[FedCom] FBI Alpha 3 in Boston
Tom Greenwood
TheGreenwoods1 at Verizon.Net
Sun Apr 30 10:22:32 EDT 2006
Bill
Thanks. After I posted and started to reflect on it, I recalled Aggie being
that way also.
I am curious as to how many of the old sites I had identified in the late
80's and early 90's are still in operation.
Tom
-----Original Message-----
From: fedcom-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:fedcom-bounces at mailman.qth.net]On Behalf Of Bill
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2006 10:09 AM
To: Discussion of Federal Government Communications
Subject: [FedCom] FBI Alpha 3 in Boston
Tom, you mention Copicut, for MA/RI there was all Aggie
for ME/NH and Northern MA from Mt. Aggie in Maine.
Bill Dunn N1/KUG
Cruise Ship Frequencies
http://home.earthlink.net/~ecps92/cruise_ships.htm [Updated]
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tom Greenwood" <TheGreenwoods1 at Verizon.Net>
To: "Discussion of Federal Government Communications"
<fedcom at mailman.qth.net>; "Bill" <ecps92 at earthlink.net>
Sent: Saturday, April 29, 2006 3:17 PM
Subject: RE: [FedCom] FBI Alpha 3 in Boston
> The mysterious Athol site appears that it may have also at one time been
> the
> western terminus of the now defunct 1.7/1.8 GHz microwave network.
> Strangely, as best as I was able to determine, it was not atop Bearsden
> Road
> where all of the towers are located as I tried to locate it there but was
> unable to find it many years ago. Both the forward link from Mt.
> Wachusett
> and the return link from Athol to Mt. Wachusett were audible atop the
> hill,
> but were weak. The exact location in Athol to this day remains a mystery.
>
> In answer to your question about the repeaters, in the early 90's (and
> somewhat still in effect today as best as can be determined) the multi
> site
> channels were effectively broken up to simultaneously cover individual
> states, i.e., there were 4 networks for the Boston Division,
> Massachusetts,
> Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Maine. There was some degree of overlap
> along state borders such as the old Copicut Hill site in Fall River being
> connected with the Rhode Island network. There were also a lot of
> discrete
> repeaters to cover individual cities in addition to short term repeaters
> that would come and go with various operations. Finally, there as at
> least
> one specific simplex frequency that was universal across the area
> controlled
> by the Boston Division that all tied back to Boston. In the late 80's and
> early 90's I believe it was 167.3625. Many of these simplex sites were
> ultimately brought back to microwave hubs on the old 414/419 MHz systems
> that were in place in several location around New England.
>
> 73's
>
> Tom, N1JQB
> Metro West Boston
>
>
>
/fedcom
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