Russia's Mystery Count Down Signal Has Changed!
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Russia's Newest Military Signal Is COUNTING DOWN! - But Why?
• Russia's Newest Milita... - วิทยาศาสตร์และเทคโนโลยี
A bloke in an old Transit van drove past my house earlier playing that bugle noise, he was shouting “Scrap Ironnnn…scrap ironnnn…” as well. If I see him again I’ll tell him to stop pissing about on the wireless.
always get a rude awakening from those guys! lmao sometimes it distorts and its the most haunting sound i will hear in my life lmao my dog also used to love joining in with them by howling but hes old now so idk if he can hear them very well anymore...
Ha! Ha! Ha! I saw that same gink over here in America!
He gives market value, plus ice cream?
We have the same in Birmingham UK a guy in van shoutin iron over a horrible noise lol
Ray: What are you talking about
Bubbles: scrAPPP METALLLLL
It’s not any worse than the music on the radio nowadays.
This sounds better, it's got a good rhythm to it
@@timspikerI see what you did there.
Это надо слушать в темной комнате без света
sick burn
Great video, obviously a bit of psyops to worry & keep NATO guessing!!! . The real danger is my wife battering me for listening to these bonkers noises at 01.27 AM . PEACE AND LOVE TO EVERYONE ❤❤.
LOL yep
Yeah, these signals are not confusing NATO. Honestly, it's more likely they don't even look at this signal, rather than them spending significant time on it.
Ha! Ha! Ha! I thought at 1:27 AM you'd be over at your girlfriend's pad!
Vatican radio?
Peace and Ahev
psiops? On a thing less than 1000people in the world are listening?
At the time of World War II, during the 872 days of the siege of Leningrad (now called St.Petersburg), the sound of a metronome was broadcast in the streets, the purpose of which was to notify residents of the city of an approaching attack by German aircraft. The slow ticking of the metronome meant that there was no air attack, and the rapid "steps" of the metronome indicated that it was necessary to seek shelter, since the bombing of the city would begin any minute. The sound of a bugle signalled that the alarm was over. The siege of Leningrad, according to various estimates, claimed the lives of 600,000 to 1.5 million residents of the city. Only 3% of people died from Nazi bombing, the remaining 97% died of starvation: about 4 thousand people died of exhaustion every day. We in Russia still pay tribute to the heroism of the undefeated citizens of Leningrad.
Terrible sacrifices made by the Russian people.
Can i ask you a question ? Are you really from Russia? I'm curious what it's like there.. there are some people that believe Russia and usa/nato will be at war soon...but nobody here wants war anywhere it's our corrupt government that keeps pushing it everywhere. It seems more likely daily with what's going on in Russia lately..so many attacks
@@bobf9749 Stalin sacrificed Leningrad, because he hated the city. Too many dissidents within the party came from there. Too many people knew what a minor figure he had been during the revolution. Also his preventive attack on Finland turned out to be rather backfiring, when Leningrad was under siege.
@@bobf9749 Unnecessary sacrifices were made. Stalin's purges of the military ranks meant that he had precious few qualified officers to command his forces, the sycophants that he put in their place were criminally incompetent. The millions of Russians that died were essentially murdered by the regime for no purpose at all.
I'm from Canada we are family not enemy no matter what these war mongers do even if we must die never forget that we are brothers..we need liberation from trudeau here
I get the ticking clock up here too in Northern Snowy Scotland, my little Long Wire picks up many odd things.
What's a long wire please?
An outdoor aerial??
I'm just visiting this channel (TH-cam recommendation for some reason)
I'm in Perthshire. What sort of "odd things" do you pick up?
@@Mortthemooselong wire is what it is - long wire antenna with almost random length, the longer the better. For instance Im living on 2nd floor & I put a wire between my window & a tree on the other side of the street, may be 15 meters length or a bit longer. Im using it to listen to long, medium & short waves radio broadcast, as well as for listening to radio amateurs on 80 & 40 meters.
The siren played at 2:00 isn't necessarily a nuclear attack siren, it's just an air raid siren and it's used here in the states as a tornado warning.
I lived next to a fire station for years, they used the same siren when dispatching fire engines. Day and night. It is amazing how quickly you learn to turn it out.
Well um.. Here in the states there is no difference between them. A tornado siren is the same as the Nuke siren.
Ya I hear these in my area regularly
Well... that seals it for me. Pirates, the air raid siren is too try hard to be anything clandestine.
In my area that siren is also used for a tornado warning siren. I think it’s a pirate as well. And it happens to be in the same spectrum as most other pirate activity.
@@RJDA.Dakota where I live the town's siren started in the 1930's about saving water pressure during firetrucks battling fires.
Now they just play it like wheneever they want aparently
Town where I grew up used an air raid siren as their fire siren. A callout system from an era when mobile telecoms were unreliable.
exactly my thoughts to
The first time an alarm sounded on the frequency was half an hour after your first video about it. It's a pirate, and they obviously watch your videos, and timed it to coincide with an influx of people listening in and chatting about it in the chat.
Blackbeard is still loose!
Producing it himself maybe ?
A military radio operator trying to look busy in case he gets posted to you know where.
I like this one... Keeping busy keeps it funded. I bet the operators room is tidy lol
Yeah, he's probably fooling around with the secretary and doesn't want to get caught by VLAD and his gang of thugs.
I was a short wave fanatic as a kid in the late 1950's, I built one and two valve short wave receivers around the trusty DF91. I bought a shortwave receiver a couple of years ago when the international crises started because if the nasty stuff hits the fan the internet will go down but short wave will remain. I found that the short wave spectrum has changed a lot over the last 65 years, there is nothing like the number of stations there used to be when I sat in my bedroom till dawn listening to all the stations in the world that my 50 foot outdoor antenna would pull in, even Radio Australia and Radio Ecuador, The Voice of the Andes. When I was a kid the short wave band was full of people reciting long lists of numbers, I never did figure out what they were,I'll have a tune in on the 43 meter band this evening when the sun goes down and listen to the ticking clock.
The long lists of numbers could have been like Beale ciphers, messages encoded using word numbers of a known text. :)
Folks checking in with their call signs, like a regional or even world wide "roll call" had a ham operator in the family and used to hear the same chatter.
I mean at this point they know you’re listening so they are probably just giving you something to listen to. Either way it’s still fun.
nothing about them is "fun".
Fun? The same country responsible for Bucha .
I was talking about the pirates not an entire country but there is always some asshole who has to make a political statement isn’t there.
@@Meibeon comedian in kiev is behind the bucha massacre
@@Meibeon
What country are you from?
(dont know much about radio but) Ringed my dad, and he instantly replied that this was MARS (Militar Amateur Radio Service) and its supposed to only used in cataclismic emergencies. He said that historically, the americans gave MARS (amateurs) a tiny slice close to the military frequencies (amateur starts at 40m and 7000khz) so amateurs could talk in the military frequencies in case of war. Wikipedia says MARS ended in 2015 and its purpose was to serve for amateurs to assist in providing auxiliary radio emergency communications in case of need.
I wonder if the constant sounds are just there to keep the channel alive? Or maybe the opposite, spam it so it cant be used.
The last segment sounded as if the person responsible at the transmitter had accidentally set the frequency a little lower and then corrected it midway when he noticed it.
It all gives the impression of trolling or pirates having some shortwave fun.
I was thinking a record being played at the wrong speed.
@@therealjammitOr a tape
@@wisteela Like one of those reel to reel types that played and recorded at different speeds. I choose record because most of the old cheap ones you can change the speed while it's running. The older reel to reel you had to turn it off, install or remove a capstan sleeve, and turn it on again to change speed.
Could be a ww2 recording itself
Another good video man, thanking you for the work mr ringwaymanchester
Short wave trolling?
That is what I get from this. 🤔
Probably.
You and me both.
I'm thinking the same.
Oh yeah! Have the chicks arrived yet?
"In my defense, I was bored."
Love the B-roll of radio infrastructure. It's always interesting to see how different engineers deal with different challenges.
I assume the local surroundings heavily influence the design of a radio mast, depending on the frequency being used for transmission. I would guess things like terrain, trees, other structures, weather, potentially large metal deposits in the ground even? Nearby equipment? I'm sure my autism would be fascinated to start exploring the waves and what influences radio waves. I can't say I know very much about them.
I suppose this seems like a good place to start!
Study diffusion, diffraction and reflection of RF. And Fresnel lenses, that'll get you started. From an old microwave tower technician.
@@GregS-em8tn it's pretty awesome that Fresnel lenses work with microwaves. I am definitely going to do some digging into that.
Another great video! Thanks for the updates.
Sample, remix,
and send it back with a bit of drum n bass thrown in.
It's gonna make horrible house music.
Long live Jungle!
What about a reply transmission of endless cow and elephant flatulence?...
eerie bugle actually sounds like something you'd hear in a dnb/jungle track
Gotta use some AI to make Putin spit some sick bars over it
That particular siren was available on a sound effects record album that one could check out at the local library back in the 70s. We sure had some fun with it back in high school.
Always enjoyable watching your videos. Keep up the great work.
That's not just a bugle call... those are notes from a performance of Also sprach Zarathustra composed by Richard Strauss (better known for its use in 2001: A Space Odyssey). The notes are a bit out of order, but it's unmistakable.
Or the opening notes of Fanfare For The Common Man by Emerson, Lake and Palmer, but as you say re-ordered.
Or the Deguello.
@sprint955st @KyzylReap no guys, I'm telling you, it's Also sprach Zarathustra. It's from a recording of a performance of that composition in particular. There's no mistake. There's no shot it's anything else. You can play them side-by-side and they're exactly the same, pitch for pitch and timbre for timbre. It's not Fanfare For The Common Man and it's not Deguello.
Yeah from 2001
@@sprint955st fanfare for the common man was composed by Aaron Copland, ELP just did a cover. It’s also different notes and different intervals although similar to non musicians.
The 6911 transmission seems to be a psychological effort aimed at tying up resources trying to make sense of the signal.
They have 0.00001% of the TH-cam audience captured.
„6“.“911“? Sounds more like a freemason warning radio
@@testboga5991 I was writing about tying security service analysts of various governments. TH-cam is largely irrelevant.
I doubt any governments pay much attention to this type of thing. The internet makes it redundant.
@@AbuHajarAlBugatti A cynical person could be forgiven for thinking cabal puppets on both sides lust for a war in which the bulk of humanity would be killed. While they run down to their bunkers.
Ticking clock signal is a test pattern used in wired radio system in Russia. The system itself in additional to regular broadcasting controls civil defense sirens and street loudspeakers. You can hear this signal from time to time in Saint Petersburg coming from civil defense loudspeakers, locals call it the metronome. Not sure if it has anything to do with ticking clock station, but now I wonder if this test pattern is a reference to WW2 in the first place.
I will monitor this frequensy more now, becauce I can hear it here in Oslo Norway as well! Thanks for the video Lewis! The best from LB1NH. 🙂
It would be interesting to know where the signals coming from. With a few guys across the country using directional antennas, find the compose heading of where the signal is strongest, then draw lines on a map to triangulate the signal. Where the lines converge will be the rough location of the transmission - just an idea
I found siren recordings on YT that sounds very similar
Great videos and loving your knowledge
I've heard it in Norway too, I call it the hammer because it sounds like that.
Thanks for the heads up.
Thank you for your time
Very interesting as ever !!
1:45 is not a clock! this metronome
immediately recalls the siege of Leningrad, the metronome was used in the broadcast as a "carrier" signal, heard constantly.
The sound of the metronome is also associated with the besieged Leningrad, which, by the way, sounds in the very "Leningrad Symphony" by Shostakovich. It's not for nothing that the composer incorporated the sound of the metronome into his work. The metronome was, in the truest sense of the word, the real savior of the Leningraders.
The metronome has a very close connection with the residents of Leningrad and the radio. The fact is that radio at that time, especially for Leningraders who found themselves in this position, was the only way to find out about what was happening. But the broadcasts on the radio did not happen very often.
When there were no broadcasts on the radio, the sound of a metronome was broadcast through it, the purpose of which was to notify residents of the city of an approaching attack by German aircraft. The slow ticking of the metronome meant that there was no air attack, and the rapid "steps" of the metronome indicated that it was necessary to seek shelter, since the bombing of the city would begin any minute.
The metronome beat incessantly, constantly reminding the residents of Leningrad that they must be on their guard. These very sounds of the metronome were reflected in culture, poetry, and music (the same "Leningrad" symphony by Shostakovich).
"In the darkness it seemed: the city was empty;
Not a word from loud mouthpieces,
But the pulse beat relentlessly,
Familiar, measured, forever new"
Our local fire station every Saturday at lunchtime tests its warning siren. It sounds exactly like the nuclear siren
What country is that?
@@everest9707 New Zealand
@@ANTHONY1983-- thanks 👍
Ours is every Monday at 7pm
It would be interesting to know how many ticks happen between the siren samples, and if they get fewer in number or not.
This "ticking clock" sounds more like a metronome.
Metronome is clock
You've never heard old grandfather clocks.
Kids these days, damn, never had they had the shit scared out of them at thier uncle's house when the damned clock hit 12, like WHO INVENTS TIME KEEPING @@beauzer36
actually sounds like most clocks I heard as a child or pendulum clock. School clocks always had a strange hop and vibration on the second and minute hands.
@@ardeladimwit true
part of civil defense... you keep an unbroken broadcast to always know it's still working up until you actually need to use it
That's some encryption I have never heard before, the zingers "that zing" is atmospheric conditions, so it's not propagation issues, it's actually modulated to make that noise, beginning, is attention, then listen, then write, then decode then end.
You're calling it a nuclear warning siren and while that's the most apocalyptic assumption I thought most of these sirens were already in place for more conventional air attacks experienced during the world wars. Nuclear attack is the most chilling but hopefully not yet an inevitability.
The London air-raid sirens were recycled for Thames flood warnings, before the Barrier was built. I remember bricking myself in 1974 when the whole lot went off, for a test. I was waiting for The End lol. I think only a couple remain now.
@@bingbong7316 Also used in case of accidental chlorine gas release from water treatment works
As a resident of the US Midwest it’s a tornado warning siren to me.
Yep, these are no different than the air raid sirens being played in Belgorod as of late with Ukraine finally giving back some of what it’s been receiving…
I've been hearing these sirens about 5 times a week for 2 years now. Recently there was an anniversary - the 1000th air raid. Many ppl just don't give a sheet about them. Usual stuff here.
Yet every siren means that some people will be killed and some houses will be destroyed.
Based on the clips you have played, my feeling is that there are a number of different transmitters in different sites all competing for the frequency. Some of them are working together to "pass the baton" while others are just trying to go over the top - which explains the distorted ticking as it's likely doubling up against a second signal that is ever so slightly off frequency. I am assuming if you spent time looking a the audio spectrum of each you could determine how many different variations there are. From your clips, there appear to be at least 3 main signals more or less taking turns and a bunch of other sub-signals.
Its actually a SW output to tell clandestine Russian listeners they are tuned into the wrong station. It was set up many years ago to tell anyone who tuned in that there is no one here. At the moment. The bugle call or the siren indicates they should go somewhere else to listen. Its actually an automated signal that when received by an authorised receiver will open up another variable preset frequency to a transmission which is actually the one of interest.
How you know?
Reminds me of the old WWVB signal from Boulder NIST station. Just missing the solar report and the "at the tone it will be ..... universal coordinated time"
Been routine for the past month over at 6911. I am on early mornings listening and I have noticed pretty much the same thing. The signal strength varies a lot. The bugles are often followed by a Russian anthem. Picked up some female with feed back on her mic , reading what sounded like sets of numbers and letters...interesting to say the least.
Thanks Lewis 👍
In this Country, there used to be pips issued a couple of times a day. Long before the internet, it was said to be a message that our subs could pick up, a reassurance that all was well. I'm just a civilian, I don't know if it's true, but it occurs to me that the ticking could be something similar.
If the clock stops, russia is gone.
Interesting. That siren isn't a warning, it's an "all clear" signal, usually meant for after an air raid is over.
I find these transmissions to be haunting!
... and low-budget horrors to be scary...
C'mon, no serious agency worldwide will do tings like that. Waste of resources & time.
It sounds like, in the altered bugle call, the final note actually was NOT altered. Strange.
It sounds like it is ringmodulated with another signal.
Sounds more like a metronome than a clock, but, same idea..
then you have never known a tilting clock.
Sometimes it's sounds like my grandma's grandfather clock ticking away. Still remember the weights inside and the shiny pendulum. Brass as all brass can be, very shiny.
Great video lewis.,...chaos reigns at the Ukraine/Russian border with this type of traffic ....I would imagine its a mix of both sides pysops along with pirates chucking in there part to its so easy today with hf set 100w good antenna to put this stuff across 40 metres. Keep going lewis soon 150k subs
I'm just gonna be real with you this is either a civ jammer or Ukraine participating in psychological warfare over the radio. What makes me believe Civ jammer more than anything is that the very same jammer who called you out over the buzzer, has used that exact same siren audio file on the buzzer several times while jamming.
I doubt the Russians would care about this type of thing. It has no military significance what so ever.
The internet makes this type of thing pointless.
@@oggaBuggain case of an EMP, short wave radio will be the only way to communicate, I think.
@@edwardkoopmans56 If there was an EMP of that scale, there would be no power grid left...
There is no way to produce an EMP on the scale needed to blackout an entire country, without using nukes.
Similar broadcasts have been made for decades. The earliest I could find on TH-cam was 14 years ago. "Russian Atomic clock" radio. US intelligence agencies have had clandestine operations broadcasting messages on the radio waves since The Cold War. My guess is this has been Russia's response to those US agencies for the past 50+ years.
@@edwardkoopmans56 Not even that one, for a while.
If that's not you adjusting the receiver's centre frequency while the trumpet sound is playing in those recordings where it's off pitch, then it sounds like it might be a recorded interval signal the pirate is using to calibrate their transmission equipment mid-broadcast. My running theory is that either the pirate is trying to jam that frequency for one reason or another, or attention-seeking because of increased observation on that area with the ongoing war.
Bah..! I’m really bad at SDR and never get any completely terrifying signals from far away places..😕
I have the same, but haven’t tried to find signals out in the wild.
That pitch change on the bugle call at the end made it sound alot like it was all played at the wrong tape speed and the "pirate?" corrected it right before it ended and resumed to the ticking clock.
This stuff is cool!Thanks
Maybe they do it because they know people are listening...and speculating.
Knowing how they use every thinkable measure to destabilize the west, I think this is the most likely explanation.
Might be fun to get some triangulation happening to try and see just where these signals are coming from.
Actually surprised no one posted the result. But i'm not into radio, maybe it's an etiquette
@@Blackwing2345635 The only way to triangulate is being physically in the presumed area of broadcast.
@@Blackwing2345635 yes, we never tell where others are broadcasting,
i wouldnt want it done to me so i dont locate others, its only common operator respect
Usng the Kiwi SDR network and TDOA would work
lol who the fuck deleted my comment? it wasnt a bad one, i guess ill unsub fromt his dude
This means something to somebody.
But what does it mean to whom?
Listening to it all go on ring now. Sirens, ticking clock and all. Alternating from one to another.
Seems the frequency went dead for now!! Sat, 10pm eastern time
The 'ticking clock' or 'metronome' could also be the sound of a Blocking Oscillator, which is quite a simple circuit and would take very little power to run. On this case it could be being used to signal that a particular transmitter is still functioning and the sound quality giving and indication of how well.
Aside from this, has anyone tried to analyse the signal in terms to see if there is any embedded data? When I first heard this I wondered if it was a time signal, the equivalent to the MSF signal that keeps radio-controlled clocks showing the correct time.
That "bugle" sounds like a Casio keyboard I used to own. It was a cheap ROMpler one for kids with bad 8-bit samples.
The note endings don't sound natural at all. It sounds like a cheap FM synth, right down to the washy phasing effects. It is either a cut up recording or somebody with some Casiotone goodness.
I’m not sure if anyone has played this game called south of the circle 😳 but it’s about the Cold War and it’s about the Antarctic the British, America and the bear country 😳 and in that game there was a signal on the radio and in the end of the game it turns out that it was a Russian count down of a nuclear catastrophe 😳 if you have the patience to play this game on A play, please do it’s quite an interesting game that seems to coincide with what is happening right now 😳🙏
I'm not expert on radio signals however I was given to understand that such repeating signals or pre-arranged sounds are signals to under cover agents to perform whatever their assigned task is. I'm pretty such we in the west do the same on different frequencies. Or as many of the comments point out, maybe that's what they want us to think and keep us guessing.
Maybe that is a repeater station, broadcasting from other stations. Maybe these are Russias inverse of the EBS (Emergency Broadcast System). If officials DON'T hear these signals, it's world-wide trouble.
First, I thought that the siren was a relay for air alarm about the recent attacks on oil refineries. But this is just a bunch of nothing's. So I assume a pirate?
Hi Lewis. This frequency's activity is most definitely a mystery. I have heard a little bit here on my FT-DX10. Odd stuff. Thank you for keeping us updated on the oddity that is 6.911. 😊🗼. 73 my friend from a rainy Portland, Oregon.
Thanks 👍
It's probably still a channel marker. I can't imagine the Russian version of FCC or Ofcom to be super patient with frequency pirates.
I can’t exactly recall the exact context, but that bugle sounds extremely familiar to me, who grew up in the 1980s USSR-maybe something they played in the beginning of the military parades on the Red Square or something like that…
Another great video! Thank you.
Probably just for people training. Given times to check in at, if your checkin is 5pm and you hear ticking, just continue as are. The bugle probably means start, and the siren probably means stop. That way you could send troops out and call them back, or start their training without freaking people out, and you would only have to give the troops a cheap radio.
I wonder if there is a way to attempt decoding the signal to discern if any logic or data is being transmitted. It appears that different tones might be employed to represent higher or lower bit rates, possibly explaining why songs and tones vary in length seemingly at random each time.
It's getting weirder. Maybe somebody is doing all this to confuse us?
Ministry of the easily confused 😊
In the US that siren noise is played when there is a tornado.
They were originally for air raids or other military attacks, including nuclear. They transitioned into natural disasters eventually, but I think it was still one of the original purposes as well.
Despite being on an edge of the so-called "tornado alley", my town's klaxons are flood sirens. Just depends on what the main natural disaster is for an area, and what rules govern their use. Testing every other Saturday at noon does make for some fun around young ones who aren't aware of the calendar, but they do know sirens are never a good sound 😂
@@myfavoriteviewer306when I lived in Memphis, I could never get used to the siren tests even though I knew they were coming. Such a creepy dystopian sound
@@justjennie7394every wensday at 12 :D
@@blargcoster the same siren plays lots of different alerts. The newest ones can play voice messages. On the test days they go thru all of them.
This says a lot about whats going on.
Is there a means to use software to monitor these radio stations and a computer rather than big costly antenna and radios made for monitoring
The one at around the 5 minute mark that has some kind of reversal going on, it felt like there was a frequency running through it that made me feel really nauseous. I don’t know anything about these number stations, is it possible to play those kind of frequencies through them?
Unnerving and very Russian.
Yea, Russia scares me.
And the czechs are leaders in psychology War fare Russia not far behind
The "change in sound", is what happens when the receiver bandwidth is opened up by whomever was operating the SDR. It wasn't something that was transmitted. It's something I routinely do.
Just a quick question, will any radio be able to pick up signals like this or do i need a special one? We have a radio in the dining room with a built in CD player, you know one of those ones, just wondering if i would be able to use it to surf the waves? Then again i might go into shock if i hear anything strange cos my eyes water just from the sound of static. Its an odd phobia, if you can call it one... but this stuff fascinates me nonetheless! Watching these videos is hard for me, especially the eery sounding ones but its also helping me get over it a bit!
My response is only a quick reply to get you started. i have this kind of equipment but since an interstate move 3 yrs ago i have not set it up.
Not any radio but rather a shortwave radio. My sense is the radio would need to cover 3000 kHz and up, have SSB capabilities, be a quite sensitive receiver capable of attaching an outdoor antenna.
A less costly alternative is SDRs (software defined radios) available through your web browser.
Best wishes to you
@@lowellwhite8810 thanks! :)
What kind of equipment do you use to listen and view the signals?
I wouldn’t necessarily call it a nuclear attack siren specifically…it’s a generic air raid warning that has been repurposed over recent years for all sorts of forewarning
Very generic.
@@MikeOxlong- still bluddy terrifying
How long has this been broadcasting?
When you post a frequence could you please say if it is Am USB or LSB thank you
The lower SW frequencies are usually USB, the higher LSB, as a rule of thumb. Can't remember the transition point, but all the info is out there on t'Internet.
@@bingbong7316 for amateur stuff, usually below 10MHz is LSB and above is USB. Most utility/military stuff is all USB no matter where, and all aircraft stuff is USB.
They use those radiocenters to maintain contact with agents in the field. Yes, russia still uses analoque communication.
Maybe its The Woodpecker sound from cold war days
3:17 - The change in sample rate is very noticeable there.
It immediately reminded me of specific samples on the Amiga.
Have a listen to some vids on "Amiga ST-01" and other sample disks.
I'm fairly sure the bugle/trumpet sound was used in many games like Lemmings.
(but could have originally come from a "Rompler" synth like the Korg M1, or possibly the Roland D-50?)
If you got in touch with some Amiga peeps, they would probably be able to tell you whether this was from one of the sample disks.
And if so, they'd likely know the exact disk.
I mean, it could just be samples played on a PC, tbh, but I could well believe it if it was just an old Amiga hooked up in Russia somewhere.
Oh, and with a bit of audio analysis to see where the highest freq drops off, the sample rate could probably be figured out quite accurately.
On a lot of those older machines, the sample rate was tied to the horizontal sync, or some multiple of that.
Or, a multiple of the colour carrier crystal freq itself.
That doesn't prove it's being played "live" on an Amiga or similar machine though, obviously.
The more I listen to the bugle sound, the more I'm convinced it's the same sample from Lemmings. lol
I'm listening to a vid of Lemmings on another tab, and I'm 87.6% sure it's the same sample.
Although on the Amiga, it's playing at a higher samp rate as from the "Russian" station.
Unless it's just the program they are using is downsampling everything.
Sounds like the samp rate in the vid is 11 KHz or below, but hard to be sure without analyzing it.
its code. that's easy if you have the sypher. They probably have times they have to tune in and get their marching orders. very effect if you are trying to coordinate small groups into large tactical movements.
Lewis: how often has the bugle calls been happening on 6911? Several times a day? I never seem to catch it when I'm listening.
Does anyone know if "the numbers" are stil broadcasted? Haven't checked in ages. If so, are there any changes there too?
Nothing heard on my Tecsun 330 and a youloop antenna. Going to try my LoG 100’ next
Well after reading the comments and listening to the recording it makes me wonder. I'm divided between a troll, a psyop or some sort of pre-arranged start signal for a person or group? Either way I expect there'll be more of this as time goes by.
personally never heard of a 'nuclear warning' siren, but it sounds an awful lot like what I've been taught at school (growing up in central europe in the late 80's/early 90's) as a generic air raid siren, meaning seek immediate shelter - from conventional bombing threat, not a nuclear one.
Just a thought
Try to listen to it from different radio nodes to the same wave
It may be just an interference from nearby Trolls who overlap the signal with their stronger transmission (due to geographical cause)
Also, the lack of noise could tell that the signal is actually closer than it supposed to be
Cool info
Any thoughts on the Ticking Clock & possibly the Doomsday Clock? 🤷🏼♀️
Lewis, after I watched this video, I logged into 4 different Kiwisdrs in Europe and the UK.....no Buzzer. Very strange. The two units in the UK were in Doncaster and Keighley, UK. Tried three different units in Finland.... even one in Fulda, Germany. No Buzzer there either. Weird stuff. 73
It seems to be getting hammered by something or has been replaced by something
Lewis,
I'm listening to 6.911 right now (10:25 pm Pacific time) and there is music and singing. Crazy. And The Buzzer is back. Something, or someone was jamming it today. 73 my friend.
At 7:30 it kinda reminds me of the Gong station, with that low eerie pitch!
It does confuse me, though, what these type of radio pirates actually get from what they're doing.
Jamming, attention.
2:05 this signal "Attention to all!"
means immediate measures by the population to prepare for immediate evacuation or occupation of shelters, shutdown of housing and communal services, electricity, gas, water
and receiving further instructions on the radio
civilian version of the signal "Storm", meaning a direct military conflict or disaster comparable to WMD.
It means an emergency mode or Martial law, readiness for an inevitable conflict
is transmitted through a centralized urban warning network and civil defense sirens
2:45 the risk of exposure to WMD factors (nuclear/chemical/bio), an already accomplished event, precipitation, etc.
4:00 metronome, meaning "Attention", is constantly transmitted to control the frequency of transmission of instructions from the Ministry of Emergency Situations and the government
4:15 testing the transmission of an audio message
4:30 beginning/end of the message
P.S. Testing of public notification systems in the event of a full-scale conflict is likely.
After all this time, I still remember something)
1:45 is not a clock! this metronome
immediately recalls the siege of Leningrad, the metronome was used in the broadcast as a "carrier" signal, heard constantly.
The sound of the metronome is also associated with the besieged Leningrad, which, by the way, sounds in the very "Leningrad Symphony" by Shostakovich. It's not for nothing that the composer incorporated the sound of the metronome into his work. The metronome was, in the truest sense of the word, the real savior of the Leningraders.
The metronome has a very close connection with the residents of Leningrad and the radio. The fact is that radio at that time, especially for Leningraders who found themselves in this position, was the only way to find out about what was happening. But the broadcasts on the radio did not happen very often.
When there were no broadcasts on the radio, the sound of a metronome was broadcast through it, the purpose of which was to notify residents of the city of an approaching attack by German aircraft. The slow ticking of the metronome meant that there was no air attack, and the rapid "steps" of the metronome indicated that it was necessary to seek shelter, since the bombing of the city would begin any minute.
The metronome beat incessantly, constantly reminding the residents of Leningrad that they must be on their guard. These very sounds of the metronome were reflected in culture, poetry, and music (the same "Leningrad" symphony by Shostakovich).
"In the darkness it seemed: the city was empty;
Not a word from loud mouthpieces,
But the pulse beat relentlessly,
Familiar, measured, forever new"
Id say is there a correlation with csrtain military activity when certain sounds are played?
I'll try again in a few hours, but I can't read that station at all in Denver. Is it USB? AM?
This channel JUST appeared on my recommendations.
I know nothing about radios! 😅
QUESTION:
I'm 59. Back when i was a kid, the most exciting thing for my friend and I to do, was to listen in to aircraft pilot transmissions on the radio! 😅
It was just an ordinary radio... I'm guessing short wave and long wave?
Could someone please explain to me why we were able to pick these transmissions up?
I have a feeling that we also got faint police conversations too, but I'm not sure. I think we picked them up, but they were too fuzzy to really hear any details.
I loved listening to pirate radio too! It always fascinated me, to think that they were broadcasting from the North Sea!
My other favourite thing to listen to was the shipping forecast! 😅 ....imagining all these shipping areas out there, and what sort of conditions fishermen were working in!
PS. We would have been listening from Norfolk, England, uk.
Thanks 💐
intesting. i currently had a theory based on facts about current events. this was a missing link. when did it start to apper again?
Let’s hear it my friend
@@rustyshack1707 you have a month of time? i'd need to give a slight offset perspective of the past 150 years. can't guarantee it's understood then, so i better don't bother. and i dont like to be accused to spread conspiracy theorys.
Can I ask a question? I've been interested in radio for years but your videos have given me the inspiration to buy a sw radio. Is there anything I need specifically to hear these broadcasts? Or would any SW receiver do the job? Thanks.
Just a shortwave receiver that does SSB mode and a long piece of wire ideally
@RingwayManchester Cheers mate. I've seen various units with telescopic aerials, I presume that wouldn't be enough? Being northern, I'm a bit tight and have been looking at the cheap stuff. Would you suggest paying more for something decent? Thanks for your advice btw.
Scott
@@scottnicholson9144it’s better than nothing. You can always use one of those to get your feet wet.
I heard it with the racket and buzzer type click sound in Nova Scotia on Friday night March 29/24 pretty clear signal