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Topics - R4002

Pages: 1 ... 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 [90] 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 ... 104
1336
Another list of frequencies instead of making a new thread for each logging.  I'll still continue making threads for unique/interesting catches.  Odd propagation this evening, WRMI 6855 kHz is nowhere to be found.  

6623 kHz LSB - Spanish
6639 kHz LSB - Spanish
6763 kHz USB - Spanish - very strong signal SIO 555.  Likely freebanders.  Talking about radio equipment, whistling into microphone, etc  
6770 kHz USB - Spanish, with minor QRM from OTR / Old Time Radio on 6770 kHz AM
6771.5 kHz USB - Spanish
6792 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6858 kHz LSB - Spanish
6883 kHz USB - Spanish, S9 level signal, OM doing radio checks
6892 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6905 kHz LSB - Spanish
6900 kHz LSB - Spanish - strong signals - common 43m freeband frequency with FSK utility QRM
6900 kHz USB - Spanish, much weaker than 6910 LSB and 6900 LSB
6910 kHz LSB - Spanish, very busy
6919 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6925 kHz LSB - Portuguese (of course  ;D)
6930 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6945 kHz LSB - Portuguese, weak
6950 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6960 kHz USB - Spanish, weak with lots of fading
6965 kHz LSB - Spanish - OM saying "Hola! Hola!" over and over again
6985 kHz USB - Spanish, interfering with MARS net on 6986.5 kHz USB
6995 kHz LSB - Unknown language (too weak to tell for sure, probably Spanish or Portuguese)

1337
Spanish speaking OMs chatting away.  Several uses of...colorful...language (in Spanish), people screaming at each other in the background, operators whistling into microphones, etc.

Interesting frequency choice.  Right in the middle of the 25 meter shortwave broadcasting band!

1338
Very weak signals right above the noise floor 6977 kHz USB this morning.  Heavy QRM from data bursts.  Hearing bits and pieces including "esta bien" and "el numero" which leads me to believe its Spanish.  These guys don't always pick the best frequencies considering the heavy amount of QRM around 6977.  Of course, they could be very close to each other and not notice (or care) about QRM.

1339
The 43 meter watering hole (for Spanish speakers, anyway) is lively this morning.  One op is making a long-winded conversation about his cell phone service and other non-pescadore topics. 

SIO 222 or so with some fading.  I can only hear one side of the conversation but I imagine propagation will improve as time goes on.  6900 kHz is where I start when looking for pescadores/freebanders now.

1340
Peskies / UNID Asian Fishermen ? 6878 kHz USB 0700+ 13 April 2017
« on: April 13, 2017, 0706 UTC »
Very similar to traffic heard on 6789 kHz USB at the same time.  Now I know what the Australians are dealing with.  The Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking stations start to go quiet and these new groups of "peskies" start to pop up  :-[

1341
Peskies / UNID Asian Fishermen ? 6789 kHz USB 0700+ 13 April 2017
« on: April 13, 2017, 0703 UTC »
Busy frequency 6.789 MHz 6789 USB - another easy to remember frequency...I'm starting to notice a pattern here :D

Several OMs talking, one of them sounds quite angry.  Some transmissions begin with two sequential beeps, possibly a sort of selective calling system?

Strong signals with better-than-usual-for-peskies audio makes for a good copy.  Too bad I don't understand whatever language these ops are speaking...

1342
SIO 122 overall.  Weak signals but relatively quiet band at the moment.  Pescadores for sure (typical peskie behavior, stations talking over each other, people singing etc

...and, of course, an easy-to-remember frequency  ::) ;D

1343
Very heavy fading making confirmation of language difficult.  Sounds like Portuguese but could be Spanish.  Several stations talking over each other at once with rapid QSB. 

at 0632, signal faded up nicely to confirm that it is in fact Portuguese. 

1344
The 6999 kHz crowd is back and much stronger than they were last time I heard them. 

OM talking about his Honda engine on his boat.  SIO 444 at peaks.  Both stations peaking nicely at S5-S6.  Frequent references to "barca" (boat).  One of the two stations has large amounts of wind noise and background engine noise in his mic.  Sounds like fishermen - pescadores!  But instead of half a dozen stations talking at once a la 6925 kHz LSB...there are only two stations on this frequency (at least right now). 

Since they're using 6999 USB, the peaks of their SSB signals easily make it past 7000 kHz to 7002 kHz...making them official intruders on 40 meters [dramatic music] lucky for them the closest CW signal (at least during the time the fishing boats were chatting on 6999 kHz) was at 7006 kHz.

1345
Weak signal on 6683 USB heard around 0610-0612 UTC 13 APR 2017

Too weak to tell language for sure but sounded like French to me.  Possibly Portuguese with some minor QRM from a nearby digital signal. 

1346
Two QSOs going on at once and causing terrible QRM, both appear to be in Portuguese but its hard to tell for sure. One on 6728 USB is slightly stronger. Another QSO going on at the same time on 6731.5 LSB, and further complicating matters is a carrier sitting on 6731.57 kHz (rounding up to 6731.6 kHz).  The carrier has very weak modulation, with progressively weaker tones showing up on the waterfall at 200 Hz intervals.  That is, a strong carrier with 5 weaker "carriers" on either side of it.  Going up from center, 6731.8 kHz, 6732.0 kHz, 6732.2 kHz, etc.  Going down from center, 6731.4 kHz, 6731.2 kHz, 6731.0 kHz, etc.  The lower side band of this odd AM signal is making listening to this already very messy frequency that much more, well, messy.

1347
Spanish language traffic with some very deep fading/QSB.  S2-S3 signal strength, speaking to S4 at some points but clear frequency so easy copy. 

1348
Two OMs chatting away, strong signals with nice audio...SIO 444 (which is rare for these types of stations).  Strong data signal 2-3 kHz down on 6885 or so.  Good frequency choice on the part of the pescadores/freebanders (for a change).

1349
Strong Spanish language traffic on another interesting frequency.  6 5 4 3 2...now that's easy to remember.  Just like 6777.7 kHz or 6888 kHz, etc.  6543.2 kHz is another case of fishing fleets using HF aircraft bands (in this case, the 6 MHz aeronautical band 6525-6765 kHz), not to mention their use of LSB instead of USB. 

Two OMs talking rapidly with long breaks of silence.  Appears to only be two stations (as opposed to many peskie loggings, where there's 3+ stations, often with several stations transmitting at once. 

I tuned away at 0647 UTC and the frequency was clear when I tuned away.

1350
Yet another 5 MHz aeronautical band pirate/peskie/who knows logging.  This time its 5540 kHz (compare to previous logs for 5510 kHz USB and 5534 kHz USB).  Googled 5540 kHz and 5540 USB and found nothing but information on shortwave broadcasters who use (or have used) 5540 kHz.  Nothing about aircraft or military users of this frequency. 

The 136th edition of the Spooks Newsletter NSNL 136 lists the frequency 5540 kHz as being used by station S30.

Peskie-like chatter in Portuguese with some sort of faint data signal underneath the voice traffic.  Very long winded transmissions (also typical for peskies) with very little to no radio discipline, which leads me to believe that its not aircraft stations using a different language or military/government/diplomatic traffic.

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