Quote:
Originally Posted by n8yx
FWIW, I used to hear a LOT of 300-baud packet on 27.540 in years past. These guys were using the F6FBB packet BBS software package and some were gatewayed into the AMATEUR packet nets...
Yup, CB packet took off in the early 90s, with 27540 as the main day freq.
A tentative call sign system was even established, and at one point just before the hammer fell, it was estimated there were approximately 200 U.S. CB packet stations, plus numerous foreign stations. Enter the FCC Field Operations Bureau with the Powder Springs Monitoring station in the lead and dozens of NALs were issued, as well as many on site inspections. The Powder Springs Monitoring Station had been systematically detecting and identifying U.S. CB packet stations in preparation for a simultaneous nationwide bust. That went down in 1994, if I recall, and in one 48 hour period, dozens of U.S. packet stations got a knock at their door, while dozens of others received NALs in the mail. If you had been watching CB packet activity closely at that time, virtually all U.S. CB packet activity went suddenly silent. The few packet stations which had not yet been identified
closed up shop permanently, after word of the nationwide bust spread quickly.
Fast forward to 2009. There is no more FCC FOB, and all monitoring stations were permanently closed in 1996. The FCC Field Operations Bureau, along with the hundreds of employees which staffed it, was abolished by Reed Hundt in 1996. The FCC today has no monitoring network and no monitoring capability, not to mention the loss of the highly skilled engineers and technicians which staffed these facilities. All that remains today is a limited ability in Laurel, MD to take a bearing on a signal of interest, plus a few resident engineers spread out across the entire U.S. Traditional monitoring for enforcement died in 1996.
-excerp from qrz.com today
Is this true?
Are the CB freq's no longer being monitored by the FCC?
Are CB'ers using digital modes on 11 meter?
If its true, then let me save you the trouble - 'Where the heck have I been?"
Originally Posted by n8yx
FWIW, I used to hear a LOT of 300-baud packet on 27.540 in years past. These guys were using the F6FBB packet BBS software package and some were gatewayed into the AMATEUR packet nets...
Yup, CB packet took off in the early 90s, with 27540 as the main day freq.
A tentative call sign system was even established, and at one point just before the hammer fell, it was estimated there were approximately 200 U.S. CB packet stations, plus numerous foreign stations. Enter the FCC Field Operations Bureau with the Powder Springs Monitoring station in the lead and dozens of NALs were issued, as well as many on site inspections. The Powder Springs Monitoring Station had been systematically detecting and identifying U.S. CB packet stations in preparation for a simultaneous nationwide bust. That went down in 1994, if I recall, and in one 48 hour period, dozens of U.S. packet stations got a knock at their door, while dozens of others received NALs in the mail. If you had been watching CB packet activity closely at that time, virtually all U.S. CB packet activity went suddenly silent. The few packet stations which had not yet been identified
closed up shop permanently, after word of the nationwide bust spread quickly.
Fast forward to 2009. There is no more FCC FOB, and all monitoring stations were permanently closed in 1996. The FCC Field Operations Bureau, along with the hundreds of employees which staffed it, was abolished by Reed Hundt in 1996. The FCC today has no monitoring network and no monitoring capability, not to mention the loss of the highly skilled engineers and technicians which staffed these facilities. All that remains today is a limited ability in Laurel, MD to take a bearing on a signal of interest, plus a few resident engineers spread out across the entire U.S. Traditional monitoring for enforcement died in 1996.
-excerp from qrz.com today
Is this true?
Are the CB freq's no longer being monitored by the FCC?
Are CB'ers using digital modes on 11 meter?
If its true, then let me save you the trouble - 'Where the heck have I been?"
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