[NSRCA-discussion] Useless Information

Jon Lowe jonlowe at aol.com
Thu Jun 7 11:55:55 AKDT 2007


26.995, 27.045, 27.095, 27.145, 27.195, 27.225 (or 27.255, not sure, 
shared with surface users and CBers, and never used after the other 
27.xxx frequencies came out).  I don't recall flag colors.

God, am I old, but not NEARLY as old as RVP!  I was a little kid in 
Dayton, OH when I first met him.  He was best known then for his AFIT 
student project, the ASCENDER, (better known as the ASS-ENDER), a 
pusher canard.  I don't know if he passed his class of aerodynamic 
students after it got into a falling leaf after a stall, and never came 
out of it!


Jon Lowe


-----Original Message-----
From: Ron Van Putte <vanputte at cox.net>
To: NSRCA Mailing List <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
Sent: Thu, 7 Jun 2007 2:42 pm
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Useless Information


OK, now for the next quiz on useless information:  What were the 27 MHz 
frequencies and what were their respective frequency flag colors?



BTW, I had a salami and cheese sandwich yesterday, or was that today?



Ron Van Putte




On Jun 7, 2007, at 2:32 PM, Bob Richards wrote:


Ron Van Putte <vanputte at cox.net> wrote:

There were seven 72 MHz frequencies, as I remember (if I'm wrong, 
someone will jump in and correct me).



Part of the useless information that is forever stuck in my memory 
banks, taking space away from more important things (like what I ate 
for lunch yesterday).

 

Technically, there were just six 72 MHz, and one 75 MHz.

 

72.080 brown/white

72.160 blue/white

72.240 red/white

72.320 purple/white

72.400 orange/white

72.960 yellow/white

75.640 green/white

 

Some were dedicated to aircraft, while some were shared with surface 
vehicles (which ones, I don't remember). Scary, huh!!!

 

Bob R.

 

_______________________________________________

NSRCA-discussion mailing list

NSRCA-discussion at lists.nsrca.org

http://lists.nsrca.org/mailman/listinfo/nsrca-discussion





=


_______________________________________________
NSRCA-discussion mailing list
NSRCA-discussion at lists.nsrca.org
http://lists.nsrca.org/mailman/listinfo/nsrca-discussion


________________________________________________________________________
AOL now offers free email to everyone.  Find out more about what's free 
from AOL at AOL.com.
=0


More information about the NSRCA-discussion mailing list