There are of course the stations starting with "F" (F01, F06, etc.), they werent worth adding into the video as they all sound the same with the rtty, except F07. Same for M01, M12 and M14, M23, etc. sound the same with the morse.
Just recently was able to listen to Cuba's number station using WebSDR. The only thing that I still can't understand is the station after awhile starts sending what I can only asume are bursts of certain frequencies, and then goes back to numbers.
I think I might have heard some type of chinese number station the other day. It played a piano jingle for about 7 seconds, a robotic chinese guy would say a short sentence, repeat around 5 times, with it going back and forth between a female and male voice. It might have just been a weird thing chinese civilian radio stations do, because after it ended it went back to chinese music. Unfortunately i dont remember the frequency
The first time I have heard the number station was at the beginning of the Ukraine war. I searched for military transmissions, and could monitor the movement of NATO and Russian planes. Then one night I found a strange voice chanel repeating a 1-2 minute message of first a call sign and then numbers, these had la few numbers that were in the same place . Any ideas if others do this also?
1:59 Reminds me of the U.S. Emergency Alert System data bursts. I actually came upon this because I think it might be a possible answer for a mysterious signal based in the midwest. I don't think it's the most likely answer, however.
Taking into account all what has happened in recent years, it is better to keep them using to 1) deliver messages 2) psychological warfare and 3) divert attention.
It's in Russian, but it pronounces numbers in a way like onesie, twosie, threesie, instead of one, two and three, respectively. So for Russian speakers it sounds unnatural
There are of course the stations starting with "F" (F01, F06, etc.), they werent worth adding into the video as they all sound the same with the rtty, except F07.
Same for M01, M12 and M14, M23, etc. sound the same with the morse.
Some of Russian stations sounds like avantgarde music lmao
XPA1 sounds like anime music on morse code with different beeping tones.
XPB sounds like an Atari 2600 game
Just recently was able to listen to Cuba's number station using WebSDR. The only thing that I still can't understand is the station after awhile starts sending what I can only asume are bursts of certain frequencies, and then goes back to numbers.
Its EasyPal transmission (the data bursts)
@@Antenna101interesting, have you tried to decode any?
@@AeroplaneJamie No, and it doesn't seem like i'll be able to any time soon because HM01 is now currently inactive.
this is really interesting and has got me thinking
I think I might have heard some type of chinese number station the other day. It played a piano jingle for about 7 seconds, a robotic chinese guy would say a short sentence, repeat around 5 times, with it going back and forth between a female and male voice. It might have just been a weird thing chinese civilian radio stations do, because after it ended it went back to chinese music. Unfortunately i dont remember the frequency
probably china radio international
Where can I find these frequencies so I can try and listening to them myself?
priyom.org
@@Antenna101 thanks
Bro the second one hits
The first time I have heard the number station was at the beginning of the Ukraine war. I searched for military transmissions, and could monitor the movement of NATO and Russian planes. Then one night I found a strange voice chanel repeating a 1-2 minute message of first a call sign and then numbers, these had la few numbers that were in the same place . Any ideas if others do this also?
what frequency?
1:59 Reminds me of the U.S. Emergency Alert System data bursts.
I actually came upon this because I think it might be a possible answer for a mysterious signal based in the midwest. I don't think it's the most likely answer, however.
Update: I just remembered I only recieve the signal on vhf analogue tv, so it is most likely not a number station
Can you record the signal?
@@Antenna101 I have the video up on my channel, posted it back in July
@@aero5568 it could be audio from a digital station, in my country video data and audio data are seperated, video is digital and audio is analog FM
@@aero5568 and it could be FLEX, POCSAG, Pager
The female polish voice at 6:30 sounds like it has an Indian accent.
13335.33 khz usb is called XPA6 is it automatic 16 khz time reference
what
Door bell
I wonder if the message at 3:47 is Morse code?
"CW" means morse code, yes.
Yes, it is.
Although even if decoded, the outcome is still encrypted in numbers.
@@coyohti Ohh neat! Thanks
Lol I copied audio and ran it thru a morse code decoder and it cam up as a bunch of E's and T's very possible I messed it up.. or maybe binary ??
E and T in decoders happen when the morse is not properly decoded
Why the hell is a spanish voice in a Russian number Station?????
why not
It's to communicate to spys, so I wouldn't be surprised if it was used so no one else understood.
Freq?
which one
It seems like the country with the biggest number of active stations is Russia 🇷🇺.
They're historically the experts of spying and espionage, makes sense.
Taking into account all what has happened in recent years, it is better to keep them using to 1) deliver messages 2) psychological warfare and 3) divert attention.
Well it is a backward country.
Who else would still be using cold war era technology lmao
@@Frille512old but gold.
5:00 is it Czech language ??? I am a Pole but it's not Polish language. Sounds very familiar but definitely it's from some other slavik country.
It's a polish origin but it sends in russian language 😊
It's in Russian, but it pronounces numbers in a way like onesie, twosie, threesie, instead of one, two and three, respectively. So for Russian speakers it sounds unnatural