{"ai_pass_count":5,"analysis_step_count":14,"confidence":0.8461329787969589,"created_at":"2026-07-08T00:03:01.010054+00:00","id":148858,"node_number":"683210","processing_time":2.7051780223846436,"recent_steps":["net.store_session","net.llm_structured_analysis","net.rules_detect","net.context_window","net.store_session"],"recording_id":151143,"text":"fancy or unfancy term depending on how you want to look at it for changing the local oscillator frequency to get around that problem and clear up birdies on frequencies you want to listen to. Some radios let you set that on a per channel basis or per frequency basis and some of them it's radio wide. If you do it, if you activate it, it changes the local oscillator for anything you put in the radio. So I think I have seen a hand radio that does it but I can't remember which one it is. I think it may be one of the Chinese radios but that's how the birdie gets generated anyway and that's what causes it. And so that's how you get away from it if you have the beat frequency shift or something similar in the programming instructions. Read your instructions and see. But beat shift is kind of the buzz word or phrase you're looking for there and try turning that on and that should clear up your received frequency where your birdie is. Back to you from N5-0."}