We seek to understand and document all radio transmissions, legal and otherwise, as part of the radio listening hobby. We do not encourage any radio operations contrary to regulations. Always consult with the appropriate authorities if you have questions concerning what is permissible in your locale.

Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Topics - skeezix

Pages: 1 ... 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 [194] 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 ... 218
2896
North American Shortwave Pirate / UNID 6950 AM 0133 UTC 8 Mar 2015
« on: March 08, 2015, 0135 UTC »
Came the air a few minutes ago. Assorted selection of oddball things.

0133Z 45544 S8 Alice In Chains "Man In the Box"
0134Z 45544 S8 Cut off previous song. Another song, was not able to ID it.
0136Z Off air.


Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2897
0112Z 45554 S9+ "Testing 1-2-3 Can Anybody Hear Me" IS
0112Z 45544 S9+ ID "Wolverine Radio"
0112Z 45544 S9+ Frank Trumbauer and His Orchestra "Blue River"
0116Z 45544 S9+ "I've Been Floating Down the Old Green River"
0119Z 45544 S9+ Teddy Wilson "Where The Lazy River Goes By"
0122Z 45544 S9+ ID
0122Z 45544 S9+ Una Mae Carlisle "Walkin' By The River"
0125Z 45544 S9+ Sister Rosetta Tharpe "Down By the Riverside"
0128Z 45544 S9+ Brenda Lee "Too Many Rivers"
0131Z 45544 S9+ ID
0131Z 45544 S9+ Elvis Presley "Blue River"
0132Z 45544 S9+ The Doors "Yes, The River Knows"
0135Z 45544 S9+ Credence Clearwater Revival "Green River"
0137Z 45544 S9+ ID
0137Z 45544 S9+ Jimmy Cliff "Many Rivers to Cross"
0140Z 45544 S9+ Neil Young "Down By the River"
0149Z 45544 S9+ Bob Dylan "Watching the River Flow"
0152Z 45544 S8 ID
0152Z 45544 S8 Talking Heads "Take Me to the River"
0158Z 45544 S8 Dire Straits "Ride Across the River"
0204Z 45544 S8 ID
0204Z 45544 S8 Simple Minds "She's a River"
0209Z 45544 S9 Fatboy "Draggin the River"
0211Z 45544 S8 ID
0212Z 45544 S8 SSTV
0213Z Off air.


Thanks Wolverine!



Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2898
Shortwave Broadcast / Firedrake 31m AM Mar 1, 2015 1832 UTC
« on: March 01, 2015, 1833 UTC »
1832Z 9455 kHz  35433 S7 Firedrake music
1834Z 9355 kHz  15431 S5 Firedrake music

No other firedrakes found 7000-25000 kHz, 1832-1845 UTC.

1915Z: Both still going, slightly stronger than earlier with no top of the hour break.
2001Z: Both are way down in strength. 15431 S5. And not off at the top of the hour.


Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2899
HF Mystery Signals / QRM on 13560 kHz
« on: February 28, 2015, 1900 UTC »
Tuning around the SW bands this morning and stumbled across a S9+25 signal at ~13560 kHz (13560.3 kHz). Never have seen it before this morning (~1830 UTC).

For a few months, have had something that sounds like ethernet over powerline. That QRM sounds sorta like ignition noise in the 13 MHz and up, with the amateur bands notched out.

Today this big power house of RFI shows up on 13560. Have a Wellbrook loop, so turn it to null it out and its null is seemingly consistent with the direction of the ethernet over powerline.

Thought at first might be a grow light, but apparently that RFI is down around 40m.

Took a portable radio around the house and the signal varies, but is still very strong. Went outside to the front and it was about the same as inside the house, walked around back and it went up ~30 dB (about 150' from front to back). For this measurement, using a GP-5/SSB with the built-in whip. Didn't go around the other side of the neighbor's house yet, probably do that tomorrow.

From watching the waterfall, its definitely nearby and not coming in from afar.

Update, 1959Z: Its gone. I don't know what time it left. There is about a ~1 kHz band of noise around 13560, but that is certainly not the mess that was on earlier. Can now see & hear a weak CODAR station (13516 to 13578, or thereabouts).

Update, 2229Z: It came back now. Have Perseus monitoring the frequency with the marker log to find out the times of operation. 


Below are screen shots of the spectrum & the waterfall when the loop is pointed at it.




2900
1540Z 11710 kHz 35523 S7 Voice of Korea English service with music. Signal is somewhat fluttery.
1555Z 11710 kHz 25522 S6 End of broadcast, dead carrier.
1600Z 11710 kHz 15521 S6 IS. Start of French service.


Also heard on 9435, SINPO=25322 S6 at 1540Z.



Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2901
Shortwave Broadcast / UNID 15215 kHz Feb 21, 2015 1600 UTC
« on: February 21, 2015, 1609 UTC »
This is the freq & time that R Öömrang was scheduled to be on.

At 15:59:52 UTC, strong (S9+) carrier came on. Carrier off at 17:00:02. There was no audio for the entire hour, just a strong dead carrier.

While this should be R Öömrang, its technically UNID as there was no ID.



Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2902
General Radio Discussion / Radio Öömrang 2015
« on: February 12, 2015, 0432 UTC »
In years past, Radio Öömrang has been broadcasting on Feb 21 1600-1700 UTC on 15215 kHz.

Have yet to hear any news about this years broadcast, but have the computer set to record it and also will listen to it live.

Since it is 1000-1100 CST, will have a breakfast of bacon & tea while listening.


2903
Shortwave Broadcast / BBCWS 9920 kHz AM Jan 26, 2015 0215 UTC
« on: January 26, 2015, 0223 UTC »
BBC World Service with news in English.  SINPO 45534 / S9. Wide signal with a bandwidth ~14 kHz.  Some rapid flutter.

According to online sources:  BBC is not on this frequency at this time (0215 UTC) and are on only two frequencies in English now (12095 & 15310), neither of which have anything detectable here.

0236Z 45534 S8 Program about music. Signal dropping slightly.
0255Z 35533 S7 Program about music continues, and signal continues to drop.
0300Z Off air




Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2904
All India Radio on an oddball frequency around 11381.67 kHz. Its slowly drifting downwards.

2205Z Freq: 11381.67 kHz
2205Z 45434 S9+ News in English
2208Z 45434 S9+ ID - "All India Radio"
2208Z 45434 S9+ More news
2209Z 45434 S9+ News summary
2210Z 45434 S9+ ID
2210Z Freq: 11381.58 kHz
2210Z 45434 S9+ Today's commentary - "Voluntary investment in defense"
2215Z 45434 S9+ Program about democracy
2225Z Freq: 11381.15 kHz
2227Z 45434 S9+ ID
2227Z 45434 S9+ Music. Signal has been somewhat fluttery.
2227Z 45434 S9+ Schedule information for Aus/NZ.
2228Z 45434 S9+ More music
2229Z 45434 S9+ This concludes the transmission from the GOS of AIR to Australia & New Zealand. More schedule information, incl targets in UK.
2230Z 45434 S9+ OM with more news in English.
223029Z Freq: 11381.03 kHz
223030Z Abruptly off air during the news.





Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2905
10/11 meters / KLDE 25910 & 25990 kHz FM Jan 4, 2015 1625 UTC
« on: January 04, 2015, 1730 UTC »
1625Z 45433 S9 Music from KLDE 104.9 in TX  (// with their online stream).

Also hearing them a bit weaker (25423 S7) on 25990 FM.





Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2906
Clandestine Stations / SOH(?) 6970 kHz AM Jan 1, 2015 1630 UTC
« on: January 01, 2015, 1637 UTC »
1635Z 35433 S7 Asian language YL (Chinese?) with music. Decent signal, but no ID yet from 1631-1636 UTC. Short-wave.info has listed as SOH in Chinese. But also has listed 0.1 kW. Either propagation is fantastic or 100W is wrong.

1649Z 25422 S6 Signal dropping. S5 noise.

1700Z Off.

Never heard an ID.


Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2907
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/northern-beaches/lighthouse-station-to-make-radio-waves-around-the-world-as-part-of-international-event/story-fngr8hax-1227023209540

A SHORT-WAVE radio station will operate from Barrenjoey Lighthouse this weekend to mark International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend.

More than 400 lighthouses and lightships around the world are taking part in the operation, including 60 in Australia and 12 in NSW.

The Manly-Warringah Radio Society will conduct the local demonstration.

Society spokesman Richard Murnane said the event aimed to raise public awareness of the importance of lighthouses and lightships.

“Our club’s aim is to make radio contact with as many stations as possible from the lighthouse, including those set up at other lighthouses and lightships around the world,” he said. “In the past, we have made contact with hundreds of stations.”

Mr Murnane said the Manly-Warringah Radio Society first participated in the event at Barrenjoey Lighthouse 10 years ago.

2908
http://www.essexchronicle.co.uk/Pirate-station-Radio-Caroline-drops-anchor-River/story-22121919-detail/story.html

Maldon Chronicle   
By Will Watkinson 
August 07, 2014 

AN ICONIC pirate pop radio ship has dropped anchor in the River Blackwater for the first time since the mid-1990s, with plans to take over the airwaves.

Radio Caroline, the world's most famous pirate radio station, which is housed on the ship MV Ross Revenge, has docked just off the shore of Bradwell after leaving its home of 10 years in Tilbury docks last Thursday (July 31).

The station altered the face of pop music by challenging the established radio format in the 1960s, 70s and 80s by playing 24 hours of pop music a day, and tracks that other radio stations wouldn't.

Now the team is back on the Blackwater for the first time since 1993, and plan to use a temporary 28-day radio licence to give Maldon and the Dengie a taste of the famous station whilst they apply for an AM licence to operate permanently.

Manager of the Ross Revenge Peter Moore, 67, who lives in Maldon and who has been involved with Radio Caroline since 1976, said: "It's nice to be back at Bradwell on the Essex coast again.

"We've had a lot of support from the local community and we hope to get more involved.

"It was a hard old slog to get the boat here and we're glad to be back – we've had a great reaction so far from the local community."

The radio station, currently based on its third ship, has a cult following throughout Europe, after a turbulent history of international police raids, fires, shipwrecks and financial ruin, all of which inspired the movie "The Boat That Rocked" starring Bill Nighy and Phillip Seymour Hoffman.

At the height of its power the station had up to 20 million listeners from the UK and Europe and changed the face of radio as we know it by challenging the BBC's monopoly over the airwaves.

Peter told the Chronicle: "It's a totally different time now to when Radio Caroline was over the airwaves and to think of the risks that you took even getting on the ship and playing music is hard to believe.

"Legally you could find yourself in prison for two years for just playing music and the boat was hardly sea worthy.

"But it was a fantastic time to be involved with music. Radio Caroline is like an addiction now we all work here as volunteers and love it."

Self-confessed Radio Caroline geek Ray Clark even wrote a book on the subject entitled 'Radio Caroline: The True Story of the Boat That Rocked' about the history of the ship.

He said: "I used to listen to Radio Caroline when I was nine years old and I just loved it. It excited me.

"Before Radio Caroline I had a number of jobs but after going on the Ross Revenge in 1987 finally radio stations wanted to listen to me, it was so hard to get on any stations back then."

In fact the first time Ray boarded the Ross Revenge – in 1987 – he was picked up by a trio named Cosmic, Captain Keith and DJ Kevin Turner and taken to the ship via a ferry to Zeebrugge and on to Dunkirk, taking 48 hours, to avoid detection by police.

On arrival he spent eight weeks on the ship and first played under the pseudonym Mick Williams – a real-life friend from Witham.

"It was all very cloak and dagger back then – but I learned more about radio in those eight weeks on board than most do in a lifetime," he added.

"I suppose it's hard to imagine now, but pop music wasn't around like it was after Caroline. After that, radio bosses took note and new stations followed."

The station relies on donations, running on a laid-back philosophy which welcomes contributions but doesn't push them.

In recent years it has enjoyed a revival with the rise of internet radio described by Peter as a "miracle".

He said: "It's a marvellous invention and we know anyone can listen from anywhere in the world, and indeed our DJ's can if they want to."

To tune into Radio Caroline go to www.radiocaroline.co.uk

2909
General Radio Discussion / Ana Montes - The Case of the Cuban Spy
« on: August 04, 2014, 0306 UTC »
From some time ago and has an image of her "cheat sheet" for encrypting/decrypting messages.

http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2008/september/montes_091209

2910
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/08/02/4267428/new-revelations-about-cuban-spy.html

BY BRIAN LATELL
SPECIAL TO THE MIAMI HERALD
For 16 years, Ana Belen Montes spied for Cuba from increasingly responsible positions at the Defense Intelligence Agency. If Havana has ever run a higher level or more valuable mole inside the American defense establishment, that has never been revealed.

When she was arrested in late September 2001, Montes was about the equivalent in rank of a colonel. She had access to sensitive compartmented intelligence. Strangely, for one so openly enamored of Fidel Castro, her superiors considered her one of the best Cuba analysts anywhere in government.

Despite the importance of her case, some of the most tantalizing questions about her spying have never been publicly answered. Could the calamity of her treason have been avoided? What was learned about Cuban intelligence tradecraft? How was she discovered? And, of enduring concern, did she work with other American spies thus far undetected or not prosecuted?

Thanks to researcher Jeffrey Richelson and the National Security Archive, new light has finally been shed on the Montes case. Because of their efforts, a 180 page study completed by the Department of Defense Inspector General in 2005 has recently been declassified. It is heavily redacted; many pages, including the CIA’s extensive comments, blacked out. Yet, a quantity of surprising new details are now on the public record.

Montes’s decision to spy for Cuba was “coolly deliberate.” Enticed by a Cuban access agent in Washington, they traveled together to New York in December 1984. Montes met with intelligence officers posted under cover at the Cuban mission to the United Nations.

She “unhesitatingly agreed” to work with them and travel clandestinely to Cuba as soon as possible. The following March, she went there via Spain and Czechoslovakia. The Pentagon report does not state the obvious: while there, she must have received specialized training in intelligence tradecraft.

Then, with Cuban encouragement, she applied for a job at DIA. A standard background investigation was conducted, but we now know that serious concerns about her suitability were raised. Without elaboration, the Pentagon report indicates that they included “falsification of her Master of Arts degree from Johns Hopkins (University) and her trustworthiness.”

DIA did not require applicants to submit to a pre-employment polygraph exam. So, Montes, a trained Cuban espionage agent with a problematic past was cleared and hired. She began her double duties in September 1985.

After her arrest, Montes insisted that she had the “moral right” to provide information to Cuba. In her view, she did not work for Cuba, but with Cuban officials. They felt “mutual respect and understanding” she thought, as “comrades in the struggle.”

The Cubans were skilled in manipulating and controlling her. She told interrogators after her apprehension that she considered herself the equal of her “Cuban comrades, not a menial espionage tool.” They let her believe she “maintained significant control,” although she consistently left “security matters, including meeting site security, countersurveillance, and transmission security” to her handlers.

Montes said they were “thoughtful, sensitive to her needs, very good to me.” They went to “special lengths to assure her they had complete confidence in her.” They allowed her a long, loose leash, easier because they were not paying for her extraordinary services.

Initially in New York, and later at her request in the Washington area, she met with her handlers as often as once every two or three weeks, usually on weekends. Everything about her second covert trip to Cuba is redacted in the Pentagon report.

In 1991, Montes underwent a seemingly routine security reinvestigation. She was asked about foreign travel, and lied. Questioned about inaccuracies in her original application for employment, she confessed that she had misrepresented an incident in her past. Feigning innocence, Montes claimed that she “did not understand the seriousness of being truthful and honest at the time.”

Her questionable case was then reviewed at a higher level. The adjudicator reported that “while Montes seemed to have a tendency ‘to twist the truth’ to her own needs and her honesty was still a cause of concern, adverse security action was unlikely.” Again, she had slipped through. Her high level clearances were recertified.

Soon after, she brazenly submitted a freedom of information request for her own government records. She must have been concerned that something adverse had been discovered. Investigative material was released. She gave the surprised Cubans copies.

She apparently visited Cuba a third time after being selected to participate in the prestigious Director of Central Intelligence “Exceptional Analyst Program” in 1992. This time her travel to the island, purportedly to conduct research, was legal.

In 1996, she was questioned by a DIA special agent after another DIA employee reported concerns about her. Serious doubts were raised about her veracity, but the allegations could not be substantiated.

None of this seems to have contributed to her eventual unmasking. So, how was she discovered? Surprisingly, revealing information seeps through the Pentagon’s report. “We got lucky,” a counterintelligence official observed. An entirely blacked-out section entitled “Serendipity” suggests the same.

By April 1998, a coordinated search for a Cuban spy was underway, according to the report. At first it was thought most likely the quarry was a CIA employee. Investigators were following a crucial clue: the unknown spy had apparently traveled to the Guantanamo naval base as Montes had apparently done on official DIA business.

The breakthrough had seemingly come earlier, however. According to the Pentagon report, Montes was informed shortly after her arrest that investigators “had information from a senior official in the Cuban intelligence service concerning a Cuban penetration agent that implicated Montes.” It appears that this information propelled the investigation that resulted in her arrest.

Who was this mysterious, previously unacknowledged source? From the language of the Pentagon report, it was probably not a defector, but more likely a renegade or compromised Cuban intelligence officer. If so, Montes was done in by one of her own so-called “comrades.”

Did she work with other American spies? The report is ambiguous; it states that after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 pressure intensified to arrest Montes. The FBI preferred to wait, however, in order “to monitor Montes’s activities with the prospect that she may have eventually led the FBI to others in the Cuban spy network.”

Did government censors inadvertently confirm the existence of a larger spy ring? If in fact there was evidence of one, it may be a long time before more is known.

It is now clear, however, that Montes’s apprehension was not just the result of excellent intelligence work. She told investigators after her arrest that a week earlier she had learned that she was under surveillance. She could have decided then to flee to Cuba, and probably would have made it there safely.

But she said that “she couldn’t give up on the people (she) was helping.” Montes is serving a 25 year prison sentence.

Pages: 1 ... 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 [194] 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 ... 218