A magnificent accomplishment. Now, if only you'd been content to stop there. Building that much bigger Yagi antenna and suspending it from a big white balloon sure seemed like a good idea at the time.........
It's still a great way to loft a Yagi, but not everybody can afford a balloon. Using a giant box kite would be more cost-efficient for a non-state actor.
There is no point in having the antenna very high up. As long as you have line of sight to the satellite and not much local noise from electronics, it will be fine near ground level.
@@la7dfa atmospheric distortionand absorption? That said. This REALLY (yet again) makes me.wakna splurge my extra 35 bucks this month on a usb sdr dongle
The woman was speaking portuguese, she was giving instructions about dropping a load, probably to a truck driver. The men were also speaking truck stuff.
7:22 - eai será que chegou na cidade carregado? (i dont understand fully the rest) ou será que derramou no meio da estrada? tem um negocio de derramar na estrada (?) (Hey, did you arrived at the city with the cargo? or got lost in the road?) 7:28 - Amor conta (?) só fica ligado nessa com um ai (interrupts) qualquer coisa só te chamo ai vou ficar ouvindo ela e a outra ta (he respondes with ok) (Love tell me (?) just stay tuned with someone, anything I'll just call you there I'll listen to she and the other) 9:03 - Começa por ai ô, fala com nós, acabou de passar o trator agora (start by there, talk to us, the tractor just passed now) the last one is talking about where someone is going, and asking why prob he changed his route, and he tells why he changed
Cool, thank you! I'm sure I could have recorded more and caught longer conversations. I've heard that a lot of the users are truck drivers, so it makes sense to hear them talking about cargo and routes.
@@saveitforpartsyes, truck drivers, farmers and illegal loggers in Amazon forest are the regular users in Brazil. But the Federal Police, with help of US govnmt, track and arrest then. FARC and a famous brazilian drug dealer called Fernandinho Beira Mar used this Sat, called here "Bolinha" (little ball), until his arrest in 2001. Other major criminal organizations (PCC) used until the arrests became recurrents by signal triangulation.
Some of this pirate are Brazilian, they use this kind of communication on rainforest (a.k.a Amazonia) where cellular signal is inexistent, they call the satellite as "bolinha" and you can find a lot of users
@@CaptainApathetic Yeah, people everywhere use stuff thats publicly available regardless of whether they own or earned it, its normal human behaviour. I mean it's not like we made the sand or trees or meat we are easily content to take from whats around us. It's human nature to take if you have a need and no one is there to stop you
HI, I used to work FLTSAT for the USAF in the late 1980s. I think you should look into "circular Polarization" for your receive antenna. I believe you want LEFT-HAND-cirlc-polarization (LHCP) for receive (RHCP for TX) . Also, the biggest problem the Pirates make is each one takes power from the tansmitter on the satellite. The battery can only kick out a certain power per day....now it's DECADES later so the battery is about 50% what it used to be.....Each Pirate takes a chunk of satellite power.....and these satties are what we call "bent-pipe" repeaters....the more power you pump in, the more power it pumps out...further draining the battery. ( I worked with the agency that was always highly concerned with "power balancing" across users.).......OK, now for my illegal satty story story.....I once called CQ over a Top Secret Gov't satellite network.....I was told to never do it again. SO....I love your channel...let me know if I can help in any way with my satty experience.....Ka1igc
Very cool, and good info thanks! I'd like to do a follow-up video when I have time and attention for it (LOTs of projects on the pile), so those would be some cool details to include.
Working in N6 for the Navy I could never figure out why SATOPS was always so frustratingly anal about power balancing. I had no idea they just wanted to keep us from draining the sats batteries, that's hilarious. Thank you for this!
Did you end up off freq by accident? Or did they put that hidden sat system in the ham band? That is funny. When I used to work for the radio systems companies I would find the unused antennas on the tower and take a suitcase radio with me. Plug in the ant analyzer and figure out what band they were in on the ant's on top the tower. I would find one I could use and operate during lunch. This one tower was 350 free standing over hilltop. Perfect. It was always amazing what you could get into on 1/4 or one watt power. I did a lot of QSO from places like that.
"I once called CQ over a Top Secret Gov't satellite network" Ah, no harm no foul. My uncle worked at a remote station for the Air Force and used to do a trick where he'd call the next station over and ask nicely for a patch into the next one from there, and so on, until he'd circled the continent and gotten back to where he started, at which point the duty desk would call over the PA that he had an incoming call, only to be connected to himself.
I’ve been tracking these for a few years in the U.K. with mostly rabbit ears and a Tri band UV-5R or Yupiteru. A 1/4 wave ground plane antenna works well too. The common frequencies seem to be between 255 and 262, usually Brazilian Portuguese language or Russian. Comedy Radio from Russia is sometimes very clear, I’ve also heard Mosque broadcasts and even Karaoke microphones! It’s an interesting section of the radio spectrum. Thanks for the video 👍🏼
A good friend of mine was in 1/505th 82nd ABN back in the 80s. They were all out in the field at Ft Bragg and got together with the commo guys who were able to use their satcom uplink to get into the PSTN, whereby they proceeded to order a huge stack of pizzas from Domino's. They gave the delivery guy instructions like, "Take the Post Road hardball until it disappears in the sand and we'll meet you there..." The guy shows up and all these grunts with green faces, foliage in their helmets, and M16s emerge from the darkness to pay for the pizza and carry it back to the Assembly Area. I thought this was a pretty cool use of resources.
8:09 You are picking up local FM stations because RTL-SDRs have bad image rejection capability, I would recommend adding a FM broadcast bandstop filter to attenuate these signals
That or a harmonic of the original frequency. Or possibly the result of 2 frequencies mixing in an imperfect RF system. After a few decades of working on antenna systems, I can confidently say RF can be pretty "black magic" outside of the mathematical theory world sometimes.
@@pileofstuff - We engineers used to say, 50% science and 50% witchcraft. Its really true. You should have seen some of the shit we saw and lived through LOL STuff from science fiction movies LOL
@@pileofstuff For something that only have about 48dB of in-band dynamic range, it's more likely to be image frequency / aliasing (especially because RTL-SDRs use direct conversion & doesn't have a great IF filter)
10,000 points to you. A lesson for anyone overthinking anything when you can reuse, repurpose and reinvent useful things out of an antenna you already had, a $1 adapter and scrap.
In Brazil those satellites are nicknamed "bolinha" (little ball) and they were heavily used, today because of Internet and cell phones I think they were not much used. But I saw news on TV a few years ago about Federal Police apprehend the equipment of some of those pirates.
@@KlodFather 1. there is a fine 2. putting people in jail for doing that would benefit no one 3. Brazilian Federal Police has more to do than to protect unused obsolete USA military unencoded bad designed satellites that could even be used by the enemy. Satellites from the 60's that are not decommissioned because it would cost more to do so than to let they rotten in space.
@@Nomamegoogle - They should be more harsh with them. Confiscate the radios or better yet whatever has the radio in it. House or vehicle. Make it hard. Problems go away when they take your stuff and throw it all out in the street and board the place up or burn it down. These guys are causing international defence problems with their disregard for the law.
Back some 65 years ago I used to sit in front of the family radio and turn the band to try and listen to whatever I could pick up. I would sit there for hours trying to hear something from someone somewhere on Earth. I don't remember specifics, but the mind of a 10-year-old can create many things that could happen and hope to find one of them. It was quite fun. Not sure what my parents thought of me with my ear to the speaker while turning the dial. BTW, this was before TV in our house...and many other houses too.
I used to do it with my crystal radio built on my Radio Shack 30-in-1 electronic project kit...so cool. Plus, I could listen on my little earphone all night if I wanted to!
as a kid i had an old radio from my grandma (one of these big boxes). I changed the radio bulbs (vacuum tubes) with some i found on scrap-radios and one time i even could hear the police radio lol)
On my childhood FM radio you could puuuuuush the dial off the bottom end you could pick up a strange pulsing transmission, some kind of data transmission I guess.
The voices at around 7:38 are in Portuguese. The lady is saying "stay tuned ok, stay on this ??" "If you need anything call me on this, or I'll be listening in on the other one too" (I would imagine they're talking about frequencies). At 9:06, again Brazilian portuguese saying: "How is it over there? Talk to us. We just loaded the truck now". The next transmission I can't make out other than the word "carga" (cargo, or load in English).
If you question why they didn't put any kind of access control on those early repeater satellites Consider that prototype repeater satellites became unusable less than a month after launch because clock-based access codes got out of sync
@@yoeyyoey8937 ....have you ever tried to keep 2 clocks sync'd??? this is why they came up with the atomic clocks that are small enough to orbit.....that is the ONLY way.....there are a gagillion factors but...when you consider that there are as many nano seconds in one second as there are seconds in 32 years and you are trying to sync to LESS that THAT......yeah....
@@Name-nw9uj ...they didnt have accurate and small enough atomic clocks.....the new quantum technology will make all that look like sticks and stones....
I'm an absolute turnip - I don't know anything about this very interesting topic - but you had me at space pirates, and I really enjoyed your attitude and presentation - ty!
5:04 it is recommended to get the antenna off the ground for proper swr/resonance measurement. all the stray capacitance of the floor will detune your antenna by quite a bit. although it's not that critical for rx only, i would suggest you redo the measurement while the antenna is on its tripod.
This is cool! I need a crash course on frequencies and radio satellites though. Older analog communication would be a pretty useful skill at times I bet
I wonder if the age of the components has caused any frequency drift in the repeaters. Regardless, I love that these 40+ year old satellites are still functioning and still getting used, even if for unauthorized purposes. A testament to engineers who designed and built the originals, glad they're not just space junk.
As it appeared in the video, the sats were actually still in service, so even without the pirates, they would not be space junk yet. But with increasing user count and decreasing battery life, they may end up as junk sooner. But surely is more fun to see this tech used by a broader audience than intended.
Well, its not all that hard, AO-7 is a ham radio satellite that was launched in 1974, and remained working until a battery failure in 1981 when it went quiet. It was heard again in 2002, when the batteries finally went "open ckt" and the equipment started operation again using only solar power. It would reset when in darkness and restart when it was getting enough light. Other than the batteries, the thing is about ready for its 50'th birthday next year, and was built by amateur (ham) radio operators on a very thin budget.
It has been a few decades from my Electronics Technician Training. That said, Check the length of the directors ( preceding the antenna ) and distance apart as well as the reflector ( after the antenna ) for the correct parts of the frequencies. They looked to not be like Yagi where the reflector is larger and the preceding ( you have 3 so front looking over half the length, next two almost the same, but shorter ). You may also want to get some more wood and cut them in half, get some wire to connect the antenna to the middle directors in a cross pattern ( when held so the antenna is pointing right, bars up, top to bottom to top antenna segments and opposite for the pointing down antenna ). Good luck hunting down the Space Pirates.
If you find any AM signals in those transponders, they are military ATC in the uplink bands (~300MHz) that are probably asigned without knowledge of the frequencies also being allocated for satellite uplinks. We do hear them from time to time.
I listening to many Brazilians and Russians, but there is also a small group of Italians, not all of them in Italy who have been making themselves heard for over 15 years, sometimes more, sometimes less, but Brazilians and Russians are on the increase, thanks also to Chinese portable and vehicular radios that have invaded the market, capable of transmitting on the rising frequency, pleasant contacts from Europe have been felt with the Russians in English, always kind and helpful, however there is no way with the Brazilians who insult immediately heavily for no reason.Ciao
The U.S. Govt legit SATcom stuff in the 250s these days are mostly secure data links. There's definitely still some secure & plain-voice USG Tacsat comms in the 260s -- some of it important stuff, But a lot of the USG Tacsat has migrated to MUOS CDMA with downlinks in the upper 300MHz area. Really annoying to hear the pirates for those of us that used to have to submit requests for UHf SATCOM transponder access back in the day & get in trouble if we used to much uplink power, etc.
WHy did it matter if you used a little too much power on uplink? I realize that you don't need a kw to access it, but enough juice to make a solid entry into the system. What kind of karens run that system anyway?
@@KlodFather As available power is shared across users, normally you uplink enough power so that the downlink power is enough to be received. If you uplink more power, the other downlinks will suffer, dependant on sat power budget. A major sat system I worked with some 40 years ago, had automatic individual and total uplink power adjustment. All users of the system had their uplinks controlled in this way.
I heard almost nothing on that frequency all day when I was messing with this. I had read it was one of the more popular ones, but I guess I just picked a quiet day to listen!
I'm very familiar with Space Pirates (otherwise known as SPRT) Honestly it's pretty easy handling their planetary bases and cargo ships, just need to pummel their pre-warfare weaponry with autocannons & Artillery, disable their AI, and then boom! You've got some new components and such. (If you are curious, this is referencing Space Engineers. That is the joke)
Intelligence and/or knowledge doesn't often appear to be a requirement for working a state job. Just pretend you know what you're doing and you can go far.
@@jplacido9999 - Apparently you have not worked in the industry... because the amount of dumb ones infesting the group these days because mommy told them they were special is gaining ground. Its scary how devoid of thought some people are coming into the field. Scary shit. We have had some debate about ideas and in some cases have had to make up a simple test on the bench to show them that their assertions do not work. After that things settle down and people get serious. When engineers make mistakes in products, people get hurt. Common sense is not out there and the guy with the most papers on the wall is rarely the brightest bulb in the room. Facts.
A log periodic or yagi log periodic would give you the wider band. Your yagi is really on the low side gain wise. Down in the equator area, they will not need such high gain antennas. The voice you heard sounded like Portuguese which while closer to Spanish can sound a bit like Russian if you are not familiar with the two languages.
And I would have recognized Russian as I worked with a bunch of Russian engineers and started to learn the language from them. Its complex as hell but full of nuance and surprises. These clowns on that channel sound like a bunch of CB trash and should be eliminated. Shutting off the satelite for a year or two should clear the board. THe radios would fall out of use quickly when the system goes dark.
Former US Navy Radioman here. I went to school for this system in 1977 and used it at sea on a system called NAVMACS. It's amazing those transponders are still operational. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleet_Satellite_Communications_System
They are speaking in Brazilian Portuguese, the woman tells him: "hide the cargo and stay alert. She will be monitoring this one and "the another one". I'll let you know if anything happens. The man just responds something that means "Ok, thank you"." She is probably referring to the frequencies of the police, military, etc. and she will let he know if she hears anything. In the second transmission, he calls someone and says he has just loaded the tractor
Ha. The chopped up tape measure segments are also used for direction finders when fox hunting for transmitters. You can go rung through the undergrowth without the risk of being impaled by a ridgid element. Lighter also.
I've not tested the metrics in any real comparative detail or to any standards other than the nanovna, though I'm still amazed how well my 450MHz yagi worked and works only using wooden rod with aluminum duct tape wrapping for the reflecting and directing elements. I invested in a 3D printer pen to make the mounts more adjustable for finer tuning. I never got around to making with the plastic knurled thumb screws or 3D printing, though did order and have most the parts I need if not all.
Most of those transmissions in portuguese that you've presented I assume they were made by truckers, they use some frequencies as a "team speak". And maybe... Sometimes Portuguese can be a little tricky and sound a bit Russian, phonetics are kinda similar
NPR on 271 MHz is very common you will pick up FM local transmissions on 271 Mhz and even sometimes you will pickup shortwave transmissions, it is just a harmonic frequency. That is why you typically want to use an FM bandpass filter. IDEALLY you want to use a band pass filter that filters out everything except the band you are interested in, in this case 270mhz
Oh so this is the video where you're haunting pirates. I am an SWL from Italy, I use a superclassic omni Diamond X300 on a Yaesu FT-7800 vhf/uhf radio and I can normally pick up lots of Brazilians pirates, sometimes Russians but mostly people from Brazil. Yagi on VHF is good if you want to get a point-to-point connection, otherwise a good old simple J-pole will march quite nicely (if you only want to catch waves without considering the ROS, so not transmitting and say goodbye to the radio). I made one from various copper scraps and I can get ships and planes from 105 MHz to the 140 MHz. Though VHF are quite keen to pick up lot of noise, sometimes it's crystal clear, but I live 50 mts far from the Adriatic sea... The idea of using a PTZ cam as a rotor is just awesome!
Cool, thanks for the info! I'm always learning more about antennas, I have an amateur license and have read some of the theory books, but it always makes more sense to me once I've actually tried it for real.
@@saveitforparts Ah, nice! I'm waiting for my license too. For now, '73 here, maybe one day we can try to catch on air, when I'll have some spare time to setup a DX (I sell marine engines... funny how we have common passions :D )
I think next time I take some vacation days I'm going to spend the entire 2 weeks just scanning, satellites, ham radio, dmr, p25 phase 2, and antenna building
Hi there, the main "users" on the military Fleetcom VHF frequencies around 250 ... 260 MHz will be stations from Brazil. Here in the Netherlands they are easy to monitor, with a Discone antenna, or even a "vertical" for 2m//70cm.
I heard the female say ‘obrigado’, which is Portuguese for ‘thank you’. Cool video and concept, cheers for sharing! PS, your man-cave looks like a sweet shop to me, lol 👌
If I may suggest, @7:30, when you located a pirate station, it will help the intelligibilty if you narrow your IF bandwidth, to cover the signal only. The reason your audio was "fuzzy" was that your BW is too wide.
Sat comms were my favorite back in my marine days. We didn't have a geosyncronus satelite over head for the man portable kits I used. Instead I had to kinda guess where tf it was in the sky, aim the antenna at it, and see if it would transmit. Kind of a pain, but I liked them bc the voice comms were always crystal clear. But for reliability it was hard to beat the old HF radio with a field expedient antenna.
@@saveitforparts Encryption is a whole other thing. Stock they are unencrypted til you load crypto. We would use unenceypted chanells to talk to civilian run range control to let them know when we were going live, when we were done shooting, how many marines were on range, etc. Since you are a radio guy, you prob already know, but if u don't I suggest looking into omnidirectional field expedient antennas. All you need is some copper wire cut to the right length for the frequency, a means of holding that copper wire off the ground. You can get comms with anyone using that same freq within 350 mile radius. Field expedients were only workable with HF radios due to the length ratios required to cut the copper wire. (The length of the cut has a certain ratio to go with the freq, but I have long forgotten the tables for that) Not all info I'm giving u here is gonna be 100% spot on (I've been out for ten years) so I'm just goin off of memories. Hope this will maybe give u an idea for a video you can do.
Hello Friend! Nice video! I speak native Portuguese, and I can sure tell you that all conversations are from Brazil. You are correct that most communications are from truck drivers and, sometimes, from farmers in the middle of nowhere. I can try to translate what they speak if you want.
This is something I have been trying do with similar tech, quite a few Zombie Sats out there with no encryption on them some still with power at times (depending what and where). This content if fantastic, Love the back stories on the history of the tech the most. Thanks for the content :)
Space Pirates is actually on LaserDisc... I managed to acquire one of the discs when a local arcade went out of business. The production values are not as good as Dragon's Lair Space Ace or Crime Patrol.
It's crazy... I built a rabbit ear yagi almost the same way about 6 years ago. only thing I did different was use copper wire for the other elements. worked like a dream on 2 meters.
Incredible! You are amazing! The voices at 7:22 in are in Brazilian Portuguese. It's a dialogue, difficult to understand, but for those curious: Male voice (7:22): "Uai, será que ele chegou na cidade, (des)carregado? Ou derramou no meio da estrada aqui? Tem um negócio de derramar carga na [cortado]" By the accent, I believe he is from the state of Minas Gerais. Translation: "Uai, did it arrive in the city, (un)loaded? Or did it spill in the middle of the road here? There's a thing about spilling on the [cut]" Female voice (7:27): "[?] Só fica ligado. Fica nessa [?] aí." Translation: "[?] Just stay tuned. Stay in that [?] there." Male voice (7:32): "Positivo, positivo" Translation: "Positive, positive" Female voice (7:35) "Qualquer coisa só te chamo aqui nessa. Vou ficar ouvindo essa e a outra, tá?" Translation: "Anything else, I'll just call you here. I'll listen to this one and the other one, okay?" male voice: "Beleza, Joyce" Translation: "Fine, Joyce"
Male voice (9:02) "Como que tá aí oh Jefferson? Fala com nois. Acabou de embarcar o trator agora" Translation: "How are you there, Jefferson? Talk to us. Just loaded the tractor now" Male voice (9:07) "[?] Vou dar uma carga pra nois ouvir [?] 544" (não tenho certeza se entendi certo) Translation: "[?] I'm going to give us a load to hear [?] 544" (not sure if I understood correctly)
By the way, I thoroughly love the channel! I also picked up satellite signals at these frequencies shown in your video, but with my biconical antenna, it was too faint for the descriminator. Just heard extremely spotty voice. Going to build a directional.
came to this channel originally for the boat content, but this stuff is cool to me even if i have no clue how it works. neat to see a channel out of the city i live in.
I've been able to receive these with an rtl-sdr and an omni directional scanner antenna on my roof here in central california, surprisingly strong signal. Usually Brazilians? using these repeaters from what I can tell
Best not to fine tune antennas while they're resting on the floor. You might get away with it, but still... Best to have them at least a little bit further away from things.
Most of the interlocutors are Brazilians, most of the things they speak are about the cargo they are managing, the word "carga" (cargo) is often. Why do I know this? Because I'm a Brazilian 🤭🤗 and I didn't know this exists, and I'm really impressed that there are so many people taking advantage of pirate transmissions. That's incredible! (I could translate most of the chats in Portuguese to you! Just ask me if you want that 😉)
@@DioneBatista legal! Eu não imaginava que os fazendeiros também usavam o rádio! Poderia me contar um pouco mais? Tipo, por que os fazendeiros usam rádio amador? Para se comunicar em caso de ataque de bandidos?
7:42 it looks like portuguese for me they're saying something like: "sera que ele chegou na cidade carregado ou (dont undertand the rest)?" translation is "did he arrive in the city loaded or (i cant undertand the rest)?" probaly a truck driver from brazil (my country yay) and the woman said: "(dont undertand) so fica ligado ta? fica nessa rua ai" "stay alert ok? stay in this road" and the guy said: "positivo, positivo" its something like "ok, ok" in english and the girl said: "ok qualquer coisa so me chama aqui nelson, vou ficar ouvindo ela e a outra, ta?" translation: "ok anything just call me here nelson, Ill be listening to her and the other one, ok?" and the guy said: "beleza, joia" translation: "ok, thankyou" (not literal translation, but he means something like this)
To hell with neon, leather and city streets glistening with newly fallen rain from a sky colored like a TV tuned to a dead channel, that antenna aiming rig is the most cyberpunk thing I've seen in a while.
Oh my god this is so cool. Im gonna get into this. I remembered my god father was into radios and had a stack wired up in his velvet, suede gentlemanly lounge, on a few shelves. God he was a bloke and a half, cool dude. All went over my head, but intensely fascinating.
In the twin cities there's MPR News at 91.1.The third harmonic of this would be on 273 MHz.... And there's KFAI on 90.3 MHz which would have it's third harmonic at 271 MHz but that's not MPR or NPR. Probably one of these signal is loud enough for you that the filtering after the mixer in the R820T tuner of the rtlsdr dongle can't knock it down below your noise floor at ~270 MHz. And then there's just some local clock error in freq that shifts it there.
Just a question, if he was picking up the third harmonic of an FM station, wouldn't the signal stay somewhat constant if he changed the direction of the antenna? Wouldn't the harmonic be coming into the antenna/system from the side and not from the direction the yagi is pointed? I hope I asked that correctly. Thank you.
I was always wondering why i pick up FM radio signals with my analog 90's TV 😁(i use it for gaming).So it is a kind of unwanted FM transmission artifact.
Even though there's virtually no atmospheric drag to speak of at GSO compared to LEO, and precise positioning is not strictly necessary for radio repeaters in GSO, they still had 120kg worth of station keeping hydrazine onboard. I doubt they've used much of it. If they wander about due to the gravitational influences or solar winds, not really a big deal, they'll still be there in the same general vicinity doing their thing, and orientation is a gyro stabilized affair driven by solar. Navsats and whatnot that require precise positioning will absolutely burn through their station keeping thrusters at a much higher rate, as well as having an extra bit of delta v in reserve for the end of their life cycle to transfer them up into a higher graveyard orbit, so their expected perturbations don't cause interference with newer sats taking their place. I don't know if there are plans or intentions for these sats to transfer up to a graveyard orbit, I would assume not as it's likely they would've already done so at this point.
7:26 Brazil. Truckers. 9:00 Brazil Truckers and Farmers. both were talking about cargo, the first one was with the cargo waiting for the release via radio to go to the place to unload. and the second was asking where another person was, and that he had just loaded the tractor on Truck. here a device called "Rádio Amador"/Amateur Radio is very popular, all truck drivers and some farmers have this device to send and receive this signals.
From North America you would need good power to reach those satelites without a serious yag. Only a mobile rig with 50 watts and a directional antenna in the north will work... and be spotty at best in FL.
Hahahahaaaa your neighbor just freaking out watching you like, “ohh shit here he goes again” keeps watching as the equipment in your yard starts moving ”what the hell is that thing. Honey come look at this shit, our neighbors setting up some experiment.” 😂
8:02 "Space pirates, I'm your host of void of space with lemon particles,Terry Gross, you're listening to NPR" Or whatever the space equivalent of fresh air would be
All these transponders are still in government use. But using wide band modems that you will struggle to detect or even see in the waterfall display. The majority of pirates are south american and portugese. As there is little or no enforcement of the law there by their PTT's. The last batch of crackdowns we heard about, those foung guilty were fined ~$50 and allowed to keep their equipment.
@@gonzo_the_great1675 Brazil, no doubt. There were portuguese users too, but they were taken down by a joint operation by portuguese branch of NATO, portuguese National Guard, and Judiciary Police. Brazil also made several operations against pirate users of Mil Sats. There are still a few out there in the midle of nowhere....
Lol man I could uae some friends like you! I have always been the "oddball maker"/"horder of electronics etc" one of my groups. The biggest problem with being interested in so many different things that require a good bit of experience and research to understand, is that you are lucky to meet anyone in person that is into even just one of those many things. It's ts a damn miracle to meet someone that is into more than one of them....at least where I have lived. Finding the time to do all the stuff you want to is another big problem with it😁 Anyway, fun times! Keep it up man!
I am brazilian, and I can confirm, the audio at 7:20 are from truck drivers, I could pick up some things: PT "Positivo... Ei, será que ele chegou na cidade carregado? ... O negócio de amarrar carga daqui." EN "poisitive... Hey, I am wondering if he already has arrived at the city with the cargo... the thing to tie the cargo..." PT "mó cota tá? só fica ligado. Fica nessa (?) aí. Positivo. Positivo. Qualquer coisa só te chamo aqui nessa, vou ficar ouvindo ela e a outra tá? Beleza, joia" EN “For some time ok? Just stay tuned. Stay on this (?) there. Positive. Positive. Anything just call me here on this one, I’ll be listening here and the other one okay? ok, cool”
A magnificent accomplishment. Now, if only you'd been content to stop there. Building that much bigger Yagi antenna and suspending it from a big white balloon sure seemed like a good idea at the time.........
It's still a great way to loft a Yagi, but not everybody can afford a balloon. Using a giant box kite would be more cost-efficient for a non-state actor.
Maybe a _LARGE KITE?_ 😊
There is no point in having the antenna very high up. As long as you have line of sight to the satellite and not much local noise from electronics, it will be fine near ground level.
@@la7dfa atmospheric distortionand absorption? That said. This REALLY (yet again) makes me.wakna splurge my extra 35 bucks this month on a usb sdr dongle
Don’t worry bro I got your joke 😂
The woman was speaking portuguese, she was giving instructions about dropping a load, probably to a truck driver.
The men were also speaking truck stuff.
Portuguese from brazil that is.
hmm.. suspicious! 👀
"truck driver" 😂
Or about cocaine 😂
That was straight up drug businesses
7:22 - eai será que chegou na cidade carregado? (i dont understand fully the rest) ou será que derramou no meio da estrada? tem um negocio de derramar na estrada (?)
(Hey, did you arrived at the city with the cargo? or got lost in the road?)
7:28 - Amor conta (?) só fica ligado nessa com um ai (interrupts) qualquer coisa só te chamo ai vou ficar ouvindo ela e a outra ta (he respondes with ok)
(Love tell me (?) just stay tuned with someone, anything I'll just call you there I'll listen to she and the other)
9:03 - Começa por ai ô, fala com nós, acabou de passar o trator agora
(start by there, talk to us, the tractor just passed now)
the last one is talking about where someone is going, and asking why prob he changed his route, and he tells why he changed
Cool, thank you! I'm sure I could have recorded more and caught longer conversations. I've heard that a lot of the users are truck drivers, so it makes sense to hear them talking about cargo and routes.
It is Brazilian Portuguese the language.
@@saveitforpartsyes, truck drivers, farmers and illegal loggers in Amazon forest are the regular users in Brazil. But the Federal Police, with help of US govnmt, track and arrest then. FARC and a famous brazilian drug dealer called Fernandinho Beira Mar used this Sat, called here "Bolinha" (little ball), until his arrest in 2001. Other major criminal organizations (PCC) used until the arrests became recurrents by signal triangulation.
pegou certinho, eu não peguei algumas partes mas o seu ficou show!
na 7:28 na parte que interrompe, tem um homem falando "positivo, positivo"
@@rodricbr nem ouvi esse kkkk, foram 15 min de eu pausando e voltando para conseguir todos
Some of this pirate are Brazilian, they use this kind of communication on rainforest (a.k.a Amazonia) where cellular signal is inexistent, they call the satellite as "bolinha" and you can find a lot of users
Honestly it's hard to blame them if it's their sole form of communication.
@@CaptainApathetic Yeah, people everywhere use stuff thats publicly available regardless of whether they own or earned it, its normal human behaviour. I mean it's not like we made the sand or trees or meat we are easily content to take from whats around us. It's human nature to take if you have a need and no one is there to stop you
@@jek__reject capitalism, return to communism
@@tylerchiu7065 No
@@JackParsons2 but you don't own any capital, do ya LT dan?
That is unspeakably cool! Never would’ve expected pirate radio to exist in space.
HI, I used to work FLTSAT for the USAF in the late 1980s. I think you should look into "circular Polarization" for your receive antenna. I believe you want LEFT-HAND-cirlc-polarization (LHCP) for receive (RHCP for TX) . Also, the biggest problem the Pirates make is each one takes power from the tansmitter on the satellite. The battery can only kick out a certain power per day....now it's DECADES later so the battery is about 50% what it used to be.....Each Pirate takes a chunk of satellite power.....and these satties are what we call "bent-pipe" repeaters....the more power you pump in, the more power it pumps out...further draining the battery. ( I worked with the agency that was always highly concerned with "power balancing" across users.).......OK, now for my illegal satty story story.....I once called CQ over a Top Secret Gov't satellite network.....I was told to never do it again. SO....I love your channel...let me know if I can help in any way with my satty experience.....Ka1igc
Very cool, and good info thanks! I'd like to do a follow-up video when I have time and attention for it (LOTs of projects on the pile), so those would be some cool details to include.
Working in N6 for the Navy I could never figure out why SATOPS was always so frustratingly anal about power balancing. I had no idea they just wanted to keep us from draining the sats batteries, that's hilarious. Thank you for this!
Did you end up off freq by accident? Or did they put that hidden sat system in the ham band? That is funny. When I used to work for the radio systems companies I would find the unused antennas on the tower and take a suitcase radio with me. Plug in the ant analyzer and figure out what band they were in on the ant's on top the tower. I would find one I could use and operate during lunch. This one tower was 350 free standing over hilltop. Perfect. It was always amazing what you could get into on 1/4 or one watt power. I did a lot of QSO from places like that.
"I once called CQ over a Top Secret Gov't satellite network"
Ah, no harm no foul. My uncle worked at a remote station for the Air Force and used to do a trick where he'd call the next station over and ask nicely for a patch into the next one from there, and so on, until he'd circled the continent and gotten back to where he started, at which point the duty desk would call over the PA that he had an incoming call, only to be connected to himself.
@@harveywallbanger3123 Early experiments in ping testing for the latency curious
I’ve been tracking these for a few years in the U.K. with mostly rabbit ears and a Tri band UV-5R or Yupiteru. A 1/4 wave ground plane antenna works well too.
The common frequencies seem to be between 255 and 262, usually Brazilian Portuguese language or Russian. Comedy Radio from Russia is sometimes very clear, I’ve also heard Mosque broadcasts and even Karaoke microphones!
It’s an interesting section of the radio spectrum.
Thanks for the video 👍🏼
Brasileiros!!
I've always wanted to have some fun getting into a microphone or shop P.A circuit 😂
Mosques? Disgusting
Some drunk singing karaoke unaware they are being broadcasted over a vast area 🤣
uv52 is dual band
A good friend of mine was in 1/505th 82nd ABN back in the 80s. They were all out in the field at Ft Bragg and got together with the commo guys who were able to use their satcom uplink to get into the PSTN, whereby they proceeded to order a huge stack of pizzas from Domino's. They gave the delivery guy instructions like, "Take the Post Road hardball until it disappears in the sand and we'll meet you there..." The guy shows up and all these grunts with green faces, foliage in their helmets, and M16s emerge from the darkness to pay for the pizza and carry it back to the Assembly Area. I thought this was a pretty cool use of resources.
Best use of tax dollars in a long time.
8:09 You are picking up local FM stations because RTL-SDRs have bad image rejection capability, I would recommend adding a FM broadcast bandstop filter to attenuate these signals
That or a harmonic of the original frequency.
Or possibly the result of 2 frequencies mixing in an imperfect RF system.
After a few decades of working on antenna systems, I can confidently say RF can be pretty "black magic" outside of the mathematical theory world sometimes.
@@pileofstuff Likely 3rd harmonic of ~90.* MHz, where most NPR stations live.
@@pileofstuff - We engineers used to say, 50% science and 50% witchcraft. Its really true. You should have seen some of the shit we saw and lived through LOL STuff from science fiction movies LOL
@@pileofstuff Oh, hey, I watch your videos! Never would've thought to see you here, lol.
@@pileofstuff For something that only have about 48dB of in-band dynamic range, it's more likely to be image frequency / aliasing (especially because RTL-SDRs use direct conversion & doesn't have a great IF filter)
Ah yes, the 1970's , no encryption, no firewalls, no security, just techies trying to help other techies. /sigh I miss those days.
10,000 points to you. A lesson for anyone overthinking anything when you can reuse, repurpose and reinvent useful things out of an antenna you already had, a $1 adapter and scrap.
In Brazil those satellites are nicknamed "bolinha" (little ball) and they were heavily used, today because of Internet and cell phones I think they were not much used. But I saw news on TV a few years ago about Federal Police apprehend the equipment of some of those pirates.
If they confiscated all their radio gear no matter the band, it would deter them for a while. The punishment should be much more severe.
@@KlodFather 1. there is a fine 2. putting people in jail for doing that would benefit no one 3. Brazilian Federal Police has more to do than to protect unused obsolete USA military unencoded bad designed satellites that could even be used by the enemy. Satellites from the 60's that are not decommissioned because it would cost more to do so than to let they rotten in space.
@@KlodFather why?
Policia federal is like gestapo or stazi in Brazil
@@Nomamegoogle - They should be more harsh with them. Confiscate the radios or better yet whatever has the radio in it. House or vehicle. Make it hard. Problems go away when they take your stuff and throw it all out in the street and board the place up or burn it down. These guys are causing international defence problems with their disregard for the law.
Back some 65 years ago I used to sit in front of the family radio and turn the band to try and listen to whatever I could pick up. I would sit there for hours trying to hear something from someone somewhere on Earth. I don't remember specifics, but the mind of a 10-year-old can create many things that could happen and hope to find one of them. It was quite fun. Not sure what my parents thought of me with my ear to the speaker while turning the dial. BTW, this was before TV in our house...and many other houses too.
I used to listen to shortwave radio at night when you could hear faint signals better. It's always interesting what's out there!
I used to do it with my crystal radio built on my Radio Shack 30-in-1 electronic project kit...so cool. Plus, I could listen on my little earphone all night if I wanted to!
I used to do the same. Simple things were the best things...
as a kid i had an old radio from my grandma (one of these big boxes). I changed the radio bulbs (vacuum tubes) with some i found on scrap-radios and one time i even could hear the police radio lol)
On my childhood FM radio you could puuuuuush the dial off the bottom end you could pick up a strange pulsing transmission, some kind of data transmission I guess.
The voices at around 7:38 are in Portuguese. The lady is saying "stay tuned ok, stay on this ??" "If you need anything call me on this, or I'll be listening in on the other one too" (I would imagine they're talking about frequencies). At 9:06, again Brazilian portuguese saying: "How is it over there? Talk to us. We just loaded the truck now". The next transmission I can't make out other than the word "carga" (cargo, or load in English).
Yeah, I was gonna mention that sometimes Portuguese is mistaken for Russian, but clearly you beat me to it lol
I've been guilty of it before, tbh
o cara manja dos pt-br
If you question why they didn't put any kind of access control on those early repeater satellites
Consider that prototype repeater satellites became unusable less than a month after launch because clock-based access codes got out of sync
did they not take time dilation into account?
How did they get out of sync?
@@yoeyyoey8937 ....have you ever tried to keep 2 clocks sync'd??? this is why they came up with the atomic clocks that are small enough to orbit.....that is the ONLY way.....there are a gagillion factors but...when you consider that there are as many nano seconds in one second as there are seconds in 32 years and you are trying to sync to LESS that THAT......yeah....
@@Name-nw9uj ...they didnt have accurate and small enough atomic clocks.....the new quantum technology will make all that look like sticks and stones....
@@ssnerd583 I didn’t know they needed that much precision and also I didn’t know they couldn’t equip them with atomic clocks
I'm an absolute turnip - I don't know anything about this very interesting topic - but you had me at space pirates, and I really enjoyed your attitude and presentation - ty!
This was mentioned in Tom Scott's latest newsletter. Very cool!
That's cool!
I found it from there too
5:04 it is recommended to get the antenna off the ground for proper swr/resonance measurement. all the stray capacitance of the floor will detune your antenna by quite a bit. although it's not that critical for rx only, i would suggest you redo the measurement while the antenna is on its tripod.
This is cool! I need a crash course on frequencies and radio satellites though. Older analog communication would be a pretty useful skill at times I bet
Oh my! The first pirate transmission was a short dialogue about a trucker asking if the other one is already loaded
Loaded with drug
I wonder if the age of the components has caused any frequency drift in the repeaters. Regardless, I love that these 40+ year old satellites are still functioning and still getting used, even if for unauthorized purposes. A testament to engineers who designed and built the originals, glad they're not just space junk.
As it appeared in the video, the sats were actually still in service, so even without the pirates, they would not be space junk yet. But with increasing user count and decreasing battery life, they may end up as junk sooner. But surely is more fun to see this tech used by a broader audience than intended.
Well, its not all that hard, AO-7 is a ham radio satellite that was launched in 1974, and remained working until a battery failure in 1981 when it went quiet. It was heard again in 2002, when the batteries finally went "open ckt" and the equipment started operation again using only solar power. It would reset when in darkness and restart when it was getting enough light. Other than the batteries, the thing is about ready for its 50'th birthday next year, and was built by amateur (ham) radio operators on a very thin budget.
@@arnoldgrubbs2005that's really cool to hear
It has been a few decades from my Electronics Technician Training. That said, Check the length of the directors ( preceding the antenna ) and distance apart as well as the reflector ( after the antenna ) for the correct parts of the frequencies. They looked to not be like Yagi where the reflector is larger and the preceding ( you have 3 so front looking over half the length, next two almost the same, but shorter ). You may also want to get some more wood and cut them in half, get some wire to connect the antenna to the middle directors in a cross pattern ( when held so the antenna is pointing right, bars up, top to bottom to top antenna segments and opposite for the pointing down antenna ). Good luck hunting down the Space Pirates.
I just finished an ELE 111 course as an elective in my welding program.
Had a great teacher and it was a lot of fun.
So cool. Reminded me of telephone Phreaks from the 80s and 90s
If you find any AM signals in those transponders, they are military ATC in the uplink bands (~300MHz) that are probably asigned without knowledge of the frequencies also being allocated for satellite uplinks. We do hear them from time to time.
You are right.
Some input frequencies coincide with sat input (specially non US mil users)
I listening to many Brazilians and Russians, but there is also a small group of Italians, not all of them in Italy who have been making themselves heard for over 15 years, sometimes more, sometimes less, but Brazilians and Russians are on the increase, thanks also to Chinese portable and vehicular radios that have invaded the market, capable of transmitting on the rising frequency, pleasant contacts from Europe have been felt with the Russians in English, always kind and helpful, however there is no way with the Brazilians who insult immediately heavily for no reason.Ciao
as a brazilian i couldn't help but wheeze here, man, that just pictures us so well
Violent bunch the Brazilians ,still smashing heads in with rocks 😮
😂
This video was amazing! Thanks for doing this intro to satellite pirate radio. The history of it is something I had never heard of.
I think the female voice was saying "Help me Obi-Wan, you're my only hope...", but in Portuguese.
7:25 WOW! is Brazilian Portuguese hahaha, recently discoverd this channel and it's amazing, Keep up the great work buddy!! shout out from Brazil!
The U.S. Govt legit SATcom stuff in the 250s these days are mostly secure data links. There's definitely still some secure & plain-voice USG Tacsat comms in the 260s -- some of it important stuff, But a lot of the USG Tacsat has migrated to MUOS CDMA with downlinks in the upper 300MHz area. Really annoying to hear the pirates for those of us that used to have to submit requests for UHf SATCOM transponder access back in the day & get in trouble if we used to much uplink power, etc.
WHy did it matter if you used a little too much power on uplink? I realize that you don't need a kw to access it, but enough juice to make a solid entry into the system. What kind of karens run that system anyway?
@@KlodFather As available power is shared across users, normally you uplink enough power so that the downlink power is enough to be received. If you uplink more power, the other downlinks will suffer, dependant on sat power budget. A major sat system I worked with some 40 years ago, had automatic individual and total uplink power adjustment. All users of the system had their uplinks controlled in this way.
I might have to give listening to those space pirates a go! I’m in the UK and the coverage into the US and Europe on your map looks pretty good.
I'm definitely hearing some traffic on 255.550 today, even with a ground plane antenna that's not tuned for the band.
I heard almost nothing on that frequency all day when I was messing with this. I had read it was one of the more popular ones, but I guess I just picked a quiet day to listen!
UA-cam recommends yet another great channel. Need to dust off my SDR and do some listening between applying for jobs while I’m outta work right now.
I'm very familiar with Space Pirates (otherwise known as SPRT)
Honestly it's pretty easy handling their planetary bases and cargo ships, just need to pummel their pre-warfare weaponry with autocannons & Artillery, disable their AI, and then boom! You've got some new components and such.
(If you are curious, this is referencing Space Engineers. That is the joke)
I hate the damn space pirate scrapper ships. I’m just trying to test out the blocks from the latest update stop destroying my things.
Clang bless you, fellow engineer.
I honestly had no clue what to expect when I clicked on this video. Pleasant surprise, this is actually really interesting!
I actually believe that this guy should be hired by a government agency or something because his knowledge is next level
Intelligence and/or knowledge doesn't often appear to be a requirement for working a state job. Just pretend you know what you're doing and you can go far.
@@MintyLime703 Aight then
😂😂😂😂😂😂 not even close😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@jplacido9999 - Apparently you have not worked in the industry... because the amount of dumb ones infesting the group these days because mommy told them they were special is gaining ground. Its scary how devoid of thought some people are coming into the field. Scary shit. We have had some debate about ideas and in some cases have had to make up a simple test on the bench to show them that their assertions do not work. After that things settle down and people get serious. When engineers make mistakes in products, people get hurt. Common sense is not out there and the guy with the most papers on the wall is rarely the brightest bulb in the room. Facts.
A log periodic or yagi log periodic would give you the wider band. Your yagi is really on the low side gain wise. Down in the equator area, they will not need such high gain antennas. The voice you heard sounded like Portuguese which while closer to Spanish can sound a bit like Russian if you are not familiar with the two languages.
And I would have recognized Russian as I worked with a bunch of Russian engineers and started to learn the language from them. Its complex as hell but full of nuance and surprises. These clowns on that channel sound like a bunch of CB trash and should be eliminated. Shutting off the satelite for a year or two should clear the board. THe radios would fall out of use quickly when the system goes dark.
Former US Navy Radioman here. I went to school for this system in 1977 and used it at sea on a system called NAVMACS. It's amazing those transponders are still operational.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleet_Satellite_Communications_System
They are speaking in Brazilian Portuguese, the woman tells him: "hide the cargo and stay alert. She will be monitoring this one and "the another one". I'll let you know if anything happens. The man just responds something that means "Ok, thank you"."
She is probably referring to the frequencies of the police, military, etc. and she will let he know if she hears anything.
In the second transmission, he calls someone and says he has just loaded the tractor
I have been watching sporadically for a couple days now, very entertaining, thanks for sharing that inquisitive spirit.
Nice Yagi antenna you whipped-up there! You can also cut up a tape measure to make flexible elements for the same.
Ha. The chopped up tape measure segments are also used for direction finders when fox hunting for transmitters. You can go rung through the undergrowth without the risk of being impaled by a ridgid element. Lighter also.
I had no idea this was even a thing and that so many people rely on these decades old satellites for communication! How nice of the US military!
I've not tested the metrics in any real comparative detail or to any standards other than the nanovna, though I'm still amazed how well my 450MHz yagi worked and works only using wooden rod with aluminum duct tape wrapping for the reflecting and directing elements. I invested in a 3D printer pen to make the mounts more adjustable for finer tuning. I never got around to making with the plastic knurled thumb screws or 3D printing, though did order and have most the parts I need if not all.
Most of those transmissions in portuguese that you've presented I assume they were made by truckers, they use some frequencies as a "team speak". And maybe... Sometimes Portuguese can be a little tricky and sound a bit Russian, phonetics are kinda similar
This is incredible... A very strangely coincidental, but resourceful use of these sats lack of security. I need to get back into radios...
NPR on 271 MHz is very common you will pick up FM local transmissions on 271 Mhz and even sometimes you will pickup shortwave transmissions, it is just a harmonic frequency. That is why you typically want to use an FM bandpass filter. IDEALLY you want to use a band pass filter that filters out everything except the band you are interested in, in this case 270mhz
Oh so this is the video where you're haunting pirates. I am an SWL from Italy, I use a superclassic omni Diamond X300 on a Yaesu FT-7800 vhf/uhf radio and I can normally pick up lots of Brazilians pirates, sometimes Russians but mostly people from Brazil. Yagi on VHF is good if you want to get a point-to-point connection, otherwise a good old simple J-pole will march quite nicely (if you only want to catch waves without considering the ROS, so not transmitting and say goodbye to the radio). I made one from various copper scraps and I can get ships and planes from 105 MHz to the 140 MHz. Though VHF are quite keen to pick up lot of noise, sometimes it's crystal clear, but I live 50 mts far from the Adriatic sea...
The idea of using a PTZ cam as a rotor is just awesome!
Cool, thanks for the info! I'm always learning more about antennas, I have an amateur license and have read some of the theory books, but it always makes more sense to me once I've actually tried it for real.
@@saveitforparts Ah, nice! I'm waiting for my license too. For now, '73 here, maybe one day we can try to catch on air, when I'll have some spare time to setup a DX (I sell marine engines... funny how we have common passions :D )
I think next time I take some vacation days I'm going to spend the entire 2 weeks just scanning, satellites, ham radio, dmr, p25 phase 2, and antenna building
"Help me Obi-Gabe....you're my only hope....."
Hi there, the main "users" on the military Fleetcom VHF frequencies around 250 ... 260 MHz will be stations from Brazil. Here in the Netherlands they are easy to monitor, with a Discone antenna, or even a "vertical" for 2m//70cm.
I heard the female say ‘obrigado’, which is Portuguese for ‘thank you’.
Cool video and concept, cheers for sharing!
PS, your man-cave looks like a sweet shop to me, lol 👌
Dude... that is so dang cool! Nice antenna too. 😁
Here's hoping another viewer can decipher some of those non-english speakers.
Every now and then I get a Portuguese commenter, but I think one of them didn't believe in satellites so who knows 😂
There’s a translation in the top comment
@@saveitforparts - Some people believe the earth is flat like their head. Its a result of having a family bush instead of a family tree LOL
If I may suggest, @7:30, when you located a pirate station, it will help the intelligibilty if you narrow your IF bandwidth, to cover the signal only. The reason your audio was "fuzzy" was that your BW is too wide.
Sat comms were my favorite back in my marine days. We didn't have a geosyncronus satelite over head for the man portable kits I used. Instead I had to kinda guess where tf it was in the sky, aim the antenna at it, and see if it would transmit.
Kind of a pain, but I liked them bc the voice comms were always crystal clear.
But for reliability it was hard to beat the old HF radio with a field expedient antenna.
Cool! It would be fun to learn more about military radios and systems. I assume most of them are encrypted these days.
@@saveitforparts Encryption is a whole other thing. Stock they are unencrypted til you load crypto. We would use unenceypted chanells to talk to civilian run range control to let them know when we were going live, when we were done shooting, how many marines were on range, etc.
Since you are a radio guy, you prob already know, but if u don't I suggest looking into omnidirectional field expedient antennas. All you need is some copper wire cut to the right length for the frequency, a means of holding that copper wire off the ground. You can get comms with anyone using that same freq within 350 mile radius.
Field expedients were only workable with HF radios due to the length ratios required to cut the copper wire. (The length of the cut has a certain ratio to go with the freq, but I have long forgotten the tables for that) Not all info I'm giving u here is gonna be 100% spot on (I've been out for ten years) so I'm just goin off of memories.
Hope this will maybe give u an idea for a video you can do.
Hello Friend! Nice video! I speak native Portuguese, and I can sure tell you that all conversations are from Brazil. You are correct that most communications are from truck drivers and, sometimes, from farmers in the middle of nowhere. I can try to translate what they speak if you want.
Thanks! A few people have commented with translations. Maybe I should have recorded longer to find something more interesting!
This is something I have been trying do with similar tech, quite a few Zombie Sats out there with no encryption on them some still with power at times (depending what and where). This content if fantastic, Love the back stories on the history of the tech the most. Thanks for the content :)
Wow, I can't imagine trying to hunt for these zombie sats. Hat's off to you for listening to them.
The language you picked up is Brazilian Portuguese, it is what we call PX, communications between truck drivers. This is soooooo nice! 😮
Not sure if you are still going to do a part 2, but I for one would love it
extremely underrated channel, I hope you don't run out of these ideas.
271.11 MHz would be a third harmonic of 90.37 MHz ... So, maybe KCCD in Moorhead?
Space Pirates is actually on LaserDisc... I managed to acquire one of the discs when a local arcade went out of business. The production values are not as good as Dragon's Lair Space Ace or Crime Patrol.
I've heard so many portuguese on those transmission, just truck drivers from brazil communication, that's actually pretty common here
Very cool nice work with stuff laying around. The show at 4:05 is a gem Flash Gordon filmed in Berlin.
It's crazy... I built a rabbit ear yagi almost the same way about 6 years ago. only thing I did different was use copper wire for the other elements. worked like a dream on 2 meters.
Incredible! You are amazing!
The voices at 7:22 in are in Brazilian Portuguese. It's a dialogue, difficult to understand, but for those curious:
Male voice (7:22):
"Uai, será que ele chegou na cidade, (des)carregado? Ou derramou no meio da estrada aqui? Tem um negócio de derramar carga na [cortado]"
By the accent, I believe he is from the state of Minas Gerais.
Translation:
"Uai, did it arrive in the city, (un)loaded? Or did it spill in the middle of the road here? There's a thing about spilling on the [cut]"
Female voice (7:27):
"[?] Só fica ligado. Fica nessa [?] aí."
Translation:
"[?] Just stay tuned. Stay in that [?] there."
Male voice (7:32):
"Positivo, positivo"
Translation:
"Positive, positive"
Female voice (7:35)
"Qualquer coisa só te chamo aqui nessa. Vou ficar ouvindo essa e a outra, tá?"
Translation:
"Anything else, I'll just call you here. I'll listen to this one and the other one, okay?"
male voice:
"Beleza, Joyce"
Translation:
"Fine, Joyce"
Male voice (9:02)
"Como que tá aí oh Jefferson? Fala com nois. Acabou de embarcar o trator agora"
Translation:
"How are you there, Jefferson? Talk to us. Just loaded the tractor now"
Male voice (9:07)
"[?] Vou dar uma carga pra nois ouvir [?] 544" (não tenho certeza se entendi certo)
Translation:
"[?] I'm going to give us a load to hear [?] 544" (not sure if I understood correctly)
By the way, I thoroughly love the channel! I also picked up satellite signals at these frequencies shown in your video, but with my biconical antenna, it was too faint for the descriminator. Just heard extremely spotty voice.
Going to build a directional.
Your channel is so much of what I want do do, but haven't got the time or skills to do.
Best channel for my morning coffee.
came to this channel originally for the boat content, but this stuff is cool to me even if i have no clue how it works. neat to see a channel out of the city i live in.
There's more boat stuff on the to-do pile, but the pile is buried under snow at the moment :-)
Yeah pretty sure I also came across this channel from the river boat series
@@saveitforparts my boat also, waist deep in snow!
In the 70's nobody used 250 MHz for anything, except all the military in the all world....
I've been able to receive these with an rtl-sdr and an omni directional scanner antenna on my roof here in central california, surprisingly strong signal. Usually Brazilians? using these repeaters from what I can tell
I want to state that all my comments are for amusement and do not intend to target the magnificent author🙏🙏🙏
Keep up your lovely videos👍👍👍
Best not to fine tune antennas while they're resting on the floor. You might get away with it, but still... Best to have them at least a little bit further away from things.
Most of the interlocutors are Brazilians, most of the things they speak are about the cargo they are managing, the word "carga" (cargo) is often. Why do I know this? Because I'm a Brazilian 🤭🤗 and I didn't know this exists, and I'm really impressed that there are so many people taking advantage of pirate transmissions. That's incredible! (I could translate most of the chats in Portuguese to you! Just ask me if you want that 😉)
Aqui no MT e no MS é muito comum, os fazendeiro e caminhoneiro tudo usa Rádio Amador.
@@DioneBatista legal! Eu não imaginava que os fazendeiros também usavam o rádio! Poderia me contar um pouco mais? Tipo, por que os fazendeiros usam rádio amador? Para se comunicar em caso de ataque de bandidos?
@@henriquelausch6999 Hoje não ABIN ;-)
@@comofaco9270 cocaina??
Wow this is so cool! I'm an electrical engineering student and would love to do some project like this in my spare time as well!
7:42 it looks like portuguese
for me they're saying something like:
"sera que ele chegou na cidade carregado ou (dont undertand the rest)?"
translation is "did he arrive in the city loaded or (i cant undertand the rest)?"
probaly a truck driver from brazil (my country yay)
and the woman said:
"(dont undertand) so fica ligado ta? fica nessa rua ai"
"stay alert ok? stay in this road"
and the guy said: "positivo, positivo"
its something like "ok, ok" in english
and the girl said: "ok qualquer coisa so me chama aqui nelson, vou ficar ouvindo ela e a outra, ta?"
translation: "ok anything just call me here nelson, Ill be listening to her and the other one, ok?"
and the guy said: "beleza, joia"
translation: "ok, thankyou" (not literal translation, but he means something like this)
To hell with neon, leather and city streets glistening with newly fallen rain from a sky colored like a TV tuned to a dead channel, that antenna aiming rig is the most cyberpunk thing I've seen in a while.
Oh my god this is so cool. Im gonna get into this. I remembered my god father was into radios and had a stack wired up in his velvet, suede gentlemanly lounge, on a few shelves. God he was a bloke and a half, cool dude.
All went over my head, but intensely fascinating.
man those guy communicatring at 9:10 are actually Brazilian truck drivers, so cool you can hear them!!
In the twin cities there's MPR News at 91.1.The third harmonic of this would be on 273 MHz.... And there's KFAI on 90.3 MHz which would have it's third harmonic at 271 MHz but that's not MPR or NPR. Probably one of these signal is loud enough for you that the filtering after the mixer in the R820T tuner of the rtlsdr dongle can't knock it down below your noise floor at ~270 MHz. And then there's just some local clock error in freq that shifts it there.
Interesting, I wouldn't have expected a side harmonic to come in that strongly. I'll have to check if other FM stations do that too!
Interesting...as I am local. I know KQRS you can pick up darn near anywhere with the wattage they put out.
Just a question, if he was picking up the third harmonic of an FM station, wouldn't the signal stay somewhat constant if he changed the direction of the antenna? Wouldn't the harmonic be coming into the antenna/system from the side and not from the direction the yagi is pointed? I hope I asked that correctly. Thank you.
I was always wondering why i pick up FM radio signals with my analog 90's TV 😁(i use it for gaming).So it is a kind of unwanted FM transmission artifact.
In 8:50 it's from Brazil. Probably some farm. I liked ur video, you gained a Brazilian subscriber.
It'll be interesting if you get a better antenna and if or how much of a difference it'll make.
It's amazing FLTSATCOM 8 is still at its operational orbit. I would have thought its stationkeeping fuel would have run out by now.
Even though there's virtually no atmospheric drag to speak of at GSO compared to LEO, and precise positioning is not strictly necessary for radio repeaters in GSO, they still had 120kg worth of station keeping hydrazine onboard. I doubt they've used much of it. If they wander about due to the gravitational influences or solar winds, not really a big deal, they'll still be there in the same general vicinity doing their thing, and orientation is a gyro stabilized affair driven by solar. Navsats and whatnot that require precise positioning will absolutely burn through their station keeping thrusters at a much higher rate, as well as having an extra bit of delta v in reserve for the end of their life cycle to transfer them up into a higher graveyard orbit, so their expected perturbations don't cause interference with newer sats taking their place. I don't know if there are plans or intentions for these sats to transfer up to a graveyard orbit, I would assume not as it's likely they would've already done so at this point.
For an Amish dude you know alot about tec !
7:26 Brazil. Truckers. 9:00 Brazil Truckers and Farmers.
both were talking about cargo, the first one was with the cargo waiting for the release via radio to go to the place to unload. and the second was asking where another person was, and that he had just loaded the tractor on Truck.
here a device called "Rádio Amador"/Amateur Radio is very popular, all truck drivers and some farmers have this device to send and receive this signals.
Damn that was actually a really good pirate accent
Came for the thumbnail, stayed for the sick radio wizardry.
You'd think people should definitely start using their Baofeng to transmit on those, if your equipment got confiscated it would be cheap to replace.
From North America you would need good power to reach those satelites without a serious yag. Only a mobile rig with 50 watts and a directional antenna in the north will work... and be spotty at best in FL.
I think the lady says "My dog has no nose!" Then the guys is like, "How does he smell?!" The lady says "Terrible." Good channel, OM, 73
Hahahahaaaa your neighbor just freaking out watching you like, “ohh shit here he goes again” keeps watching as the equipment in your yard starts moving ”what the hell is that thing. Honey come look at this shit, our neighbors setting up some experiment.” 😂
8:02
"Space pirates, I'm your host of void of space with lemon particles,Terry Gross, you're listening to NPR"
Or whatever the space equivalent of fresh air would be
All these transponders are still in government use. But using wide band modems that you will struggle to detect or even see in the waterfall display.
The majority of pirates are south american and portugese. As there is little or no enforcement of the law there by their PTT's. The last batch of crackdowns we heard about, those foung guilty were fined ~$50 and allowed to keep their equipment.
Where...?
@@jplacido9999 Brazil I think it was.
@@gonzo_the_great1675
Brazil, no doubt.
There were portuguese users too, but they were taken down by a joint operation by portuguese branch of NATO, portuguese National Guard, and Judiciary Police.
Brazil also made several operations against pirate users of Mil Sats.
There are still a few out there in the midle of nowhere....
Lol man I could uae some friends like you! I have always been the "oddball maker"/"horder of electronics etc" one of my groups. The biggest problem with being interested in so many different things that require a good bit of experience and research to understand, is that you are lucky to meet anyone in person that is into even just one of those many things. It's ts a damn miracle to meet someone that is into more than one of them....at least where I have lived. Finding the time to do all the stuff you want to is another big problem with it😁
Anyway, fun times! Keep it up man!
Great stuff man
Stumbled on your channel looking for new content, am genuinely interested and now subscribed.
Why is this illegal? This is awesome! They should allow for it if your transmit power is low enough and you dont try to use it for commercial purposes
They're military satellites, I guess the US military doesn't like people using their stuff :-P
Because the US military likes to keep back ups for its back ups.
At 7:28 I'm sure that is Brazilian Portuguese. Amazing channel!!!
Thank you tom scott for finding this.
On that feng you would need to have a programming cable and in Chirp programming software go and make the RX wider to get more recieve frequency
Thanks Wolverine 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
This is wild. Dude do more of these.
I am brazilian, and I can confirm, the audio at 7:20 are from truck drivers, I could pick up some things:
PT "Positivo... Ei, será que ele chegou na cidade carregado? ... O negócio de amarrar carga daqui."
EN "poisitive... Hey, I am wondering if he already has arrived at the city with the cargo... the thing to tie the cargo..."
PT "mó cota tá? só fica ligado. Fica nessa (?) aí. Positivo. Positivo. Qualquer coisa só te chamo aqui nessa, vou ficar ouvindo ela e a outra tá? Beleza, joia"
EN “For some time ok? Just stay tuned. Stay on this (?) there. Positive. Positive. Anything just call me here on this one, I’ll be listening here and the other one okay? ok, cool”