must be coming over the artic.
@anthonypope84297 ай бұрын
Great video how much are the are the radios to buy like the one you use I have a few scanners but I want a better one to pick up more aircraft the ones I use I can only hear the pilot and not ATC
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
The Icom 7300 in this video is a HF transceiver, and overkill just for listening. You can use any SSB capable SW radio, just get a good long wire antenna up. For listening to VHF airband, it's not a case of the quality of radio/scanner, it's how far you are from the transmitter site (maybe the airport) and how high you can get your antenna.
@dodo1opps7 ай бұрын
This sounds like the HF version of the Automated Terminal Information Service (ATIS) in the US. Alot of the information is available by telephone...