Part of my teenage year,discovering the world via waves radio , listening various culture and languages and hearing cosmic sound making you relaxing tonreach the kamasutra😊wonderful periode!
This is what I always hear everytime I tuned to the entire shortwave radio band. I started listening to shortwave radio on June of 1995 after reading briefly from an encyclopedia on shortwave radio from the S book of the encyclopedia series. I had used my mom's radio which also can be used to play cassettes and a microphone jack with large speakers. It ran on both batteries and AC power. It had a knob to switch radio bands. It had AM, FM and shortwave bands. It was the only radio with the shortwave band. I was not more knowledgeable back then on shortwave radio compared to now but do remember what I heard. Now thanks to TH-cam and Twitter, not only I learned what the broadcast stations were. I learned what were the noises including what turned out to be amateur radio operators on USB or LSB that sound different on AM. In addition, there are web SDRs worldwide I can tune to and listen to what was heard in various locations as well as roughly pinpoint the location of the broadcast station. I did notice a shift in the shortwave radio band in 28 years thanks to the internet and satellites. However, there are still people who have no internet access, no satellite access, no local AM, FM and television stations and not even a local newspaper publisher nor newspapers. Shortwave radio remains the only way to reach millions of people worldwide with information, entertainment, religious programming and culture programming. Amateur radio operators still use shortwave radio for global communications including emergency communications links.
I have been fascinated with the short wave since my father and brother gave me one as a young kid. We lived just 50 miles south of the Voice of America, and I used to pick up all kinds of things in the mid to late 60's. Even the GMT time-second n drones would fascinate me.
I remember hearing this interference on my radio 46 years ago, as a young boy it fascinated me, all the different sounds. It’s great to hear it again in our crystal clear digital world.
Some of those sounds are military in origion. I listened to shortwave for a long time and there were morse code and jamming . There was this one sound called " Woodpecker " and many other mysterious ones .
I loved to listen to this sounds in an old tube radio, and of course the stations from far countries. At those times, I was a kid living in a very small city of Colombia. Even now I wonder what produces sound as in 10:30.
@@parvdeepdeswal9407 Yes, it was a criminal, really famous, specially for people who admires this kind of people. When I was a kid, I could heard of assasinations and bombs in Medellin where he lived. He got a lot of money, all this money brought from USA, because drugs are a profitable business where some stupids consume and put the money, some other stupids put the drugs and the deads, some other stupids pursuit the formers. Honestly, I have never watch this kind of TV series.
Good to hear some of those old sounds again. There still used to be a bit of morse code in the early 80s but I assume most of that has long since gone silent.
Hey, I liked your examples of tricksters---especially that scoundrel/genius Smith. I got him psyched out for good. I also love radio. But ignorant about short wave. This type of sound might be pure gold for a lucrative marketing & writing job I just fell into. Which involves.. I won't say it! And I'll disown the subject publicly b/c I think it's crap. If this is years old, oh well.. Take it easy - Jennifer
That is actually some type of FSK mode. Different from RTTY. It is often heard on the same frequencies used by both WWV and WWVH on 5 and 10 MHz during the day.
@@SuperFlyRock1 FSK is Frequency Shift Key. RTTY is radio teletype. WWV and WWVH are call signs for the time signal stations broadcasting on shortwave from the National Institute of Standards and Technology. WWV is located in Colorado. WWVH is located in Hawaii.
Can you recommend radios that pick up noise well? I have a Sanwa 6080 and while it sounds awesome I don't think it is capable of doing super crazy stuff ...
@@mm.dra69 The radio you have is a good one. Try listening to shortwave radio after sunset and try all shortwave bands then, you should be able to pick up a lot of good signals and noise. Or, you could try listening to it when the sun is up. Good radios: Degen, Grundig, Sangean, Tecsun, XHDATA, Eton...etc.
He is showing us the sounds between the stations .Things in the universe and the sun all make weird sounds that can be picked up by shortwave . The sound of the signal as it modulates or fades in and out is like music . Poorly shielded electronics also make weird sounds on shortwave. The best conditions for shortwave are at night during low solar activity and being outside of large cities .
Part of my teenage year,discovering the world via waves radio , listening various culture and languages and hearing cosmic sound making you relaxing tonreach the kamasutra😊wonderful periode!
This is what I always hear everytime I tuned to the entire shortwave radio band. I started listening to shortwave radio on June of 1995 after reading briefly from an encyclopedia on shortwave radio from the S book of the encyclopedia series. I had used my mom's radio which also can be used to play cassettes and a microphone jack with large speakers. It ran on both batteries and AC power. It had a knob to switch radio bands. It had AM, FM and shortwave bands. It was the only radio with the shortwave band. I was not more knowledgeable back then on shortwave radio compared to now but do remember what I heard. Now thanks to TH-cam and Twitter, not only I learned what the broadcast stations were. I learned what were the noises including what turned out to be amateur radio operators on USB or LSB that sound different on AM. In addition, there are web SDRs worldwide I can tune to and listen to what was heard in various locations as well as roughly pinpoint the location of the broadcast station. I did notice a shift in the shortwave radio band in 28 years thanks to the internet and satellites. However, there are still people who have no internet access, no satellite access, no local AM, FM and television stations and not even a local newspaper publisher nor newspapers. Shortwave radio remains the only way to reach millions of people worldwide with information, entertainment, religious programming and culture programming. Amateur radio operators still use shortwave radio for global communications including emergency communications links.
There is something mysterious about shortwave sounds. I believe cosmic background radiation makes up about 1% of the sounds heard on a shortwave band.
I have been fascinated with the short wave since my father and brother gave me one as a young kid. We lived just 50 miles south of the Voice of America, and I used to pick up all kinds of things in the mid to late 60's. Even the GMT time-second n drones would fascinate me.
It sounds so bizarre and mysterious. I love it.
Camila G. Glad you liked it and thanks for listening.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I remember hearing this interference on my radio 46 years ago, as a young boy it fascinated me, all the different sounds. It’s great to hear it again in our crystal clear digital world.
A buddy of mine had this receiver with a Heathkit DX 60. Thanks for the memories!
Just fine tuning my instrument 📡🔭
Some of those sounds are military in origion. I listened to shortwave for a long time and there were morse code and jamming . There was this one sound called " Woodpecker " and many other mysterious ones .
This is beautiful and exactly what I was looking for!... thank you!
William Sledge Thank you very much for your comment!
I can hear the Italian anthem in background at 0:50
Oh does this stuff come in on short wave radio? Heck I hear it in my head all the time even when I’m not close to a radio
oh so sweet n staticy I love shortwave radio
Ethers and dreams
I loved to listen to this sounds in an old tube radio, and of course the stations from far countries. At those times, I was a kid living in a very small city of Colombia. Even now I wonder what produces sound as in 10:30.
Colombia is a very beautiful country and beautiful music too.💖💖💖🎶🎶🎶
did u know pablo escobar ? sorry i just finished narcos and am curious
@@parvdeepdeswal9407 Yes, it was a criminal, really famous, specially for people who admires this kind of people. When I was a kid, I could heard of assasinations and bombs in Medellin where he lived. He got a lot of money, all this money brought from USA, because drugs are a profitable business where some stupids consume and put the money, some other stupids put the drugs and the deads, some other stupids pursuit the formers. Honestly, I have never watch this kind of TV series.
Good to hear some of those old sounds again. There still used to be a bit of morse code in the early 80s but I assume most of that has long since gone silent.
Today i've been hearing some Morse on SSB.
Wunderschön! Vielen Dank!
+Pierre Jumeau You are welcome!
So cool! Thanks for posting!
masterpiece from history 😊
This crime documentary left an impression on me. Will it do the same for you? Will you be watching?
gold jerry! gold!
Where's that ft. collins,Colorado short wave time Station w/that sound... By the way, Hammarlund is a great radio!
WWV
Hey, I liked your examples of tricksters---especially that scoundrel/genius Smith. I got him psyched out for good. I also love radio. But ignorant about short wave. This type of sound might be pure gold for a lucrative marketing & writing job I just fell into. Which involves.. I won't say it! And I'll disown the subject publicly b/c I think it's crap. If this is years old, oh well.. Take it easy - Jennifer
9:50 I sometimes hear a 625 hz sound in the background like this one when i tune in a shortwave radio. Can someone explain what causes it?
That is actually some type of FSK mode. Different from RTTY. It is often heard on the same frequencies used by both WWV and WWVH on 5 and 10 MHz during the day.
can you explain it without abbreviations?
@@SuperFlyRock1 FSK is Frequency Shift Key. RTTY is radio teletype. WWV and WWVH are call signs for the time signal stations broadcasting on shortwave from the National Institute of Standards and Technology. WWV is located in Colorado. WWVH is located in Hawaii.
@@SuperFlyRock1 MHz is Megahertz.
@@martinaguilar5905 thank you
make one with you just staying in one frequency and the frequency isn't occupied, i just want to hear shortwave static
You mean just beeps and bleeps?
yeah
Working on it.
@@Seekthetruth3000 >I'll make one.
>2 years ago.
I guess he didn't make it :/
very relxing
Hi
I was exploring the different sounds that a shortwave radio makes. Just to give you a feel for it. I like those beeps and bleeps.
same fam
Seekthetruth3000 from the whole world hearing some some some....crash nothing really sounds.. Whatever you enjoy exploring
I was wondering, do all shortwave radios produce the same sounds or are they different depending on the brand?
Some radios are more sensitive than others. It also depends on the time of day or night.
Can you recommend radios that pick up noise well? I have a Sanwa 6080 and while it sounds awesome I don't think it is capable of doing super crazy stuff ...
@@mm.dra69 The radio you have is a good one. Try listening to shortwave radio after sunset and try all shortwave bands then, you should be able to pick up a lot of good signals and noise. Or, you could try listening to it when the sun is up. Good radios: Degen, Grundig, Sangean, Tecsun, XHDATA, Eton...etc.
0:09
Stations from Latin America? I can hear 2 Brazilian ones at least
rpmarts ‘With Gods word’....American..on 1.01
It's RTTY
Is this for free use?
Feel free to use it.
Why don't you just stop ot one station?
Agreed! This guy needs to simply stop sweeping frequencies!
He is showing us the sounds between the stations .Things in the universe and the sun all make weird sounds that can be picked up by shortwave . The sound of the signal as it modulates or fades in and out is like music . Poorly shielded electronics also make weird sounds on shortwave. The best conditions for shortwave are at night during low solar activity and being outside of large cities .