Path: utzoo!utgpu!watmath!iuvax!rutgers!orstcs!bigtime!hugo From: hugo@bigtime.fidonet.org (Hugo) Newsgroups: sci.electronics Subject: Re: Police-radar countermeasures (and rockets) Message-ID: <661.24E1D0E5@bigtime.fidonet.org> Date: 10 Aug 89 17:46:00 GMT Organization: Big Time Television Lines: 36 Quite the interesting piece on ECM, and quite informative. Having worked in ECM for a short while it is always interesting. I think, however, that even if the passive systems or those with electronic modifications are expensive, there sure seems to be a market for it. Perhaps it is the modern-age answer to the 'rich ignoring the rules'. Of such interest is the newest addition to the home ECM scene, the aircraft detector. It is essentially the same as the radar detector in that it is an alert device, but it operates by monitoring the police aircraft communication freqs and with some minor discriminator circuitry is able to determine approximate distance and course. The latter must, of course, be relatively crude. It then 'assesses' whether the aircraft poses a threat to your speed jaunt. It shouldn't take long before the police alter the frequencies or go silent, but it is interesting the amount of money people will pay to drive fast. At the ultimate end of sophistication would be --hypothetically speaking, naturally-- a CW doppler jammer computed to return the correct frequency to the radar to make it appear that you were really doing 55. It would take a bit of integration with the car's electronics/speedo and some interesting programming, but although it seems feasible I don't know if it would really work as it should or just confuse the radar. Maybe just a big chaff gun on the front of the car? L.E.Hughes (BITNET - KQM@EPAVAX or ERP@ORSTATE) -- Larry Hughes Domain: hugo@bigtime.fidonet.org UUCP: ...!{tektronix, hplabs!hp-pcd}!orstcs!bigtime!hugo via Big Time Television (bigtime.fidonet.org, 1:152/201)