archived as http://www.stealthskater.com/documents/adam_01.doc read more at http://www.stealthskater.com/px.htm More Details on the Montauk Project Radio Receivers From: "A.D.A.M." Date: Wed, April 14, 2004 1:06 am To: KRAM@stealthskater.com Subject: Some old information re: Montauk Hello. I just read your post on Valentine's board (http://www.valentinesdesigns.com/wwwboard/index.html ). I know a little about the FRR-24 receivers that Preston Nichols describes in the Montauk series books. The FRR-24 was a diversity receiver. That means it's built on the idea of combining multiple receivers in one group to eliminate signal fade or to allow them to receive multiple signals (not necessarily the same kind of signal) at the same time. I went and visited Preston a few years ago. I got to see the FRR-24 receivers.(he has three sets of them that I saw). Each receiver is housed in 8-foot high equipment rack. Very impressive. I am enclosing some files of a FRR-24 that was built by National Radio that went for sale on ebay (ebay item 3025205410 (Ends May-24-03 144611 PDT ) - NATIONAL AN-FRR-24 RECEIVER L@@@@@K.htm ) The SP-600-JX17 Super Pro (built by Hammerlund) was more then likely the receiver type they would have used by Preston's description. The JX17 denotes special options (diversity receiver, product detector, extended coverage, etc.). It was available with an outboard SSB (single side band) adaptor also. The more modern receiver that the FRR-24 seems to be equivalent to is the FRR-224. I've seen one. I was comparing it to the FRR-24 and it seem to be a modern day version of its older counter part (diversity, SSB, AM, ISB, etc.). I saw that receiver in Preston's shop also. The Delta-T antenna in the picture that is described as used at Montauk -- wasn't. It was on top of Preston's shop in East Islip (see page 202 in Montauk Revisited). I saw the remains of it when I was at Preston's shop. A storm tore it off the shop's roof. That's all for now. If I find anything else laying around, I'll let you know. And no -- I was not ever involved with the Philadelphia Experiment or Montauk Project. I just decided to go and check out a few things for myself. I have a lot of this archived; but due to my current computer upgrade (Windows 2000 is a little fussy), a lot of it will probably stay archived for a while. I forgot to give you the links to few Delta-T antennas I have built. These are not public links and I don't want them archived/published. Then why show you? Because I think everybody should question the information and draw their own conclusions. I built them before I met Preston and compared notes with him when I went to visit him. It was all derived from the info in the Montauk series books. For my own curiosity/edification, that's all. I don't need the attention/spotlight put on me. I have taken my research in a different direction as of two years ago. BTW, I seemed to recognize Preston from somewhere. And he said the same thing. We both agreed that it was not anything to do with Montauk 1
or any thing on Long Island. We just couldn't put our fingers on it. We both felt that we had worked together and were good friends at one time. Here's 2 non-public links: XXXXXXXXXXXXXX (my 7ft Delta-T, my inverted Delta-T, and my small Delta-T) XXXXXXXXXXXXXX (my small Delta-T showing a rotating magnetic field) And just for fun, here is my public website: http://web.a-znet.com/~peruny/ 2
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Be Safe, Be Well, Always. "A.D.A.M." I've built a few of them. One of the pictures is a drawing of one (two views, side then top). The other is, I think, the third one I built and an mpg of one in operation, spinning a cheap auto compass (I believe at the Schuman frequency to prove it's capable of producing a rotating magnetic field). If you want to add them to your archive, go ahead. Just credit them to "peru". That is what my online "handle" was back then. I can't believe that somebody else hasn't built one. I've built a few. It's not that hard. I thought you'd get a kick out of it. A single frequency (I choose the Schuman freq) and a phase shift network is all that's needed to produce a rotating magnetic field. That is a cheap auto compass setting in the center of a Delta-T antenna (at about 100 Watts of power). 4
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