[QUOTE=Orayn;24400120]Well, the few times UVB-76 has featured anything other than static/noise, it's been vague, cryptic messages that could easily be maintenance tests. Other similar stations broadcast strings of numbers at regular intervals, which are thought to be decoded by foreign agents using a one-time pad, meaning only the agent with the key for that particular transmission will be able to know what it means. It's low-tech, but short wave radio can potentially be picked up over great distances and is potentially more secure than an email.[/QUOTE]
Ya exactly, it doesnt matter if someone does decode the morse, because the morse code itself is also code which we just dont know.
The buzzer is back.
Hey guys, been browsing this thread for the last couple of days. Just stumbled upon this link -
[url]http://englishrussia.com/index.php/2010/08/28/inside-the-mysterious-uvb-76-station/[/url]
Interesting to say the least. Not sure about it's validity.
[QUOTE=Bob Dylan;24406073]Hey guys, been browsing this thread for the last couple of days. Just stumbled upon this link -
[URL]http://englishrussia.com/index.php/2010/08/28/inside-the-mysterious-uvb-76-station/[/URL]
Interesting to say the least. Not sure about it's validity.[/QUOTE]
Those were the pictures in that blogpost, which are claimed to staged. I don't see why the building should be empty and flooded when it's still active. Also there's people inside. And no power plant would waste that amount of energy that it needs for transmitting.
[QUOTE=Miktor.;24406235]Those were the pictures in that blogpost, which are claimed to staged. I don't see why the building should be empty and flooded when it's still active. Also there's people inside. And no power plant would waste that amount of energy that it needs for transmitting.[/QUOTE]
Okay, I see them now. Sorry for the repost then. This thread has grown remarkably fast.
Thread Music:
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41Xt4-KFFZs[/media]
Also, just incase you [url=http://www.facepunch.com/showthread.php?t=989540]get scared.[/url]
How about this: [url]http://translate.google.com/translate?js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=1&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.radioscanner.ru%2Fforum%2Ftopic12415.html&sl=ru&tl=en[/url]
Date: August 27, 2010 19:38:31 · Adjusted: SPEAKER (August 27, 2010 20:09:31) #
Pautinych Pautinych
all offers ..
Right now with the floor kick this link opens!
I read the link - basically anything interesting, except that:
Posted MexaHuk, 26.08.2010 at 02.10
Interestingly, two hundred comments, but only one zemlanin asked quite obvious question - but what unites all the dates include a mysterious garbage?
Attention, response. Well, or one of the possible answers.
December 24, 1997 at 16:32 DMW with the 5-th site 2 nd State Test Cosmodrome Free combat crews of space means the Strategic Missile Forces to Start Booster Start-1 "with a U.S. commercial satellite remote sensing" EarlyBird 1 ".
September 12, 2002 at 10:23 UTC Space Centre, named after Professor Satish Dhawan Indian organizations to explore outer space ISRO (Indian Space Research Organization) held a rocket firing a medium-sized PSLV-C4. For the first time in his practice carrier brought meteorological satellite Metsat-1 in geosynchronous transfer orbit (GTO)
February 21, 2006 at 21:28:02 UTC from launch complex Uchinoura Space Center Kagoshima starting commands the Japanese space agency JAXA performed start launcher M-V № 8 with astronomical satellite ASTRO-F.
Interestingly, is not it? Ну а что же произошло 23–го? Well, what happened twenty-third? Few gugleniya - and voila:
August 23, 2010 at 17:57 UTC with a missile test site White Sands, pcs. Brant IX. New Mexico, NASA specialists to Start geophysical rocket Black The main objective of the flight was to study the Sun and its corona.
And now I ask - what is actually there, they start?
[url]http://dirty.ru/comments/286709[/url]
[editline]04:12PM[/editline]
Sorry for Googlespeak btw
Oh, and on August 25th this:
[url]http://www.voanews.com/english/news/middle-east/Iran-Tests-New-Missile-101471109.html[/url]
Iran Says It Test-Fired New Missile
*Listens to thread music*
:razz:
The buzzer. It's probably some sort of code.
You know what this means. We have to decipher it.
[QUOTE=Bob Dylan;24406073]Hey guys, been browsing this thread for the last couple of days. Just stumbled upon this link -
[URL]http://englishrussia.com/index.php/2010/08/28/inside-the-mysterious-uvb-76-station/[/URL]
Interesting to say the least. Not sure about it's validity.[/QUOTE]
So, hang on, this place is literally completely flooded?
[editline]01:47PM[/editline]
[QUOTE=Miktor.;24406235]Those were the pictures in that blogpost, which are claimed to staged. I don't see why the building should be empty and flooded when it's still active. Also there's people inside. And no power plant would waste that amount of energy that it needs for transmitting.[/QUOTE]
The person that said it was staged is exactly like the people in here that said this is a rickroll.
-snip late :saddowns:-
HOLY SHIT GUYS
This explains everything!
[img]http://img153.imageshack.us/img153/5733/thisexplainseverything.png[/img]
:3
^
at around 3:00 in recording1-21-47-len.mp3 you can hear voices in the background
[editline]07:03PM[/editline]
4:40 too
[editline]07:04PM[/editline]
on the subject of sound, 440 Hz is middle A
[editline]07:10PM[/editline]
[QUOTE=Sergeant STFU;24410240]The buzzer. It's probably some sort of code.
You know what this means. We have to decipher it.[/QUOTE]
I've noticed that each different buzz has a different "voice"
It's very possible that there is a code behind it. I've heard between 8 and 13 different sounds, and there's no telling how many other sounds there are if you look at it under a spectrograph.
[editline]07:13PM[/editline]
and at many different volumes
I said something along the lines of that in Shotgunners chat.
The whole thing may be code, used by military equipment on the other end.
Every so often i hear sounds of things being put down in the background, this is creepy as fuck
I think it´s a rocket detection system and spreads info about detected rocket launches. Someone should do a survey of all the known dates of messages and compare them with known rocket tests.
Is this still going on?
Blimey
[QUOTE=eule;24419457]I think it´s a rocket detection system and spreads info about detected rocket launches. Someone should do a survey of all the known dates of messages and compare them with known rocket tests.[/QUOTE]
There's simply too many rocket launches compared to transmissions from this station.
Every few pages people tend to be saying the same exact things that have been said, such as...
[quote]IT'S GETTING QUIETER, WAIT NOW LOUDER[/quote]
I've come to the conclusion that listening to it nonstop is a waste of life.
dont worry kids its just russians on microphones
That buzzer sounds like something from a Boards of Canada song.
[QUOTE=eule;24419457]I think it´s a rocket detection system and spreads info about detected rocket launches. Someone should do a survey of all the known dates of messages and compare them with known rocket tests.[/QUOTE]
You'll find that it is the other way round. The people to ask about it is the radio enthusiasts who monitor the numerous Russian military Morse networks.
In many cases you will find that the priority messages in the same format as UVB-76 are sent and then the missle test launches are conducted. This is especially noticeable with the Russian test launches in the Barents and White Sea of the Bulava missile.
[url]http://www.cvni.net/radio/nsnl/nsnl121/nsnl121mil.html[/url]
[url]http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100614/159421002.html[/url]
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RSM-56_Bulava[/url]
All these Russian military networks are active in flash messages on a regular basis. UVB-76 is not that active and obviously fulfils a different command and control function.
The US and Russia inform each other of their intended intercontinental ballistic missile launches. This was part of the START Treaty as no-one wanted a test launch to be mistaken for a rogue or an all out first strike.
The clue to the function is the maintained frequency of 4625 khz. The buzzer doesn't broadcast higher up the HF frequency band. If it was transmitting on various frequencies then it would be fulfilling a function in relation to that radio propagation. It is specific to the Moscow Oblast region.
You can see from Russian radio scanner forum that some of the Russian conscripts knew of the Buzzer being set up on their radios. The radios were located in military bases in the Moscow Defence Region and fulfilled an emergency communications system.
[url]http://www.radioscanner.ru/forum/topic12415.html[/url]
The UK used a similar system known as HANDEL for its Civil Defence warning system. The only difference was that instead of shortwave the system was relayed over the national phone lines. The problem with the phone line system was that it obvioulsy relied heavily on telegraph poles and lines. The Russians obviously built a more robust system to function post attack.
My theory is that the Russian Buzzer is the Civil Defence network system for the Moscow region. The use of HF radio would mean that it would function during the electro magnetic pulse wave generated in a nuclear strike. This is one of the reasons that the Russians still use Morse Code on their networks and still able to get through in an EMP environment.
[url]http://www.ringbell.co.uk/ukwmo/Page211.htm[/url]
You can see the HANDEL system in operation on the following video. See 05:00 point on video from the 1970s. The UK disbanded the specific nuclear warning Civil Defence network in the early 1990s.
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RsCJMYgFNuU[/url]
A carrier is maintained on the broadcast (regular ticking) until a command and control message is sent.
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=An3ctClI_z4[/url]
During the Soviet era the Civil Defence network was huge and a played a vital part in defence of Russia. It required command and control and so does the modern day Ministry of Emergency Situations.
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ministry_of_Emergency_Situations[/url]
Currently just static.
Edit: Woah, people talking in the backround, hard to make out
Remember that the Buzzer isn't the only broadcast station in Russia that sends out the same format voice messages. Other stations such as the 'Squeaky Wheel' and 'The Pip' also function in the same manner.
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8LQMDQAoVk[/url]
The Squeaky wheel
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HxTOK-cZpsg[/url]
The Pip
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2YkA16v9-X0[/url]
[url]http://www.cvni.net/radio/nsnl/nsnl112/nsnl112vm.html[/url]
'The Pip message
S30
Pip on 3756 kHz. Both Tom and I have heard messages from S30.
3-12 1821 UTC Pip followed by a message in Russian read by a YL.
5-12 1506 UTC Male announcer repeated a message for about a minute or so.
5-12 1810 UTC Male with short one minute voice announcement.
6-12 1817 UTC Short voice message. from 1817-1818 UTC.'
The following has a recorded flash message sent during 2008 from the Squeaky wheel.
[url]http://hfsurfing.blogspot.com/2008/11/s32-squeaky-wheel-changes-tempo.html[/url]
The following is a message sent from 'The Pip'
[url]http://hfsurfing.blogspot.com/search/label/S30[/url]
These stations form a simple but effective command and control system for the Russians. Maintain the frequency with an identifiable and unique carrier - simple and effective. The frequencies are geared for the location that they are intended to be heard and be the most effective.
Awesome posts T_J, i´ll wade through the links now :D
This post is very interesting too:
[url]http://dirty.ru/comments/286709[/url]
google translated post quite far below:
I was a young radio operator, I have only started to independent combat duty. many receivers, but it works only two - the connection to the parent CP, and in the corner warning system - which is almost always silent. On the KP working "woodpeckers" - Krivorukov radio operators, the transfer of which resemble bubnenie deaf-mute, letters curves and difficult to understand. Alert is the MQM - the letters evenly, high tone, like a bird that chirps in the morning. He heard very rarely.
The third hour of the night. KP fast asleep. In place of sit-duty officer and radio operator on duty, that is me. Operating asleep. I too wildly sleepy. Ever the silent alarm receiver suddenly wakes up and chirps its:
VN92 SCHTTS SCHTTS 78912 VEMIRON 4513 AR, twenty seconds, the transfer is repeated.
Bread that is not kodogramma - too short, and not signal - that goes with the letters ЬЬЬ or XXX, if the language switch.
Dembele, who I went to the disciples, there were two: one was an Armenian, Azerbaijani and the second. Both were considered the best radio operators of the regiment, and though they are with each other periodically argued, nevertheless, lived in harmony and fun. Instruction from them was simple: "If this thing suddenly starts to work, you write down everything and give the duty." And now, with overcoming his shyness, I go and wake up the captain of an alcoholic:
- Trsch captain, came on the network warning ...
Tell him nakaryabanny sheet. The captain is a long time, he was the second time the captain, he was five years before retirement and Fuck everything. The captain suddenly trezveet, lack of safe codebook and fat sovsekretny reference signals about command and control elements and kodogramm for ... arms. Fiddled with a notebook, he raises his head, in my opinion vperivaet colorless eyes and very clear metallic voice says:
- When. You. It. Adopted?
- Just ...
He muttered under his breath:
- Fucking!
And distinctly whiter.
I was sent back. I hear it on the phone calling the commander and something he said orderly.
Five minutes later, creeps sleeping on duty shift. Fifteen minutes later, and encouragement materyaschie colleagues catching up from the barracks. Twenty minutes later, arriving from the town officers, together with the commander. The commander calls back for confirmation on the KP and somewhere else. All zashherilis on BP. Enters my platoon leader - committed joyful and very worried. For questions excuses.
It is frightening to tears in his eyes. But the ears are listening, and writing hand - turn the page after page of journal entries.
An hour later the all clear readiness. All sprawled: Who in the barracks, who is back home - to sleep. I was strictly ordered to strictly listen to the warning network in both ears, and, fucking, God forbid, I'm going to sleep - once the tribunal.
Platoon Sergeant, I elicit the morning: "Well, what was it?"
He hedged, said: "Relocation to the highest degree of combat readiness. The mass attack a potential enemy. Later, however, repulsed."
I was frightened again.
So, I read the site and again ...
Better not to know what it is they transmit. Because if you think about it, then chill binds insides. As you know, names, call signs, radio procedure and content kodogramm somewhat changed.
[QUOTE=Bllasae;24411614]So, hang on, this place is literally completely flooded?
[/QUOTE]
Those pictures were said to be fakes earlier in the thread.
[editline]11:49AM[/editline]
[QUOTE=eule;24425927]Awesome posts T_J, i´ll wade through the links now :D
He muttered under his breath:
- Fucking!
[/QUOTE]
:razz:
There was a transmission on my birthday.... and a spike of activity towards the end of this month...what gives?
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