Russia's Military Signal Has Been Obliterated And It's Terrifying!

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 503

  • @domestosteron
    @domestosteron 6 месяцев назад +334

    For those wondering what the sound at 5:50 is, it's from a youtube video of a broken tornado siren in Chicago.

    • @stormshadow_6477
      @stormshadow_6477 6 месяцев назад +52

      As far as I know it is an actual signal some tornado sirens in the US use. Search for alternate or hi-lo wail here on YT.

    • @tkteun
      @tkteun 6 месяцев назад +57

      Federal Signal - Alternate wail

    • @Jeff-sp7bg
      @Jeff-sp7bg 6 месяцев назад +9

      Yes there's one about 3 miles from me

    • @geronimo5537
      @geronimo5537 6 месяцев назад +10

      its also a sound used in old videos games such as grand theft auto for a broken police car siren.

    • @jaydubzonward
      @jaydubzonward 6 месяцев назад +1

      yes i was just about to say the same thing!!

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta 6 месяцев назад +75

    Had an instructor at Fort Gordon who said the signal being broadcast doesn't really matter.
    The complex tones/patterns are there to authenticate the station.
    The real 'message' is the exact time and date a station goes off the air permanently.

    • @crazyskyguy
      @crazyskyguy 6 месяцев назад +6

      How does that work?

    • @scrambledmandible
      @scrambledmandible 6 месяцев назад +29

      ​@@crazyskyguy The Dead Hand protocol - if the control stations go quiet, it is assumed that Mission Control has been eliminated by the enemy, so launch all nuclear warheads

    • @a64738
      @a64738 6 месяцев назад +15

      Ohh that is creepy... I would think that it means those stations is part of the automated Russian "Dead Hand" system meant to launch all their nukes if the signals stop (as they assume they are destroyed by nukes). Problem is that if for example you have a huge solar storm like "the Carrington" event the signals will also stop.

    • @bluesrocker91
      @bluesrocker91 6 месяцев назад +10

      @@scrambledmandible ​Supposedly the Royal Navy uses BBC Radio 4's longwave transmission as a kind of "dead hand" signal...

    • @zoolkhan
      @zoolkhan 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@scrambledmandible aaah that bullshit again :)

  • @harbourwoodlandvisitor2445
    @harbourwoodlandvisitor2445 6 месяцев назад +147

    in 1980s Manchester i remember as a kid selecting SW on my grandmothers Grundig yacht-boy n210 radio from 1973 hearing some of the strange sounds coming from beyond the soviet iron curtain. at that time i felt Russia was a hostile and mystical place where no one would ever dare leave or enter into.

    • @alastairbarkley6572
      @alastairbarkley6572 6 месяцев назад +45

      "Russia was a hostile and mystical place where no one would ever dare leave or enter into"
      So right. It's difficult to explain the way people perceived life behind 'The Iron Curtain' back then. My mum was a scientist of modest note particularly among Eastern Bloc academics [1] and consequently she received many official invites to go on exchange visits and lecture tours behind The Curtain. On one occasion in the mid 1960s when she visited Moscow, she took a Standard 8 Bell & Howell movie camera (silent) and shot footage of Red Square, Lenin's Tomb, the incredible 'GUM' department store and so on. The results were terrible (this were not a Plug n Play, user friendly device - like most tech back then) but everybody and his dog back in the UK wanted to see the movies because people here just couldn't imagine that a Westerner could even go there, let alone make home movies. Literally hundreds of people must have passed through our crude home cinema. So rare were genuine professional visits to the Eastern Bloc that frequent visitors were sometimes asked by our security services to do a bit of amateur espionage there - deliver a package, meet with someone, get a delivery or a verbal report about something and so on. This is what Greville Wynn was doing when he and Col. Penkovsky (KGB) were blown (November 1962) - Wynn spending some uncomfortable time in the Gulags and the hapless Penkovsky presumed executed. I often wondered whether Mum ever did that sort of thing. She was an ideal courier.
      [1] She died in 1984 having received, inexplicably, a Polish Wikipedia page - the only one. How odd.
      pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brenda_E._Ryman

    • @ParasocialCatgirl
      @ParasocialCatgirl 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@alastairbarkley6572 She has an English and a French article as well (omitting middle initial in title).

    • @philjameson292
      @philjameson292 6 месяцев назад

      On a serious note, there have been a number of reports of British academics etc that were secret agents in the Cold War that never told their families and the true story only came out after their death

    • @grandrapids57
      @grandrapids57 6 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@alastairbarkley6572 What a terrific story, especially for me as I was in Moscow several times during those Soviet days. Yes it was exactly like that.

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@alastairbarkley6572 Wikipedia lists her death in 1983.

  • @wizrom3046
    @wizrom3046 6 месяцев назад +76

    I'm an electronics/software guy that has a hobby in clocks and electronic timekeeping, synchronisation etc.
    I expect the ticking clock transmission is exactly what it appears to be... a clock.
    Sending a precise 1 second tick would be very effective for keeping equipment in correct time synchronisation. It only requires an accurate second pulse because any drift of the receiving clock devices is quite slow, so they can easily be disciplined into precise timekeeping by receiving the 1 second pulse signal, even if there are large breaks in transmission. I have made similar systems myself.
    It makes sense to have a state run 1 second pulse, for older equipment before GPS timekeeping or even in case of GPS loss due to war etc.

    • @leovolont
      @leovolont 6 месяцев назад +14

      Yeah, I used to be a calibration tech. Before we had atomic clocks we would run our counters using a Radio Clock Signal, as you describe, to run a comparison tape to our counter, and we'd tweak the Timebase of the Counter until the tape indicator would be running dead center showing no deviation. I knew guys that would disconnect the deviation meter's needle so that it would just hang dead dog in the middle to draw a straight line on the tape, but heck, you'll always have some timebase deviation, and all you have to do is touch the needle with your finger to know it's just hanging dead dog. But, nowadays, they can build atomic clocks the size of a 8 legged chip. Take care. It's great to see that soimebody like you is monitoring the World.

    • @wizrom3046
      @wizrom3046 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@leovolont wow what wonderful info! THANK YOU for sharing!
      I cant take credit for "monitoring the world", I think the person behind this video channel gets the credit for that!
      But I do like to share where I can.
      Old guys like us should really be sharing our experience with the old technology before we pass away, like to put our stories and tech knowlege up on the internet so it can be there for future generations. 👍

    • @TV4ELP
      @TV4ELP 6 месяцев назад +2

      Every grid powered qould just use the grid tho. The frequency is pretty deliberatly kept constant. Having a second value to cross reference if needed or when off grid sure might come in handy

    • @wizrom3046
      @wizrom3046 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@TV4ELP in some countries the grid keeps good time, in other countries not so much.
      With things like military bases and small installations they could be off grid or prepared to be off grid at any time.

    • @leovolont
      @leovolont 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@TV4ELP For electronic counters with just ordinary accuracy, such as plus or minus 1 hz for 10 MHZ, you need better accuracy than the Municiple 60 Hz. Remember that Europe uses 50Hz for the same applications, and so the Frequency of Line power can be all over the place without it ever mattering. Also, frequencies, for calibration have to be traceable to some standard. The Radio Frequencies ARE cerrtified, and so the calibrator can submit the identification of the Radio Broadcaster, along with his deviation comparison tape record, in the counters certification file. Image using the local Union Operated Municiple Power Plant as a Calibration Standard... the Calibrator would be looking for a new job the next time he, or the Counter he calibrated, gets audited.. Yeah, Metrology is a Science and so Calibrators don't, and can't screw around.

  • @DreadVos
    @DreadVos 6 месяцев назад +96

    That noise at 5:40 is actually the sound the City of Chicago downtown Tornado/Emergency sirens make. Dual tone, and going up and down to make it much more audible over and between the large buildings! Reference link for the sound! ruclips.net/video/TnQG0mgoops/видео.html (not my channel or affiliated with)

    • @domestosteron
      @domestosteron 6 месяцев назад +7

      @RingwayManchester this comment deserves to be pinned more than mine.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape 6 месяцев назад +5

      As if tornados weren't scary enough. That's a pretty good siren.

    • @friendformationbot
      @friendformationbot Месяц назад +1

      came here to post this, please pin dreadvos' comment! Sirenhead borrowed this tornado siren sound from the original video, which was already terrifying, and it sort of got rolled into the sirenhead mythos and lost its original identity. considering the Slalingrad Clock is another recognizable emergency siren sound that i've heard in dozens of video games and movies and likely comes up right away when someone googles "air raid siren", i would not be surprised if the buzzer jammer pirate is the same guy as the 6911 pirate

    • @DoctorPhobos
      @DoctorPhobos 4 дня назад

      Rising and falling tones indicate an imminent attack. A steady tone is a storm warning; i.e, tornado.

  • @alancordwell9759
    @alancordwell9759 6 месяцев назад +33

    The one that used to get the hairs on the back of my neck standing up as a SWL in the 1970's was the G03 gong station! The whole SW band was teeming with eerie, weird and fascinating signals back then.

  • @Tore_Lund
    @Tore_Lund 6 месяцев назад +91

    The ticking clock is definitely state sponsored. They give resources to anything that can add to intimidation and confusion, even if it is not clear if it will be worthwhile.

    • @simplygreen5832
      @simplygreen5832 6 месяцев назад +12

      Russians used the ticking clock before in the Battle of Stalingrad.

    • @Tore_Lund
      @Tore_Lund 6 месяцев назад

      @@simplygreen5832 Makes sense then, fits the narrative Russia is pushing trying to draw analogies to WW2 with their current war. Possibly even hoping it will add to their verbal nuke threats?

    • @nygothuey6607
      @nygothuey6607 6 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@simplygreen5832yes, if I remember correctly after the 6th army and part of the 4th Panzer army were surrounded in Stalingrad the Red Army played the ticking clock noise 24\7 over loudspeakers with the occasional message "Every 30 seconds a German soldier dies in Russia." Or something to that effect.

    • @bluskytoo
      @bluskytoo 6 месяцев назад +4

      ticking clock is a time hack for navigation, we used it in flying all the time

    • @Tore_Lund
      @Tore_Lund 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@bluskytoo I noticed yesterday watching the Russian Victory Day parade, that during their minute of silence, they also had a ticking clock and it was similar: Reverberating and not a real clock, i.e. the ticks didn't alternate as from a real clock mechanism but were similar rhythmic taps. Worth checking if the Ticking clock signal is the exact same as the audio played at the parade.

  • @garyhardwick8489
    @garyhardwick8489 6 месяцев назад +41

    Sounds like something the BBC Radiophonic Workshop used to come up with. Really eerie. Nice video.

  • @janedagger
    @janedagger 6 месяцев назад +97

    I can tell you exactly what it was like to find numbers stations in the 80s... a stormy as frack night at the end of Long Island, NY, and I picked up a boatload and it was freaky, creepy, scary, mysterious and I was hooked. Thank the ugly gods I wasn't alone. Scared the holey shit outta me :)

    • @xszl
      @xszl 6 месяцев назад +14

      and nothing you could find about it in the local library.
      Calling back on your illegal cb with 500W amplifier didnt have any result also
      Scary yes, but still searching for signals every evening

    • @RiffZifnab
      @RiffZifnab 6 месяцев назад +8

      I'm glad I'm not the only one that gets creeped out by this stuff. I can't listen to these videos when I'm falling asleep. 😬

    • @janedagger
      @janedagger 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@RiffZifnab i CAN listen to them now and in fact have the entire Conet Project box set plus extras. I was fascinated and of course, no way to get info on them those two nights. Sometimes late at night I can get a bit oogly headed listening but that's okay, its nice that it still gets under my skin. When I first stumbled over info on numbers stationis and put two to two together... well, that was it. Then I wanted to know more and more. LOL! ahhhh, such a glorious sinkhole.

    • @srice8959
      @srice8959 6 месяцев назад +14

      As a child of 1972 I completely understand what you’re saying. It’s so crazy because it really was a scary time to be alive, and at the same time it was so exciting. Especially down here in New Orleans because a lot of people didn’t know that New Orleans was quite the little hotspot at times because of it being a major port in the Gulf of Mexico, the river, and because of the Air Station here to. We use to watch completely blacked out airplanes late at night or in the early early morning hours between midnight and 3 am. My family are all cops and my uncle Mike who was like the super cop type because he was a homicide detective, and a member of SWAT. Because our swat team for the NOPD also worked their regular police department jobs, and when he transferred out of homicide he was technically assigned to motor pool because he was building a remote control system for an unmarked police car that was used in hostage situations. All while working on the department’s communications systems so he got into the number stations more or less as a hobby, but was able to use the network towers the department had to listen in to them. Personally my knowledge of ham radio and such, but his son and me were the same age so we would stay at each other’s houses on the weekend’s, and he would show us and let us listen to them with him. An of course to us kids he was like Q from James Bond Movies. Sorry for the long comment about this. It’s just the video and your post brought back so many memories that I really haven’t thought about in probably 20 years give or take. Think I need to call my uncle and see how he’s doing

    • @JustPlaneNutzRC
      @JustPlaneNutzRC 6 месяцев назад +2

      @janedagger Same here, my friend, out on eastern Long Island as well. I spent many late nights as a teen back in the 80's searching for and listening to those creepy number stations. I distinctly remember the sensation of the hair standing up on the back of my neck one night, trying to make sense of what the heck I was listening to.

  • @TheOzarkWizard
    @TheOzarkWizard 6 месяцев назад +50

    Would you mind marking when youre using stock footage at the bottom of the video? most people assume that the video shown is about the signal being discussed.

    • @alastairbarkley6572
      @alastairbarkley6572 6 месяцев назад +10

      Are you new here? Lewis has explained his use of stock footage many, many times. Actually, some of the 'stock' footage is his own - breathtakingly good drone footage of the English countryside, for example.

    • @TheOzarkWizard
      @TheOzarkWizard 6 месяцев назад +13

      @@alastairbarkley6572 No, i am not a new viewer, and i personally would prefer a caption that states what tower is showing. even for the stock footage, as i am genuinely curious.

    • @fretlessfender
      @fretlessfender 6 месяцев назад +1

      He might do, but Lewis is a busy chap, and afministration is something he can do without I suppose...😂

    • @CastleHassall
      @CastleHassall 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@TheOzarkWizardhe seems to always state the name of whatever installation is in the photo when it is shown

    • @thebrowns5337
      @thebrowns5337 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@alastairbarkley6572 You do realise new people are allowed to watch these videos and it's easy to see at least one 'new' person may see at least one of these videos every single day?

  • @asm_nop
    @asm_nop 6 месяцев назад +3

    As pointed out by DiamantHaren, 4:57 is a jammer being played over top of the electronic music song "Epic" by artist "TheFatRat" at a timestamp in the song of about 0:49.

  • @SneakyBeakySpy
    @SneakyBeakySpy 6 месяцев назад +51

    The Polish radio station sounds kinda like the woman is saying "Oblicz" instead of "Oblique" meaning "Calculate (something)"

    • @ellouco1020
      @ellouco1020 6 месяцев назад +1

      Nah. It's more a obliks

    • @sebimoe
      @sebimoe 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@ellouco1020 I'm can't hear anything else than "oblicz" no matter how I try. Maybe there is some other explanation, but it doesn't sound like eng. oblique and definitely not like obliks

    • @KnowYoutheDukeofArgyll1841
      @KnowYoutheDukeofArgyll1841 6 месяцев назад +2

      But where's Astrix and Getafix?

    • @ZeddPl
      @ZeddPl 6 месяцев назад +2

      Sneaky is correct here, I'm Polish and it's obviously saying "oblicz" (eng. "Calculate")

    • @mickgof
      @mickgof 6 месяцев назад

      Oblique means "to the side"

  • @AKSnowbat907
    @AKSnowbat907 6 месяцев назад +23

    5:00 sounds like a dude walked in with his radio playing and started buffing the floors.
    How funny would it be if it's been an open mic for 40 years and no one knew lol.

    • @zachjeffcoat7936
      @zachjeffcoat7936 6 месяцев назад

      Funny enough, in case you want to listen to said song, it's from a song called "Epic" by TheFatRat.

    • @m1geo
      @m1geo 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@zachjeffcoat7936I like Monody.

  • @kellingc
    @kellingc 6 месяцев назад +39

    Do you think the buzzer could be being jammed by someone in Ukraine? Would seem logical.

    • @MultiPureEnergy
      @MultiPureEnergy 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@oggaBuggaI don’t know about completely, the buzzing is there to generally keep the band clear and jamming it keeps the band not clear. The issue is that for jamming a marker to be useful it has to be very persistent.

    • @kellingc
      @kellingc 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@oggaBugga OH, I agree that it is pointless. I was just thinking the Ukraines might be motivated to try and annoy Russia.

    • @James-kd7dc
      @James-kd7dc 6 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@kellingcThey already annoyed Russia. That's why Russia is kicking their butt at the moment.

    • @opiesmith9270
      @opiesmith9270 6 месяцев назад +20

      @@James-kd7dc😂😂😂 you must be confused. Russias entire Black Sea fleet either sinking or running and hiding from Ukraine who doesn’t even have a single frigate. Or is it the 3 day special military operation going on for 2 years, 2 months, 2 weeks, and 2 days at present with no signs of stopping. 500,000 casualties, against a much smaller, weaker, poorer country like Ukraine, thats “kicking their butts”? Embarrassing. Truly your brain is broken.

    • @OryxAU
      @OryxAU 6 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@James-kd7dc This is what you don't understand, it literally does not matter how Russia does now. It's like an elephant tripping over and then being unable to move past an ant. This is what the entire world thought of Russia, a mighty beast, a competitor. For Ukraine to stand strong against that is a feat in itself, they've earned every bit of praise while Russia has only lost everything it ever hoped to be.

  • @TOx1CC
    @TOx1CC 6 месяцев назад +2

    the buzzer is still highly unknown, its a long shot to go out and say "this is bad for the russian military" when the station rarely relies codes to old and defunct communication hubs.

  • @JamieCrookes
    @JamieCrookes 6 месяцев назад +12

    First time i've actually watched the credits in full and saw my name. I'd forgotten I even joined. :o)
    Happy to support!

  • @waveinversion
    @waveinversion 6 месяцев назад +11

    I can confirm how creepy it was coming across a numbers station in the late `80's early `90's as a kid before I knew what they where. It became my favorite things to do late at night because it felt like a little window into a forbidden bit of the ether!
    I found out later on in the late `90's when I got my ham ticket what they where, and really got into it. Then when my family finally got internet service, I started learning about number stations which led me down a rabbit hole that got me into hacking, IT, and to my current job of being a system tech in Land Mobile Radio.
    I still love listening to the old style station numbers stations because it brings me back to those fun nights as a kid listening to them on my old Halicrafts tube HF rig!

  • @morlanius
    @morlanius 6 месяцев назад +52

    They are wasting their time. The buzzer is there to keep the channel clear, when they use it the buzzer stops. If you want to annoy them, jam the band when they aren't transmitting the buzzer.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 6 месяцев назад +19

      Yeah they're effectively jamming a jammer.

    • @cevansinz
      @cevansinz 6 месяцев назад +24

      If you jam it continually, wouldn't you affect both the buzz and any message transmission? Because that's probably easier than trying to guess when they'll send a message.

    • @falksweden
      @falksweden 6 месяцев назад +7

      The slight problem is knowing the buzzer's transmission schedule...

    • @c0ldsh0w3r
      @c0ldsh0w3r 6 месяцев назад +12

      This is a braindead comment 😂😂😂 if the channel is being jammed, no one can use it?

    • @VinicioFrascali
      @VinicioFrascali 6 месяцев назад +1

      0

  • @gir489returns2
    @gir489returns2 6 месяцев назад +9

    Siren Head has to be the scariest thing I've seen in a while.

    • @pixelcatcher123
      @pixelcatcher123 6 месяцев назад +1

      sound like straight outa backrooms

  • @fretlessfender
    @fretlessfender 6 месяцев назад +1

    The Buzzer has been covered by strange noises for days now. That has occurred before but you could still hear the buzzer underneath the music/rubbish. Not so much this time, no matter how hard you concentrate, can't make out the tone of the buzzer at all!

  • @joehopfield
    @joehopfield 6 месяцев назад +15

    I live near the cold-war focused Wende Museum in California. An audio-centric exhibition about cold-war numbers stations would be fantastic. Are there public archives of soviet and american short wave stations? I wish the cold war were actually over... :'(

    • @SvenSkottke
      @SvenSkottke 3 месяца назад

      There are amateur archives of past and current stations; ENIGMA2000 and PRYOM are two sites operated by enthusiasts, which do catalogue the stations and provide means to listen to recordings and live on air.
      It's not all though, here in Germany agents were found to be using popular comment sections of e.g. sport-videos on YT as chat forums with their handlers. The write innocuous comments, but the length or amount of words translates those comments into different messages.
      It's interesting, sleeper agents don't receive training after they are deployed, so they stick with tech from the time they were deployed.

  • @dabigdawg145
    @dabigdawg145 6 месяцев назад +3

    What you heard on that high frequency sound that was erie... was Russian high data packet transmission hidden in coding. You overlay several signals at once to confuse the listener. You just need to know how to filter out the noise.

  • @xpump876
    @xpump876 6 месяцев назад +1

    As a teen i used to spend hours mucking about with my shortwave searching for the bizarre and boy did i find some amazing sound/noise signals.
    I always wondered as to origins of the particular weird ones
    My hobby is modular synthesizer's and patching up a sound/noise to match what I once found on shortwave would be a daunting effort indeed.

  • @taschenrechner
    @taschenrechner 6 месяцев назад +4

    I remember in the 90's as a kid, hearing loads of numbers stations late at night. Cubans, Israelis, etc. Also, lately, SVO has been audible very clearly here in the southern US.

  • @seanhayes1996
    @seanhayes1996 6 месяцев назад +4

    UVB is certainly getting weird lately. I just made a recording of it, and I caught it cut from the digital hash back to the buzzer, then back to the hash, then a lot more crackling noise, then it beeped a bit, then back to the hash. It didn't sound like it was being jammed, so I think that might all be coming from the official military transmitters. I can provide the clip if you'd like. Please let me know.

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape 6 месяцев назад +10

    That Realistic radio at 3:47 is a beautiful artifact.

  • @bluenetmarketing
    @bluenetmarketing 6 месяцев назад +1

    The ticking clock may be a meshtastic form of communication, where each click is different than all other clicks in a code.

  • @AnnBearForFreedom
    @AnnBearForFreedom 6 месяцев назад +6

    At 5:42, my immediate reaction to the interference was "Speed it up, speed it up!" Theres something there being slowed down. I don't have the ability to do the conversion myself, but I really think it might be worth your while to speed up the "noise".

  • @cevansinz
    @cevansinz 6 месяцев назад +2

    I like to check 6218 to see if it's beeping or playing От Волги до Енисея over and over.

  • @misterbacon4933
    @misterbacon4933 6 месяцев назад +14

    Very informative and interesting! Greetings from the Netherlands! 🇳🇱

  • @JClark2600
    @JClark2600 6 месяцев назад +1

    So interesting listening to number stations. You can kind of tell how many agents an intel service has by monitoring to the digits. Usually the agents code is repeated several times at a precise time, which you can log then look back on in the future. Then usually they then go in the 5 digit OTP code. and finally the transmit the message. No code is less that 10 digits, 5 for the agent/operator then 5 for the OTP in use followed by the message. I've setup an RPi to start logging reoccurring numbers and the time logs for which they were sent/received.

  • @thormusique
    @thormusique 6 месяцев назад +5

    That's really wild, Lewis! I love the fact that I'd once assumed SW radio would by now have become relatively boring and maybe even dead. But that clearly hasn't been the case! And in these crazy times, who knows what might pop out of the aether! Your report here is a case in point. Cheers! PS: Thanks for these 'reminders' to fire up my radio more often. 🙂

    • @RJDA.Dakota
      @RJDA.Dakota 6 месяцев назад +1

      Shortwave is more relevant than ever but you just can’t “dive in”. You do need to know time of day, versus the frequency. Higher frequencies work better in daylight, lower (below 10 MHz) work better in darkness conditions. There are other variables. I can hear AIR traffic (which is sporadic) at about 8900 kHz. The hobby is not dead, but you have to search through the bands and above all, be patient.

    • @thormusique
      @thormusique 6 месяцев назад

      @@RJDA.Dakota Thanks, but you're preaching to the choir, mate. I've been a diehard SWL'er for well over 50 years now. Christ, I'm old! ;-)

  • @StalinTheMan0fSteel
    @StalinTheMan0fSteel 6 месяцев назад +10

    When I was a kid, before the internet, there were many CW beacons across the hf spectrum. I learned Morse code in one summer when I was 15 so i could get my Novice licence. In those days there were many International broadcast stations that had there own unique chime that would repeat over and over. It would start maybe ten or fifteen minutes before broadcast. My favorite was Radio Deutsche Welle, I would sit and listen to it while doing homework etc! LOL!

    • @Jeff-sp7bg
      @Jeff-sp7bg 6 месяцев назад +2

      That's a great story. There's still a fair amount on HF but I get ALOT of traffic from China

    • @StalinTheMan0fSteel
      @StalinTheMan0fSteel 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Jeff-sp7bg Yeah, not nearly as much as when I was a kid but I still pick up Radio China (mainland and Taiwan) in English and of course Cuba. Also there's a high powered station in Florida (WRMI) that broadcast programs from various European Countries on 9955 khz and 9455 khz. 8-)

  • @alastairbarkley6572
    @alastairbarkley6572 6 месяцев назад +43

    Does anybody listen to China Radio International on short wave? I sometimes have it on on the background. Very slick, informative and for the most part pseudo-credible. It puts me in mind of SWLing the 'communist stations' that were easily audible in the evenings across the UK in the 1960s and beyond. They were terrible: laughably crude propaganda particularly the ridiculous and plainly made up 'Listeners Letters' - "Cedric from Smethwick asks whether life for workers in the glorious USSR is really as good as people say. Cedric, it's BETTER..." and so on. The most amazing was Radio Tirana in Albania (that secretive, repressive nation being aligned with Mao's China rather than the USSR) where the 'News' was so breathtakingly false, so distortedly anti-Western that it made your jaw drop. Dishonesty like that was quite a shock, then. These days we'd just mutter about Fake News and ignore it.

    • @Bartok_J
      @Bartok_J 6 месяцев назад +5

      Do a Google on "June Taylor", who was Tirana's main announcer in Cold War days. Her story is interesting - a New Zealander of Maori origin, adopted daughter of a left-wing dentist, who ended up reading dreary propaganda for years in a tinpot dictatorship on the other side of the world.

    • @Hadassahs-Holt
      @Hadassahs-Holt 6 месяцев назад +4

      I do, on a tiny C Crane Skywave SSB, east coast of the US. That's exactly what it reminds me of, too, although I didn't start listening until the late '70s. I always wonder if VOA copied that slick manner, or if propaganda just oozes out that way over the radio...

    • @MartinPGrindrod
      @MartinPGrindrod 6 месяцев назад +5

      Yes and also North Korea on 12015kHz although CRI sometimes broadcast on the same frequency, it's fun hearing how productivity and food production is at an all time record, it reminds me of the USSR propoganda in the 1970s where the claimed tractor production figures would mean everyone had one lol.

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 6 месяцев назад +4

      Haha, I used to listen to Radio Moscow in the '80s...

    • @mlezine
      @mlezine 6 месяцев назад

      How are things changing really? Now propaganda and fake news are the merit of the West.

  • @Anon-mk4ms
    @Anon-mk4ms 6 месяцев назад +3

    We had this weird old radio that sat in our kitchen and one evening I was looking for a pirate radio station (this was the late 80's) and I came across two stations right next to each other on the end of the tuning scale, one was a morse code and the other was a man reading out numbers in English but it was accented making it clear English was not his first language, it was creepy and sinister.

  • @stringlarson1247
    @stringlarson1247 6 месяцев назад +1

    This Polish number station recording is now my new ringtone. The other tracks sound like Throbbing Gristle or old Cabaret Voltaire.

  • @danielturnell1840
    @danielturnell1840 6 месяцев назад +14

    The Siren Head sounded pretty cool tbh.

    • @Aries-n3v
      @Aries-n3v 6 месяцев назад

      The ice cream man from hell

  • @RogueError617
    @RogueError617 6 месяцев назад +3

    More on that tornado siren ; it's a thunderbolt 1003 set to alternate wail function.

  •  6 месяцев назад +14

    polish lady is using OBLICZ it means calculate

    • @ivansavitsky449
      @ivansavitsky449 6 месяцев назад +3

      Oblique or cherta. Means stroke or slash.

    • @halthammerzeit
      @halthammerzeit 6 месяцев назад +3

      Definitely "oblicz" - calculate.

  • @rjds1800
    @rjds1800 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is intriguing and is definitely worth monitoring because a sudden change from the norm could be an indicator of something happening. Sounds obvious but the updates are appreciated.

  • @kaithomsen9726
    @kaithomsen9726 6 месяцев назад +1

    How big a transmitter and antenna / mast is needed to block out the buzzer ?

  • @psychonauthacker
    @psychonauthacker 6 месяцев назад +1

    I was in the cascade mountains, McKenzie pass.Oregon.
    Monitoring CB transmission. Frequency 27.015 27.025 and 27.035 all had bleed over of morris code from somewhere. It was faint but definitely there. Maybe this is normal as I am fairly new to radio.

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 6 месяцев назад

      CB band is unlicensed amateur band, so you hear random stuff over there, voice, Morse, pirate music and whatnot.

  • @michaelmeyer2725
    @michaelmeyer2725 6 месяцев назад

    The Buzzer still being heavily jammed 0113 UTC 7 May. The clock still ticking on 6911, and nothing on the Polish frequency. Listening via Netherlands based WebSDR. US based WebSDR not picking up anything in Europe.

  • @AdamSWL
    @AdamSWL 6 месяцев назад +1

    The Ticking Clock is 5x5 and sometimes much stronger here in southern Australia before morning greyline.
    Have heard it go from siren to ticking and back, then air raid siren to ticking etc....
    This signal has no fading whatsoever and would seem to be beyond a pirate effort at this point.

    • @RingwayManchester
      @RingwayManchester  6 месяцев назад +3

      Great stuff Adam cheers!

    • @AdamSWL
      @AdamSWL 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@RingwayManchester Always Lewis!! Watching and listening until the bombs drop 😉

  • @jamesa2961
    @jamesa2961 6 месяцев назад +1

    Another rad video. Thanks man. Someday I'll take pics of this tower in anoka minnesota. It has massive vents on the building and seems a Lil out of place compared to the building and what not .

  • @m4inline
    @m4inline 6 месяцев назад +5

    I got a SW radio for my son after he heard about number stations on youtube (here). Scared the poor boy half to death.

  • @Canarywharfdebz
    @Canarywharfdebz 6 месяцев назад +1

    I have been listening to number stations since the 80s and still miss the Gong GO3! Thank you for your great videos! 73

    • @Jeff-sp7bg
      @Jeff-sp7bg 6 месяцев назад

      Do u still hear the nightly one with the female voice in spanish? I'm in the US west coast

  • @perstaffanlundgren
    @perstaffanlundgren 6 месяцев назад

    Have you noted any signals disappearing sense the over the horizon radar site*
    in Russia was damaged?
    *The facility is designed for detecting nuclear missile launching and possibly also strategic bomb planes.

  • @user-re4jf2sb4q
    @user-re4jf2sb4q 5 месяцев назад

    Person who knows nothing about radio here but i was wondering given new technologies like satellite communication, is radio really all that necessary in the modern age?
    Also why can't the radio signals from these mysterious towers be triangulated or something?

  • @nozhki-busha
    @nozhki-busha 6 месяцев назад +33

    Russia having problems. oh dear how sad never mind.

    • @outtakontroll3334
      @outtakontroll3334 6 месяцев назад +3

      anyways....

    • @viscountalpha
      @viscountalpha 6 месяцев назад

      Russia is getting their ass handed to them by ukraine.

    • @stephenminchin4870
      @stephenminchin4870 6 месяцев назад

      Not nearly so many problems as Ukraine is having though!

  • @Lethgar_Smith
    @Lethgar_Smith 6 месяцев назад

    I downloaded the old Conet project number station recordings years ago. I use them as alarms and alerts on my phone. The E17 Czech Lady has been my morning alarm for years now.

  • @DavidVICARY-e8p
    @DavidVICARY-e8p 6 месяцев назад

    Decades ago a communications engineer told me that a transmission of the letter k repeated constantly since the 1950s could be heard on a restricted bandwidth, anywhere in the world, but was strongest in West Virginia. Any thoughts?

  • @zachjeffcoat7936
    @zachjeffcoat7936 6 месяцев назад

    Interesting fact in case you wanted to know. At 5:00 the music being played is part of the song "Epic" by an artist named TheFatRat. I knew I recognized that song, took me like 5 minutes to find it.

  • @javic1979
    @javic1979 6 месяцев назад

    unless you get different listeners from equal distances from around the original tower to confirm signal strength to pinpoint a new location its hard to tell if this is internal or external tampering or even deliberate act by russia to mess around with the frequency to outdo the hackers to turn their attention elsewhere

  • @xenon7173
    @xenon7173 6 месяцев назад +1

    5:05 likely just a pirate playing over a CIS 12 modem. The buzzer is occasionally turned off in order to let a modem transmit instead of voice.

  • @spodule6000
    @spodule6000 6 месяцев назад

    I picked up Oblique the other day while I was trying to pick up Radio New Zealand here in southwest England. They share the same frequency sometimes.

  • @iagmusicandflying
    @iagmusicandflying 6 месяцев назад +1

    Re: spooky. Can confirm. I spent hours playing with my Grandpa's shortwave radio receiver listening to all sorts of weird things. The first time I heard a numbers station I guess I was about 12. It was later at night and it messed with my head.

  • @willgallatin2802
    @willgallatin2802 6 месяцев назад

    There have been a number of these odd stations come and gone since I first got my amateur radio license in 1979. As an 11 Y.O. kid the early number stations confused me to no end.

  • @viscountalpha
    @viscountalpha 6 месяцев назад +1

    Theres some solar flare activities that can certainly affect radio communications.

  • @human_isomer
    @human_isomer 6 месяцев назад

    I remember that back in the 1980s, a signal could be heard in Germany, somewhere in the usual VHF range used for radio (88-108 MHz), where numbers were read and constantly repeated. Probably doesn't exist any more, but I know we wildly speculated about the reason and use of that signal. I still think it was related to the secret service of the GDR.

  • @tenchudjmusic
    @tenchudjmusic 6 месяцев назад +9

    the jammed buzzer sounds like the buzzer looped or redone using some form of additive synthesis/ resynthesized in some fft technique

  • @musicilike69
    @musicilike69 5 месяцев назад

    I used to hear them when I was a kid and we lived in Germany as part of the British Army force there.

  • @brianredban9393
    @brianredban9393 6 месяцев назад +1

    When i hear some of these sounds i think of someone sitting at a desk receiving a broadcast from another deminsion

  • @ataksnajpera
    @ataksnajpera 6 месяцев назад +3

    8:56 - That voice clearly says "OBLICZ" which means "CALCULATE"

    • @hanscooks3027
      @hanscooks3027 6 месяцев назад

      Yeah, would make sense if the numbers were in Polish, but the numbers are read in english prolly for multinational use

  • @kissingbanditt
    @kissingbanditt 6 месяцев назад +3

    Incredible video and info.
    Thank you so much for the videos u make for our community.

  • @Jeff-sp7bg
    @Jeff-sp7bg 6 месяцев назад

    There's a broadcast just like this every night here in the US but the frequency changes nightly anywhere from 6500khz to 11000 khz and it's in spanish. Female voice.

  • @JJiMedia
    @JJiMedia 6 месяцев назад

    A great video as always! I think that during your session listening to The Buzzer, you encountered a thing that's been going on for some time now: The Buzzer sending different types of digital transmissions. This has happened from time to time, but in an increasing rate. A few months back, I witnessed Buzzer's distinct signature signal going out in my SDR's waterfall. I tuned to the frequency and it started sending a digital transmission. They usually stopped for a few seconds with silence, the channel marker returning briefly and cutting off abruptly, a few seconds of silence and another, different digital transmission resumed. During the pauses I also heard some russian voices briefly, one with counting up, which in the middle of it changed to a digital transmission. This went on for about an hour and a half with the channel marker appearing after a brief silence and then going out again. During this period, they also used nearby frequencies to send similar digital signals.
    This test also attracted some pirates: Between the silence, another russian voice was caught singing something like "perturbatsij, perturbatsij" and that could also be heard mixed with the digital transmissions. Also some music was played and heard underneath the digital signal and once the signal stopped, the music continued.
    My best guess is that what you heard and published in this video was actually The Buzzer being used as a digital transmission test, with pirates trying to jam it to the best of their abilities. The channel marker was likely off during that time.

  • @Thesaltymaker
    @Thesaltymaker 6 месяцев назад

    I appreciate your passion on this topic.

  • @SheffieldVince-2E0NZS
    @SheffieldVince-2E0NZS 6 месяцев назад

    @5:50 the siren (named Federal Signal Modulator) is created by a company known as "Federal Signal Corporation" The siren has seven different tones, one of which is called "Wailing" which is the one in this transmission. Up until 2020, Chicago used to use this siren but recently changed it for a more conventional one, eerie AF!

  • @fsstickman1
    @fsstickman1 6 месяцев назад +1

    Does the ticking clock have any sort of schedule or does it just randomly play ticking and sirens

  • @budrekot
    @budrekot 6 месяцев назад

    Still hearing the digital noise here rather than the buzzer here in Lancashire via my Hack RF and a longwire 01.37am 07/05/24

  • @KeystoneInvestigations
    @KeystoneInvestigations 6 месяцев назад

    As you are so spot on with all your info Lewis 👍, I really enjoy all the stills and video of all those antennas!
    I guess it appeals to the antenna geek in me!
    God bless the antenna geeks! 😃

  • @spyalex
    @spyalex 6 месяцев назад

    Hey there =)
    Recently i was testing my Malahit DSP2 with a telescopic antenna and i was listening to a "Buzzer" frequency. Reception was bad, considering i was around 30 km from the UVB-76 located (as internet says) in Naro Fominsk (i was testing Malahit at the 55.5148°N 36.9786°E Selyatino). I was standing outside (testing it at a day and at night), sky was clear, no any interfering objects around me. So, the question is, is this "Buzzer" really is on this Naro Fominsk location? Or it's just a rumor?

  • @ArduinoAlan
    @ArduinoAlan 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great video as always, Lewis. At 5:42 the rising and falling signal is a Federal Signal model 1000T or model 1003 dual tone siren. certain municipalities would use the dual tone mode as an indicator of a fire. super creepy

    • @Firepup740
      @Firepup740 6 месяцев назад +1

      That specific one is a Federal Signal Modulator running alt wail, if I remember the signal name right.

    • @ebnertra0004
      @ebnertra0004 6 месяцев назад

      The only Thunderbolts that could produce alternate wail were 1003s, as they were the only ones with solenoid shutters. The audio here, though, is from something electronic, most likely a Modulator, though one could probably get an EOWS-series to produce it, as well

  • @gwtg8247
    @gwtg8247 6 месяцев назад +2

    Another fine video! Could you do an indepth video on Menwith Hill?

  • @nickram81
    @nickram81 6 месяцев назад

    As far as I can tell the buzzer and the jammer can no longer be heard in Europe.

  • @markharpen7417
    @markharpen7417 6 месяцев назад +4

    Fantastic Content and research!

  • @bossdog1480
    @bossdog1480 6 месяцев назад

    We have a radio station in Central Queensland that just plays the same piece of music ad infinitum.
    I don't know if they ever use it for anything else. Maybe they have a license and need to use it or lose it.

  • @cuf_
    @cuf_ 6 месяцев назад +1

    5:00 it is the russian military trying to jam off pirates that are blaring music on that freacuency.

  • @MrOffTrail
    @MrOffTrail 6 месяцев назад +1

    I'm curious why you ascribe many of these signals to pirates, when the level of commitment, as you say, seems to indicate state actors. And as to the theory of pirates being the ones jamming the Buzzer, what motive would a pirate broadcaster have to do that?

  • @stinchjack
    @stinchjack 6 месяцев назад +1

    Ahhh, a vast collection of sounds and noises that could be from 60's or 70's Dr Who episodes

  • @sealtooth
    @sealtooth 6 месяцев назад +5

    On a whim, just tried 6911 from the bottom right corner of Australia and I could pick it up. First time I've heard it! Only got a shortish antenna too, not even pointed at Europe.

    • @AdamSWL
      @AdamSWL 6 месяцев назад

      Also from bottom right corner and I pick it up mainly on a simple 1/4wave ground plane tuned for 40m.

  • @rambo1152
    @rambo1152 6 месяцев назад

    An oblique is a stroke or "forward slash". Often used in Morse telegraphy "dah di di dah di" it's certainly not a dash.

  • @TheOpticalFreak
    @TheOpticalFreak 6 месяцев назад

    Hi, Did you actually use an X6100 to listen to those signals? What was the type of antenna that you used to receive the signals? 😮

  • @anthonyandrew6725
    @anthonyandrew6725 6 месяцев назад +1

    Still think that is an old fashioned clockwork metronome, not a clock.

  • @cojo_1
    @cojo_1 6 месяцев назад +10

    love from romania

  • @woj95
    @woj95 6 месяцев назад +8

    0:49 I'm not sure if that woman said "oblique", to me sounds more like "oblicz" which means "calculate" 😅

    • @NotASeriousMoose
      @NotASeriousMoose 6 месяцев назад

      It ends on a hard K, not a shh sound like oblicz

    • @sebimoe
      @sebimoe 6 месяцев назад

      @@NotASeriousMoose oblicz doesn't end on a "shh" sound, it is more similar to eng. "ch". I can't hear a polish K there either

  • @thebrowns5337
    @thebrowns5337 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for relaying the message comrade

  • @superdriver777
    @superdriver777 5 месяцев назад

    The sound at 5:50 isn't even from broken siren-it's a standard operating mode called Hi-Lo or Alternate Wail and yes it's particularly creepy and very fitting for Sirenhead

  • @penar4987
    @penar4987 6 месяцев назад

    The noise you call siren head is actually the tornado siren for the city of Chicago. I heard it whilst in downtown during a massive thunderstorm outbreak in 2010.

    • @RingwayManchester
      @RingwayManchester  6 месяцев назад

      That’s true but the sound is used in siren head videos

  • @slumpeddengineer
    @slumpeddengineer 5 месяцев назад

    the siren sound didn't come from an SCP lol. It came from a Federal Signal modulator Warning siren in Chicago. :/ And to those who think the siren is broken when it makes that tone, thats the alternating wail signal. It's supposed to make that sound.

  • @johnderatt3168
    @johnderatt3168 6 месяцев назад

    Total noob here, could the russian signals be part of their recent Nuke exercises?

  • @spuddy345
    @spuddy345 6 месяцев назад

    I'm surprised no one seems to get the obvious historical reference with the ticking clock, or should I say metronome.

  • @confuseatronica
    @confuseatronica 6 месяцев назад +3

    "oblique" is just another word for "slash" right? /

  • @stephenjames3952
    @stephenjames3952 6 месяцев назад

    I remember picking up sounds like this on a cheap AM radio at the extreme ends of its range

  • @TurtleWaxed
    @TurtleWaxed 6 месяцев назад

    You could use audacity to Select and filter out the buzz so you can hear just the other signal. So good fun.

  • @13JonnyR
    @13JonnyR 6 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks, interesting topic

  • @dylanjames8792
    @dylanjames8792 6 месяцев назад

    Heard a woman's voice similar to the one in the beginning of this video. Except she was speaking a series of numbers in all different order, in Spanish. Anyone know what this might be?

  • @kemi242
    @kemi242 6 месяцев назад +3

    5:43 is actually a tornado siren from Chicago.

  • @TheNightOwl082
    @TheNightOwl082 6 месяцев назад

    Hey Ringway! I recorded some data off of a Web SDR recently, I was curious if you had any recommendations on data processing methods? I'm willing to email the audio to you if you're interested!