fussbudget said:it might also be possible during the summer months and for a brief period in December, to pick up Mexican analog stations via "Sporadic E."
Actually such conditions can happen at any time, often driven by solar activity/sunspots. Here in Texas, Latin American DX is not uncommon. I'm hanging on to an old 13" B&W portable (with mechanical tuners!) to keep an eye out for low-band VHF DX from south of the border...with virtually no American DTV's in the way.
HoustonListener said:Also, as a more direct answer to your question, low powered Channel 43 in Houston formerly was used by a company called Accelernet for broadband internet and nothing was audible (or visible) beyond static on that channel (this venture did not work out long term and Channel 43 is now a Spanish news oriented TV station called TV Informa)
I never was able to discern any kind of signal on 43 when it was the Accelernet service. Maybe just a slight change in the "snow."
15-20 years ago, when cell phones were analog, you could actually hear the phone conversations on channels 70-83. Somewhat tricky to tune in, as they were narrowband FM transmissions being received on a comparatively wideband receiver.Mark said:I think you could also ask yourself the same kind of question, if you had a very old TV set that still gets channel 70 -83. What would you get on that? I don't have one but my guess is nothing. Any cell phones or cordless phones using those frequencies would be scrambled.
I got a kick out of congressional legislation at the time that banned receivers capable of tuning cell phone frequencies. Little did they realize that it could apply to tens of millions of TV sets.
The cell phone audio is now gone, with the shutdown of the old AMPS technology. I still can pick up some obvious datastreams, but they seem to be something other than cell phone services.