Hi! First posting on here! I've been twiddling along the scales & came across a rapid high-pitched Morse transmission on 6360 KHz at 10:30 G.M.T. today (12th Jan). Coming through in north London at strength 7/10, continuous.
Any thoughts?
This is not going to be a Clandestine Station, so I have moved the thread to Utilities, where it probably belongs.
If you can provide a little more detail it will increase the probability of a good ID. A recording makes it even better. A screen shot of the spectrum could also help, but not as much as a recording.
You say 6360 kHz LSB and high pitched Morse code. It is really best if you can give “center frequency” when talking about Morse transmissions (if you don’t know how to derive that it can be discussed). Saying 6360kHz LSB Morse means the signal can be anything from (depending on your receiver passband) about 6356 up to 6360 kHz. And there are dozens of past known Morse stations in that range.
The next question is, how sure are you that it is Morse code? Are you familiar with RTTY or FSK? Those are both often mistaken for “high speed” or very rapid Morse by relatively new listeners or experienced listeners that do not typically listen to Utilities.
The reason I mention RTTY or FSK is because a very good candidate, in fact I bet it is what you are hearing, would be PBB, Den Helder, Netherlands. This is a Dutch navy FSK signal that is on 6358.5 kHz, right in the middle of your passband when tuned to 6360 kHz in LSB mode.
T!