Mark Koernke discussed Michigan Militia Manufacturing's new armored chest pouch designs featuring modular pockets for 75-round drums and Kevlar panels, along with plans for a CIA-style breakout bag. He covered water storage strategies for drought preparedness, emphasized map-reading and orienteering skills over GPS reliance, and detailed land navigation techniques including compass use and terrain identification. The show included extensive discussion of affordable micro FM transmitters from DealXtreme for emergency communications, and concluded with technical preparation for post-nuclear signal communications using Yagi antenna arrays to punch through radiation-induced background noise, referencing past above-ground nuclear testing by multiple nations.
Live 365. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm. And keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors, so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores, and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children? to live in fear and be a slave. O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each God-given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, this is the second hour of the afternoon in intelligence report. I am our corny. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west, central, southeast, and east. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com. We're on AM&FM Micro Technologies. both east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. We're in the Hallmark Network on the eastern seaboard from the top of Maine to the bottom of Florida. From the bottom of Florida across the arc of the Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, a little bit of Nebraska, a big chunk of Wyoming to include both the 3rd and 5th pit and our friends and 7 sisters on the left side of the state. Also, Colorado, the recall state, where we slammed them. Congratulations, very good work. Faces, dates, home addresses, businesses, and government operatives. Very good job. You snagged them, tagged them, and we know what's going on in Boulder and Colorado. Well done. I just say, well done. Well, the left coast where we have the State of Jefferson is a shining beacon. A lot of other pieces of real estate and occupied territory. Of course, the California Soviet Socialist Democracy being the biggest problem, the CSSD. They're going to be a beachhead for communist operations inside the United States. That is the agenda. That's where they're headed. Anyway, turning back to the east, we sweep across the plains, leap over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippian land and the Smokies slash the Blue Ridge where the restaurant crew's Grandma teams okay teams. And the model build grammar consortium of retired telecommunications workers bring us the golden spike. Many hands make for light work a million, and Peddicoat Junction operators, the ability to continue to function everything else is offline. It's a beautiful Monday out there right now, guys, and we are past the end of the month. Now we're ticking down the days for February. That's right, it's the 3rd of February, it is the 6th year of open Fabian the socialist. and the Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K-2014 Old Earth Calendar or Mayan. Crazy Town Crazy Town! That's right, we're the Wolfman Crazy Town! Look at them Mayans up there up here, cutting out and throwing those small chunks to the peasants. That's right! Yeah, they're having such good times up there. Down the Mayan pyramid. Well, yeah, we're having a better time from about 400 yards up. Both action rifles, scope. Yeah, 15 power. And, look, oh, look, oh, she's some pumpkin mist up there. High priest was holding that obsidian knife real high. He had somebody stretched over there, and then she just saw his head go, boom, like a pumpkin. Yes, I deal with the problem, especially with Uncle Wonka up there. Or any of the Uncle Wonkas you deal with down here, for that matter. Anyway, it is beautiful Monday, and it has been a very busy weekend. I want to say thank you to our friends. Especially, we had a great time. Our guys had a militia, actually had two, but the one wasn't as big as the other, but a militia-only gun show. Tradeoff, this is where everybody brings their goodies to a Patriot location. and everybody make sure that the weapons and ammunition and whatever you got stays in the family so i'll say congratulations very good work there uh... by the way i do want to point out with uh... michigan militia manufacturing and mmm uh... is reproducing i mentioned this this morning i got a i got a heads up from our friends a better fact what i stop by we will be announcing a another production run of the uh... mmm chest pouch with the large pocket for the 75 round drum mags. There's so many of those in circulation. And because of other ideas, one of the things that had been incorporated quietly into I guess the second and third run is basically chicken plate armor. It says you're using a chest pouch, you put a back plate pocket in it and you can slide in Kevlar panels. Because of the size of the plate, the size of the back panels, the standard chicken plates in soft armor or in hard armor will slide into those pockets. Well, there's another generation that's coming up, so here's what's changing. I understand that what they're going to do is use the original design with regard to the pocket. So the front center pocket is going to be for the standard 75 round drum. There's Korean drums, there's Chinese drums, there's Romanian drums out there, all of them of the same size. So the center pouch is going to be the same. The two outer pouches though, the way they're doing this is a double mag pouch on the left and right of the 75 round drum. 20 round pockets left and right beyond that which of course are just front of the armpits. It tapers down as far as the pockets go. And then of course laces, well in this case, buckler straps to the rear with a quick release strap that actually is to the left or right depending on how you want to station it. Now the and of course still has the bra straps that you know go over the shoulders But they're padded which is something that we already been doing with the earlier models The big change is that they've gone with a factory size Standard rear pocket now it carries as it is a back armored panel in 3 8 inch high impact foam Now that is floatable by the way by itself. It actually is, you know, totally compressed. It's the same stuff you're seeing out there for a lot of other industry applications. The pocket is designed to handle a complete shock trauma panel of the industry standard for present production off the shelf so you can buy threat level two, threat level three, or a threat level four panel, insert it behind the vest, behind the carry pouches, and it's another layer of armor. Personally, I'd go level two, unless you're gonna use it as the only piece of body armor. Now, MMM has already got the saddlery work being done, the stitching, the idea is everything is triple stitched. If you want to see an example of what we're talking about, go to Equipping for the New World Order Part 2. Equipping for the New World Order Part 2. There is a section there where we covered chest pouches and we actually had, again, an offering for the original pouch. There are thousands of those that were built. literally thousands and thousands. I don't know how many total because a lot of people are carrying these or have them in their 510 programs. Well, they're going to be putting those out in another production run, but this is the armored version. This is actually going to be able to carry, you know, as it is, it'll come with a foam armor panel, which I would leave inside and put it behind the Kevlar panel. Why? Well, when the Kevlar panel stops a bullet rather than your flesh being the next thing that gets socked, Having the impact armor behind that will dissipate the energy that much more efficiently over a wider area. Still doesn't mean you aren't going to get a thump, but it's nothing going to be nothing like if you had just the armor there. The other option, which is what the guys are also pointing out, is shock trauma plates as big as the armor itself. This also would dissipate a great deal of the energy with a bullet that's stopped by the Kevlar. The big thing is I still put the foam pad behind the steel plate. I put the Kevlar up front, steel plate in the middle, soft plate behind that, the soft foam behind that. It's not that soft. This is a high-impact foam. It's a floating foam. You've seen it in panels as big as 4x8 sheets. In fact, originally that's how we got it, was in clamped sheets. Okay. So again, a heads up on that. They're in motion on it. I got corrected after this morning. They will be in production. We'll let people know about that. Sounds like we have a caller. Who do we have? Hey Mark, sorry about that. That's okay, jump in there please. That's me either. I don't know if Ed knows it, but why 365 is down? The station. They're saying that the station is not available. Okay, that's where I'm listed again. So we're listed, we're there, but we're probably there, but we're not listed. Yeah, it says it's not available, so I don't know if Ed knows that. I just wanted to... Very good. Have you tried Indiana Freedom Talk Radio just to see if we're hooked up through there? I'll try that in a sec. Go ahead and see if you can hook up a heads up for Ed just in case he hasn't seen that. It's showing that we're delisted again. At the very least we're delisted or we may be offline. So if Ed's already working on it, he might be actually busy enough with that. He's not even coming on the... He won't even come into my ear. Oh, I'm being ignored. No, no, he's doing his job. So again, for Ed out there and for the rest of people, give us some feedback. Our friends in the chat room, Are you hearing us through live 365? There we go. Let's do it that way. Just in case. Okay, meat eater, you've posted in the chat room, live 365 is not working. So, I appreciate that. Anybody else? Feedback from other areas may be hooked up from the other direction. And we'll go from there. Anyway, as it is, I'll proceed because it's in the archive, hopefully. As it is, again, I mentioned earlier, COPES distributing for all of you guys out there. Well, now let's close the thought. The MMM group is going to be producing actually another pouch for the 75 round drums. This is going to be a CIA type pouch or CIA hanger pouch. It's going to be similar to the chest pouch configuration but it's going to have a larger number of pockets for 30 round mags. It won't be designed to be carried up front as a chest pouch, it's designed to be a breakout bag. They were listening to what I was saying on the air over the last couple of months. The girls got together, mapped out the design, the ideas to make it as simple as possible. In other words, one cut and then everything just gets stitched together and it's done. So we're working on that right now. Go ahead, caller. Who do we have? This is Henry out in Jefferson. We're broadcasting you on Live 365. Very good. So it is probably where T listed again. Guys, 365 has been doing this on and off. So Ed's probably trying to take care of it right now. I appreciate that. How are things looking out there in that neck of the woods, Henry, by the way? Cold. We got a little dusting of snow last night and it's frigid cold and the oppression just continues. It's dried up. It's going to be... It's going to be an interesting summer. Yeah, same thing here. We had beautiful. Actually it got warm enough. I know we got a little above freezing because we got melt, but as soon as the sun goes down, guys, beware. I can't stress this enough. I don't want to hear somebody going, I didn't know it was icy. It's winter time. The lake still froze for over two months. We've seen this back in the 1980s. It's going to be drought again, like back when they had the last water crisis. The crisis is being formulated through the Endangered Species Act. There's water in the reservoirs, they just won't let it run down. They're letting it go down the river to take care of the fish and that's what's draining it. Interestingly enough, like I said when I was in California years ago, just south of where you are, you know, coming up through the ditch there from LA to Bakersfield. And the first trip I went is when the drought was hitting, you know, early, what was it, must have been 93, 93, 92, 94. And you guys, the water level was a hundred feet below the docks. The docks look like diving boards. I drove across the Sacramento River back when that was going on. It was amazing. Like you said, there were 50, 75 feet up on the bank. It looked like diving platforms for the Hawaiian cliff divers, didn't it? It did. That's what it reminded me of. There's a problem if I was younger, and I'm surprised somebody wasn't killed trying to do it because it's still pretty deep down below. But with my luck, I'd find a rock. There's one there for everybody that still try it. A month later they had all the classic desert torrential rains and the same place we went right by it. It's before you get up to where that town is in the middle of the pass. And we got up just about halfway and I'm looking over the edge there actually, and I looked over to the other side. There's those same docks, but I can just barely see them as little white bands under about 60 feet of water. Yeah, they got dunked. Yeah, exactly. And again, feast or famine is what we need to be prepared for too. That's the other reason, water storage guys. All through the season, as long as you can keep pumping water and put it into reserve, I don't care how you do it. Like what I do here, Henry, I just build up seven more. All the milk chugs I automatically fill up during the winter because I always make sure the goats and the animals outside have water. And it's quick and easy just to grab two gallons and every so often, one morning, one afternoon, just fill up their containers again. But also, the 2 liter and 3 liter pop bottles. Now, the 3 liters have now become, just to give you an idea, the dollar store 3 liter pop bottles. are now 2.5 liter pop bottles. So I can't even get my 3 liter pop bottles like I used to. Because nobody wants them. You're supposed to have a deposit, but nobody will take them. So instead I saved those for water reserve. And I've got another 20 that I just filled here today. and those are going to go onto the shelf and they're going to supplement whatever else we have. And I don't care that the plastic's not going to break down, it's going to sit there and stare at you. The other thing I'm starting to do right now is I've been saving up wine bottles and we're going to do a small percentage of wine bottles all the same model, all the same size, all of them cork, not aluminum, not screw lids. And those are going to be another part of the water storage. simply because the glass will sit there and stare at you forever, unless you start trying to juggle wine bottles that are full, they're going to be there for another hundred years without any problem at all. I've got a couple of 60 gallon juice barrels like the concentrated juice comes in. I have them handy but within a mile or two I've got a couple of mountain springs that run year round. So fresh water isn't really that. But it does come down to the water storage thing because everybody doesn't realize those dams were built to store the water. So when you had dry years like this, you would have the water to take care of it. But because of the Endangered Species Act, they're making them open up the It's like when there were some firefighters killed a few years back because they wouldn't let them dip into the damn river and get the water because it might damage the fish. It's completely out of hand. It's about UN Agenda 21. They're trying to take control of all the fresh water sources. It's plain and simple. Well, again, this gets back to what my dad said years ago. He had the same class that I did, but when he was taking a class at Eastern Michigan University, it was part of this follow-up where they had to have him, he had to continually upgrade education. And, by the way, he never graduated from high school, guys. He's one of those guys with an eighth grade education, okay, and he has done so many different things. He's 91. He's not working anymore. But, it's interesting, I don't really mention that, but he's taken college classes, he's been all over the country re-educating himself in different ways depending on what it is he wanted to work in, and worked in diesels, worked in mechanical engineering, worked as a tool and die man, worked in real estate just as a pickup as a side thing to meet people because he used to deal with people. It is becoming a hero. I went up last week. I went up north a little ways and went up in the mountains just looking around to see how deep the snow was and see where the elk were moving and what might have you. And they've taken out all of our force signs, I mean all the signs for the roads. They're all gone. So that you don't know where you are. I know where I'm at. Yeah, you do. I know. But you know, in a way that's kind of cool because, you know, but I will say something. Let me explain something here. If you're working in an urban warfare or a real combat environment, guys, do you know the first thing that they take out of the road signs? You're told to do that so that nobody can use their maps if they don't know how to orient a map and they don't know really where they are. The idea is that you can pretty well confuse a big chunk of the population and you can manipulate the population as refugees. But also keeps the enemy from understanding when they move into an area. So their perception is that we're the enemy. And the American people, as we've said before, since the War Powers Act of 1933, they've openly declared us the enemy. And that's why they do this. That's the only reason. Were those signs paid for? Yep. Would it be good for another 10, 20 years in place? Yep. In fact, most of the stuff that we built in the 70s, 80s and 90s was built for longevity. The only reason they changed it out was because, if anything, it was because of reflective safety standards. So then they built the new signs, which are even more durable and have higher reflective service standards, and then they go out with a wrench and they make them all disappear. You have the influx up here from communist California. The people go to all these GPS. They have little classes down here in Klamath for them to learn how to go for wheeling, they call it. They all have GPS's which allows the track, they can see that. That's how they track and trace everybody through the forest. People need to learn how to use a compass and a map again. Without the GPS, the GPS needs to be, you know, take the battery out, make it disappear, put it on strap it on something else and let it just roll around in circles where it's irrelevant if you're going to have one. I mean, in reality, that's one of the things, before we do anything, and even if we were to use any other kind of technology for land navigation, the basic rule the Army learned 40 years ago, people were not developing map skills. And so they made it mandatory that if there are any critical MOSs that you're in guys or if you're going to be an NCO or an officer, before you get into any course you must pass the Map reading course. And if you don't pass it, you take it again. And if you don't pass it a third time, well, if they were kind, they might just let you keep retaking it until you get it right. But depending on how critical it was and how few a number of courses, they might just tell you, come back next year. I mean, it's kind of hard. When you're walking, it can be difficult. If you're driving and you get to high places where you can see the mountains, it's a lot easier, but it's a skill, man. People better get it. And that's where, again, orienteering, thank you for bringing it up, because I did want to talk about this, we got into this weekend. The guys have been working in orienteering pro classes, and here in the state we did cross country skiing, but cross country skiing with land navigation. And a lot of places where you are, there's no terrain features per se, And that's why, remember, when you read a 1-to-50,000 scale map or a 1-to-27,000 scale map, many of the man-made features are on there to include radio towers and or buildings and concentrations of buildings. Guys, sometimes it's knowing where the city glow should be. And then IDing, okay, there's a red dot on the horizon. Let's see, I know approximately where I was, what would be in that area. I look at my map, okay, that should be a radio station located at such and such from where I am here. I can shoot an asthma, now I'm going to look over here. Okay, there's the village glow from Schmidlapville, and I can see some of the city lights at the center of the glow. So I can shoot at azimuth from there and I can get a basic location where my final approximately where I am by running so many lines. And that's something everybody needs to remember that the topographic features may not be all that extreme. Mountains even though, once you can see a saddle and you can identify saddles, rolls in the terrain, and if you can pick and identify the most significant one, remember those are usually the easiest ID on a topographic map. So, and rivers are another one. Rivers and river bends, lake bodies are another great one if they can be seen. Remember sometimes a forest for the trees. If you're close to or on the shore, remember kind of eyeball out and see if you can guesstimate the shape. And remember that that unique shape for that lake is going to be on that aerial view on that map. One thing I found pretty cool, if you're in a country you don't know real well, if you get your entry point, you know where you're going in and you're running roads, I just take a twist tie off of a sack of bread and I mark a mile on it with a little ink pen and it will twist with the roads and everything and you can be pretty accurate traveling like that. Absolutely. Yeah, and that's a little easier work than a string where a lot of people use different techniques. Not a cord if it's a little thicker like wax cord works really well for that. But yeah, a zip tie or actually, again, a bread tie is flexible enough, but also static enough it'll match the road line. and that is an excellent solution. The other thing about this too is guys, compasses don't have to be very fancy. You can spend any amount of money you want on a compass. But I would recommend if nothing else go to DealXtreme, in fact DX, www.dealxtreme.com. DX.com or DEALXtreme.com. And the reason I bring that up is because they have a lot of stuff that they have cheap and one of them they have are all kinds of different packages for compasses. They have like little dot compasses which I highly recommend that you have on the shelf in quantity. You can get like 10, 20 or 30 of them for like $3, $4. Now those are not real fancy compasses but they will get you across country and you can hide them on your person. Those are survival, escape and evasion tools. They're small, they're easy to conceal, they can be put in different pieces of equipment and left in also cashiers. But you can get nice military spec or copies of the US military lin-satic compass for 5, 6, 7 dollars. No, they're not the most expensive and I know even as I say that, well Mark, they're probably Chinese made. Yeah, I guarantee they are. but they will provide you with an effective tool for cross-country land navigation. And at this point in time, most important, every member of every group that's listening to my voice needs to have a compass. We have one in every pack. I mean, it's up here. You need to know where your true north is for your area. And if you know that and you can just reverse the calculation, you can find out where you're at anywhere in the mountains. I mean, it's not rocket science, but you do have to pay attention. Well, the most important thing here again is to actually make it a... Well, the way that they do it in the military, the way they did years ago, actually came from Europe is orienteering, which is what I've mentioned. I've used that word many times. What that is is actually a land navigation competition. Now, I still have, and I can take you out, although again, I try not to give everybody any coaching on this so they're surprised, because when we use a couple of courses I set up 25 years ago, And you know what's funny is, I will attest to the fact that when they talk about pollution, or actually the environment, I sewed up these land navigation triangular banners, well Nancy and myself, we did this together about 27 years ago, and better than three quarters of them are still hanging where I hung them guys 27 years ago. So I can attest to the fact that at least that nylon if it was Chinese or American made It may be a little kind of a dusty orange instead of that blood red that it was when we put them out there, but they're still hanging basically where they were. So the fishing line thread that I used obviously had the proper IR protection in it. They hang in a location where what you do is you're taking a topographic map, you're given an objective. You go to that objective and from there to the next and to the next and to the next. You can set it up as a 10-point station, a 12-point station, or a 20-point station. In the competitions in Europe, you typically dress as a jogger or a runner. and the idea is timing to see how long, how quickly you can go from point A to point B, point B to point C, and it's land navigation with a... you have to be able to pace the distance, you're going to be shooting an azimuth with a compass, and it's speed. The idea is to get from one to the next through the whole course, and the person that wins is a person who has clicked off each of the different... there's a clacker that you put on making a mark, and each mark should be unique. You don't want all the same mark for every one of your orienteering stations. But each one, you make a homemade clacker that will cut the paper and they go from one to the other until they've reached the end of the course and their time from beginning to end. And what's cool is people get very competitive. If people want to do something that's positive, This is a great competition sport. You guys can do it amongst yourselves. You can get family involved. Everybody can play around and participate in it. Everybody shares the task. If you do teams, you do a four-man team or a five-man team like a fire team. Each person, one person shoots the asthma, the other person is a pace. The other person is also paying attention to terrain variance. and the team leader does correction or is following and monitoring all aspects and for instance will remind the person that we're on an up slope so there's a change in how you pace because you walk differently on slopes guys both how you walk down slope and up slope so there's a whole process to a team effort on this too which is really cool go ahead anything else Henry jump in there please. I would say that I knew this guy who came here from New York He went out to show me his haunt and blind and we went for a little walk. I was watching him. We talked about walking on side hills and such. He got down to the bottom of the hills and started coming back. and he was going away from his blind. I said, you know where you're at, right? He said, yeah, my blinds are there. I said, no, it's not. And I had a time when you walk on a hill, you were heading downhill, buddy. I mean, people don't realize things like that. You don't walk in a straight line. Nobody does. That's why you have a compass, I suppose. Anyway, I'm going to jump out. Thank you, sir. I appreciate it. And again, hopefully we'll get more moisture, but you got the same weather we got here. So we're getting cold everywhere across the country. That means you better make sure you got good cold weather gear. Again, I would highly recommend take the time, go to all the different surplus points guys and take advantage of their closeouts and clearances. I think we might have another caller. Who do we have? Just to be safe. Okay, very good. Now, I mentioned dealextreme.com. Another thing, guys, we have had a chance to test out some of these FM. One of our friends picked up listening to the program. They picked up one of these FM rebroadcaster units that are available through DealXtreme. In fact, they picked up a CZE-01A, which is a 1.5 LCD adjustable stereo audio FM radio transmitter. Now, these are for Wi-Fi. These are for actually doing digital transfer, you know, information and such. What's interesting is these work exceptionally well as micro FM stations. Why? Well because they are digitally synthesized. They do have an onboard synthesizer for quality control with regard to signal generation and they are very clean I am told. Now we're going to experiment with two other models. But if you go to dealextreme.com, www.dealextreme.com, For our guys that are looking at putting a micro FM in your rat rig or your inventory, again go to www.dealextreme.com. Now, once you go there and you get to dealxtreme.com, I just printed it in the chat room for everybody. The model that the guys experimented with, and they actually got good range out of these two, of course they went with a little different antenna configuration. They cut an FM antenna for experiment using coat hangers, guys, and mimicked a standard multi-dipole mono rig. Hold on here, I'm trying to do two things at once. Anyway, electrical tools, computers, iPhones, consumer electronics. Right at the very top you'll see consumer electronics on the left hand side. Now once you get there you'll see all these listings that pop up and over in the very bottom in the middle it says other consumer electronics. Go to other consumer, oh look at that. Now, the cool thing is that they do have some other things that definitely are worthwhile. Number one, AM-FM shortwave radios, and these include sideband. Now, you can pay any price you want for those guys, but if you scroll down, why look at that, there's a CZE-7C 1W to 7W stereo FM transmitter. These are black in black. They also have a number of different co-transmitters for television re-transmitting, etc. all kinds of cool stuff. But scroll down and you'll find other FM transmitters in many different sizes and many different outputs. Well, the guys experimented with, and again this is with the CZE-01A Again, 1.5 LCD adjustable stereo audio FM radio transmitter, black and silver, their price was $135, they only bought one. The SKU number is 234873, but if you look on this page, you will see that there are many other options. And you can pay any combination of money, the amount of money you want for these units, depending on what it is. They, in fact, have a 2.4 gigahertz wireless AV transmitter receiver sets for $60. Those have all kinds of unique applications, especially for off-site, shall we say, reflecting, going from one location to the next. Now, they have a number of different micro FM transmitters. that are upwards to 15 watt out of the box CZ-E15A, 2 watt to 15 watt stereo FM audio transmitters. $211 for that particular rig, not necessarily the unit you want to spend money on. However, I would assume, and we haven't tested all of these, Remember, when you increase output, you're not necessarily going to be increasing range. You will to a degree, but not, in other words, it's not geometric. If you go from a 5 watt to a 10 watt, you're not going to get double. You'll get a little less than. But what you will get with greater increase in a micro FM is permeation. What's really critical is does it go through the walls in the house? Does it go through brick walls? Does it go through concrete? Can they still pick up the station? if that radio receiver is inside a house or inside a building or inside a steel building well when you have greater signal power going out from the antenna then you're going to get the permeation that you need so that that signal will be consistent they're not going to get a lot of gravel and stuff or noise or phase noise popping in Now, it doesn't mean they can't hook a wire up to the window or the wall, which a lot of you have done if you have a lesser FM receiver also. Remember, the receiver is half the battle too. But these are pretty cool units. They have even up to it, including light commercial, professional 1.5 LCD stereo FM, PC control transmitter, and again, the unit itself, this is a little more sophisticated, but, and it's $205 by the way too, We'll run off 12 volt of course, most all of them do. But in addition to that, again we're looking at a little more output, 15 watts out of the box, and with a lot more, a lot of other features. So again, it's a matter of what do you want to spend, what are you looking for. Now one thing I've noticed about these, these are using the alloy, not the plastic for the most part, they're using the alloy work box slash kit boxes. Very well made, typically with, again, additional vent and you know, radiator slash cooling fins so that they're again designed to dissipate calories and heat so they'll sustain operation when they're running. But they have any size you can imagine and any price you can think of. So take a look at what's on the shelf there, see if it fits your wallet, and then we need to experiment on a larger scale with these things to see how they'll perform. Again, you can find smaller output, shorter range, or smaller units that will fit your smaller pocketbook. And then remember you can add, if you have a certain output available, remember that you can add an exciter to this. to increase. In other words, step one, get a transmitter. Step two, How about upgrade by adding a little more of a bumper on that or you might even decide, hey, I like this so much. I'm just going to go buy another model. Well, then you can use the original one as a backup, as a reserve just in case, which is not a problem. OK. A lot of other solutions here, too, for a lot of our friends that are listening to shortwave. If you're looking for additional shortwave radios, most of them appear to be in the Sanjan format. They're not necessarily Sanjan. It's like tech-son. Okay, well what that is is the Tech Sun like the PL310ET. All that is is the Sanjian motherboard with a little different box and probably some plastic on the outside where the name is. But otherwise, it's a basic Sanjian radio. And again, remember all they do is they produce them overseas and somebody else gets a knockoff of the motherboard. and they run with that accordingly. Just something to understand about most of the radio equipment you're running into out there. It will be reproduced and reproduced and copied and copied and copied and a lot of it's pirated. It's just in the nature of how things work and what happens. Now I was corrected this morning and I've got to make sure I get this out right too. I'm sorry, but again, allelectronics.com has the microphones for sale and for whatever reason I screwed up on that one and I have, of course I got them listed, one over top of the other. Goldmine-Electronic, electronicgoldmine.com, or electric, forgive me, goldmine-elect-products.com. They have a lot of other cool stuff and scientific projects and such too you want to check out. So definitely it's a matter of what are you looking for in the way of unique trinkets to play with and to develop with regard to your technology what you're going to be doing to work with signal communications etc. It's not communications Tuesday but I want to get this out because we definitely had a test run already take place. Range with this 15 watt was off the shelf with the wire and actually was running 10 watts. A little under 10. What is it? 9.8. Anyway, around there with the output that they had, with the way that they set up the system, they were able to reach about seven, eight miles with a strong signal. And that was with a so-so improvised antenna, guys. So a little more calibration, a little more work with something that's a little more permanent. And I am sure that the signal would probably reach farther, but also, again, Remember you can adjust the antennas with the micro FM so that you can actually pattern out the blossom to hit primary roads or to hit a village or a town with a better signal etc etc etc just something to think about and again ideas solutions not just complaining about the problems or I feel so bad about oh shut up it will make things work anyway last but not least before we get to the top here switching directions again I would remind everybody also that, oh let's see, well I don't have time to get into this anyway, one of the things that happened this weekend is we did a directional broadcast experiment starting from northern Ohio. This was working with YAGI antenna arrays or a large antenna array using a wire system. Now, the idea behind this was to create what is called a punch signal or a directional signal. The Yagi antennas do this, but one of the reasons that we need to be prepared to do this for all of you that are listening is because of the nuclear threat and electronic countermeasures jamming that can take place. Either way, we end up with a similar problem. In a nuclear environment, remember that everything gets irradiated. What happens? Let's put it this way. Somebody drops a thumper, drops a mushroom in your backyard, somewhere near you. Well, first of all, it turns the surface area basically about the temperature of the sun. everything gets turned in. It doesn't just turn things into a glass parking lot. It turns everything into a copper and an iron and a glass and a... Yeah, everything there that's at the center of the epicenter of the event is kind of turned to molten. Okay. Now needless to say, this is a nuclear reaction. So, like Mr. Sun, we also get all of the spectrum of radiation coming out of the event. But We also have several things that are irradiated to the point where they also throw off a wide spectrum of radiation themselves. Now, I mentioned metals, especially with metal structures, you're going to get a lot of free flow coming off of all of that material. The farther you get away from the epicenter, not very far, within about the 5 PSI range, On that wall around the blast, or that area around the blast, again it's the circular away from the epicenter, you're going to get a lot of free radical transmissions that are coming off in all spectrum everywhere you can imagine, any way you can imagine. And we don't even know. It's not really predictable. It's something that's not talked about. Everybody goes, well, there's radiation, there's alpha, beta, and gamma. Yes, there is. But one of the other things that's happening is because of that energy being absorbed, and then because of metal structures, harmonics, any number of different things, guys, it creates literally a wall of radio signal. It's radiation. That's what a radio signal is. It's radiation. So we may have to go around. Now there's two ways to do this. You either punch a hole through the obstruction. In other words, you focus your signal and you're going to get something through. Okay, it's not going to be great. In fact, I'm not going to be able to. But let's put it this way. Whereas Mars may not get through, what we'll get through is code. Number one, that's if you're punching through, but typically if you've got enough energy, you might be able to get voice through or probably will get voice through, but again, quality will be very low to say the least. Why? Because of variance in background radiation and signal, and that's going to cause problems from one direction. Well, the idea behind doing a focused YAGI transmission from point to point to point is to practice that technique of punching through the background noise. Now AWACS and other jamming technologies, which we're all supposed to have forgotten about, which we didn't, okay, you may also have to punch through because of that. And because of interception, remember, Yagi antennas provide the best way to avoid detection. Taking anywhere from 92 to 96 to 97% of the signal and focusing it down one avenue, one very narrow transmission, one very narrow line. It's not an omnidirectional broadcast. It is a directional broadcast. Now there's another technique. If we had, say, a major nuclear event in a target area is identified, the other option, still using YAGI transmission to get the signal to where it needs to go, for both OPSEC, operational security, and because of background noise would be to offset to a reflector or a target that is to the left or to the right of the obstacle. Now you would think, of course, with downrange, fallout, etc., yes, we do have all kinds of other noise, but that's not really the issue. What it is is that at the epicenter, it's going to be hot. not just radiologically with regard to alpha, beta, and gamma, but also radio signal disruption in general. It's called a chimney. In reality, after a nuclear attack, it's going to jump to about 80,000 feet. This plume, well, consider the process. When the initial nuclear detonation took place, it literally consumed all oxygen within an area and then quickly dissipates. Now, in the process, more material vacates or actually it moves into the vacated area, the vacuum, that is created because of the consumption of molecules. Virtually everything inside that epicenter is being eaten just like it's a mini sun. Now, because of this, more material is activated and activated again in this chimney, which of course, because of a thermal rise, part of the whole process of radiation generated, It will climb to up to 80,000 feet and then pan out. That becomes like a tree trunk or like a chunk of rock in the way of your signal. Now rather than trying to punch through it, the other option is if you are, which is what we're focusing on here, not just in Michigan but all over the country, signal web grids. In other words, several different sites, many different sites, hundreds of different sites where we can shoot an asthma through a particular radio station. That particular retransmitter, transmitter slash retransmitter, can then send the signal to another location and we can circumvent the obstacle. That's one thing that you need to be prepared for. Lansing, Michigan could be flashed off the map. Detroit, Michigan could be flashed off the map. Any number of different locations may or may not be hit. The idea is that we need to get around it. Could be Jacksonville, Florida. Could be Charleston. Okay, could be whatever. whatever that objective is, if it's one or two that are hit, they are going to create a lot of other issues, not just the conventional radiological, well, it's unconventional in that it's unique, but rather than just the conventional alpha, beta, and gamma issues, we need to look at others which were already proved out and tested and are known about since the first atomic bombs were dropped, but also because of Abel and Baker and many dozens and dozens of other bombs dropped over a period of time. We actually have already had World War III. In fact, I was kind of joking about this before, but in reality I'm not. You know, each country self-nuked itself. I mean, nuked its own real estate. The United States did open ground testing on American real estate inside the United States, inside the 48 guys. Now, what's really funny is, check to see how many bombs we dropped. You know, people said, well, if we dropped all these bombs, it'd be the end of the world and we would have... Okay, really? Well, what were the size of the bombs that were dropped? How many were there? And what was their yield? Now, understand that when we started out in the nuclear craziness of the day that we lived in, we only had kilotons. But don't worry, we caught up on that real quick and went to megatonnage. And it wasn't one or two devices. It wasn't like a bomb. It was a lot of bombs. Not only was it the United States and Russia, but don't worry, the British caught up real quick and they started dropping nuclear devices. Then the French got into it and they started dropping nuclear devices. Oh, let's not forget that, well, yeah, the Chinese got into the fray and they dropped some nukes. And Pakistan had to test their nuclear devices, guys. They wanted to make sure their bombs worked. Whoa, wow, we started to make the old brain gears work, right? So, we've already had a technical World War III above ground. Seriously. And in fact, there's some really cool videos some kids have done using video game technology to kind of walk through. And I want you to take a look at the old tickle meter there. How many above ground weapons did we set off from our side? How many above ground weapons did the Russians set off? and then look at the third and fourth string and what they did. You know what I mean? In other words, like, well, the Brits, the French, the, you know, the Chinese, the Pachys. And don't forget, India had nuclear devices and does have nuclear devices too. There's a whole bunch of other countries in the nuclear family and I ain't talking nuclear power. Okay? We've already had World War III. We're working on World War 4 and 5 with maybe a little more earnestness towards targeting more of the population. But we already dumped enough radiation on everybody as it is and nobody talks about it. And again, by the way, Big Jungle was in the Pacific over and over and over again. Over and over and over and over again. And then again. And then again. Now, during these processes, all of these things I'm talking about with regard to signal communications are issues that were already discovered and addressed in different ways. It is one of the reasons that aircraft have both radiological, in fact not only military, but civilian aircraft have radiological sensor technology on board. It's not a high priority, it's not the highest priority because, well, we aren't dumping nukes on each other right now for the moment. But that sensor technology, especially in each of the progressive generations of aircraft, has become more sophisticated. One of the reasons is we also don't want to fly through one of those plumes because that's like flying through a big microwave oven, like, well, more like a people toaster, okay? and really embarrassing when the wrinkles you know the one that when the chills say the absorption rate kind of drive you through to cook to a crispy even though you're dead but you don't know it yet that kind of thing uh... we really don't want to experience that uh... so there's a lot of other things that you need to be taken into consideration with aviation assets for the same reason if you have aircraft you need to be looking at radiological defense at least for monitoring to confirm threat issues plus understanding something we talked about earlier with ground navigation. Air navigation is no different. Mapping, mapping, mapping. Not GPS. Not GPS. Mapping. Collect it now. You'll need it later. and maps well they take advantage of the most fiscated battlefield computer on the planet your brain okay so just nothing taken into consideration there anyway signal communications we've been working on this if you don't understand what what I'm talking about with regard to yagi antennas look it up do a little research we're gonna cover this more tomorrow on communications Tuesday but I want to give you a heads up we've been doing this for quite some time this weekend we get a minimal minimal distance point to point direct target, Yagi broadcast. Took us about a minute and 20 seconds to cover the state when they first started fumbling with it. Then, progressively with each experiment, and again with guys gaining a little bit of experience and rebroadcasting, they knocked it down to a little under a minute to cross the state of Michigan from one center to the next to the next. The idea behind this is to use either digital or even other recording technologies so they could repeat the signal without it being something that's an onboard rebroadcast from one machine to the next. In other words, some form of medium recorded it, they immediately threw it into the system and broadcast out and relayed point to point because of the whole length of the video. Anyway, we're at the top already. For everyone out there, take advantage of what we've been mentioning about Baker's Green Acres dot com. We need to get serious on that. God bless the Republic. Death of the New World Order, we shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. We're in a march. We'll be back from 8 to 9, evening intel report. Meanwhile, Ed's taken over there. If you are finding Liberty Tree Radio on live 365, be patient. Ed's letting them know about that and they should be correcting it. Bye bye. Let it go where all can see, feed it with our devotion, boys, call it the Liberty Tree. It's the tall of lands, the sons of livid, gave it on the storm, boys.
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