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Watching The Cops Title: How cops are catching grow ops with AM radios With the proliferation of indoor marijuana grows, the indoor horticulture industry has been booming. Chinese manufacturers are turning out indoor grow equipment at a rapid pace with little to no regulatory oversight or compliance. Because of this, there has been a significant amount of radio frequency interference (RFI). Before we get into how to detect a marijuana grow with your car radio, you have to understand some simple mechanics of how a grow operates. To grow marijuana indoors, you need supplemental lighting necessary for photosynthesis. These lights may be fluorescent, LED, and for larger operations, high pressure sodium (HPS) or metal halide (MH). The HPS and MH lamps may be 1000W per lamp and require a ballast for proper operation. These ballasts were originally magnetic but in the past few years have become electronic. These devices are subject to FCC part 18 rules but there appears to be a total disregard for the FCC rules. Many (if not most) electronic ballasts are manufactured in China and may have little FCC stickers on them but there is no evidence of any testing for compliance having been done. Because of this, a large amount of RFI is interfering with nearby electronics. As an example, one grow next to a CalFire station Californias state fire agency caused a continuous hum over the stations callbox speaker and interfered with them receiving radio broadcasts over their stations PA. Ham Radio Helpers One amateur radio operator located five marijuana grows near his house due to RFI alone! Many ham operators can locate a grow simply by taking a radio and portable antennae out into their neighborhood and using the radio to triangulate the exact location of the grow. One industrious ham operator went to his local grow shop and borrowed several lights and ballasts to test for RFI. He found that one light and ballast set up would cause interference up to 700 meters. From our experience, we know that most indoor grows have more than one light and ballast, which would amplify the RFI. Pioneering Field Use One ham radio operator described the interference this way: It can be pops, it can be a buzzing sound, whistles just all kinds of different noises that we'll hear. Tom Thompson, a ham radio operator, told a Colorado newspaper, If I can track this down, anybody can track this down. If I listen long enough, I can tell when they turn the lights off... You can tell exactly when the harvest is. This method of finding marijuana grows isnt fool proof, but it can be another useful tool in your toolbox.
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#1. To: Gatlin (#0)
This story may be true or not, but my big screen TV does the same thing to AM radio. I have a sneaking suspicion that the interference on the AM band has something to do with government "dirtying up" the bandwidth to discourage the dissemination of differing views via talk radio.
Thanks for publicizing that Gatlin. Guess who benefits? The growers do! Now they can easily employ countermeasures to the weakness you are stupidly harping about. I can see Gatlin walking around with an AM radio and when he discovers a power line or transformer interfering with the signal, Gatlin calls the cops and tries to convince them he's discovered a huge indoor pot grow...LOL!
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