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Topics - R4002

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1321
Hearing bits and pieces of OM talking under the storm crashes...strong carrier on 6925.0 kHz...lots of peskies on 6925 LSB though

1322
Dramatic music, S4, frequency may be closer to 6925.1 kHz

OM lecturing about the dangerous narcotic marihuana "in and around New York"

Sounds like audio from the seminal film Reefer Madness

1505  more dramatic music
1507 "This is the City of Los Angeles, one of the fastest growing cities"
1512 drama about catching the evil dope peddlers
1540 "homicide listened to Hugo's story, then transferred it over to Captain Hayes in narcotics division"
1544 "Marky, its Ann, I've got the shakes bad..."
1606 Signal jumped up a bit, more dramatic music

[likely weed-related material due to today being 4/20]

1323
6900 kHz LSB chatter coming in this morning as usual.  The band is pretty quiet but these guys are still there! 

Signals are weaker than they have been in days past (I've been away from my radios for the past 4-5 days) but I imagine they'll get stronger as the day goes on.

1324
Electric dance music S2-S3 6925 kHz USB

1321 UTC signal dropped significantly...still hearing bits and pieces of music at the noise floor
1323 UTC signal came back up to S4, hard trance/techno track with YL vocals


Off at 1335 UTC

1325
Hearing both sides of a long conversation on an "offset" frequency HF SSB marine channel (it is within the legal marine allocation though).  Simplex communications (many marine frequencies, in particular the ITU HF marine channel numbering plan, are half-duplex or split-frequency operation). 

Signals have been fading closer and closer to the noise floor over the past 10 minutes or so. 

1326
Both 6830 USB and 6840 USB have the same signal strength (peaking at S2-S3) with usual freebander-level audio quality.  6840 is considerably more busy than 6830, perhaps indicating that some stations QSYed from 6840 kHz to 6830 kHz for a "private" QSO and then went QRT or switched back up their original frequency.

"0104" heard as an identifier of some kind

1327
I'm about to jump on a plane (nothing like listening to various remote receivers while sitting in the terminal waiting to board the airplane) but I wanted to make one last log before I shut everything down.

After tuning around the 6700-7000 kHz region, home to the Old Time Radio pirate on 6770 kHz AM a.k.a. OTR 6770, another carrier on 6769.5 and SSB traffic on 6766 kHz USB and I came across some more Portuguese fishermen chatting away on 6868 kHz LSB.  Another easy to remember frequency for sure. 

1328
Messy frequency this morning.  Old Time Radio (OTR) on 6770 kHz AM fading in and out and when its peaking (OTR that is) 6766 USB gets obliterated.  When OTR fades down, the SSB traffic makes listening to OTR very difficult.  Further complicating matters is a strong FSK signal on 6769 kHz.  It appears to be in "channel marker" mode right now (that is, unmodulated).  That, or its simply an unmodulated carrier.  I've been having to listen to OTR in USB mode to get away from all the QRM.

1329
More pescadore (or pescadore like) traffic coming in this morning.  Long, deep fades making copy impossible at points.  SIO 222

1330
S3 signal this morning but sounding good on the peaks. Hearing an OM and a YL talking.  Radio drama.  Minor pescadore/freebander and FSK ute QRM causing a terrible het.  Music playing at 1112 UTC.

Ad for Chesterfield Cigarettes at 1113 UTC.  Peskie QRM (6766 kHz USB) getting considerably worse.  

This frequency is a popular one.  The FSK signal has disappeared and now (1119 UTC) there's a strong unmodulated carrier on 6769 kHz.  The two-way voice traffic on 6766 USB has gotten stronger and more active.  OTR is coming in stronger too though so it could simply be a propagation enhancement as the sun continues to rise. 

1331
This frequency has been logged in the past, and, like before, the signals are just slightly too weak to get a positive ID on the language, but it sounds like Spanish.  SIO 111 just above the noise floor.  

EDIT (at 1059 UTC) - signal strength of one of the stations increased substantially.  Sounds like somebody is complaining about his wife/girlfriend/XYL/YL.  Heavy use of various Spanish curse words! 

1332
Group or "net" of Italian-speaking stations taking turns talking.  Several mentions of "unit 30" or "station 30", "number 6" and other identifiers.  More professional sounding operating procedures compared to most pescadore / freebander traffic Interspersed between voice transmissions is some sort of short "rushing sound" data burst.  Not sure if this is related to these guys or if its another signal on the same (or on a nearby) frequency. 

Checked several remote SDRs and the stations on 6996 kHz USB are more or less the same strength and readability up and down the US east coast. 

Frequency still active when I tuned away at 1055 UTC. 

1333
Peskies / UNID Asian Language 5155 kHz USB 0730+ UTC 15 April 2017
« on: April 15, 2017, 0739 UTC »
Similar to the group (I don't really want to use the term "net" in this case) that's also going strong on 5169 USB.  The stations on 5155 are considerably weaker, however.

1334
Peskies / UNID Asian Language 5169 kHz USB 0730+ UTC 15 April 2017
« on: April 15, 2017, 0737 UTC »
Two OMs chatting away (with QRM from a pip/channel marker on 5171.6 kHz).  5169 USB, no idea what language this is but I don't think its Portuguese or Spanish.  SIO 333 to SIO 444 at peaks with some static crash QRN.

1335
This forum is for logging unlicensed/out-of-band/unidentified two-way traffic commonly heard below 25 MHz.  Anything heard from 25 to 30 MHz should be posted in the 10/11 Meters forum.

Due to the sheer number of freebanders, outbanders, peskies, pescadores, illegal HF operations, etc out there..it is important to include the following information in the Subject line when creating a thread:

**If your thread contains a single log (for one frequency or a single group/net), be sure to include the following:

1) Identification information (if available) - this includes presumed ID ("Asian Fishing Fleets?")
2) Frequency (in kHz).  If the traffic you're hearing is using 6777.7 kHz for example, don't round it up as "6778 kHz". 
3) Date and time (in UTC)
4) Mode (the stations often logged here often switch between LSB and USB at random).
5) Language, if you can even sort of ID it.  Most pescadores heard on HF seem to be from Latin America

**If you're talking about several logs in a single post:
1) A title stating "Logs 7 March 2015", "Loggings", "Heavy Peskie Activity 6-7 MHz", etc is effective. 
2) Frequency band(s)
3) Please include the date and time in UTC. Approximate times are fine as it is rare for a listener to know exactly when a frequency became active.


In the actual logging post itself, please include as much information as possible.  This includes the number of stations, any names, handles, callsigns, etc given, quality of signal (are they drifty, how decent does the SSB audio sound?).  Other information includes if they are land-based stations (freebanders or outbanders) or marine-based stations operating outside the ITU HF-SSB marine bands.

AERONAUTICAL MOBILE 6525-6765 kHz - two sub bands, note gap between 6760 kHz and 6765 kHz
AERONAUTICAL ROUTE BAND 6526 kHz to 6682 kHz - 3 kHz channelized steps, USB mode only
AERONAUTICAL OFF-ROUTE (MILITARY) BAND 6686 kHz to 6760 kHz - 3 kHz channelized steps, various modes (channelization often ignored)
FIXED AND MOBILE BAND 6765-7000 kHz - anything and everything...military, MARS, government (FEMA and SHARES nets heard here), pirates, and of course peskies

Don't just stick to 6-7 MHz either, or ignore the legit 6200 kHz to 6525 kHz 6 MHz marine band.  I've noted lots of pescadores in the 5 MHz region below, above and within the 60 meter broadcast band and the fixed/mobile allocations near 60 meters, including the frequencies between the 60 meter amateur radio band and even on 5000 kHz with WWV.  I have also logged them on 8/9 MHz, 10/11 MHz and 12, 13 and 14 MHz frequencies (above and below the amateur bands, often within aircraft allocations).  Look for "easy to remember" or "cute" frequencies like 8989 kHz, 4141 kHz, 6464 kHz, 7654.3 kHz, etc.  All sorts of combinations of these have been noted.

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