This is a recording from January 1988 of mobile phone calls. The cellular phone system was analog and could be eavesdropped on if you had a radio that could receive between 800 and 900 megahertz, frequency modulation, or FM. I had access to such a receiver as an employee of Televents Cable TV in Martinez, California. Many of the service techs were issued an AOR, model AR-2002 communications receiver with an antenna tuned to around 150 megahertz. During times when there weren’t many service calls, we would drive slowly through neighborhoods with our radios tuned to one of the video carriers of the “midband” cable channels listening closely for the distinctive “sync buzz” (very close to 60 hertz with lots of higher harmonics). If the noise was detected, that was “signal leakage,” cable TV signals radiating out from the cabling, acting like a radio transmitter. This violated FCC rules as it potentially could interfere with aircraft communications. We would then start looking for loose, corroded connections. Often the culprits were “F fittings.” We didn’t stop checking for problems until the signal was at an acceptable low enough level. I noticed the radios we were using for our work, the AR-2002, tuned up through 1300 megahertz. On my days off work, I’d take the receiver home and record cellular phone calls. I’m quite sure the radio I’m demonstrating in Sonic Outlaws is the company issued unit, before I bought my own.
Most of the calls are not complete because as people driving would get out of range of one cell tower and connect seamlessly to another, the frequncy would change. I did a lot of filtering and a liitle noise reduction to clean up the audio quality. The frequency range is from just under 200 hertz to a little over 4000 hertz with extra notch filtering at 120 and 240 hertz.
8 users commented on " Analog Cellular Phone Calls 1988 "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackNot quite the same thing, but I have several hours of phone calls on cordless units that I recorded off of a scanner in the early 90s. A lot of it is deadly dull, but there are some gems in there. Actually, there were some REAL gems that I heard a few years before that, but I had no means to record them at the time. From what I understand, they eventually shifted the frequencies around and made it illegal to have radios that could catch those. Party poopers!
Clean minimal static
There still are a few analog baby room monitors in my neighborhood in Seattle that occasionally can be heard. There are a few other analog radio signals, as well. Most notably school bus drivers in the Puget Sound area.
Oh man, this brings back LOTS of memories. I used to monitor cell phones as a teenager on a Pro-2005 that I got as a yard sale and did the obligatory mods to. Here in the Vancouver/Portland area we had AMPS service until into the early 2010s though traffic really started to drop off around the early to mid 2000s. The last time I had that radio on (2016 or 2017ish) there was no voice traffic though I did hear AMPS control channel polling on the lower (?) 800 MHz band so there at least was clearly still a long-forgotten AMPS network operating in east Vancouver as of a couple years ago. I should try to get my mom’s 25-year old Motorolla bag phone going again and see if I can access this apparently emaciated network.
(Remember back when cell phones used to sound like this and you didn’t get the feeling you were talking to a robot? We really had it good before networks starting oversubscribing and ultra-narrowbanding their vocoders.)
Great find David, thanks for posting.
BTW: The switch this cell network in your recording homed on was a 1 or 1A ESS (common-control crossbar system from AT$T). You can tell by the little “squeak” cut-through when the wireline customers answer their phones. There aren’t any of those left in the PSTN since the last one in Texas was removed about a year ago.
Thank you for those thoughts! You’d likely love this or already know about it.
http://www.wideweb.com/phonetrips/
Oh yes, Evan’s and Mark/Richard’s recordings have had a place in my audio library for many years.
For the record, there is a new site run by dmine45 from Binrev, that contains many new Doorbell tapes released since Mark/Richard compiled his list, it is http://evan-doorbell.com/.
Why you not respond to my post? I wanted to hear what you thought.
Oh yes, Messrs Doorbell & Bernay have been part of my phreak listening routine for many years.
There’s another site that has more up-to-date and new additions to the Doorbell library than Mr. Bernay’s wideweb, which is quite old: http://evan-doorbell.com/