The Million Watt Jamming Wall Designed To Keep You In The Dark

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  • Опубликовано: 31 мар 2024
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Комментарии • 369

  • @sergeygalayda2931
    @sergeygalayda2931 Месяц назад +387

    1971 in USSR. I made my first crystal radio on plywood board. At day time it was only Radio Myak from Moscow and at night it was only VoA. Coil was winded on 3D battery paper casing and capacitor was from old transistor radio. Antenna long wire hide in walnut tree.

    • @fretlessfender
      @fretlessfender Месяц назад +31

      Exciting times, clandestine radio listening! Was it dangerous back then?

    • @demiscunningham7340
      @demiscunningham7340 Месяц назад +13

      ​@@fretlessfender keen to know too

    • @gregjones3660
      @gregjones3660 Месяц назад +4

      @fretlessfender
      Ah, very dangerous... code name Bond

    • @fretlessfender
      @fretlessfender Месяц назад +9

      What was the risk?

    • @sergeygalayda2931
      @sergeygalayda2931 Месяц назад +74

      @@fretlessfenderRisk? Listening anti soviet western radio could give you a free ticket to see Siberia or accommodation in special medical facility with mental orientation.

  • @daveirwin6903
    @daveirwin6903 Месяц назад +126

    I miss listening to shortwave during the Cold War years. I live in the middle of North America. I could listen in to the USSR, Cuba, Mainland China, Voice of America, HCJB out of Ecuador, the BBC, Deutchewelle, Austria, Australia, the Canadian Provincial stations, and more.
    Nowadays, the only international broadcast I can pick up in English is Spain. The airwaves feel so empty compared to those days.

    • @GeoNeilUK
      @GeoNeilUK Месяц назад +17

      When I use my supermarket brand short wave radio, the only broadcast I pick up in English is Radio Romania. I think everyone's switched over to the internet.
      I know there's a digital broadcast mode called DRM (Digital Radio Mondiale) which is kind of like DAB for AM (in that it's not backwards compatible with analogue radio) but I've never seen actual radios capable of receiving DRM the way DAB radios are ubiquitous here in the UK.
      Also, the UK were very early adopters of DAB meaning that most of our stations still broadcast in MP2 and not AAC because so many old radios are still out there that can't decode AAC! Other countries that use DAB have switched completely over to DAB+ with AAC, but the UK won't do that. Only a small handful of stations use DAB+/AAC and they broadcast at very low bitrates, 24kbps last time I checked!

    • @modafotoab
      @modafotoab Месяц назад

      @@GeoNeilUK DAB, whether plus or not, has been a solution without a problem from the beginning, and has been a real damp squib in Germany in spite of repeated marketing campaigns to get everyone to buy a new receiver. The early adopters here bought staggeringly expensive DAB receivers to be able to decode only a handful of channels, then the decision was made to switch to DAB+, which created a pile of high-value electronic junk. Although advertised to reach 90% of the population, reception is still very hit-and-miss today, and certainly doesn't have the continuous coverage that good old FM VHF does, particularly in the many hilly areas. Besides that, there are just far too many 'old' and perfectly good receivers in use here to warrant switching off the FM VHF services. Doing so would create a veritable mountain of electronic junk and annoy many poeple!

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl Месяц назад +3

      Voice Of the Report of the Week International is on 4840khz @0200 Eastern on Saturdays and 0000 Eastern on Mondays 🙂

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 Месяц назад +2

      Indeed it was like tuning into alien radio broadcasts.

    • @hakangustavsson3538
      @hakangustavsson3538 Месяц назад

      Those jammers made shortwave listening almost impossible at the end. And added to those the Russian Woodpecker oth radar destroyed the hobby. The when these pests were switched off one had largely moved on and soon international radio stations started closing. But I would say jamming largely killed off the great DX-ing hobby. So sad, bloody communists trying to keep their populations in the dark.🤮

  • @kaunomedis7926
    @kaunomedis7926 Месяц назад +78

    I live near Kaunas station. Disconnected speakers with longer wires were humming and sometimes speaking. The greenhouse in the yard had strange phenomena- plants died reaching horizontal wire. There was several hundreds volts potential between ground and wire. HF, so not dangerous for humans. But neon lamps worked for free. There was nice fireshow when some wires were broken on transmitter. Still one tower here.

    • @jygeb
      @jygeb Месяц назад +2

      gal galėtum papasakoti daugiau? ar kur nors daugiau apie tai rašoma? Kaip suprantu, kalba apie Vaižganto gatvę, ne Linksmakalnį.

    • @georgejetson3648
      @georgejetson3648 Месяц назад +2

      Move.......immediately.

  • @warmpondwater1610
    @warmpondwater1610 Месяц назад +45

    I got a flash back with the duel male female voice jamming. That took me right back to being 8 year old. Wow…. Right back.

  • @theclearsounds3911
    @theclearsounds3911 Месяц назад +21

    I was a teenager in the late 1970's, and built a shortwave radio. I picked up a bunch of these jammers, and had no idea what all that noise was. I had no idea it was censorship. Some of what's in this video are very similar to what I heard.

    • @paulstubbs7678
      @paulstubbs7678 29 дней назад +1

      Same here, when I was very young, when we visited my grandparents, they had a portable short wave radio, I'd disappear into a quiet corner for a listen. I'd hear these jammers and thought they were some form of super secret stations as I could not figure them out.

  • @Hebdomad7
    @Hebdomad7 Месяц назад +33

    10:32 The whole system has 'eternally angry downstairs neighbor vibes'. Turning on loud music every time they heard loud footsteps above them.

    • @John-mf6ky
      @John-mf6ky Месяц назад

      Sounds like my neighbor 😂
      I feel like I can't even breathe in the middle of the day 😅

    • @iana6713
      @iana6713 Месяц назад +2

      @@John-mf6ky I used to have a neighbour like that where I previously lived. Standout incidents included the night her stoner boyfriend came home from working late one Christmas Eve and turned his music on full blast at 3am, because he wanted his mood to be "festive"... Thank God I don't live there any more.

  • @OkupantTuriMutiCiet
    @OkupantTuriMutiCiet Месяц назад +47

    Interestingly the domestic soviet shortwave radios didn't have anything above the 25m band, but the export radios had 19m, 16m ,13m bands wich weren't jammed. When my grandfather got a VEF-12 for his wedding, he had his friend, who worked at the VEF factory, put in the 19m, 16m, 13m bands, so he could listen to VoA and BBC without the jamming.

    • @IGLArocknroll
      @IGLArocknroll Месяц назад +17

      So that's why the Hungarian "Videoton" and "Orion" radio receivers were popular with the Soviet troops stationed here... good to know.

    • @Bartok_J
      @Bartok_J Месяц назад +6

      The higher bands were jammed, but the jamming was less effective at these frequencies because of the greater skip distance, i.e. the jamming could go over the heads of the intended listeners.
      During the sunspot maximum, Voice of Israel used even higher frequencies - among the 27MHz CB channels and just above the 28MHz amateur band - for its Russian language broadcasts as the Soviet jammers couldn't go that high.

    • @jonathaneastwood2927
      @jonathaneastwood2927 Месяц назад +2

      @@Bartok_J neither could most of the listeners though so a bit pointless!

  • @bobroberts2371
    @bobroberts2371 Месяц назад +30

    The Brit TV programs " Connections " ( 1 and 2 ) and " The Day the World Changed " by James Burke . One line in an episode goes something like this " It isn't about who has the biggest army or the most bullets, it is about who controls the information "

    • @campandcook3118
      @campandcook3118 20 дней назад

      Well, especially covcov showed which organisations and companies tried to control information

  • @cmjones01
    @cmjones01 Месяц назад +15

    Great video. I remember listening to short wave in the UK in the 1980s and hearing the jamming. I now live in Warsaw, Poland, and my parents-in-law still have the VEF 206 radio they used to listen to Radio Free Europe and the BBC. Just outside the city, in a placed appropriately called Radiówek, was the local jamming transmitter. Apparently the remains of the bunkers used are stlll there, though I haven't had chance to go and look for them.

  • @pablod6872
    @pablod6872 Месяц назад +14

    I miss tuning in to the BBC World Service in the evenings and trying to remember my German by listening to Deutsche Welle.

  • @cryptickcryptick2241
    @cryptickcryptick2241 Месяц назад +27

    I understand from other sources that Radio Free America was very effective from a cost benefit perspective. For every $1 spent broadcasting; the Russians ended up spending like $100 dollars jamming it. When you are in a strategic race with a rival, both USA and Russians were launching submarines, tanks, aircraft carriers, and more; having a rival waste more resources that you use is important. It would appear that the broadcasters, only needed one station to broadcast, yet in order to jam the enemy needed to use hundreds of jammers, generally in large cities. A cost/benefit analysis such as this could easily be calculated on killowatts of broadcasting power, number of hours of manpower and number of towers constructed.

    • @richiehoyt8487
      @richiehoyt8487 Месяц назад +1

      This sounds like an aspect of the efforts to broadcast 'propoganda' (as it were) into the Soviet Bloc that isn't generally appreciated. One has to wonder if it was, in fact, the primary purpose of these broadcasts(?!) Even if not, certainly a nice ancillary benefit.

    • @cryptickcryptick2241
      @cryptickcryptick2241 Месяц назад +2

      @@richiehoyt8487 Getting truth to people in Russia was probably the main thing. People knew their government "might sometimes lie," but without having a way to hear the other side, people did not have a way to make up their own mind. A little truth goes a long way in counteracting lies.

  • @glenjarnold
    @glenjarnold Месяц назад +9

    I remember getting into radio seriously in early 1981 when the CB craze was in full swing, and my interest quickly turned to shortwave radio in general. The assorted pulses, wobbles and mechanized voices fascinated me. But still, the biggest bugbear for me once I got my amateur licence in 1984 was the infamous Russian Woodpecker (although it was over-the-horizon-radar, it still did a fantastic jamming job!)

  • @Pablud3S
    @Pablud3S Месяц назад +9

    In lithuania we've recantly had a TV programme about amateur radio operators in soviet times. This is an awesome supplement, even if unintended by you :)

  • @cypher31337
    @cypher31337 Месяц назад +9

    Iron curtain..... My grandpa used to chat with Russians via HAM radio.... Which was frowned upon heavly for the USSR citizens...

  • @MatthewDoye
    @MatthewDoye Месяц назад +10

    This explains some of the various noises I used to hear listening to SW in the 70s and 80s

  • @simonmason8582
    @simonmason8582 Месяц назад +28

    "Jamming" by Rimantas Pleikys is a great book - it explained the "U" beacon origin as used in Kraftwerk's "Radioland" in 1975.

    • @Bartok_J
      @Bartok_J Месяц назад

      Wasn't that used for Jammer control? I remember one well, just outside the 49 metre broadcast band. It was supposedly well up in the north as it propagated for longer periods than would be expected.

  • @waveyjones3347
    @waveyjones3347 Месяц назад +26

    The research into these videos must take dozens of hours. Thank you for the content! 🎉

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Месяц назад +65

    Being a shortwave listener and
    amateur radio operator back to
    1960, I remember that jamming
    on the airwaves especially back
    in the heyday of shortwave
    broadcasting. Today with less
    on Shortwave to listen to, it's
    less common.
    Years ago on a Caribbean cruise
    back to Florida, passing Havana
    Cuba, I could hear the jamming
    on Radio Marti from Florida to
    Cuba, I think on 1180 KHz. 😊

    • @viarnay
      @viarnay Месяц назад +4

      I can hear Radio Marti almost 5/5 from Canari Islands 🙂

    • @raymondmartin6737
      @raymondmartin6737 Месяц назад +6

      @viarnay Thanks 😊 Canary Islands
      are a very nice place. 20 years ago when
      I operated as V25CH, in Antigua, I was
      called by a Canary Islands amateur
      Operator. I have done shortwave and
      Amateur Radio for over 60 years, now
      being 80. I miss the old days of short
      wave reception, that we had before
      the internet. 73 de Ray W2CH, NH.

  • @ianliston-smith7921
    @ianliston-smith7921 Месяц назад +12

    Yet more accurate research Lewis! Some of the BBC's HF feeders (different language streams on each sideband and were never jammed) to relay sites occasionally also carried RTTY data for those relay sites. This was frequency changes, array changes, general schedule changes, etc. and it was suspected these were being read by the USSR jamming centres. A test was set up using a frequency and relay site never before used for BBC Russian. If it took the jammers a few minutes to find the new transmission (they were very efficient!) it was suspected they found it just by band-scanning. However, the test BBC Russian-language transmission was found instantly, confirming the RTTY telexes were being read...

  • @Linas_LY2H
    @Linas_LY2H Месяц назад +4

    Thanks for the interesting video and thanks for paying tribute to Rimantas Pleikys, one of the best experts in broadcast radio and jamming issues.
    I remener the jamming era very well from my childhood and young adult years. What is interesting, the radio receivers produced in and made for the soviet market were only having 75, 49, 41, 31 and 25m Short Wave bands. And these bands were jammed heavily. At the same time, the other SW bands, like 22, 19, 16, 13m were, actually, free of jamming (as the soviet radios were not having them!) ,and one could listen to the VOA, RFE/RL, BBC etc , if only had the right receiver. To have this, many radio amateurs, like myself, or just electronics enthusiasts were upgrading the soviet-made transistor radios by rewinding the coils and replacing some capacitors in order to shift the receiving frequencies up to the right frequency range. One brand of radios, the VEF -202 designed and made in occupied Riga, Latvia, has become a legendary radio, as it was very easy to upgrade due to its very smart rotating cylinder with band-coils easily accessible and swapable with rewound ones. I had one I modified for myself, another for my parents, also for some friends. Greetings to all Short Wave listeners! @Linas_LY2H

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Месяц назад +1

      The irony is that the VEF radios were quite a successful Soviet export to the west being sold under the names Vega and Selena. The adverts actually highlighted the Soviet expertise in shortwave snooping using "trawlers" with an unusual number of antennas.

  • @nigelh3253
    @nigelh3253 Месяц назад +21

    Thanks for a very well researched video. Amazing the amount of effort and money that was put into the jamming process. The Russian government must have been very frightened by the free access to information. Very frightened!

    • @radioactivMUC
      @radioactivMUC Месяц назад +6

      As Russia is toady

    • @nigelh3253
      @nigelh3253 Месяц назад +5

      @@radioactivMUC Yes, I was going to add that! Today, no need for jamming, the government just controls all the TV, radio, press, etc.

    • @ItsTristan1st
      @ItsTristan1st Месяц назад +9

      The problem is that it was (and is) not information but rather material designed to "promote the interests of the United States of America". That is from their own website. IE propaganda radio.

    • @jeffkardosjr.3825
      @jeffkardosjr.3825 Месяц назад

      Russian?

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Месяц назад +7

      Now westerners are afraid of mean tweets.

  • @Teknophobe
    @Teknophobe Месяц назад +62

    Really love this content Lewis. Worked for NATO, in Germany from 89, to 91. So this stuff fascinates me. 👍

    • @bluenose21c
      @bluenose21c Месяц назад +7

      I was In berlin 88 till early Jan 90, its really interesting

    • @Teknophobe
      @Teknophobe Месяц назад +2

      @@bluenose21c Truly wondrous times to be in, Germany. 👍

    • @bluenose21c
      @bluenose21c Месяц назад +2

      ​@@Teknophobe Absolutely 💯

    • @Teknophobe
      @Teknophobe Месяц назад +1

      @@bluenose21c Just caught ur name. Was it a Scottish regiment u were in by chance?

    • @bluenose21c
      @bluenose21c Месяц назад +3

      1 kings mate in spandau ​@@Teknophobe

  • @dougtaylor7724
    @dougtaylor7724 Месяц назад +7

    Lewis, on Easter Day the ham bands were jammed off and on with a massive carrier signal that was 5 to 8 times the size of an AM carrier. It was a buzz or a clock tone. It was so large the splatter would cover 1/2 of the small bands like 12 and 17 meters. The signal would cover 1/4 of a large band. People in western and northern US did not hear it. The southeast was affected. Have you heard of this?

    • @frankjohnson7204
      @frankjohnson7204 Месяц назад +2

      Over horizon RADAR. They are very common and don't seem fussy as to who they annoy.

    • @JimWatt
      @JimWatt 14 дней назад

      HAARP ?

  • @senilyDeluxe
    @senilyDeluxe Месяц назад +4

    A friend of my dad said, back when he lived in GDR, he and some friends built an antenna in the attic that they got tuned so it would receive the western signals but block out the jamming signal. That was the first time I heard that there was radio jamming going on in the eastern bloc.

  • @cmdredstrakerofshado1159
    @cmdredstrakerofshado1159 Месяц назад +31

    What interesting is jamming has the opposite effect many times because people wonder what is the state is so afraid of and jaming strarts to creating more questions needing to be answered then if they left obvious western propaganda broadcasts alone

    • @MysteriousFigure
      @MysteriousFigure Месяц назад +8

      Exactly, a perfect example was in the GDR / East Germany, where there was a culture of discouraging people from watching west german tv through a variety of methods (as west germany strategically placed some of its tv transmitters for maximum coverage over east germany), but it couldn't be blocked without blocking tv in parts of west germany and causing diplomatic problems, so those people had access to those western broadcasts. However, in the "Valley of the clueless" (Tal der Ahnungslosen) in areas like Dresden where they couldn't get the western TV signal to reach easily and those people had reduced information / freedom to get that information, there was actually more anti-government sentiment and more demands for freedom, to the point there are stories of the east german authorities supposedly building in downrange antennas so that those areas could still get west german tv in an effort to try and placate them and stop them being so disruptive (the idea being that there isn't one area that will then start protests elsewhere due to being so annoyed)

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Месяц назад

      Your comment made me think how Romania broadcast the American series Dallas thinking it would show their citizens how unscrupulous American businessmen were, putting profit before even family. Of course the main thing Romanians actually noticed were the beautiful houses, cars, and clothes.

    • @TrueNativeScot
      @TrueNativeScot 22 дня назад

      It's like how the harder that social media censors pro-White content, the more people seek it out to see why it's being hidden from them

  • @arenaengineering8070
    @arenaengineering8070 Месяц назад +6

    Now a lot of SMPS in every house better jamming LW, MW and SW than megawatts jammer in 1960 -1980. Future is comming.

    • @rasoirwolf
      @rasoirwolf Месяц назад +2

      Hell, the power adapter that came with the original HD Radio I had caused enough Interference, it blocked out the digital sidebands on an FM station and messed with stereo reception on weaker stations, where other, older AM-FM Radios worked fine. I got a better quality adapter and got better FM and FM-HD reception. We don't have any HD stations I can get on AM.

  • @oldgolfpunk
    @oldgolfpunk Месяц назад +17

    I have zero knowledge of this topic. But I love learning and listening to your channel.
    Respect brother 🙏

  • @hoperp1951
    @hoperp1951 Месяц назад +4

    Started my interest in radio back in the early 60's, my uncle was a radio operator in the RAF. He showed me some of the SW Broadcast stations around the world and started SWLing. Radio Moscow, VoA, Radio Tirana, Radio Beijing, Radio Hanoi, Radio Havana, BBC World Service to name but a few. So many were jammed but still possible to resolve a lot of content despite the jamming. Eventually moved on to the Ham Bands, got licenced in 1979. 73 de GW8TVX.

    • @alanolley7286
      @alanolley7286 Месяц назад +1

      I started in the 60s when father gave me an old Murphy radio that his father bought after their house was bombed in 1944.I trailed a wire down the catslide roof at home and spend hours listening to stuff from many countries .Still have the radio ,which is waiting to be restored.

    • @hoperp1951
      @hoperp1951 Месяц назад

      @@alanolley7286 Awesome :)

  • @toucan221
    @toucan221 Месяц назад +3

    Yes everybody has forgotten the old days of Radio Jamming, very good, very interesting, thanks

  • @timmotel5804
    @timmotel5804 Месяц назад +6

    Very cool. I had a crystal radio in the early 1960's and a SW Radio also. Short wave was great back then.
    Today, much SW is just religious Nutters. There is fortunately, some real intelligent & rational content out there. I'm using a 100 foot outdoor wire antenna.
    Thank You & Best Regards.

  • @timmoore60
    @timmoore60 Месяц назад +7

    I remember the wobble jammers that were used during the Gulf war, a rapid siren like noise. Not heard it since, and not sure if it was used prior to that. I don’t have any recordings of the wobble jammers (or even the woodpecker) but we did certainly hear that down under.

    • @wrongsideof40
      @wrongsideof40 Месяц назад

      If you want to relive the moment, just play the first 30-seconds of Hawkwind's Silver Machine!

    • @timmoore60
      @timmoore60 Месяц назад

      @@wrongsideof40 that’s a very similar sound, but if anything the Hawkwind sound is a slightly sped up sound compared to what I remember the wobble jammer being.

    • @wrongsideof40
      @wrongsideof40 Месяц назад

      @@timmoore60 Yeah, just an approximation. But if anyone down the pub asks you about wobble jammers(!) you could probably point them to this, with a clear conscience!

  • @thevintageaudiolife
    @thevintageaudiolife Месяц назад +1

    I've been rebuilding and listening to shortwave for over 40 years now. Sometimes I hear the most fascinating conversations, some tend to be very suspicious. I find older tube shortwave receivers to be more sensitive than my transistor receivers. My favorite radios tend to be from early 40's.

  • @MSM5500
    @MSM5500 Месяц назад +1

    I remember that back in the day. I also remember that moment when all of a sudden the radio jamming got switched off. The jamming tower was situated just 5km away from where I lived. It didn't cause much problem with the reception though so I could easily listen to what I want to on SW when the sun is set. I was a school kid at the time but was addicted to all the Voices of the West very much especially thanks to my mom who didn't let me watch the Soviet TV. But my favorite program was the daily Billboard Magazine Top 10 with Ray McDonald on VOA broadcasted not on SW but MV from Thessaloniki, Greece. It was all in English so there was no jamming there at all and sound quality was just a huge step up from what was on SW. I liked to bring my portable radio in my classroom and play Yankee Doodle - a VOA's signature tune at 8AM to the teachers. The dumb Soviet teachers knew fuck all about what I made them to listen to so I felt very proud of me doing that. Great thanks to my parents that I was born and grew up in the non-Soviet family despite living in the SU.

    • @richiehoyt8487
      @richiehoyt8487 Месяц назад

      Good for your parents, and Good For You!

    • @MSM5500
      @MSM5500 Месяц назад

      @@richiehoyt8487 Cheers!

  • @JeffreyGroves
    @JeffreyGroves Месяц назад +28

    I remember hearing really annoying jamming of broadcasts in Belgium in the early 1980s. The jamming signals were very annoying. I believe they were warbler type jammers.

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape Месяц назад +3

    I love these historical subject videos, Lewis. You do a great job digging up all this historical information, the kind of Cold War history most people forget about. And the photos of vintage 1970s East Block radio equipment are wonderful. Would love to get our hands on some of that gear today!

  • @M-demo
    @M-demo Месяц назад +2

    Thank you for sharing. When I was in my teens, I would accidentally pick up Radio Moscow and other gurgling/high-pitched Morse code on my electric guitar amp. It was the most surprising sound to hear from an amp. At the time, I couldn't understand how or why this happened.

  • @ernestsmith3581
    @ernestsmith3581 Месяц назад +2

    Here on the other side of the pond, I always considered US Aviation Weather stations and beacons our version of information blocking, preventing us from receiving European longwave broadcasts meant for local consumption. Admittedly very difficult here in Texas even without the AvWeather jamming, I did manage to catch a few at EU dawn.

  • @tr4nscend
    @tr4nscend Месяц назад +2

    Fun fact VoA is now a favourite of most enlightened and expat persians. It's quite celebrated :)

  • @SuperMAZ007
    @SuperMAZ007 Месяц назад +1

    Very thankful you covered this topic. I was a little child when I and my Grandfather listened to the Voice of America. I remember the jamming well. Sometimes the people responsible for jamming did not know the language of the broadcast so they would randomly jam here and there. But the message was hear still even if it was fragmented. People would use different methods to enhance the tuning devices on the radio to be able to get a better signal if one of the short waves was disrupted. Older radios made before WW 2 where in much demand at some point cause they could be used to listen to wave bands that where missing from the standard Soviet Radios.

  • @thomas2024_
    @thomas2024_ Месяц назад +7

    Yeah, 1988! The years of Gorbachev's "glasnost" - or, in other words, an ushering in of a new era of openness and transparency in the Soviet Union... Nice to the man followed through - unblocking Western broadcasters across the Eastern Bloc!

    • @hoodzoot
      @hoodzoot Месяц назад

      yeah gorbachev, what a great man right... ape

  • @SpinStar1956
    @SpinStar1956 Месяц назад +3

    I remember as a kid hearing all these and many more. Some of the were extremely loud and nasty sounding.
    Being in the US, many times you could distinguish both the station and jammer; and even augment one or the by antenna orientation.
    I sure miss the SW stations, you could get different versions of news; so you could pick your propaganda.
    Some of the propaganda was so outrageous that it was a hoot to listen to. Thanks for the video and 73… 😊

    • @rasoirwolf
      @rasoirwolf Месяц назад

      I guess you could look at RT or Radio Sputnik online now, it's still pathetic - even on another platform.

  • @johnpinckney4979
    @johnpinckney4979 Месяц назад +23

    Cuba is not a slouch when it comes to jamming. For a long time, they jammed 1140 kHz to hit WQBA in Miami. (WQBA also lost a News Director to a car bomb assassination in the 1970's.) The jamming was so intense that co-channel WRVA in Richmond, VA was often unlistenable in the city at night. There was also Cuban jamming of U.S. AM stations in summer 1982. My employer at the time was a victim. Although few listened to our simulcast AM outside of drive, I did check on it occasionally by checking the AM mod monitor. One night, I noticed the meter wasn't in sync with the FM. I punched-up the audio and I heard Radio Rebelde! A little bit of excitement on what would've otherwise been a boring evening. I called our CE. He called our VP/GM. He called me and wanted a report on his desk before I left the studio. Needless to say, the Government Relations people of a lot of broadcasters were at the State Department the next day! IIRC, this was a response to the start of Radio Marti. Also, in the spring of 1980, Radio Moscow had a short-lived "North American Relay Station" in Cuba, broadcasting to at least the U.S. east coast on 600kHz.

    • @tvdan1043
      @tvdan1043 Месяц назад +1

      That may explain why I had such a hard time hearing WRVA at night as a kid, despite living about 25 miles from their transmitter site. Even when we could pick it up, there was always what sounded like electrical noise in the background (sounds that were reminiscent of what Lewis presented in this video). My parents said it was because they had to reduce power at night, but everything I read said WRVA was full-power 50,000 watts 24/7.

    • @rickt10
      @rickt10 Месяц назад +1

      I was a disc jockey in commercial radio from late 70s through 80. In 1980 I was doing morning drive on an AM 600 station in North Florida. We were having our antenna system being worked on. As was typical for AM we had an omni direction antenna during the day and directional at night (straight West to protect Mexico clear channel). We were off the air at night for a couple of weeks and I brought the station up in the morning. I brought the station up, and immediatly got calls asking what the heck was that commie BS we were broadcasting last night (when we were off). Come to find out it was radio free Moscow comming out of Cuba directed straight up Florida. I assured the callers it wasn't us. So, the US sure didn't seem to do any jamming of Soviet propaganda.😂

    • @rickt10
      @rickt10 Месяц назад

      @@tvdan1043
      Even 50 kW stations often had to reduce power and go directional. Only a couple of blowtorchs (as we called clear channel stations). I doubt if they went directional they stayed 50 kW

    • @tvdan1043
      @tvdan1043 Месяц назад

      @@rickt10 WRVA was (is) clear channel.

  • @Dutchreason
    @Dutchreason Месяц назад +1

    Any European who was a teenager in the late 80's to early 90's who owned a radio and got off of familiar FM frequencies remembers this.

  • @samcollins6394
    @samcollins6394 Месяц назад

    Another really well thought out and researched video. Thank you Lewis. I shudder to think how much time and effort you out into producing these. I learn something new with every one. Thank you.

  • @user-gb8jp8ew6z
    @user-gb8jp8ew6z Месяц назад +8

    Could you please make some more videos about big jammers?

  • @anthonyfranz8317
    @anthonyfranz8317 Месяц назад

    This video was extremely well produced and has great information in it. Lewis, you continue to do a fantastic job on this channel. Keep up the good work!

  • @kevinmothers904
    @kevinmothers904 Месяц назад +4

    @7.28 Albanian Radio Tirana interfered in the evening with the BBC Radio One broadcasts which were also on 1214 kHz.

    • @michaelmiller641
      @michaelmiller641 Месяц назад +3

      The female announcer in English on radio Tirana always sounded like an old washerwoman!

    • @rasoirwolf
      @rasoirwolf Месяц назад

      Isn't Radio Tirana broadcasting on WRMI now?

    • @Bartok_J
      @Bartok_J Месяц назад +2

      @@michaelmiller641Her name was / is June Taylor, and she's a New Zealander of Maori heritage. Worth a Google - an interesting story about how a New Zealand dentist's daughter ended up reading boring propaganda in a tinpot dictatorship on the far side of the earth.

  • @ryank5tar
    @ryank5tar Месяц назад +1

    Another great history lesson. Keep up the Great work.

  • @nowster
    @nowster Месяц назад +4

    Got a surprise when making up an amplifier kit back in the 1980s and found the short unshielded cable to the volume control caused it to pick up a Russian shortwave broadcast clearly.

    • @cooked.gaming
      @cooked.gaming Месяц назад

      My cousin had a bass guitar amplifier that when he put his tongue to the cord it would pick up a local aussie radio station… still have never learned exactly why

  • @ivorbiggen9599
    @ivorbiggen9599 Месяц назад +1

    A good job well done there Lewis, very informative yet again and a lot research. Always surprised with what you come up with. Thank you for that

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela Месяц назад +4

    It's amazing the scale this was done on. I can see Russia doing it again.

    • @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459
      @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459 Месяц назад +1

      Yep, esp on media platforms where presidential candidates got silenced, to speak nothing of common folks, lol. Russia doin it again lol.

    • @heckelphon
      @heckelphon Месяц назад

      There are far more ways for people to receive data from other parts of the world for it to work now. Instead they seem to rely on being able to brainwash or frighten a large proportion of the population to believe that NOT listening to anything foreign is not only your patriotic duty, but that only the state services from VGTRK tell the truth.

    • @thomashenden71
      @thomashenden71 Месяц назад

      Russia is already jamming the GPS signals in neighbouring countries - so yes, unfortunately…

    • @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459
      @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459 Месяц назад

      @@thomashenden71 people should worry about their brains being massively, all them media cannons, jammed. Some positioning sys gotta be the least of their worries.

    • @JimWatt
      @JimWatt 14 дней назад

      @@thomashenden71 That is because the neigbours are firing US supplied GPS guided missiles at Russia.

  • @TheRisenPeopleEire
    @TheRisenPeopleEire Месяц назад +1

    Love this stuff man brilliant!

  • @getyerspn
    @getyerspn Месяц назад +3

    My mum and dad went on a cruise around Sweden & Finland ending in a trip to Russia in st Petersburg a few years before to Ukraine war ... On the Swedish ship they were traveling on all the TVs and radios just received 'static' interference even they're mobile phones stopped working when they approached Russia and they were over flown many many times by fighter jets very low .. I remember my mum saying the captain kept reassuring them telling them it's ok it happens every time they enter russian waters .... Sounds to me like the jamming is very much still a thing.

    • @rasoirwolf
      @rasoirwolf Месяц назад

      Yeah, it does. Not even Russian broadcasts were audible though?

  • @jamesa2961
    @jamesa2961 Месяц назад +2

    Hey thanks bud. Another great video . I remember hearing weird sounds as we had a cb antenna on the roof . But , I'd get weird interference now and then and I remember hearing the old channel markers. Wished I could ask my dad. About it but he has passed 3 years ago

  • @Kw1161
    @Kw1161 Месяц назад +2

    Thanks for reminding me of the bad old days especially when I was out to sea trying to listen to the BBC, Well at least China hasn’t started ramping up their transmitters and sometimes their “Firedrake” signal is okay to listen to. Fortunately, Cuba’s money problems have slowed their jamming somewhat.
    73! Have a great day!

  • @captaindonut9075
    @captaindonut9075 Месяц назад +11

    Cool never imagend my country of lithuania will ever make in one of your videos.😊
    Edit#1: 10:36. My dad sayd that was a radio station. He knows that since he worked a short time as an army radio coms oficer for the army.
    Edit#2 10:50 the now closed old kaunas
    post office.

    • @rockymountainbiking4030
      @rockymountainbiking4030 Месяц назад +1

      It is amazing how Lithuania is being revealed as a trend setter. Where in Vilnius is that building?

    • @captaindonut9075
      @captaindonut9075 Месяц назад

      @@rockymountainbiking4030 my perents sayd somewhere in žvėrynas.

    • @rasoirwolf
      @rasoirwolf Месяц назад +2

      @@rockymountainbiking4030 Not just Lithuania, the other Baltic States are mentioned more than they used to be in lots of media. Estonia is becoming the model Democracy in the World.

  • @algorithminc.8850
    @algorithminc.8850 Месяц назад +9

    Great topic ... thanks. Cheers ...

  • @iana6713
    @iana6713 Месяц назад +2

    This is utterly fascinating stuff to listen to - imagine the resources that the cash-strapped Eastern Bloc economies threw at attempting to jam Western broadcasts into their territory. And all for nothing, in the end. I have worked with a few older Poles who can remember their parents listening to the Polish Service of the BBC during the period of martial law in the '80s, and they told me it was an absolute lifeline because it showed them that they were not alone.

  • @Ra-zor
    @Ra-zor Месяц назад

    Oh wow, I remember as a kid picking up Russian stations with multiple people speaking at the same time and thought it was a few stations overlapping! now I know what it was!. Thanks for this great video.

  • @jhonsiders6077
    @jhonsiders6077 Месяц назад +4

    I read that during the Berlin blockade RIAS was some times so powerful people could hear it in the fillings of their teeth ! True or not I do not know. . I am about to string all the wire of my directional wire antenna out in the back field will have 415 feet of wire plus the grounding radials under it in the earth will make it receive northeast towards your side of the pond hope to hear the cool stuff you do .

    • @Veritas-invenitur
      @Veritas-invenitur Месяц назад

      Although there has never been a confirmed case of dental fillings picking up radio signals, it has probably happened. During the 20th century, fillings were made up of an amalgamation of different metals. Some combinations of these metals have been used in similar per portions to early fillings by soldiers in the field during WW2 to make crude radios. The earliest consecutive reports of fillings picking up radio signals occurred across Europe during WW2 on a night when the Northern Lights were exceptionally vivid. For me, that’s enough proof.

  • @mrmiasnikovich900
    @mrmiasnikovich900 Месяц назад +2

    When Chernobyl exploded, Soviet authorities did not alert the population during the first most dangrous weeks when the air was full of radioactive iodine, moreover people were forced to attend the1st May demonstrations in nearby cities like Kyiv or Homiel as if nothing happened. I was lucky that my father used to listen to the "enemies' voices" on shortwave, and got aware of the accident a few days after it happened, much earlier than everyone else, and made me stay at home even though there was great weather outside, probably saving my health or even life -- quite a lot of my childhood mates suffered from thyroid-related problems and even cancers, i didn't.
    Also, as far as he remembers, back in 70s-80s RFE/RL has always been heavily jammed, VoA was jammed not so thoroughly and could be heard, while BBC and DW were not jammed at all most of the time. Additionally there was barely no jamming on the shorter bands 19m and 16m not used in the USSR, so a skilled person could retune an existing receiver to them for better listening. Also it was hard and expensive, but quite possible to get an export version of a soviet or a foreign radio supporting these bands.
    And thank you for dedicating the video to Rimantas Pleikys: apart from his great work on radio jamming history, he stood behind Radio Baltic Waves that relayed Belarusian RFE/RL service on MW from Vilnius and even had own programming towards Belarus in early 2000s: listening to these 612KHz transmissions in my Walkman impacted me a lot back then. 15 years later i payed a visit to the transmitter site before it got demolished.

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Месяц назад

      The first that the West knew about it was when a Nuclear facility in Sweden saw much higher radiation than normal.

  • @nnov_tech_chan7891
    @nnov_tech_chan7891 Месяц назад

    Seva Novgorodsev and his "Rockposevy" music program are my favorite.

  • @MalleusSemperVictor
    @MalleusSemperVictor Месяц назад

    It's very interesting to see the medium of information change, and the methods of controlling it on both sides change with it.

  • @longsighted
    @longsighted Месяц назад +8

    It is little known that the Eurovission Song Contest was pushed by the Western Powers as a means of overcoming Soviet jamming of Western television. Basic principle was that all of Europes television station transmitters would pushing out the same program. It is the reason why the program had such a lavish presentation.

    • @ethzero
      @ethzero Месяц назад +3

      Now it's used as a referendum on each other's country's popularity.

    • @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459
      @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459 Месяц назад

      Nope, that’s a myth. You can’t overcome jamming like that. Also jamming wasn’t that constant and complete - you could and did get broadcasts. RF propagation caused more issues.

    • @longsighted
      @longsighted Месяц назад

      @@gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459 Surely you have answered your own point which is probably correct, if jamming g was complete. However it was evidently not as you indicate allowing some western TV tx's to be recieved. They were all carrying the same program.

    • @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459
      @gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459 Месяц назад

      @@longsighted oh, where do I begin. First, simultaneous transmission wouldn’t have improved on power output, as it couldn’t have technically been simultaneous. Second, the frequencies and often signal standards were different - no multiplier again. And, finally, they didn’t jam tv signal as the frequency it operates on doesn’t really travel far.

    • @longsighted
      @longsighted Месяц назад

      @@gustavevilleneuvedehoff-un5459 I concuur with your technical observations. However the song contest was pushed by the western powers in a way to illustrate western vibrant living standards. How effective it was for the money invested (in scheme of things small) is only known and possibly summized by those who promoted the plan. However the song contest still survives today in much the extravagant and some times bazaar presentation it pioneered in those very early days of television. I suppose they thought it was another headache for the Soviet Union to contend with.

  • @mstrawn69
    @mstrawn69 Месяц назад +3

    I used to listen to Radio Moscow because it was really funny at times.

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Месяц назад

      "Factory number 745 has produced a 1868965 tractors this year"

    • @JimWatt
      @JimWatt 14 дней назад

      @@MrDuncl Radio Tirana used to talk a lot about tractor production, the UK didn't need to jam it, it was not a station to listen to for long although it was a very strong signal in London.

  • @trackside8279
    @trackside8279 Месяц назад

    Excellent work!

  • @GeoNeilUK
    @GeoNeilUK Месяц назад +2

    Makes me wonder if RTE had an international service if that would have been jammed. There was briefly an Irish Overseas Radio service that I think had nothing to do with RTE that broadcast on short wave in the 1990s I believe but the closest RTE got to an international radio service was 252 on long wave and that jammed Algeria until it was switched off.

    • @rasoirwolf
      @rasoirwolf Месяц назад +1

      Probably would've been jammed, if it were older, Ireland is in the West. Not NATO, but in the West.

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Месяц назад

      Atlantic 252 ? I recall getting good reception of that driving all the way from Bristol to Blackpool. A few years later a pilot told me they listened to it in the cockpit as the NBD receiver could be tuned to it.

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Месяц назад +1

    Great video, Lewis...👍

  • @user-yq6hg1rh7b
    @user-yq6hg1rh7b 20 дней назад

    i managed to get a hold of some LP records which were used by Radio Free Europe. Crazy to hear the music from the same discs that perhaps millions have heard over shortwave.

  • @samwilliams1142
    @samwilliams1142 Месяц назад +1

    In the late 60s and early 70s I had a large cabinet type tube radio that would tune some of the shortwave bands. There were religious broadcasters, VOA, Radio Australia, RSA; rarely would I get USSR. I knew nothing about propagation. Eventually I learned that low frequencies do better in darkness and high frequencies do better in daylight. Heard a few jammers in the background. I had a longwire antenna. Oklahoma

  • @yannisgk
    @yannisgk Месяц назад +2

    then : radio wars
    now : radio gaga

  • @dadamager3000
    @dadamager3000 28 дней назад

    fantastic episode. even as a lithuanian i was unaware of this technology, very interesting

  • @321CatboxWA
    @321CatboxWA Месяц назад

    Well done. Thanks

  • @michaelmiller641
    @michaelmiller641 Месяц назад

    I remember when tuning through the shortwave broadcast bands in the late 60s early 70s all the noise caused by the jamming stations!

  • @Bartok_J
    @Bartok_J Месяц назад

    Regarding the jammer callsigns - the two letter ones were within the USSR, the alpha-numeric ones were located in satellite states such as Bulgaria.
    How do we know this? In the mid-80s, the BBC Receiving Station at Crowsley Park was involved in an international exercise to identify the source of this "harmful interference" (a euphemism for "deliberate jamming"). In conjunction with Radcontrol Baldock (that had DFing facilities) and monitoring stations overseas, a mass of information was collated, identifying the offending sites and formally complaining the the governments concerned.
    Checking jamming of BBC broadcasts was a daily task at BBC Monitoring, and functioned as something of a beacon of East-West relationships; for instance, BBC Polish had been clear until martial law was declared in Poland, when it started again.
    RFE and Radio Liberty were the main targets, and were still jammed for a time after jamming of the BBC, VoA and DW had stopped. The very last services to be jammed were actually Bulgarian - jamming of RFE Bulgarian continued for a few weeks after all the other jamming had ceased, presumably at the request of the Bulgarian government.

  • @MikesMovies
    @MikesMovies Месяц назад +1

    Excellent stuff

  • @mikeeygq
    @mikeeygq Месяц назад +1

    Great topic !

  • @oldshep2695
    @oldshep2695 Месяц назад

    Thank you.

  • @americanveteran1382
    @americanveteran1382 Месяц назад +2

    The iron curtain was real.thing Although most people never understood the great lengths people would go to to get information from both sides..today the same thing happens using cyber communications..different times same.story

    • @jessec4677
      @jessec4677 Месяц назад

      Seems to me that with how many different ways we have to communicate now, they can't just jam a signal anymore. Every major nation has its own army of misinfo agents. Just a symphony of garbage fed to us now to obfuscate the truth instead of jamming.. Our poor brains! lol

  • @sinisatrlin840
    @sinisatrlin840 Месяц назад

    I own many SW receivers, over 50 Halicrafters, many more japanese ones. SW amd LW are topics of my interest and on net i have found declassified reports from CIA listening post in Belgrade from 50s/60s. Many, many pages of interesting stuff.
    Yugoslavia did not jam western stations so it was ideal for installing listening and measuring station in US embassy.

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere Месяц назад

    China also jammed broadcast signals on HF and MF. But LF seemed to be relatively free of jamming, except for the use of identical frequencies by very high power Soviet bloc domestic broadcast transmitters. (Up to 2 Megawatts for a while.) Curiously, the BBC's 200kHz Long Wave broadcasts were often clearly audible in New South Wales, Australia when I was there around 1970, with no obvious attempts at continuous jamming, except for the big Radio Moscow broadcasts on the same frequency. But the BBC and Moscow broadcasts were not always simultaneous. For instance, after midnight, UTC, until 06:00, the BBC World Service used to take over from domestic Light Programme (then Radio 2 but now Radio 4) daytime broadcasts on 200kHz. So at certain times of day or night, anyone in Southeast and Eastern Asia with a Long Wave receiver could listen to BBC News and other transmissions. Of course, the 200kHz frequency (which was also a frequency standard signal with low bit rate clock synchronisation data on the carrier, was changed later to the present 198kHz.
    The BBC 198 kHz transmissions will discontinue when the very few remaining high power transmitting valves can no longer be rebuilt. They have been run at reduced power for several years already, in an attempt to prolong their useable life. Will Moscow continue to use the frequency when that happens? Time will tell.

  • @wormwood6424
    @wormwood6424 Месяц назад

    I heard the same intermittent sounds on my fm radio in the car the other night in south wales 😳

  • @ColKorn1965
    @ColKorn1965 Месяц назад

    I remember listening to the Voice of Russia way back when I started listening to shortwave in earnest. My biggest problem was that I was too close to our local AM station and there were so many heterodynes it acted as a jammer.:(

  • @GardenerEarthGuy
    @GardenerEarthGuy Месяц назад +1

    Epic!

  • @IndependentNewsMedia
    @IndependentNewsMedia Месяц назад

    Very interesting video, God bless.

  • @sundog486
    @sundog486 25 дней назад

    As a schoolboy in the early 60s, I would listen to the Soviet stations after the BBC had closed down for the night. They were propaganda alright but nothing that affected my politics, more about grain and steel production and other national statistics.
    Of course there was VOI but the others were more exotic. I often arrived at school tired.

  • @d.j.roberts187
    @d.j.roberts187 Месяц назад +3

    It’s wild that governments go to such lengths to keep their people from hearing others people’s truths and opinions. Imagine what our government is doing to us now.

    • @cryptickcryptick2241
      @cryptickcryptick2241 Месяц назад

      Fortunately, today our government does not block (much); the Chinese though have an incredible blocking program.

    • @TrueNativeScot
      @TrueNativeScot 22 дня назад

      @@cryptickcryptick2241oh, governments of the majority of White countries block so much. Try to question anything about WW2 and not only do your social media posts get wiped almost instantly but you could go to prison

  • @yanmetcaluire
    @yanmetcaluire Месяц назад +1

    Thanks a lot

  • @thes764
    @thes764 Месяц назад +1

    Great video! Glad you cover that topic, would appreciate if you follow up with more details or other places like Cn or the Koreas.

  • @methinnk2.063
    @methinnk2.063 Месяц назад +4

    Don’t be jammin meee

  • @vonzigle
    @vonzigle Месяц назад +2

    Thanks!

  • @barrieshepherd7694
    @barrieshepherd7694 Месяц назад +2

    Interesting to look at jamming history in the UK. As far as I can tell the UK government, even during the wars, never jammed overseas transmissions - even Lord Haw -Haw.
    The only use of jamming, that I can find , was back in 1970 when Harold Wilson authorised jamming of RNI / Radio Caroline who had started an active campaign against the Labour Party, and Wilson, before the General Election. It was said he authorised the use of a massive 1 megawatt transmitter reserved for National Emergency use. Wilson lost the election.
    I guess that was an early for of Election Rigging by Social Media!

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Месяц назад

      i wonder if they would do it now if shortwave was still more popular .because it looks like in the uk they are becoming big fans of censorship

    • @barrieshepherd7694
      @barrieshepherd7694 Месяц назад

      @@belstar1128 It is probably done differently - they can (and probably do) block internet sites.
      The Radio Caroline / RNI jamming was on the medium MW AM band - apart from the fact that Wilson was scared the pirates would expand on his alleged infidelity with his secretary the Record Companies lobbied the government because they saw a loss of revenue.

    • @Bartok_J
      @Bartok_J Месяц назад +1

      I believe there was a SMALL amount of jamming carried out by Britain in WW2, but for military reasons - German broadcasts carrying information for bomber missions etc - rather than to stop the public listening to enemy broadcasts.

    • @barrieshepherd7694
      @barrieshepherd7694 Месяц назад

      @@Bartok_J Yes I was thinking only of public service jamming. I agree that at a military level jamming would have occurred.

  • @kellymarieangeljohnson114
    @kellymarieangeljohnson114 Месяц назад +1

    I have the book your video is based on i remember hearing those jumnled up vouce jammers once as i tuned across a jammer the nouse stopped and radio moscow appeared in its place it wasobviousley an error but proof jamming was made in USSR. The Kaunas radio station today transmitson 1386 khz programs in Ukranian and polish power is only 75Kw

  • @stewartbarnes
    @stewartbarnes Месяц назад +10

    Funny, but in 20 years this exact conversation will be had about the Internet. "Jamming-shaddow ban ing"

  • @TheZabbiemaster
    @TheZabbiemaster Месяц назад

    I read about these systems in the Metro series of Books by Dimitri Glukovski.
    such an insane idea to build a jamming wall that massive to keep forign music and information out

  • @Littlewing6was9
    @Littlewing6was9 Месяц назад +1

    Mind Unveiled mentioned your channel on a viddy I watched last night. 🌃🌼

    • @oldgolfpunk
      @oldgolfpunk Месяц назад +1

      Thats a good channel I also listen to. They do alot of research into their topics.
      It's not just random information

  • @threepotgtti
    @threepotgtti Месяц назад +3

    We're jamming, To think that jamming was a thing of the past,
    We're jamming, And I hope this jam is gonna last

    • @goodnightvienna8511
      @goodnightvienna8511 Месяц назад

      Dammit 😂😂😂I thought I was first with this Bob Marley reference

  • @floriroemer
    @floriroemer Месяц назад

    Can you make a video about all the equipment you use? It would be very interesting

  • @Bluelagoonstudios
    @Bluelagoonstudios Месяц назад

    1 MW, not environment friendly, even with 380VAC here I couldn't pull off that one. max 5Kw, but my antennas wouldn't survive. Although I worked with such power transmitters when I was part of Broadcast Partners in the Netherlands, doing work in Belgium. For both national and local FM radiostations, and later DAB+ crap. I remember in the 70 that we jammed the woodpecker in a international effort. Great times. Btw, I bought you a coffee, a very strong one 😅

  • @GeorgeLiquor
    @GeorgeLiquor Месяц назад

    That repurposed tower in Tallinn is very interesting. What are those elements at the top? Broadcast TV?