| Early     avalanche beacons transmitted at 2.275 kHz. In 1986 the international     standard of 457 kHz was adopted. The Ortovox     F2 (which was released in 1980) transmitted and received on both     2.275 and 457 kHz. This allowed it to locate both new and old-style     beacons. That was handy in the 1980s, but it is no longer relevant. 
 A     1997 update to the standard specified that beacons must transmit     within ±100 Hz of 457 kHz. In 2001 this allowable     variance was reduced to ±80 Hz.     Unfortunately, older analog beacons that used ceramic oscillators (e.g.,     the F1 and F2,     but not the M2)     can drift outside this ±80 Hz range.     Newer beacons use crystal oscillators and transmit very close to 457 kHz. 
 The     drifting usually gets worse as the temperature decreases. For example, a     warm beacon inside your jacket may transmit near 457 kHz, but when it cools     it may drift outside the ±80 Hz range.       Frequency TestingI tested 51 avalanche transceivers (15 different     models) using a sophisticated spectrum analyzer to see if they transmitted     within specifications. I measured the frequency at 70F and     0F to see how temperature affected the frequency. I     presented the results of this testing at the International Technical Rescue     Symposium (ITRS) in 2007. Suffice it to say that 49 of the 51 beacons were     within range. The others were only slightly out of range (-90 Hz  and     -100 Hz, and only when cooled to 0F).  
 During     the testing, I also compared the results of the spectrum analyzer with the     built-in frequency     tester found in the Pieps DSP.       Frequency Drift and Transceiver     PerformanceThe     downsides of a beacon transmitting outside the ±80 Hz range are twofold. Most importantly, a searching transceiver     may not receive the wayward beacon's signal at all. Secondly, the range     (i.e., distance) at which the wayward beacon can be located will be significantly     reduced. 
 This     was first brought to my attention by a friend who successfully located     three buried Ortovox F2s during a beacon drill in the morning. That evening     he went outside to retrieve the beacons and couldn't receive a signal from     any of the beacons! They were eventually located with a different beacon. I     suspect the F2s drifted off-frequency as they cooled and that his digital     transceiver was being too particular about the required frequency (that     model of receiver has since been updated to better handle off-frequency     transmitters). 
 I     also tested the distance at which four different beacons could receive a     signal from an Ortovox F2 that was transmitting +200 Hz above the normal     457 kHz frequency (i.e., at 457.200 kHz). The results are shown in the     following graph. The maroon bars show the distance that the beacon could     receive a properly transmitting 457 kHz signal when the transceiver     was held perpendicularly (i.e., in worst-case orientation).  
 The     blue bars show the distance that the beacon could receive the wayward     457.200 kHz signal. Note that I only did these tests on one occasion using     these four transceivers. The results should be viewed as indicative of the     problem rather than as definitive numerical data. 
 You     can see that the Pieps DSP which     could receive a 457 kHz signal at 48 meters did not receive the wayward     signal until 20 meters. The Barryvox     3000 received the signal at 11 meters, but only in analog mode     (i.e., the direction indicator did not appear). The Tracker     DTS had the smallest percent decrease in     performance (although the actual distance was less than the DSP), but the     distance of 12 meters is also unacceptable. Needless to say, having an     transceiver that transmits this far out of range is dangerous. 
 The     Pieps DSP has a feature wherein it does not normally search outside of     the ±80 Hz range when first entering the search mode,     but if you press the scan button (labeled either "?" or     "(((") button it will scan±500 Hz for     several seconds. If it finds a beacon, it will lock onto it while flashing     "500" in the display. It's a nifty feature, but I doubt many of     us would think to toggle this mode if our initial signal     search failed. This was added to the DSP in version 2.8 of their     software (if you have an older DSP, you can get the software updated).     Prior to this upgrade, the DSP had a difficult time locating     out-of-frequency beacons (based on word-of-mouth conversations, the old DSP     software had shorter range than the Barryvox shown in the above table). 
 Both     the Tracker and Pieps DSP engineers have gone to great lengths to receive     signals from out-of-frequency analog beacons. The problem is not with these     newer beacons, but with the off-frequency transmissions of the older     beacons. It was extremely difficult for me to accept that my faithful     Ortovox F1 was transmitting at an unsafe frequency, but I eventually     accepted this fact and retired "old blue." Beginning with version 3.1 of the Pieps     software, the DSP can measure the frequency of other beacons. The     photograph to the right shows the DSP measuring the frequency of a Tracker     DTS. At BeaconReviews.com, we performed more than 100 tests on 51 different     beacons at various temperatures and compared the results with a $20,000 spectrum     analyzer—the DSP's frequency tester did an excellent job. 
 
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         | To test the         frequency using a Pieps DSP: |           | 1 | Switch the DSP into Search mode. |           | 2 | Place the two transceivers close         together and motionless. |           | 3 | Press-and-hold the button just         below the screen (i.e., the Enter button) until "F" (for         Frequency) appears in the display. |  
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 The     DSP will then display the amount that the transmitting beacon is off. For     example, if the screen displays "F020" and the arrow points to     the left, it means the transmitting beacon is transmitting 20 Hz below the standard 457,000 Hz,     or at 456,980 Hz. In the illustration to the right you can see that this     Tracker DTS is transmitting at exactly 457,000 Hz. As long as the number     displayed is equal-to-or-less-than 080, the beacon is within     specifications.       Additional ReadingBruce     Edgerly & John Hereford of Backcountry Access, Inc. (the company that     makes the Trackers) wrote an excellent article on this topic. Read it     here.  
 Somewhat     related to frequency drift, the "continuous carrier"     signal can confuse digital transceivers. Read about it here.  | 
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