Posted from Usenet by W3VS... To rec.ham-radio and sci.electronics: Recent postings have asked about modifying scanners to receive the aircraft band. I use the following cheap/dirty (but educational) method whenever I go plane-watching or must kill time at an airport. This article was originally posted about 2 years ago on rec.ham-radio: RECEIVING AIRCRAFT FREQUENCIES ON TWO METERS Most 2-meter receivers and VHF scanners will detect strong signals from a portion of the VHF aircraft-communication band, by making constructive use of Image Response, a normally-undesirable attribute of superheterodyne receivers: 1. Consult the owner's manual to find the first intermediate frequency (i-f) of your receiver. It's usually near 10.7 MHz. 2. Multiply the i-f by 2 and add to the desired aircraft frequency. Set your receiver to the sum. Example: To listen to 124.15 MHz with an Icom IC-2AT handheld transceiver: The IC-2AT's i-f is 10.695 MHz. 2 x 10.695 MHz = 21.39 MHz. 124.15 MHz + 21.39 MHz = 145.54 MHz. Set receiver to 145.54. Aircraft radio is AM but most transmitters contain enough FM or incidental phase modulation so that they are easily readable on narrow-band FM receivers, depending upon the type of FM detector in the receiver. It's usually necessary to increase the volume-control setting. Of course, multimode receivers work better for this application than do FM-only types. The catch-- Sensitivity is very low. You must be less than a mile from the transmitter (2-3 miles with a beam antenna). Receiver designers do their best to eliminate image response; the poorer its image rejection, the BETTER a receiver works for intentionally receiving image frequencies. The tuned circuits in the front end of the receiver reject image frequencies. A sufficiently strong signal can overwhelm the filters or couple directly into the mixer. To deliberately degrade image rejection, try installing a temporary jumper to bypass the input filters, or couple the antenna directly to the receiver's mixer input. Even the low sensitivity can be turned to advantage: A friend who services aircraft radios uses his handheld 2-m ham transceiver tuned to an image frequency to make preliminary tests of transmitters in parked planes. If he hears nothing, the aircraft radio is faulty. The aircraft band (118-136 MHz) is much larger than the 2-meter ham band. The image response of a ham-band-only receiver covers only from about 122.6 to 126.6 MHz, a well-populated and interesting segment. VHF scanners can receive most or all of the aircraft band by the image technique, as can certain ham rigs which are modifiable for wider frequency range. Two-meter repeater owners are often dismayed and mystified by aircraft interference on "their" frequency. The only solution is to replace the receiver with one having a different intermediate frequency. Before establishing a repeater it is wise to calculate the receiver image frequency and check for activity there. FAA regulations prohibit operation of electronic devices by passengers aboard commercial aircraft, without permission from the operator. "Operator" means the airline management, not the pilot. Pacemakers and a few other devices are excepted. One reason for the regulation is that local-oscillator radiation from radio receivers can interfere with the plane's navigation or communications equipment. -- Frank Reid W9MKV reid@gold.bacs.indiana.edu