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Home SNIFFER MK4 - VK3YNG Doppler Systems Diamond May1000 Icom R-3 Yaesu VX-1R


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Each hunter will be asked to provide a list of equipment he or she uses to t-hunt and will be given their own web page, listing their personal favorites.

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[Equipment by Individual]

Please submit your list of T-Hunting equipment to:
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Review of the Sniffer MK4
Click here
VK3YNG Sniffer MK4 Review
VK3YNG (manufacture)

March 11, 2005: The MK4 Sniffer is still my all time favorite, next to my Doppler and Garmin GPS (StreetPilot 2610).

Testing a Wide Band Portable Beam Antenna

Diamond MAY1000  120 - 500MHz

PDF of Instructions and Adjustment Chart.

 

Entry level (1st time hunting) equipment list.

1) Receiver, 2-Meter HT (Handi-Talkie). Use your body to block the radio signal.
2) Antenna adaptor or paper clip. When you get close, remove the antenna and replace it with a paper clip or the antenna adaptor to reduce the signal.
3) Map of the t-hunt area. So you can drive towards the transmitter and not get lost.
4) HINT: Using your RECEIVER with the paper clip. Place the radio on your dash and use it as a U-R-Here radio. Your receiver will begin to hear the transmitter when you are close...congratulation.

Little more serious equipment list.

1) 3 to 6 element Yagi or 2 to 4 element Quad for the 2-Meter band.
2) Receiver, 2-Meter HT (Handi-Talkie).
3) Attenuator, to reduce the radio signal so you can use your 'S-Meter' and locate the strongest direction.
4) Magnetic Compass (Handheld).
5) Protractor and Grease Pencil (Plot compass bearings).
6) Maps (Auto club maps of the area you are hunting).
7) Antenna adaptor or paper clip. When you get close, remove the antenna and replace it with a paper clip or the antenna adaptor to reduce the signal and body fade the transmitter.
8) HINT: Use your RECEIVER and the paper clip. Place the radio on your dash and use it as a U-R-Here radio. Your receiver will begin to hear the transmitter when you are close.
9) OPTION: Mount a mobile Radio in your car or just use your RECEIVER with a mag-mount antenna. You can use it as a distant U-R-Here radio. At S-1 your might be as far away as 10-miles, at half scale S-5 your getting closer maybe 4-miles and at full scale, you better start listening to your RECEIVER with the PAPER CLIP because, your really close now.

Equipment I use almost all the time

1) Arrow-146-4-II Beam. 4-element 2-meter Yagi. I found the 4-element beam is best for getting your initial bearing. It has good gain (pulls in those really weak signals) and has a narrow, accurate, directional beam.
Disassembled 4 element beam. Assembled 4 element beam with MK4 Sniffer receiver. I use VK3YNG's MK4 Sniffer to receive the fox signal.
Folded 3 element beam. Unfolded 3-element beam with MK4 Sniffer for walking transmitter hunts. Smaller 3-Element setup for walking/running hunts.

2) Arrow Attenuator. 0 to 75db of attenuation, necessary to drop the signal strength of a Fox transmitter to tolerable level. (Not necessary with the VK3YNG Sniffer MK4, it has its own 9 built-in automatic attenuators).
4 element beam with attenuator and receive radio. I keep the Arrow Attenuator and Standard Radio for backup.

3) VK3YNG Sniffer MK4. A 2-meter receiver with 9 built-in attenuators (totaling 135db) and an audio signal strength meter that increases in 'tone' as the signal gets stronger.
     a) Initial bearing receiver with my Arrow-146-4-II Yagi (as long as the signal is strong enough).
     b) U-R-Here receiver. Lets me know how close I'm getting to the Fox (9-levles, from 6-miles to 1-inch).
     c) Close-in sniffer with my Arrow-146-4-II beam (points to the radiating Fox antenna within an inch).
VK3YNG MK4 Sniffer as a U-R-Here radio. Mounted U-R-Here receiver.

4) Compass. Magnetic is best, I've tried digital and prefer a non-battery operated compasses.
     a) I've played around with a good digital compass again but, have gone back to Magnetic.
Compass, protractor and map. A good compass, protractor and laminated map.

5) Protractor. The one's used by mariners to plot their course. I purchased mine from West Marine.

6) Maps. One continuous map of the entire 'hunt' area is very important. 'AAA' auto club maps seem to work best. Have your maps laminated in plastic. You can write on them with a felt-tip pen and erase the markings with Isopropyl Alcohol.
     a) I use the Garmin StreetPilot-III GPS receiver with street-level mapping for my map. It has the entire state of California and Nevada on one memory chip. It can also plot the shortest route to the fox (automatic street by street directions). I tend to plot my initial bearing out 5-miles and have the StreetPilot-III figure out the shortest route to that point. It really helps when your in a strange location and can't figure out how to get there from here.
     b) I've also been using a laptop computer running Topo-USA for my maps. It works great because it covers the entire western United States. Topo-USA also allows me to plot and save all my bearings, as well as see the terrain (such as mountains) that may cause radio signals to bounce or become obstructed.

7) AHHA Microfinder Doppler. Great for getting to the fox without stopping for more bearing. If your serious
    about transmitter hunting, this device will make hunting FUN and easy.
Mobile Doppler, GPS and amateur mobile radio. Mobile radio, GPS and Doppler.   Doppler antenna mounted on a Jeep. Doppler antenna.

8) Mobile amateur radio. Standard C5900DA Tri-band. Your radio doesn't have to be the C500DA, any mobile radio will do, as long as you can scan or receive all the FOX channels and the talk-in frequency. I use my mobile radio as a distant U-R-Here radio. At S-1 I am probably 10-miles away, at half scale S-5 I'm around 4-miles and at full scale I am only 1-mile away. At this point it is a good idea to have a U-R-Here radio, I use the Sniffer MK4. It takes over the duties where the mobile radio leaves off. The MK4 will progress from attenuation #2 (1.5-miles) to #7 (30-feet) away from the transmitter. 2.2 MB C5900DA Owners Manual in PDF format.

Useful.
9) Backup 2-meter HT (Handi Talkie). In case the Sniffer MK4 can't hear the Fox for the initial bearing.

10) Arrow Fox Hunt Loop Antenna. Very directional and very wide receive range (although it is a little deaf).
     a) When ever possible I will use this antenna, primarily because it is less affected by reflections (due to its Faraday shield) and the null provides a very sharp bearing (much sharper than a beam).
     b) Also, because it is small (6"). I will use it when the Fox hides in a Shopping Mall or some other tight quartered environment.

11) Flashlight. Most hunts end in the dark.
     a) I use the SureFire E1e/KL1. Only 3.3 inches long and weighing 2.2 ounces, this little LED flashlight put out more light than a 2-D Cell Flashlight. I can clip it onto my baseball cap and also use it as a hands free head-band light.
 

 

 

Larger image of the 4-element Arrow Yagi.

Arrow 146-4-II (manufacture), a 4-element two-meter Yagi.
The four element beam is your best bet for an initial bearing. You can pull out weak signals (sometimes they are very weak) and the directional lobe is narrow, giving you the confidence that you are headed in the right direction.

Larger image of this photo.
HINT: Turn up the attenuator and your squelch, until your receiver only receives the fox for a short 'blip' while you swing the beam. This will give you the most accurate direction. Using the Icom R3 in DF mode displays a GRAPHIC of your signal strength and using the Sniffer MK4 is even easier. It has an audio signal strength circuit that increases in Tone as the signal gets stronger and also has 9-built-in (automatic stepping) attenuator.

 

Larger image of the 3-element Arrow Yagi. Arrow 146-3-II (manufacture), a 3-element two meter yagi. Very useful and portable. Although I don't use it much anymore, I like the Arrow 146-4-II 4-element beam much better. I thinks it's because most of the competition uses 3-elements and the 4-elements gives me a slight edge on hearing a weak transmitter and pointing at it a little more accurately.
PDF Arrow Satellite Yagi assemply instructions. Arrow Satellite Beam (manufacture). 3-element 2-meter and 7-element 70cm.
I have found this duel band beam to be the most versatile transmitter hunting beam I have owned. The three element 2-meter portion is a compromise. I personally like to use four elements for my initial bearing because of the extra sensitivity however, the three elements on 2-meters makes it a lot more compact and easier to maneuver when walking.

The 7-element 70cm portion really won me over. Using a truly duel band transceiver (Standard C568A), I leave the left VFO on the fox frequency and the right VFO on the third harmonic. I can hear a 50mw transmitter clear across a large park on the VHF side and then sniff out the fox, within a few feet on the UHF side without changing radio's or beams. I still have to use my Scout-40 (frequency counter) and attenuator for an even closer, pin point location (under one inch).

 

Attenuator (manufacture). This resistor filled switch box is essential in cutting down a strong signal strength getting into your receiver. It allows you to read your S-Meter at half scale for the strongest signal in a given direction. (Attenuation level 0 - 75db).

Pretty cheap and works really well.
Do not transmit through any ATTENUATOR. Disable the PTT.

 

VK3YNG Sniffer MK4
VK3YNG Sniffer MK4
more details

VK3YNG Sniffer MK4 (manufacture). This receiver, made by VK3YNG, is designed for quickly finding the direction of beacons or hidden transmitters. Anything from distant weak signals to very close "sniffing" of transmitters running many watts of output power can be pin pointed accurately without suffering "overload" problems that plague other designs. Full auto-ranging operation allows the operator to quickly and intuitively locate the source of a signal without twiddling knobs or watching meters. The operator is freed to concentrate on more important things such as negotiating terrain or reading maps.

Frequency Coverage: 120-122.995MHz, 143-149.995MHz. in 5 KHz steps.
Receive Modes: AM, FM and Signal strength TONE. Sensitivity seems to be .1uv

I use the IRON HORSE Mini-Mount Antenna, mag-mounted on the hood of my car and connected to the MH4 Sniffer. This gives me a very stable and consistent, mobile, U-R-Here radio.

I really like this antenna. Very easily transported and used.

Compass (West Marine). I have found a good magnetic compass, like the one pictured, is a must. I own and have used many digital, electronic, compass's and found the batteries dead or needed recalibration when I needed it. Make sure your compass is liquid filled.
Protractor (West Marine). A good plotting protractor is also a important. Plotting your initial bearing on a large map of the hunt area must be accurate and fast.
Garmin StreetPilot-III Owners Manual The Garmin StreetPilot (satellite, global positioning system), during the hunt, helps me predict my course of action and and avoid dead-end streets.

I now use the Garmin StreetPilot-III manufacture, for auto-routing the shortest distance between two points on street level maps.
It really helps when your in a strange location and can't figure out how to get there from here. Also, when hunting in the mountains, I use "plot fastest route" instead of "shortest distance". I have found some of the roads listed on my maps are impassable or private. When plotting "fastest route", the StreetPilot-III almost always plots a drivable route.

 

Garmin StreetPilot-2610.
Just choose your destination using StreetPilot’s touch screen or remote control to be automatically guided with turn-by-turn directions and voice prompts. Both the 2610 and 2650 feature color displays, built-in maps, and everything needed to download additional map detail and look up points of interest and addresses in seconds. Select maps and transfer data directly to the unit through a USB connection and onto a standard CompactFlash® memory card. These products are powered using the external speaker with 12/24-volt adapter cable or A/C power adapter (both are included in the purchase).
 
  Laptop. I like using Delorme TOPO-USA for my maps. It covers the entire western United States and also allows me to plot and save all my bearings. TOPO lets me see the terrain (such as mountains) that my cause radio signals to bounce or become obstructed.

I installed the "Gamber Johnson" laptop mounting hardware to my 1998 Jeep Cherokee without drilling holes. It mounts to the passenger seat rail bolts. Gamber Johnson has mounts for almost all vehicles (Gamber Johnson product search).

AHHA Microfinder Doppler Operations Manual.Larger image of the Doppler mounted in my Jeep.Larger image of the 8 element doppler antenna.

Using a Doppler like the "AHHA MicroFinder manufacture" improved my transmitter hunting and made hunting a lot more fun. Watching the display pointing along my initial bearing is a big help in building confidence. The Doppler really shines when you are close-in, giving you the edge when winding around short City streets, trying to home-in on the Fox.

The "AHHA MicroFinder manufacture" can display your desired direction in three modes, raw non-filtered and two digitally filtered modes. Filter-1 can reduce the flutter of a general direction by 30% (not user adjustable). Filter-2 can reduce the flutter to a single LED (user adjustable).

               Operational Parameters for Filter-2.
                              QQ/MISS/DEPTH.
QQ: indicates the required good signal quality before a sample signal can be placed in the queue. (0-9)
MISS: indicates how many signal samples may be missed before the queue is emptied and has to start acquiring samples again.
DEPTH: indicates how many good samples must be in the queue before a signal is considered "acquired" and is displayed. (1-100)

Factory default was set to display a direction, if it can acquired 12 good signal samples with a signal 'Quality' of 2 or better but, will throw out all the good samples and start the acquiring process all over again if it receives 10 bad signals at anytime.

This setting was too accurate. It only started to point when your really close to the Fox.

Experimenting with the Parameters of Filter-2 has lead me to leave the 'QUALITY' set to '2', the 'MISS' parameter to 10 but, reduced the 'DEPTH' to 10 (2 / 10 / 10).

I have to tell you, this 'Digital Signal Filter" really worked. No more ambiguous, multiple, spinning LED's pointing somewhat in the direction of the Fox. What I saw was only one LED pointing in the direction of the Fox. When acquisition of the signal was lost, the Doppler continued to point in the last known direction of the transmitter. If you pass through a 'Hot' spot of good signals, the Doppler locked onto and only displayed the direction of the good signal. I haven't noticed any loss of accuracy. However, I did notice my Doppler displaying a very regular and consistent direction to a hidden transmitter.

I'm going to play around with other setting like, QUALITY 4, MISS 5 and DEPTH 5. Maybe QUALITY 2, MISS 7 and DEPTH 7. How about QUALITY 1, MISS 10, DEPTH 20 ?

I changed the Doppler's 'Filter' parameter on the Feb.2,2002 hunt to Quality 2, Miss 9 and Depth 9 (2 / 9 / 9). This seems to be the lowest (least accurate) I want to go. The Doppler seems to be very responsive with this setting, giving me reasonable accuracy in pointing to the transmitter. The jammer transmitter gave me a little trouble only because the Fox chose to transmit short (2 to 3 seconds) bursts at 5 minute intervals. Waiting for the transmissions, I was stationary. When I started rolling to average the signal through the filter, the transmission stopped. I would recommend using the Doppler in non-filter mode on jammer hunts like this.

Like on the Feb. 2, 2002 hunt, I left my QFIL set to (2 / 9 / 9). On this hunt, Feb 16, 2002, the setting worked out perfectly. I'm leaving it set to the almost perfect (QFIL 2 / 9 / 9). The AHHA Doppler pointed most of the time and correctly to the Foxes. I only noticed a few incorrect directions and only for an instant. The Doppler corrected itself very quickly. I think we have have winner here.

By the way, I have version 1 of the AHHA MicroFinder. Version 2 has even more features.

 

Standard C5900A Owners Manual.
Standard C5900DA (discontinued)


Yaesu FT-8900R (Replacement)

Mobile Radio

Standard C5900DA Tri-band. Your radio doesn't have to be the C5900DA, any mobile radio will do, such as the new Yaesu FT-8900R, as long as you can scan (receive) all the FOX channels and the talk-in frequency quickly. I use my mobile radio as my initial U-R-Here radio. At S-1 I am probably 10-miles away, at half scale S-5 I'm around 4-miles and at full scale I am only 1-mile away. At this point it is a good idea to have a better U-R-Here radio, I use the Sniffer MK4. It takes over the duties where the mobile radio leaves off. The MK4 will progress from attenuation #2 (1.5-miles) to #7 (30-feet) away from the transmitter.

Due to a large demand on copies of my C5900DA owners manual, I have made an Adobe Acrobat - PDF file of the C5900DA Owners Manual. Click: 2.2 MB PDF FILE.

 


Kenwood TH-F6A
Kenwood TH-F6A
Tri-Band Hand-Held Transceiver
2m, 220MHz & 70cm
I've settled on using this little radio as my EDC (every day carry) radio and it works great for communications during a transmitter hunt. It can receive 2 frequencies simultaneously, even on the same band, I can listen to the FOX and Talk-In channel.
PDF manual for the TH-F6A
PDF, Arrow Fox Hunt Loop Antena PDF file. Arrow Fox Hunt Loop Antenna manufacture.
The loop works backwards from a Yagi. Instead of looking for the strongest signal, with the loop you look for a null (lowest signal). The Loop Antenna has the advantage of being less affected by reflection signals (due to its Faraday shield) and the null can provide a very sharp bearing (readable to plus or minus 5 degrees). Another advantage of this antenna is it is small (6") and light (1.7oz). The disadvantage is it has two nulls 180* apart and can't hear weak RF signals.

Because the Fox Hunt Loop Antenna is not a tuned antenna, it may be -10db down from a unity gain 1/4 wave spike (I found it to be a little more than -15db down). On the bright side, since the loop antenna is not tuned, it may also have a very large frequency spread. Well just have to see how wide it is (I tried it and it can DF at least down to 740KHz and as well as our local 442MHz repeater, my wireless headset at 912MHz was iffy). I wonder how it compares to a rubber duck antenna commonly supplied with our handi-talkies. Since rubber duck antennas are known to be deaf and 80% of the time we can hear the Fox with our rubber duck antennas, I would think the Fox Hunt Loop Antenna could be used at the start point quite frequently.

Conclusion (John Kemper, FAA Agent): "The Arrow Antenna New aluminum FHL loop was equal to or superior to all (three) other loops tested, in all conditions".

Hint: Depending on the shielding of some plastic radios, more than about 15db of inline attenuation may cause a loss of the null. Tuning your radio 5 - 10 KHz. off frequency may work as an attenuator.

 

SureFire E1e with KL1 LED bezel.
E1e/KL1
SureFire E2e and E1e with the KL1 LED bezel.
E2e and E1e/KL1
SureFire (manufacture) E1e-HA Flashlight with KL1 LED Bezel.
Power Output - 16 to 17 Lumens.
Battery Run Time - 1-1/2 Hrs. Full bright, 10 Hrs. Moderate light.
Battery Type - (1) Lithium SF123A. $1.25ea. at SureFire.
Length - 3.3 inches.
Weight - 2.2 ounces.
Diameter - 0.8 inch Body.

The E1e/KL1 is brighter than a 2-D Cell flashlight and much smaller. I can carry this flashlight everyday and also clip it onto my baseball cap as a hands free head-band light.

I also bought the SureFire E2e which comes with a 60 Lumens Xenon bezel. This is about as bright as an 8-D Cell flashlight. I can screw on the KL1 LED bezel and get 17 Lumens for about 4-1/2 hours on (2) Lithium SF123A batteries.
Length - 4.6 inches.
Weight - 3.2 ounces.
 

Larger image of the SuperDF and antenna.Larger image of the SuperDF unit.

Super DF.
TDOA (time difference of arrival).

This direction finding tool is the single most versatile of all the equipment mentioned. With this one tool, you can;
1) Obtain your initial bearing from the start point.
2) Hunt Vertical or Horizontal signals by rotating the antenna.
3) Hunt while mobile with the antenna mounted outside the car.
4) Hunt Close-In, within a foot of the fox transmitter.

Reflections are this tools single biggest problem.
1) Incomplete nulling of the RDF tone, you have multi-path.
2) Harsh or raspy RDF tone, you have multi-path.
3) Incorrect bearings, reflections.

Reduce the error caused by multi-path.
1) Take several bearings close together, about 1 foot apart.
2) Note the two most extreme (divergent) bearings.
3) The best bearing is the middle of the two extremes.

 

   

EQUIPMENT USED FOR BACKUP

Icom R3 instruction manual.
Click for more details

Icom IC-R3 manufacture. (Backup Receiver).
This Icom receiver comes with a Direction Finding mode. I have found this function very helpful. Since the display graphs signal strength, you can quickly determine the direction of peak signal meter readings. Body-fading is now so easy.

You can use the R3 as a U-R-Here radio too. With four built-in attenuation levels, I am able to step my distance to the fox, from two miles away, down to 250 feet from the transmitter. Any other U-R-Here radio only gives you one indication and that is usually 1/2 mile.

Click here for my report and conclusions.

The receiver for your initial bearing beam must be sensitive and have excellent selectivity. I have used a LOT of radios and found that "STANDARD RADIO handhelds" have the best immunity to adjacent channel and frequency mixing interference however, Standard is no longer in business. The Icom IC-R3 is acceptable for your initial bearing and is an excellent U-R-Here radio.

 

Instruction manual not available. Optoelectronics sells them.

Close-In, Scout-40manufacture Frequency Counter.
Using a Frequency Counter (the Scout-40 has a signal strength meter), with your initial bearing beam and attenuator, you can sniff out the radiating element of a fox transmitter to within less than one inch.

The Scout-40 has a maximum range of about 500 feet (typically 250 feet). If you use the Icom-R3 will your beam, you can get you within 250 feet of the fox before it saturates. Switch to the Scout-40 with your beam and sniff out the fox to within less than one inch.

   

USEFUL TOOLS I NO LONGER USE

Web page, detailing the VX1 setup.

U-R-Here, 1st 'IF' (your close) Radio

Next, I setup my U-R-Here radio, a Yaesu VX-1. I set this radio to a frequency that is double the 1st 'IF' and then add it to the fox frequency. This give me a radio that is relatively insensitive and can get to within 1.5 miles of the fox before sounding off. The U-R-Here radio will become full scale at about a 1/2 mile from the fox.

 

Larger image of the 440 beam setup.

Close-In, 70cm beam, 3rd Harmonic

Once your within walking distance of the fox, you still have to find it. I use this small 70cm beam and attenuator setup, tuned to the third harmonic of the fox transmitter. As long as the fox emanates harmonics and your within 1,000 feet, this setup works great. I can get within a few feet of the fox.

Xplorer operations manual not available. Optoelectronics sells them.

Using the Xplorer Test Receiver.

This expensive test receiver fills some gaps left open by the 70cm beam and 2-meter/frequency counter setup. However, I don't think its worth the expense or setup  inconvenience. The range on this device, connected to the 2-meter beam is around 1/4 mile and can get within about 30 feet of the transmitter before it saturates the receiver.

Flashlight manufacture. Most hunts end in the dark. You must see where your going, your equipment and the hidden transmitter. I use C-Crain's 3-LED 'PETZL' head-band light. A hands-free light is very useful.
   

Some interesting bits of information & Equipment

Doppler
AHHA MicroFinder Doppler
MicroFinder Doppler Control Unit
Vehicle Setup
Doppler Vehicle 1998 Jeep Cherokee
Doppler setup in my 1998 Jeep Cherokee
Jeep Cherokee
1998 Jeep Cherokee T-Hunt vehicle.
Doppler Vehicle, 1998 Jeep Cherokee Classic

Fox Controller KIT

PicCon Fox Controller operations instructions. Version 1.2
PicCon Controller
PicCon Fox Controller in bunny box.
My latest fox box. PicCon Controller, Standard C558A, 2-GelCel Batteries and cooling fan.

Iron Horse, Mini-Mag-Mount Antenna.
This antenna works as well as the famous 'J'-Pole for the fox transmitter and it's easier to set up.
 
 

Raycon 6805 Fox Controller KIT

Fox Box
Larger image of the Fox Box.
Fox transmitter & Controller in an old ammo box.
This transmitter can be programmed and turned
on remotely. It can also be used as a cross band repeater.
Transmitter
Larger image showing the inside of my Fox Box.
Controller, battery, cooling fan and transmitter.
Ready to be programmed and turned on.
Continuous operation at 5-watts for 7 hours.

 

 

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