The horn keeps on being interrupted.
This is really getting interesting.
[QUOTE=Wii60;24306925]it sounds like someone is shaving themselfs for a long time[/QUOTE]
I think it sounds more like planks through a table saw...
this is.... weird...
I just heard something bump against the mic.
Fucking Russians.
[editline]12:43AM[/editline]
OH GOD WHERE'D THE SOUND GO? :ohdear:
[editline]12:44AM[/editline]
Someone's fucking with shit.
IS IT YOU FACEPUNCH? TELL ME. I WONT BE MAD.
[QUOTE=Dan*;24307048]I just heard something bump against the mic.
Fucking Russians.
[editline]12:43AM[/editline]
OH GOD WHERE'D THE SOUND GO? :ohdear:
[editline]12:44AM[/editline]
Someone's fucking with shit.
IS IT YOU FACEPUNCH? TELL ME. I WONT BE MAD.[/QUOTE]
It's been us the whole time we sure fooled you :v:
Okay guys we can stop the transmission now we tricked him.
I'm having a lot of trouble hearing parts of the code due to the signal masking foghorns/static and the morse progressively getting softer. If anybody here is an audio technician/expert please PM me.
Someones shuffling papers or some shit.
im scared :tinfoil:
seems to be fading a bit...
[QUOTE=TrafficMan;24307081]It's been us the whole time we sure fooled you :v:
Okay guys we can stop the transmission now we tricked him.[/QUOTE]
I FUCKING KNEW IT, DAMN IT YOU GUYS IM GONNA-
I promised I wouldn't get mad...
Just... dont pull this shit again, facepunch. :(
Did it just stop for about a second or did the stream just bug out?
[QUOTE=dark_console2;24307173]Did it just stop for about a second or did the stream just bug out?[/QUOTE]Stream bugged out.
I can't believe ive been here for the last 2 hours listening to god damn humming, im going outside.
i'm buying a shortwave receiver
[b]This is me right now.[/b]
[url=http://i.imgur.com/xOsB8.png][IMG]http://imgur.com/xOsB8.png[/IMG][/url]
Anyone else hear a high-pitched hum over the usual buzzing?
[QUOTE=Boobenmyre;24307358]Anyone else hear a high-pitched hum over the usual buzzing?[/QUOTE]
Yeah im getting that.
-snip-
[quote]The search of the Seattle apartment also turned up a radio for receiving short-wave radio transmissions and a spiral notebook, "some pages of which* contain apparently random columns of numbers."
"The spiral notebook contains codes used to decipher radiograms as they came in," the complaints said.[/quote]
[url]http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/7860022/US-arrest-of-Russian-agents-reads-like-spy-thriller.html[/url]
USB Feed seems to be better ATM.
i dug up some information
[quote]All Morse code is transmitted in English... the Russians do have extra characters... but... its all in English, its not flipped back to Russian. Whether or not its coded is another story... Look up q-signals in relation to morse code. strands of numbers are not numbers but the actual "information"[/quote]
[quote=wikipædia]The Q code is a standardized collection of three-letter message encodings, also known as a brevity code, all of which start with the letter "Q", initially developed for commercial radiotelegraph communication, and later adopted by other radio services, especially amateur radio. Although Q codes were created when radio used Morse code exclusively, they continued to be employed after the introduction of voice transmissions. To avoid confusion, transmitter call signs are restricted; while an embedded three-letter Q sequence may occur (for instance, VE3QRP is an amateur radio station dedicated to low-power operation), no country is ever issued an ITU prefix starting with "Q".[/quote]
[quote=Example of above]
QRA What ship or coast station is that? This is ____.
QRB What is your distance? My distance is ____.
QRC What is your true bearing? My true bearing is ____ degrees.
QRD Where are you bound for? I am bound for ____.
QRF Where are you bound from? I am bound from ____.
QRG What line do you belong to? I belong to the ____ Line.
QRH What is your wavelength in meters? My wavelength is ____ meters.[/quote]
It would be really metal to use the BEEEP....BEEEP....BEEEP - in a metal song :rock:
On another note;
I used to listhen to this a little less than a year ago - now that I hear it again, I can tell that they changed something in the sound.
Every 2 mins or so there would be a longer beep, like; BEEP...BEEP....BEeEeeeeEEEEPP.
None the less, when the beeping stops, you know shit is going down.
and then it got really loud. lol.
UVB stopped on 06/06/10 for a while. Around the time those Russian spies were uncovered in the U.S.
[QUOTE=pognivet;24307613]UVB stopped on 06/06/10 for a while. Around the time those Russian spies were uncovered in the U.S.[/QUOTE]
Source?
Russia isn't crazy enough to attack the U.S. and the U.S. isn't dumb enough to attack Russia, so why the need for spies?
Well herp a derp, because there isn't any trust. There are no gentlemen left
Oh fuck, oh fuck, it just stopped. Please, someone tell me this is just my computer.
[QUOTE]
Voice messages from UVB-76 are very rare. Three or four such messages have been intercepted in over twenty years of observation:
At 21:58 GMT on December 24, 1997, the buzzing abruptly stopped to be replaced by a short series of beeps, and a male voice speaking Russian announced: "Ya — UVB-76. 18008. BROMAL: Boris, Roman, Olga, Mikhail, Anna, Larisa. 742, 799, 14."[7] The same message was repeated several times before the beep sequence repeated and the buzzer resumed.
A similar voice message was broadcast on September 12, 2002, but with extreme distortion (possibly as a result of the source being too close to the microphone head) that rendered comprehension very difficult. This second voice broadcast has been partially translated as "UVB-76, UVB-76. 62691 Izafet 3693 8270."
A third voice message was broadcast on February 21, 2006 at 7:57 GMT. (recording of the third voice transmission) Again, the speaking voice was highly distorted, but the message's content translates as: "75-59-75-59. 39-52-53-58. 5-5-2-5. Konstantin-1-9-0-9-0-8-9-8-Tatiana-Oksana-Anna-Elena-Pavel-Schuka. Konstantin 8-4. 9-7-5-5-9-Tatiana. Anna Larisa Uliyana-9-4-1-4-3-4-8."[8] These names are found in some Russian spelling alphabets, similar to the NATO phonetic alphabet.[9]
On August 20, 2010 at 12:11 AM CST, a garbled Russian voice was detected by amateur listeners. It made a short message with little interference and then repeated itself with noticeably more static. This followed recent activity on the station that included more static than usual and several instances of objects being moved/dropped. All of this was detected by amateur listeners and is unconfirmed at the moment.
On August 23, 2010 at 9:35 AM PST, a garbled Russian voice was detected on UVB-76. The voice read out a single, short transmission several times before the line went dead, then returned to its normal broadcast.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Boobenmyre;24307734]Oh fuck, oh fuck, it just stopped. Please, someone tell me this is just my computer.[/QUOTE]
Its still going, probably just a momentary error.
i bet the russians are reading this thread, toying with us. READING OUR MINDS :tinfoil:
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