The crying baby jammer brings back memories of my ships open comms being jammed when I was in the Navy. We used an open net for anyone to tune into who needed help in the area, but it would always get jammed by adversaries or bored fishermen. Since we had to monitor the line, we would hear all sorts of jams from crying babies, music, screaming women, drunk singing and even sound effects from old Looney Tunes cartoons, that would go on for hours. It was a very interesting experience
@@JordanMills1932-ix5ix Some people's best interest is specific other people not getting helped. The world would be better off without these losers but unfortunately we have a lot of them. For example if you run a pirating operation that takes over other ships you'd be stupid not to jam emergency frequencies.
Using pro-Ukrainian messages would seem an excellent way of convincing people that "This numbers station is absolutely not Russian" under any circumstances ;) Also using a baby crying as a jammer for a voice signal actually makes sense - I believe we are generically tuned to react to a baby crying, so it would be very distracting!
@@BobAbc0815 What's _really_ disturbing is that cats only do that to get HUMAN attention - they KNOW we react to that frequency The whole thing is manipulation 😅
The crying baby reminds me of the CIA propaganda played over speakers mounted on helicopters during the Vietnam War, which featured a loop of a baby crying and the fast, frantic Vietnamese warning against the Viet Cong, or something to that effect. I imagine it would damn sure be creepy to listen to, especially at night in a jungle.
Op Wandering Soul - they played messages from """dead""" VC, telling how the should've stayed home, missed their mother's and couldn't find rest Must've been freaky af, even if you knew what it was
@@craigwatt1303 you'd have to be VERY old indeed. I'm creeping up on 60 and as a 9 year old American boy when the first Star Wars movie came out, I was part of the core target audience.
@@iagmusicandflying ans being the age you were you likly had to have your parents take you so id saay most that wouldnt get it would be my grans age in which case not likly on youtube.
If the ticking clock is a pirate, then it is a pretty serious operation. Heard every morning here in Southern Australia, often S7+ easily getting over OTHR interference. Whoever is doing it has a very decent station.
The signal at 0:35 could be a test transmission for transatlantic financial data. There seem to be quite a few low data rate transmissions that are related to banks transmitting on RF to avoid the lag of internet traffic and thereby gaining a few milliseconds advantage. Once one starts they all have to try to keep up.
Interesting channel! I've always had an interest in radios and frequencies, and you do a great job narrating and explaining things! I'll be subscribing to your channel! 👍
It's amazzing how there's still new shortwave stations even in 2024. While us in the UK basically sleeps when it comes to anything radio. (except DAB it seems?)
I listen to a lot of radio; I've had a VHF directional fitted on top of the house followed by a directional DAB. They can't be beaten, stereo FM, faultless, DAB no bubbling or cutting out. I'm not a wireless expert but I like listening to what I can hear.
@@chunkysalad9650 I think I may have confused, they are five element aerials directed to, in this case the Sutton Coldfield transmitter. I live in Coventry.
Love the channel, Lewis. The signal at the start has a short variable pitch noise which sounds similar to components of Australia's OTHR, JORN. Have a listen (other vids on youtube) and see what you think. 👍
Greetings from Sweden! Yet again, thank you. The Buzzer was weird again on sunday. That Digi-sound at the start is Kraftwerk the Model, pitched up and played backwards 1/4 then "upside down" 1/6 (they mirror the backwards so it's played "Back-fard-down"
4:15 this is a baby monitor or similar. Many old devices (including cordless phones) used CB bands back in the 70s and 80s. The frequency listed is 27.385 mhz, or CB channel 38.
@@3rdalbum depends on where the transmitter is located and the ionisphere. 4w cb can skip all over the world in perfect circumstances. However if the transmitter is located close.... Regarding it can't be ruled out. I remember using my "walkie talkies" and hearing people talking on their cordless phones because it was all CB.
Some of these tones recorded remind me of the Cold War Carrier Wave that was put through the telephone lines in Britain as the nuclear attack warning network. It used the same line as the old speaking clock. We can only guess their real purpose over the airwaves but wonder if it has a similar use as the old Carrier wave. Great video.
I don't know if I'd call them pirates or "clandestines" like we called them in the 1980s. As to the Crying Baby.... with so many monitoring the Buzzer and others in the background, I imagine that not many people will keep the Crying Baby channel on for too long, and that might be part of the plan???
A crazy idea for a numbers station. Back in the telegraph days, they had codes that used words to represent phrases. For example, here are a few from a 1910 code: Quadrants: At what price and how soon can you furnish Quadrate: Quote best price on Quandrange: In market for Quaffed: Will wire you tomorrow morning Quaggy: Have written In theory the subject matter of a numbers station is limited to things about the operation. It is a Domain Specific Language. You don't have to be able to convey messages like "Do you think 'War of the Worlds' was a better movie than 'Independence Day'?" So you take the phrases, place names, and maybe even letters of the alphabet, in case you need to occasionally spell something out, and you assign a bunch of words to each one. And you tag the words as to whether they can be used as nouns, verbs, adverbs, or adjectives. Then you have some sort of AI (not necessarily cutting-edge AI; something like the 1983 Ractor of the book "The policeman's beard is half-constructed" would do) generate sentences out of these words, and a text-to-speech generator read them over the air. Since there are many words that can mean each phrase, you would need a program to decode them, which would have to be well hidden, but the advantage if you are being clandestine is that if your neighbors hear it through the walls of your apartment, it will just sound like speech, and won't arouse the suspicions that someone saying "one six five three two" might.
Same. I have two little ones and the sound of crying is really hard for me to ignore or just sit through without trying to help.. I feel my blood pressure going up when I hear it. I know it's an evolutionary instinct.
@0:36 sounds very similar to the Japanese Slot Machine, but not quite the same. Also the QRG doesn't fit. On the other hand: it looks like you're above the frequency there. @4:41 there used to be, and probably still are, babyphones operating on frequencies in between the US 40 CB channels. I guess that signal is a reference to that. Nice update, cheers Lewis!
You are bound to find ocean fishing long line beacon buoys. Normally they are morse code but not wanting others to get their long lines anything works. Then there are stream monitors and other functions. Even ocean wave height monitors too.
Our neighbour's cordless phone IF caused the local amateur 144 repeater to broadcast the BBC. Thinking we had caught the pirate and the fox hunt kept pointing back to near my house? It only happened when he was on a long call. The distance was line of sight around 5km.
Who in general uses shortwave radio now is it just enthusiast's? Why would anyone broadcast propaganda on shortwave? I'm not saying it's not happening I just don't get it.
The crying baby signal reminds me of a psychological operation more than anything else. At least that is the best Case scenario! A previous commenter referenced that the CIA often used in in Vietnam a variation of a crying baby has also been used in survival and evasion courses for special operations units as part of interrogation survival training
That crying baby sounds eerily like the Israel 'crying drone' in Gaza. As well as the crying baby that was played through loudspeakers at the Columbia Uni in the US. Wild, might not be the same but it's very odd to me especially after the recordings were used in such a horrific way.
The 15KHz band is often used for eavesdropping. You might have potentially discovered a "data listener" planted on a computer or within the network stream. The sever is active when a terminal is being accessed, and there have been devices developed by "Agencies with international interests" to serve this purpose. Many years ago, the Russians were using polytones, and a raid done in East Germany had recovered special "decoders" that could receive and interpret these signals. The Russians still use polytones, as do a few others (Cuba/China/North Korea) and while slightly faster in their transmission speed and bandwidth, they still seem to follow the old classic beeps, boops, and pulses.
My question about the baby crying signal is, could it be a mask? I mean, if it is the same sound except for different portions in certain spots, it could be used to transmit code. If you don't know the original baby crying sound, you technically would need to have multiple clear copies of the crying. The other side of this is babies crying would hit on the psychological side of anyone listening who doesn't know its purpose. Meaning they would be less likely to want to keep picking it up and copying it.
I don't understand it because on the waterfall it looks like a barcode and the sound is something like 50 Hz, but depending on your filter BW and modulation you could hear this or that so kinda difficult to conclude anything from it.
27Mhz is Citizens Band in the United States and Canada. Taxi companies use it down in Mexico. I talk frequently on CB radio, and that crying baby has been around for over 15 years. It'll shift channels sometimes, but it always sounds the same. I believe it comes from the West Coast of the United States. You should do a bit of research on American CB radio, it's actually interesting, and how much power some of these people run. Learn about the Superbowl on CB Channel 6. Some of those guys are running 100kw+. I should warn you though that you will hear some of the most profane things on 27Mhz AM from the US. Just putting that out there so it doesn't come as a shock. With the CB in my car, I've talked to Australia on a couple occasions as well as Jamaica.
I spend a lot of time on websdr sites , recorded some signals I though interesting enough to share on my channel. Something about 6911 I noticed on Russia's memorial day was that the siren played all day non stop , then during the ceremony for the moment of silence they played audio of the Stalingrad clock. I think it has some deeper meaning. I have been told by many people it's a pirate . I have heard the clock, the siren and a rock version of the Russian national anthem on 6911, so I think for sure it comes from Russia , probably a Russian TV or radio station because it is very consistant.
The crying baby at 4:15 is noted as being at 27.385 MHz, which is actually Citizens Band (CB) channel 38 in the US. Still an odd thing to hear, regardless.
I’ve been receiving those pips on a frequency of 6220 and also 6218khz mixed in with what I believe is over the horizon radar of the type spread all though out the hf bands not heard anything else as of yet though…
Is it possible that ther ticking clock is from somewhere like Ukraine, the tick is so that people can find the frequency, and it turns to a siren for an air raid warning ?
The ticking clock being a pirate leaves me wondering... Why? What is the purpose? It has been there for months now, ever so often with the air raid sirens... why would somebody do something like this... for attention? Going by everything has a reason, makes me wonder what the gain for this individual is... if it is a pirate, or is it??? What is your take on this Lewis?
I read speculation that it's Russian Pirates doing a modern rendition of a soviet war time era propaganda, the "every 7 seconds a german dies" one. Harzard a guess the siren or alarms is to scare people using nuclear threats. People who listen this a lot longer than I have say it ends with the Russian Anthem.
I never imagined we’d hear an intercontinental baby monitor….
True meaning of ICBM 😂
😂😂😂
or I.C.B.M.
Biden by night
@@thisladlovescoffeedang, i thought the comment was good
That first digital code, could make for a pretty sick tune!!!
But! Hello you!
Those were my own thoughts when I first heard it.
Limmy.gif
Hello you!
The first one wouldn't sound out of place at a rave. 😆
I've danced to worse in my youth!! 😂
I was gonna say that, it's not bad at all... You lucky people! (reference)
I just said the same thing! I'm going to sample it :)
Pleasant cheerful robot swarm..:::🐈⚡️🐈⬛
Like early Autechre noodly moments...🌌🎼☁️
@@cherrymountains72’Ave a banana!
You know you've got a popular channel, when people go out of their way to get on your show.
Jealous of your handle
Sounds like someones having a 8-Bit party!
0011101000101001001011101001101001011001010100
*SLOWED AND REVERBED*
1:03 pretty sure it’s an unpublished track from Kraftwerk 😉
They are all unpublished tracks from Stockhausen. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurzwellen
I still have a 33rpm record somewhere. 😁
The airwaves are a weird place to be sometimes
Indeed
The crying baby jammer brings back memories of my ships open comms being jammed when I was in the Navy.
We used an open net for anyone to tune into who needed help in the area, but it would always get jammed by adversaries or bored fishermen.
Since we had to monitor the line, we would hear all sorts of jams from crying babies, music, screaming women, drunk singing and even sound effects from old Looney Tunes cartoons, that would go on for hours.
It was a very interesting experience
Just to clarify, the open net was explicitly for asking for help, and people were jamming it?
@@JordanMills1932-ix5ixI’m wondering that as well because you’ve got to be a terrible person to jam that because you are bored, surely
@@JordanMills1932-ix5ix Some people's best interest is specific other people not getting helped. The world would be better off without these losers but unfortunately we have a lot of them. For example if you run a pirating operation that takes over other ships you'd be stupid not to jam emergency frequencies.
Using pro-Ukrainian messages would seem an excellent way of convincing people that "This numbers station is absolutely not Russian" under any circumstances ;)
Also using a baby crying as a jammer for a voice signal actually makes sense - I believe we are generically tuned to react to a baby crying, so it would be very distracting!
Apparently baby crying is very close in sound to the prop noise of small drones. Which is why people find drones so annoying.
Cats also Sound like Babies, very disturbing.
@@BobAbc0815 What's _really_ disturbing is that cats only do that to get HUMAN attention - they KNOW we react to that frequency
The whole thing is manipulation 😅
@@unbearifiedbear1885 all hail our Feline Overlords
@@jungleent1972Changed to "messages" - apologies for any offence caused!!
These Russians will try anything to get on the Ringway Manchester YT channel!! 😂😂
Putin's favorite's channel !
"...special antennae" 👨💼
Who says it's the Russians?
@@SocialistDistancing CIA most probably
Sounds like an Imperial probe.
The crying baby reminds me of the CIA propaganda played over speakers mounted on helicopters during the Vietnam War, which featured a loop of a baby crying and the fast, frantic Vietnamese warning against the Viet Cong, or something to that effect. I imagine it would damn sure be creepy to listen to, especially at night in a jungle.
they / we used it for PSYOPS or , to harass " prisoners " / detainees in POW camps during "wartime ", lol.
Operation Wandering Soul. The actual audio is spooky as shit.
Op Wandering Soul - they played messages from """dead""" VC, telling how the should've stayed home, missed their mother's and couldn't find rest
Must've been freaky af, even if you knew what it was
@@furrymessiah lol wish I'd read the replies before commenting 😂
0:35 i managed to translate it "help me obi wan kenobi. your our only hope. "
what method to translate? that sounds like a message to Japan or China....
@@432HZ_officialyou’re either very young or very, very old to not get that reference.
@@KyzylReap can you be too old to get that refrence.
@@craigwatt1303 you'd have to be VERY old indeed. I'm creeping up on 60 and as a 9 year old American boy when the first Star Wars movie came out, I was part of the core target audience.
@@iagmusicandflying ans being the age you were you likly had to have your parents take you so id saay most that wouldnt get it would be my grans age in which case not likly on youtube.
If the ticking clock is a pirate, then it is a pretty serious operation.
Heard every morning here in Southern Australia, often S7+ easily getting over OTHR interference.
Whoever is doing it has a very decent station.
That's R2D2 having some "personal time". 🤖
😂😂😂
Don't droid shame, man. 🙂
He sounded like a really happy droid.
The signal at 0:35 could be a test transmission for transatlantic financial data. There seem to be quite a few low data rate transmissions that are related to banks transmitting on RF to avoid the lag of internet traffic and thereby gaining a few milliseconds advantage. Once one starts they all have to try to keep up.
It made sense in 1970s... but in 2024?
@@jimbotron70 Still faster than routing through the internet
Radio reception isn’t consistent so there’s no way RF would be used as opposed the internet.
@@mrfust Nonsense. Google 'High Speed Trading Using Shortwave Radio'
@@mrfust you need to read more because it's definitely happening. Many trading companies are hiring RF engineers for this precise reason
Interesting channel! I've always had an interest in radios and frequencies, and you do a great job narrating and explaining things! I'll be subscribing to your channel! 👍
2:18 That's got to be a sound effect from Space Cadet pinball. I've played too much Space Cadet not to recognise it.
It's amazzing how there's still new shortwave stations even in 2024. While us in the UK basically sleeps when it comes to anything radio. (except DAB it seems?)
The buzzer, better answer the door 🚪 😅
Some strange signals on the air
I listen to a lot of radio; I've had a VHF directional fitted on top of the house followed by a directional DAB. They can't be beaten, stereo FM, faultless, DAB no bubbling or cutting out. I'm not a wireless expert but I like listening to what I can hear.
Using an hf yagi just for direction finding is asking a lot since the antennas tend to be huge.
@@chunkysalad9650 I think I may have confused, they are five element aerials directed to, in this case the Sutton Coldfield transmitter. I live in Coventry.
Stellar video. Had to comment and do my part !!!
Another excellent job lewis awesome thanks
Love the channel, Lewis. The signal at the start has a short variable pitch noise which sounds similar to components of Australia's OTHR, JORN. Have a listen (other vids on youtube) and see what you think. 👍
Sounds like an Imperial droid communication signal. 🤪
It's an old signal, but it clears
Greetings from Sweden!
Yet again, thank you.
The Buzzer was weird again on sunday.
That Digi-sound at the start is Kraftwerk the Model, pitched up and played backwards 1/4 then "upside down" 1/6 (they mirror the backwards so it's played "Back-fard-down"
Are you sure that it's the Model?
4:15 this is a baby monitor or similar. Many old devices (including cordless phones) used CB bands back in the 70s and 80s. The frequency listed is 27.385 mhz, or CB channel 38.
its also a popular unofficial LSB net these days
Heard in Canada and parts of Europe? That's some long range baby monitoring.
@@3rdalbum depends on where the transmitter is located and the ionisphere. 4w cb can skip all over the world in perfect circumstances. However if the transmitter is located close....
Regarding it can't be ruled out. I remember using my "walkie talkies" and hearing people talking on their cordless phones because it was all CB.
Thank you for all you do. I find your videos informative and entertaining. Good job.
I hear the crying baby and siren on CB Channel 38 LSB all the time lol.
3:38 "The time sponsored by Accurist, will be"... 😂
Hahaha I was just thinking that listening to the pips and someone had put the comment 😂😂👍👍👍👍
totally 😂 damn i miss that...think its been 35years almost
That first one would make a great sample for some intense EDM.
Some of these tones recorded remind me of the Cold War Carrier Wave that was put through the telephone lines in Britain as the nuclear attack warning network. It used the same line as the old speaking clock. We can only guess their real purpose over the airwaves but wonder if it has a similar use as the old Carrier wave. Great video.
Nothing beats Swedish Rhapsody
Radio Trolls... very sneaksy and cagey.
Thank you for sharing!
That first radio noise was from a dance club on Antares Prime.
It sounds like Jack Douglas is sending morse.
Whey hey! Gerroff!!
To me, that "crying baby" sounds a lot like one of those squeaky rubber chicken toys.
think thats why that noise of dog toys bothers me
I thought that too 😂
The crying baby sound was used by The East German Embassy London during the early 70's when making their nightime nuisance telephone calls.
Did they really use to do prank calls?
@@jimbotron70 They had a private war going on with Westminster Council for many years. Nightmare neighbour would be an apt description.
Phil can you drop me an email I’d love to know more
I don't know if I'd call them pirates or "clandestines" like we called them in the 1980s. As to the Crying Baby.... with so many monitoring the Buzzer and others in the background, I imagine that not many people will keep the Crying Baby channel on for too long, and that might be part of the plan???
The crying baby has been in there on 27.3850 lsb for at least 2 months.Now i'm in baltimore and he comes in fairly regularly when conditions are good
A crazy idea for a numbers station.
Back in the telegraph days, they had codes that used words to represent phrases. For example, here are a few from a 1910 code:
Quadrants: At what price and how soon can you furnish
Quadrate: Quote best price on
Quandrange: In market for
Quaffed: Will wire you tomorrow morning
Quaggy: Have written
In theory the subject matter of a numbers station is limited to things about the operation. It is a Domain Specific Language. You don't have to be able to convey messages like "Do you think 'War of the Worlds' was a better movie than 'Independence Day'?" So you take the phrases, place names, and maybe even letters of the alphabet, in case you need to occasionally spell something out, and you assign a bunch of words to each one. And you tag the words as to whether they can be used as nouns, verbs, adverbs, or adjectives. Then you have some sort of AI (not necessarily cutting-edge AI; something like the 1983 Ractor of the book "The policeman's beard is half-constructed" would do) generate sentences out of these words, and a text-to-speech generator read them over the air.
Since there are many words that can mean each phrase, you would need a program to decode them, which would have to be well hidden, but the advantage if you are being clandestine is that if your neighbors hear it through the walls of your apartment, it will just sound like speech, and won't arouse the suspicions that someone saying "one six five three two" might.
That first one could be the legendary Leeds Warehouse techno combo known as LFO.
then there would be another channel marker with the Leeds Warehouse Mix playing 24/7 (banger of a tune)
I've heard that baby jammer too. Heard in PNW USA when coast to coast reception happening on that band.
If I had to listen to that crying baby signal for any length of time I would lose it...🤦♂️
Same. I have two little ones and the sound of crying is really hard for me to ignore or just sit through without trying to help.. I feel my blood pressure going up when I hear it. I know it's an evolutionary instinct.
0:40 - thats R2D2 trying to talk to the borg collective
the drop sound is like when you go through the grocery checkout and have your groceries scanned
thank you
It sounds like sum one is trying to communicate with R2D2
Someone is using a old baby monitor
And hooked it up to a powerful shortwave transmitter! "When you want to monitor your baby, but from a continent over!"
Sounds like the intro for the Muppets - Dr' Bunsen Honeydew's scientific show.
Little Miss Marker, or the beginning
of like a surgeon by Weird Al Yankovic.😊
I still miss the gong number station from the former DDR - GO3. That was on another level!
I apologise for my Homecountrys disapointing Disapearance😂
@@BobAbc0815 🤣
The pip sounds, sound like Car trackers in RF mode
lemme grab my SDR to try the "Crying Baby".... Ontario, rural.
Sounds like techno mixed with morse code on sound 1
That baby monitor is sooo unnerving, but I'm pretty sure that's R2D2 having a seizure at the beginning of the video!
That first one sounds like a Kraftwerk song!
some guys been locked in his attic trying to make "that track" since 1981. its just his old power supply brick giving off rf at roof level.
Thanks RM. Time to go Band Scanning**** Take Care
I dont understand why propaganda is transmitted on SW. No offense but its not exactly mass media. What is the reason anyone?
01:00 crap there goes the neighborhood. That sounds like the Imperial probe from Hoth. Time to warm up the Ion Cannon.
@0:36 sounds very similar to the Japanese Slot Machine, but not quite the same. Also the QRG doesn't fit. On the other hand: it looks like you're above the frequency there.
@4:41 there used to be, and probably still are, babyphones operating on frequencies in between the US 40 CB channels. I guess that signal is a reference to that.
Nice update, cheers Lewis!
You are bound to find ocean fishing long line beacon buoys. Normally they are morse code but not wanting others to get their long lines anything works. Then there are stream monitors and other functions. Even ocean wave height monitors too.
Our neighbour's cordless phone IF caused the local amateur 144 repeater to broadcast the BBC. Thinking we had caught the pirate and the fox hunt kept pointing back to near my house? It only happened when he was on a long call. The distance was line of sight around 5km.
15744 kHz....ah yes, that is the new German Techno group Beepychirp! 🙂
Who in general uses shortwave radio now is it just enthusiast's? Why would anyone broadcast propaganda on shortwave? I'm not saying it's not happening I just don't get it.
It's residual compared to the golden age but still in use and useful for some purposes.
The crying baby signal reminds me of a psychological operation more than anything else. At least that is the best Case scenario! A previous commenter referenced that the CIA often used in in Vietnam a variation of a crying baby has also been used in survival and evasion courses for special operations units as part of interrogation survival training
Could be a compressed data burst in an audio container. Talking about the first one.
That crying baby sounds eerily like the Israel 'crying drone' in Gaza. As well as the crying baby that was played through loudspeakers at the Columbia Uni in the US. Wild, might not be the same but it's very odd to me especially after the recordings were used in such a horrific way.
Might have to dust off the SDR
Yes, hello! I was wondering if you could play that song again.
That will cost you a fiver!
0:40 uses 3 distinct sounds - some kind of slow data transmission similar to Morse, perhaps.
The buzzing on the ticking clock seems faster than the normal buzzer!!
The 15KHz band is often used for eavesdropping. You might have potentially discovered a "data listener" planted on a computer or within the network stream. The sever is active when a terminal is being accessed, and there have been devices developed by "Agencies with international interests" to serve this purpose. Many years ago, the Russians were using polytones, and a raid done in East Germany had recovered special "decoders" that could receive and interpret these signals.
The Russians still use polytones, as do a few others (Cuba/China/North Korea) and while slightly faster in their transmission speed and bandwidth, they still seem to follow the old classic beeps, boops, and pulses.
The first clip you play sounds very similar the sound effect used in the episode of Gilligan's Island where the satellite lands on the island.
The first transmission may be from the HWU vlf transmitter in Rosnay, France.
My question about the baby crying signal is, could it be a mask? I mean, if it is the same sound except for different portions in certain spots, it could be used to transmit code. If you don't know the original baby crying sound, you technically would need to have multiple clear copies of the crying. The other side of this is babies crying would hit on the psychological side of anyone listening who doesn't know its purpose. Meaning they would be less likely to want to keep picking it up and copying it.
I don't understand it because on the waterfall it looks like a barcode and the sound is something like 50 Hz, but depending on your filter BW and modulation you could hear this or that so kinda difficult to conclude anything from it.
The first sounds like an imperial probe droid doing a recon.
Robert De Niros brain when he hears the word trump?
I get massive ticking clock and buzzer QRM all the time across many bands.
27Mhz is Citizens Band in the United States and Canada. Taxi companies use it down in Mexico. I talk frequently on CB radio, and that crying baby has been around for over 15 years. It'll shift channels sometimes, but it always sounds the same. I believe it comes from the West Coast of the United States.
You should do a bit of research on American CB radio, it's actually interesting, and how much power some of these people run. Learn about the Superbowl on CB Channel 6. Some of those guys are running 100kw+.
I should warn you though that you will hear some of the most profane things on 27Mhz AM from the US. Just putting that out there so it doesn't come as a shock.
With the CB in my car, I've talked to Australia on a couple occasions as well as Jamaica.
Me: "Any Jungle in,guy?"
Ringway Manchester credits: !
That first digital code is R2D2 when he gets very excited.
Pretty sure that first one was a new Daft Punk track.
I spend a lot of time on websdr sites , recorded some signals I though interesting enough to share on my channel. Something about 6911 I noticed on Russia's memorial day was that the siren played all day non stop , then during the ceremony for the moment of silence they played audio of the Stalingrad clock. I think it has some deeper meaning. I have been told by many people it's a pirate . I have heard the clock, the siren and a rock version of the Russian national anthem on 6911, so I think for sure it comes from Russia , probably a Russian TV or radio station because it is very consistant.
First one literally sounds like a sick techno stab and synth phrase for something
I almost wanna remix it
That first signal is Scrillex after too many Garys.
What time in UTC do you mainly monitor the bands?
at night monitor the bands
i wonder if you can hear am radio by putting your ear on a sheep that's sleeping on a big am antenna
I reckon you could, but the sound would be a bit......
(Wait for it).....
Woolly......
I'll see myself out lol 😆
The first pip channel marker sounds exactly like an Apple IIe’s boot chirp.
The crying baby at 4:15 is noted as being at 27.385 MHz, which is actually Citizens Band (CB) channel 38 in the US. Still an odd thing to hear, regardless.
This CB band was also used for 'baby phones' in Holland... but the strength ! and no one to come in action, brrr!
I’ve been receiving those pips on a frequency of 6220 and also 6218khz mixed in with what I believe is over the horizon radar of the type spread all though out the hf bands not heard anything else as of yet though…
Sure that first one isn't a pirate having a rave with a commodore 64? 😂
The first one just needs a good "Donk!" on it mate.
Is it possible that ther ticking clock is from somewhere like Ukraine, the tick is so that people can find the frequency, and it turns to a siren for an air raid warning ?
The first one is definitely R2D2’s DJ job.
The ticking clock being a pirate leaves me wondering...
Why? What is the purpose? It has been there for months now, ever so often with the air raid sirens... why would somebody do something like this... for attention?
Going by everything has a reason, makes me wonder what the gain for this individual is... if it is a pirate, or is it???
What is your take on this Lewis?
I read speculation that it's Russian Pirates doing a modern rendition of a soviet war time era propaganda, the "every 7 seconds a german dies" one.
Harzard a guess the siren or alarms is to scare people using nuclear threats.
People who listen this a lot longer than I have say it ends with the Russian Anthem.
New viewer here. I have a question. When he says “pirates” is that Pirates on the sea? Or radiofrequency pirates? Can someone explain?
Radio pirates