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#1
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Larry, this one's for you.
I don't normally get excited by antennas but motoring up to this array as
the turn around point of our trip gave me the feeling you get when you look at one of the biggest and most impressive of anything. 26 1000 foot tall towers all interconnected with the most fantastic web of wires and bed spring like arrangements you can imagine. It transmits at 25 Mhz to tell our nuke subs which cities to vaporize. If there is a war, presumably a nuke will go off just above it within one or two milliseconds of the ones that go off over Washington DC. Strange to think that this wild and remote spot is Ground 0.1. http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Cutler.jpg We motored right up to the dock where the sign says, "Do not approach within 300 feet." With typical government common sense, the type size is such that the sign can't be read until you are within 100 feet. No signs of security or any human presence except for a single van parked next to the administration building. There is a building with about a dozen very large diesel engine exhausts sticking out of the roof so I imagine this sucker pumps out some real power. There is something in the cruising guide about the transmissions from this facility also being a prime means of measuring sunspot or solar activity due to their effect on the ionosphere. You can see the layout on Google Earth right at the end of our trip. They don't bother to hide the towers on the chart, unlike the more impressive structure that used to be in Prospect Harbor. In the curious blank spot on the chart used to be a circle of towers about a mile in diameter and nearly as tall as these. Around the top of the towers ran a flat coil of huge diameter cable. The strands were maybe a foot in diameter and the entire coil was wider than a highway. I don't know when this was dismantled but I think it was still there when I went through in the mid 80's. No sign of the remains or tower foundations visible on Google Earth that I can see. -- Roger Long |
#2
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
On Sun, 24 Aug 2008 10:25:48 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote: I don't normally get excited by antennas but motoring up to this array as the turn around point of our trip gave me the feeling you get when you look at one of the biggest and most impressive of anything. 26 1000 foot tall towers all interconnected with the most fantastic web of wires and bed spring like arrangements you can imagine. It transmits at 25 Mhz to tell our nuke subs which cities to vaporize. If there is a war, presumably a nuke will go off just above it within one or two milliseconds of the ones that go off over Washington DC. Strange to think that this wild and remote spot is Ground 0.1. http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Cutler.jpg How did you like Roque Island? We could see the antennas at Cutler form there 3 years ago but did not go as close as you did. |
#3
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
"Wayne.B" wrote
How did you like Roque Island? We could see the antennas at Cutler form there 3 years ago but did not go as close as you did. Incredible place. It's reputation as one of the the crown jewels of the coast is well deserved. I saw a good deal of it by kayak in the early 80's but never realized that the famous beach is actually on the harbor side. The chart shows sand on the north and I was pretty impressed with that when I walked on it then, even though it was in steady drizzle. Speaking of drizzle, there are a few impressive outcrops of rock along Great Head. I paddled under one to get out of the rain and stuck my paddle up above my head to hold myself in place against the current. There was a "clink clink" and I realized that a several hundred pound piece of rock was loose enough in the overhang to move easily with my paddle. I scooted out of there in a hurry. We saw the rock fallen on this trip and I though how easily my legs and kayak end could have been sticking out from under it. Think what this newsgroup would have been spared We got a picture of it but I haven't gone through them all yet. We didn't have the best weather at Roque but stopped for a long walk on the beach which was a high point of the trip. We also took a picture of the northernmost inch of sand beach an the U.S. East Coast. -- Roger Long |
#4
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
You are only off by a factor of about a million. The ultra low frequency
Cutter array transmits around 45 HERTZ but as long as a sub's antenna is less than about 60' below the surface it can receive the signal. I wonder what the bit rate is. I don't see how they can transmit more than 2 or 3 characters a second. My neighbors accused me of trying to receive those signals when I hung up a 160 meter delta loop around the yard but it is only 529 feet around. 45 Hz requires 22,000 feet. They really would get upset about that! :-) -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "Roger Long" wrote in message ... I don't normally get excited by antennas but motoring up to this array as the turn around point of our trip gave me the feeling you get when you look at one of the biggest and most impressive of anything. 26 1000 foot tall towers all interconnected with the most fantastic web of wires and bed spring like arrangements you can imagine. It transmits at 25 Mhz to tell our nuke subs which cities to vaporize. If there is a war, presumably a nuke will go off just above it within one or two milliseconds of the ones that go off over Washington DC. Strange to think that this wild and remote spot is Ground 0.1. http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Cutler.jpg We motored right up to the dock where the sign says, "Do not approach within 300 feet." With typical government common sense, the type size is such that the sign can't be read until you are within 100 feet. No signs of security or any human presence except for a single van parked next to the administration building. There is a building with about a dozen very large diesel engine exhausts sticking out of the roof so I imagine this sucker pumps out some real power. There is something in the cruising guide about the transmissions from this facility also being a prime means of measuring sunspot or solar activity due to their effect on the ionosphere. You can see the layout on Google Earth right at the end of our trip. They don't bother to hide the towers on the chart, unlike the more impressive structure that used to be in Prospect Harbor. In the curious blank spot on the chart used to be a circle of towers about a mile in diameter and nearly as tall as these. Around the top of the towers ran a flat coil of huge diameter cable. The strands were maybe a foot in diameter and the entire coil was wider than a highway. I don't know when this was dismantled but I think it was still there when I went through in the mid 80's. No sign of the remains or tower foundations visible on Google Earth that I can see. -- Roger Long |
#5
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
Glenn Ashmore wrote:
You are only off by a factor of about a million. The ultra low frequency Cutter array transmits around 45 HERTZ but as long as a sub's antenna is less than about 60' below the surface it can receive the signal. I wonder what the bit rate is. I don't see how they can transmit more than 2 or 3 characters a second. My neighbors accused me of trying to receive those signals when I hung up a 160 meter delta loop around the yard but it is only 529 feet around. 45 Hz requires 22,000 feet. They really would get upset about that! :-) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency -- Richard (remove the X to email) |
#6
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
"Glenn Ashmore" wrote
You are only off by a factor of about a million. Well, who's counting? Hard not to type that "M" instead of an "H". The cruising guide said 25 something but it's hardly authoratative. -- Roger Long |
#7
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
Glenn Ashmore wrote:
You are only off by a factor of about a million. The ultra low frequency Cutter array transmits around 45 HERTZ but as long as a sub's antenna is less than about 60' below the surface it can receive the signal. I wonder what the bit rate is. I don't see how they can transmit more than 2 or 3 characters a second. My neighbors accused me of trying to receive those signals when I hung up a 160 meter delta loop around the yard but it is only 529 feet around. 45 Hz requires 22,000 feet. They really would get upset about that! :-) Does this mean our subs are 22,000 feet long? I knew they were getting pretty big, but ... OK, I suppose they can tow a long wire, but still 22000 feet seems a bit much. |
#8
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
"Roger Long" wrote in
: I don't normally get excited by antennas but motoring up to this array as the turn around point of our trip gave me the feeling you get when you look at one of the biggest and most impressive of anything. 26 1000 foot tall towers all interconnected with the most fantastic web of wires and bed spring like arrangements you can imagine. It transmits at 25 Mhz to tell our nuke subs which cities to vaporize. If there is a war, presumably a nuke will go off just above it within one or two milliseconds of the ones that go off over Washington DC. Strange to think that this wild and remote spot is Ground 0.1. http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Cutler.jpg We motored right up to the dock where the sign says, "Do not approach within 300 feet." With typical government common sense, the type size is such that the sign can't be read until you are within 100 feet. No signs of security or any human presence except for a single van parked next to the administration building. There is a building with about a dozen very large diesel engine exhausts sticking out of the roof so I imagine this sucker pumps out some real power. There is something in the cruising guide about the transmissions from this facility also being a prime means of measuring sunspot or solar activity due to their effect on the ionosphere. You can see the layout on Google Earth right at the end of our trip. They don't bother to hide the towers on the chart, unlike the more impressive structure that used to be in Prospect Harbor. In the curious blank spot on the chart used to be a circle of towers about a mile in diameter and nearly as tall as these. Around the top of the towers ran a flat coil of huge diameter cable. The strands were maybe a foot in diameter and the entire coil was wider than a highway. I don't know when this was dismantled but I think it was still there when I went through in the mid 80's. No sign of the remains or tower foundations visible on Google Earth that I can see. Yes, that's NSS. They are one of the major Navy comm centers and certainly ground zero for several countries' missiles. How's it feel to be irradiated by one of the most powerful VLF transmitters on the planet?....(c I've talked to NSS on HF from our ship in the Med using WW2 AM transmitters back in the 1960s. Our ship was GD. |
#9
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
Correction: The remains of the Prospect Harbor antenna are still visible on
Google Earth. I was looking in the wrong place. It's also a lot smaller than it seemed when I was sitting in a Kayak, only about a quarter mile in diameter. It was still pretty impressive. -- Roger Long |
#10
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry, this one's for you.
"Roger Long" wrote in
: Correction: The remains of the Prospect Harbor antenna are still visible on Google Earth. I was looking in the wrong place. It's also a lot smaller than it seemed when I was sitting in a Kayak, only about a quarter mile in diameter. It was still pretty impressive. -- Roger Long While we're on the subject of low freq antenna arrays, here's the one that sets your automatic clocks, WWVB, Ft Collins, Colorado on 60 Khz: http://tf.nist.gov/stations/wwvb.htm My last visit to the station was when I was in PMEL (Precision Measuring Equipment Laboratory) school at Lowry AFB, CO, in 1966. We were on a tour of the, then, National Bureau of Standards (now NIST) labs at Boulder when one of the NBS guys found out I was a ham radio op. He invited me to come to WWVL (20 Khz but discontinued in 1972) and WWVB on 60 Khz, still using the same, but refurbished, antenna array, today. It's a very interesting loaded antenna on a frequency where the wave is 5000 meters long! Look around and you'll see the bit rate is 1 bit per second, requiring each code to take 1 minute to send. That's why it takes hours for your new radio clock to set itself. It has to wait until it hears the right code train at 1bps. |
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