the Swan Lake incident is a really interesting point of history (and may be worth a video onto its own). on USSR state TV, Swan Lake was always played as the "filler" show when serious things were going down. for instance, the piece was aired while they were filling the new leader after the death of Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev, then for Cherneko, then Adropov. USSR citizens began to understand that Swan Lake meant something big was going down. So you can imagine their surprise on August 19, 1991, as tanks and troops rolled into Moscow, that Soviet state television was playing Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake on loop. It makes me wonder what was happening that date in 2010.
According to everybody’s favorite quick reference source, Wikipedia there were a few distressful things going on in Russia on 2010, some kind of relevant to current events or related to the current world stage like the signing of the Kharkiv pact, extending the lease of the then Ukrainian controlled Crimean ports which had some protests in respond, however this took place in April. Other events closer to the transmission date were the end of a season of wildfires in September and a shooting in a Chechen parlament in October.
@@AxolotlAndyyeah it was definitely Crimea. Russia had just dealt with Georgia in 2008 and was taking Crimea before an attempt at Ukraine. Putin was also intentionally using USSR propaganda because he’s trying to rebuild the empire. He might know now it’s not so easy but he’s still trying
I listen to the Buzzer often and never hear anything besides jamming and music. Very interesting to hear other recordings. Thanks for the history and all these unknowns about the Buzzer
I remember something in the seventies that we called the woodpecker. It sounded like a woodpecker and I think it was on the forty meter band but jumped around. Thank you for the video Lewis. 👍
That was the Duga over the horizon radar, Known as the russian woodpecker, Duga was well known for rendering areas of the shortwave band unusable. i believe Manchester has done several videos on it already.
@@firedogman2280 There’s now a new Russian long range HF radar. It isn’t as horrible as Woodpecker, but still annoying. On a waterfall SDR display, the intruder signal leaves a trace of varying widths that looks like a 2-D sketch of a the DNA helix.
I remember the buzzer coming in on my crystal set i made from a toilet tube and cats whisker diode back in the 1980s still listening today on 4.625.000khz
Just an hour ago I detected a message via the buzzer. Someone spoke for a minute. On a later stage the operator stand from its chair, few minutes later he came back. I didn't record the full message, but I will upload from what I've recorded.
I wonder if there were really that many more open mic incidents lately, or if worldwide listeners have just exploded to catch them all. Certainly in the 90s it seemed they were quite careful about turning the voice mic on, and it seemed separate from the mic near the buzzer machine. I know some enthusiasts found the purported old site, during the transition from UZB, abandoned but with signs of the right kind of gear and a tiny room the buzzer could’ve been in. Makes me wonder if wherever it’s set up now doesn’t have separate rooms for the operator and buzzer anymore like the maybe-original seemed to. If so, that must be torture to sit next to! But you’d think they’d be concerned about potential security breaches if listeners can hear the operator receiving a phone call…
sometimes I think the issues they have had with people speaking on an open mic... maybe its literally a live mic in a room and they just play a physical buzzer into the mic
@@rbauer961 the intended messages absolutely had their own mic they needed to push to talk on, but “accidental voice captures” seemed very rare before. Now, especially with the buzzer being “left on” during some announcements instead of switching over, makes me wonder if they’ve gone from 2 mics and a mixer/switcher to just one mic and turning off the buzzer.
Its absolutely a heartbeat as a military messaging channel, the buzzer shows that it's workig correctly, so everything is normal. However the main purpose is that if every other communication channels have faild for example in case of nuclear attack, they will transmit an special code as the locations of nuclear ICNBMs aims like Topol throughout this radio frequency. This extremely long life confidential radio station has a great maintenance budget for almost half century and is not a simple thing. I think its a horrible buzz when you know it may receive a code which can destroy all of Earth's life in less than one day !!!
for a signal that has had the shortwave world in a stranglehold for decades, the actual Buzzer transmission offices seem to be a real mickey mouse operation
Yea...he should stop using A. I. generated images. It's cringe, "cheap" and quite frankly "insulting one's inteligence". I'd rather look at pictures of antennas rather than that stuff if actual pictures are unavailable.
@@ihavecojones I think it's fine. They're labeled appropriately, and they're on topic with what's being discussed. Maybe he's just tired of showing the same images and drone videos? Cut the guy some slack lol.
I heard the Buzzer first on a Unitra desktop radio, made in Communist Poland. This radio only had continuous coverage of around 5.8-10 MHz, but it had the Buzzer on something like 9715 kHz, I think that was 4625 x2 + 465 kHz IF frequency. I could pinpoint that frequency quite easily, knowing frequencies of other stations nearby. 9705 had Radio Free Asia in Vietnamese in the 1400z hour, and La Voix du Sahel from Niger active for a year or two, audible in the evenings. And 9725 had Trans World Radio in Russian & some Belarusian via Austria, also at 1400z. And there was Tunisia on 9720. That was in late 2000s, so I remember the previous, more "lively" Buzzer, and its continuous wobble at 59th minute of every hour. So spooky! 😬 Frankly, of all those signals mentioned, only Buzzer is still on air today XD
I can never get to hear this, am tuned to 4.625.000 and on USB but I just get static, what am I doing wrong please as this signal fascinates me. Thanks.
I have a recording that actually proves the existense of that Diesel generator. Also have a record of a weather report. And I believe I still have the longest ever messages on Buzzer still on my channel.
@OskarEhmsen Please google: "The most interesting Buzzer marker breakdown ever" This will give you my reddit post about the event, I included the recording, and in a post below I also added photos of the Diesel generator at the old Buzzer site in Povarovo.
@OskarEhmsen Please google: The most interesting Buzzer marker breakdown ever" This will give you my reddit post of the event, there's a recording, and in a post below there are photos of the Diesel generator at old Buzzer in Povarovo.
I am puzzled why some sites have also logged the buzzer at 6810 kHz A1A (CW), and indeed I can hear signals at 6810.5 today (13 Aug 2024). I assume it hops around sometimes?
Is the opening statement a mea culpa ? In which case I own up to being one of those who assiduously watch your videos on the buzzer even though I really don't know why lol.
Recording off the air is pretty much a standard of most SDR setups. That isn't the problem. The problem is propagation. Unless you are living in Russia in line of site of the buzzer transmitter, you are not going to receive it 24 hours per day. Depending on where you are, you will likely get no more than about 8 or 9 hours per day. The Buzzer youtube streams try to get around this by using different public SDRs as their sources, but it rarely works out.
That jammer is the CIS-12 a system that send a powerfull jammer signal if the frequentie is blocked from a pirate or something. They don’t use it very often but sometimes there can be e very powerfull orher signal not from the buzzer so its a battle they started
Probably a coastal radio station broadcasting a channel marker in SITOR-B data mode. The format is three short bursts of data followed by a three letter ident. 4.2075 is the frequency for many coastal stations around the world. If you can decode the morse ident I can tell you which one it is.
10:44 LNR4 - isn't it a reference to the Lughansk People's Republic (It will be something like Luhasnka Narodna Respublika in Russian)? It's one of the two separatist republic in Donyetsk Area of Ukraine. DOCU4 can also be connected to Donyetsk in some way. It's 2018 so 4 years into the war.
@@Nwiers if indeed you are, I salute you! For something silly to play, I suggest Der Fuhrer's Face by Spike Jones. Look up the history of that song, it's very funny.
It was a broadcast with some russian names. The names describe features and psychology related to names in the USSR. The reason is they will make you do things. Kinda russian spy's and soldiers
@@alexhajnal107 I think there is some regulation that if a radio channel stays unused for an extended amount of time, it will be given to "someone" else. This might be their way of keeping the channel alive.
Geneva convention should add special protections for silly radio shit talking where they are not allowed to be targeted. The lads on both sides need entertainment in their depressing mud holes.
@@lililililililili8667 Yeah, instead of sending them Javelin and Tow missiles, we should round up the gazillion cb radio laying around and send them over there! 😁
@@PaulaBean Yes, I wondered. But there be so many choices, so much bandwidth. I still don't get it. So they've staked out a frequency full of noise. Oh dear. So they have it to use when needed? I'm so sick of Russians. All they do is lie, cheat, murder and destroy. Well I too can make noise. Lots of it.
@@greggoog7559 Goebbels said, "Propaganda works best when those who are being manipulated are confident they are acting on their own free will." Or are you just being paid per lie?
@@2nostromo Unfortunately, I'm not being paid to lie, no. I would probably consider this immoral though and not accept the job. And your Goebbels quote is of course very applicable, although not in the sense that you think: it should be extended to: "Propaganda works best when those who are being manipulated are confident that it's the OTHER side who's spreading it" 😉 I'm not blaming you at all -- The West (i.e. NATO countries) have perfected the art of propaganda to such a degree that it's almost impossible to detect except if you essentially spend 24 hours a day reading news from ALL sources, like I (un)fortunately can. (no, I'm not jobless, I'm just SO smart that a few hours a day of work make me rich 😁) Cheers.
approximately they say the following Hello, I can hear you -And I can hear you perfectly -And I can hear perfectly well -But what's the problem -We don't know what the problem is -well, we will check or you will check with your (next, an illegible word) -Well, how can we control it, because we can hear each other, maybe the generator is broken -Let's not discuss this here, let's go to the phone -Yeah well There are several female voices that I find difficult to separate .Their manner of conversation is like that of two frivolous ladies
Hold on, this AI generated art (according to you) could actually be based on factual representations of Russian military operatives. If true, I want to be working with those delightful young ladies (ding, dong) 😅
The "LNR4" callsign could refer to LNR as the acronym for "luhansk people's pepublic" - ruzzia's provisional occupational pseudo-government tumor they formed by taking Ukrainian territories in the Luhansk region, similar to transnistria in Moldova. The sister tumor is known as DNR as in "donetsk people's republic".
To be honest, I like the AI-generated images. When I started as an SWL back in the mid 1970s, I would hear these kind of transmissions all the time. Due to the fact the USSR and its affiliates were still considered “the enemy” so to speak, I always imagined some poor unfortunate soul drawing the short straw and being forced to sit in a dingy metal shack or a bunker in front of a rack of ancient radio gear as an operator on the graveyard shift. I would imagine these people sending coded or encrypted messages to someone… just one single person who was tasked with listening on a random frequency for instructions from the head-office. In other words, a “KGB Spy.” In my mind, these scenarios always took place in the middle of the night and it was always raining or snowing wherever these stations were located. I really didn’t understand time-zones at a young ago, so if it was 2:00 in the morning for me, it was same for the radio operator sending messages from the Ukraine in radio bunker way out in the middle of nowhere where it wouldn’t be detected. The first time I heard a numbers station, I was scared to death because I thought I had intercepted a Russian transmission I wasn’t supposed to hear. Regardless of the creepy radio fantasies of a 10-year-old boy, seeing the AI images kinda gives me an actual picture of what I had imagined as a child.
The hell is going on with the phonetic alphabet the russkies are using 🤣 literally hilarious ETA: the heck kind of equipment are the russians using, come on do better 🤣 ETA2: The letter “z” is pronounced “zee”. It is not pronounced “zed”. That is simply a fact and if you have an issue with it I urge you to take it up with the US government. thanks!
Here is the cause of September 2nd 2010 transmission: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Mardakert_clashes At that time Medvedev is the president of Russia, and is about to visit the region in order to stabilize situation. However, clashes still happen right before, and Russia let's Armenia know that it is gonna get punished. They do so by playing Swan Lake, as it is a known Russian secret code of announcing that point of no return has been reached and Russia has decided to use force. Just as it played Swan Lake right before invasion of Ukraine. That said, the code does not tell what particular force will be used. Just that it will be.
The sound of the Buzzer sliding into castors-up mode is pure class.
the Swan Lake incident is a really interesting point of history (and may be worth a video onto its own). on USSR state TV, Swan Lake was always played as the "filler" show when serious things were going down. for instance, the piece was aired while they were filling the new leader after the death of Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev, then for Cherneko, then Adropov. USSR citizens began to understand that Swan Lake meant something big was going down.
So you can imagine their surprise on August 19, 1991, as tanks and troops rolled into Moscow, that Soviet state television was playing Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake on loop. It makes me wonder what was happening that date in 2010.
According to everybody’s favorite quick reference source, Wikipedia there were a few distressful things going on in Russia on 2010, some kind of relevant to current events or related to the current world stage like the signing of the Kharkiv pact, extending the lease of the then Ukrainian controlled Crimean ports which had some protests in respond, however this took place in April.
Other events closer to the transmission date were the end of a season of wildfires in September and a shooting in a Chechen parlament in October.
@@AxolotlAndyyeah it was definitely Crimea. Russia had just dealt with Georgia in 2008 and was taking Crimea before an attempt at Ukraine. Putin was also intentionally using USSR propaganda because he’s trying to rebuild the empire. He might know now it’s not so easy but he’s still trying
I listen to the Buzzer often and never hear anything besides jamming and music. Very interesting to hear other recordings. Thanks for the history and all these unknowns about the Buzzer
We can never really get enough of the Buzzer, so keep 'em coming, Lewis!
Thank you! Keep up the great work. 👍👍👍👍👍👍😊😊
Thank you too! I appreciate you!!
"mostly by me" 🤣 Great video!
I remember something in the seventies that we called the woodpecker. It sounded like a woodpecker and I think it was on the forty meter band but jumped around. Thank you for the video Lewis. 👍
That was the Duga over the horizon radar, Known as the russian woodpecker, Duga was well known for rendering areas of the shortwave band unusable. i believe Manchester has done several videos on it already.
@@firedogman2280 There’s now a new Russian long range HF radar. It isn’t as horrible as Woodpecker, but still annoying. On a waterfall SDR display, the intruder signal leaves a trace of varying widths that looks like a 2-D sketch of a the DNA helix.
@@wtmayhew Whats the frequency, I think ive listened to something similar
Worth a listen at this very moment - intermittent start stop buzzing, music, apparent messages.
Thanks!
Thank you so much!
I love that you are covering all this, and in so much detail.
I remember the buzzer coming in on my crystal set i made from a toilet tube and cats whisker diode back in the 1980s still listening today on 4.625.000khz
surely it was more than a cats whisker and a toilet tube, right?
@@homeopathicfossil-fuels4789lol got visuals of wires to toilet lol, I’m probably mis reading or missing the meaning tho lol
it had two sophisticated pipe cleaners as an antenna.
Just an hour ago I detected a message via the buzzer. Someone spoke for a minute. On a later stage the operator stand from its chair, few minutes later he came back. I didn't record the full message, but I will upload from what I've recorded.
Most underrated channel on UA-cam!!! I am surprised you haven't way more people subbed man only a matter of time keep it up !!
Outstanding and detailed video, thanks!
Thanks as always
Bro the iPhone timer going off made the buzzer so much less scary thank you for that
Maybe the Mic Failure was a tribute to Norman Collier?
Yes, I thought that too 😂
😂😂
Thank you, I literally just laughed out loud!
One for the kids there🤣
Very British idea 😂😂
those are some very handsome signal operators, Lewis :)
Lewis: Your _Buzzer_ vids are ALWAYS interesting...👍
original-1990 Buzzer has definite Sputnik overtones
I wonder if there were really that many more open mic incidents lately, or if worldwide listeners have just exploded to catch them all.
Certainly in the 90s it seemed they were quite careful about turning the voice mic on, and it seemed separate from the mic near the buzzer machine. I know some enthusiasts found the purported old site, during the transition from UZB, abandoned but with signs of the right kind of gear and a tiny room the buzzer could’ve been in.
Makes me wonder if wherever it’s set up now doesn’t have separate rooms for the operator and buzzer anymore like the maybe-original seemed to. If so, that must be torture to sit next to! But you’d think they’d be concerned about potential security breaches if listeners can hear the operator receiving a phone call…
Another interesting video Lewis
Love this, great info ❤
sometimes I think the issues they have had with people speaking on an open mic... maybe its literally a live mic in a room and they just play a physical buzzer into the mic
That’s exactly what it was back in the day. An open mic and some sort of analog noise generator.
I can't help but picture some poor old babushka having to sit with her finger on the transmit button and "brrrrr"ing into the mic 😅
@@mortyrosenstein4211but it seemed to be in its own room back then, kind of weird we’re hearing operators taking phone calls regularly nowadays…
@@kaitlyn__LProbably a case of relying on a switch on the microphone and less professional operation
@@rbauer961 the intended messages absolutely had their own mic they needed to push to talk on, but “accidental voice captures” seemed very rare before. Now, especially with the buzzer being “left on” during some announcements instead of switching over, makes me wonder if they’ve gone from 2 mics and a mixer/switcher to just one mic and turning off the buzzer.
Its absolutely a heartbeat as a military messaging channel, the buzzer shows that it's workig correctly, so everything is normal. However the main purpose is that if every other communication channels have faild for example in case of nuclear attack, they will transmit an special code as the locations of nuclear ICNBMs aims like Topol throughout this radio frequency.
This extremely long life confidential radio station has a great maintenance budget for almost half century and is not a simple thing. I think its a horrible buzz when you know it may receive a code which can destroy all of Earth's life in less than one day !!!
Fascinating
Excellent. Thank You 👍
for a signal that has had the shortwave world in a stranglehold for decades, the actual Buzzer transmission offices seem to be a real mickey mouse operation
I've never heard UVB76 "moo" like that before.
I need to sample it for my growing collection of audible mechanical failures! (Most are eg a tape deck, or turntable, motor failure while playing.)
Nice video Lewis! 🙂
Thanks Lewis
Fascinating!
Oh- What's the two tower site shown please? Unusual it has the two live towers connected by the horizontal.
The AI soviet radar operators 😭
Yea...he should stop using A. I. generated images.
It's cringe, "cheap" and quite frankly "insulting one's inteligence".
I'd rather look at pictures of antennas rather than that stuff if actual pictures are unavailable.
@@ihavecojones I think it's fine. They're labeled appropriately, and they're on topic with what's being discussed. Maybe he's just tired of showing the same images and drone videos? Cut the guy some slack lol.
I heard the Buzzer first on a Unitra desktop radio, made in Communist Poland. This radio only had continuous coverage of around 5.8-10 MHz, but it had the Buzzer on something like 9715 kHz, I think that was 4625 x2 + 465 kHz IF frequency. I could pinpoint that frequency quite easily, knowing frequencies of other stations nearby. 9705 had Radio Free Asia in Vietnamese in the 1400z hour, and La Voix du Sahel from Niger active for a year or two, audible in the evenings. And 9725 had Trans World Radio in Russian & some Belarusian via Austria, also at 1400z. And there was Tunisia on 9720. That was in late 2000s, so I remember the previous, more "lively" Buzzer, and its continuous wobble at 59th minute of every hour. So spooky! 😬
Frankly, of all those signals mentioned, only Buzzer is still on air today XD
Great video
I can never get to hear this, am tuned to 4.625.000 and on USB but I just get static, what am I doing wrong please as this signal fascinates me. Thanks.
I have a recording that actually proves the existense of that Diesel generator. Also have a record of a weather report. And I believe I still have the longest ever messages on Buzzer still on my channel.
Where can i find it ? Or can you send it me ?
Link?
Can you upload that proof of the Diesel Generator
@OskarEhmsen Please google: "The most interesting Buzzer marker breakdown ever"
This will give you my reddit post about the event, I included the recording, and in a post below I also added photos of the Diesel generator at the old Buzzer site in Povarovo.
@OskarEhmsen Please google: The most interesting Buzzer marker breakdown ever"
This will give you my reddit post of the event, there's a recording, and in a post below there are photos of the Diesel generator at old Buzzer in Povarovo.
Thanks RM. You are Amazing with your Radio Communication Information**** Take Care***
The buzzer Warble is just a Russian car crying to get up to speed 😂
Looks more like a push to talk that not doing well and sometimes activated itself
Nice video.
I am puzzled why some sites have also logged the buzzer at 6810 kHz A1A (CW), and indeed I can hear signals at 6810.5 today (13 Aug 2024). I assume it hops around sometimes?
Is the opening statement a mea culpa ? In which case I own up to being one of those who assiduously watch your videos on the buzzer even though I really don't know why lol.
Someone with the know how and the hardware needs to setup 24 hour recording of the buzzer.
Recording off the air is pretty much a standard of most SDR setups. That isn't the problem. The problem is propagation. Unless you are living in Russia in line of site of the buzzer transmitter, you are not going to receive it 24 hours per day. Depending on where you are, you will likely get no more than about 8 or 9 hours per day. The Buzzer youtube streams try to get around this by using different public SDRs as their sources, but it rarely works out.
From UVB-76 is now also a jammer transmitting, and St Petersburg a spoof jammer. Which effects civilian air travel.
Affects.
That jammer is the CIS-12 a system that send a powerfull jammer signal if the frequentie is blocked from a pirate or something. They don’t use it very often but sometimes there can be e very powerfull orher signal not from the buzzer so its a battle they started
Yesterday I heard a strange signal followed by three letters in morse code on the frequency of 4.207 USB, does anyone know what it is?
Probably a coastal radio station broadcasting a channel marker in SITOR-B data mode. The format is three short bursts of data followed by a three letter ident. 4.2075 is the frequency for many coastal stations around the world. If you can decode the morse ident I can tell you which one it is.
@@matthaxx7137 Thank you my friend for the information, morse code is three letters E i H
8:48 What kind of molten plastic AI generated mixing panel is that?!?
Is there something? Involving the dead hand. Associated with this station?
If you consider Mariupol Base as part of the dead hand, then yes
never was
the warbling at ~4:20 noise triggered me but instead of anger or rage it was pure fear
I was listening alone in the small hours when I first heard that top of the hour warble. My first thought was “Oh s hit, that doesn’t sound good!”
4:30 not an expert, but isn’t the wobble just to identify the time in the field as a spy
You've gotta stop using the AI stuff. Would rather see your shots of antennae you've already aired, than see an opportunity for an artist go to AI.
I like the pics, it contributes to the story tmo
if he couldn't afford manual art, the opportunity never existed
10:44
LNR4 - isn't it a reference to the Lughansk People's Republic (It will be something like Luhasnka Narodna Respublika in Russian)? It's one of the two separatist republic in Donyetsk Area of Ukraine.
DOCU4 can also be connected to Donyetsk in some way. It's 2018 so 4 years into the war.
Thanks or this video (and audio).
Mostly by me! 😂👍😁😎
I dare not set up a web SDR as it will be inundated with buzzer listeners 😆
There are some on yt called thebuzzerchannel hey has a livestream
Buzzer is submarine 'bsckup' freq... Thats why its used so rarely
4:40 fein type ahh beat
Maybe the Z was misheard as V - they said U Zee B, rather than U Zed B and the Zee was misheard as V!
What are the names of the equivalent Cyrillic letters?
@@b43xoit UVB correspond to the letters 'УВБ' in Cyrillic
"You-Vee-Bee" can sound a lot like "You-Zee-Bee", depending on how anyone pronounces their Z's
Just wondering... if one had a pirate station, what frequency and what would you play on it?
Just play over the same 4625.00khz or a little above of under 😉 i’m not one of the pirate’s or maybe i am 😶
@@Nwiers if indeed you are, I salute you! For something silly to play, I suggest Der Fuhrer's Face by Spike Jones. Look up the history of that song, it's very funny.
@@christopherlewis1847 i gonna look at it maybe tonight i will put that song on 💯
It was a broadcast with some russian names. The names describe features and psychology related to names in the USSR. The reason is they will make you do things. Kinda russian spy's and soldiers
That Buzzer FART... awesome.
Why don't you explain how you know the call sign is changed?
You hear the change on transmissions?
@@RingwayManchester didn't hear it. Send me a timestamp.
No… listening to the transmissions revealed the call sign changes, which is how we know it changed!
17/12/24. Hope you will analyse this very important and baZed message from the UVB-76
So at the end of the day, noone seems to have the faintest idea what the purpose of these broadcasts on 4625 are actually for?
Keeping the frequency in use.
@@PaulaBean But for what potential future use?
@@alexhajnal107 Numbers.
@@alexhajnal107 I think there is some regulation that if a radio channel stays unused for an extended amount of time, it will be given to "someone" else. This might be their way of keeping the channel alive.
“Normal people” 😅
0:01 Well, that's the pot calling the kettle black.
0:04 Oh. Carry on, then.
Which transmitter site images did you use for the beginning of this video?
Maybe the Russian were trolling us!
Can I listen on a quanseng kv 58?
What's new on the Ukraine front, Lewis? Are those cb'ers still trolling each other!
Geneva convention should add special protections for silly radio shit talking where they are not allowed to be targeted. The lads on both sides need entertainment in their depressing mud holes.
@@lililililililili8667 Yeah, instead of sending them Javelin and Tow missiles, we should round up the gazillion cb radio laying around and send them over there! 😁
This has got to be an expense to a country already feeling the squeeze. What's in it for them?
Keeping the frequency in use.
@@PaulaBean Yes, I wondered. But there be so many choices, so much bandwidth. I still don't get it. So they've staked out a frequency full of noise. Oh dear. So they have it to use when needed? I'm so sick of Russians. All they do is lie, cheat, murder and destroy. Well I too can make noise. Lots of it.
Russia is, in contrast to the west, NOT feeling a squeeze.
@@greggoog7559 Goebbels said, "Propaganda works best when those who are being manipulated are confident they are acting on their own free will." Or are you just being paid per lie?
@@2nostromo Unfortunately, I'm not being paid to lie, no. I would probably consider this immoral though and not accept the job. And your Goebbels quote is of course very applicable, although not in the sense that you think: it should be extended to: "Propaganda works best when those who are being manipulated are confident that it's the OTHER side who's spreading it" 😉 I'm not blaming you at all -- The West (i.e. NATO countries) have perfected the art of propaganda to such a degree that it's almost impossible to detect except if you essentially spend 24 hours a day reading news from ALL sources, like I (un)fortunately can. (no, I'm not jobless, I'm just SO smart that a few hours a day of work make me rich 😁) Cheers.
Great video very interesting thankyou
Is it plausible that this was an aircraft beacon at one point?
8:46 Russian women have weird thumbs?
AI isn't that good with fingers, thumbs and letters.
buzzing!
It’s an elf antenna receiver
Great video & I thought the AI generated visuals were excellent.
Agents receiving messages.
Imagine being some lowly Russia tech and gaging your every mistake recorded for posterity.
Can anyone translate what they're saying at the 13:00 mark?
approximately they say the following
Hello, I can hear you
-And I can hear you perfectly
-And I can hear perfectly well
-But what's the problem
-We don't know what the problem is
-well, we will check or you will check with your (next, an illegible word)
-Well, how can we control it, because we can hear each other, maybe the generator is broken
-Let's not discuss this here, let's go to the phone
-Yeah well
There are several female voices that I find difficult to separate .Their manner of conversation is like that of two frivolous ladies
Hold on, this AI generated art (according to you) could actually be based on factual representations of Russian military operatives. If true, I want to be working with those delightful young ladies (ding, dong) 😅
If this guy disapear we all know he know to much 🤨
Which promts u use for the ai pictures?
Something with 'lots of analog meters' and 'molten plastic microphone mixing consoles' 🤪
Those AI pictures are actually quite good.
I thought you weren't doing any more AI backgrounds on your videos? 🤔
Robinson Maria Hernandez Joseph Gonzalez Ruth
Fcc did nothing
if anyone can translate the Russian verbiage, please do.
The "LNR4" callsign could refer to LNR as the acronym for "luhansk people's pepublic" - ruzzia's provisional occupational pseudo-government tumor they formed by taking Ukrainian territories in the Luhansk region, similar to transnistria in Moldova. The sister tumor is known as DNR as in "donetsk people's republic".
Young Deborah Harris Jason Taylor Betty
Anderson William Williams Ronald Brown Frank
Jackson Gary Taylor Cynthia Williams Susan
You using AI gen'd images?
*_HACK THE PLANET!!!_*
Eh?
tenalp eht kach
Great film
No more AI derived images, please. It’s everywhere and getting tired. Real tired… it’s the polar opposite of creativity.
To be honest, I like the AI-generated images. When I started as an SWL back in the mid 1970s, I would hear these kind of transmissions all the time. Due to the fact the USSR and its affiliates were still considered “the enemy” so to speak, I always imagined some poor unfortunate soul drawing the short straw and being forced to sit in a dingy metal shack or a bunker in front of a rack of ancient radio gear as an operator on the graveyard shift. I would imagine these people sending coded or encrypted messages to someone… just one single person who was tasked with listening on a random frequency for instructions from the head-office. In other words, a “KGB Spy.” In my mind, these scenarios always took place in the middle of the night and it was always raining or snowing wherever these stations were located. I really didn’t understand time-zones at a young ago, so if it was 2:00 in the morning for me, it was same for the radio operator sending messages from the Ukraine in radio bunker way out in the middle of nowhere where it wouldn’t be detected. The first time I heard a numbers station, I was scared to death because I thought I had intercepted a Russian transmission I wasn’t supposed to hear. Regardless of the creepy radio fantasies of a 10-year-old boy, seeing the AI images kinda gives me an actual picture of what I had imagined as a child.
i think much like the US military, all those russian troops are also just sitting around boring offices trying to stay awake until their next break
The hell is going on with the phonetic alphabet the russkies are using 🤣 literally hilarious
ETA: the heck kind of equipment are the russians using, come on do better 🤣
ETA2: The letter “z” is pronounced “zee”. It is not pronounced “zed”. That is simply a fact and if you have an issue with it I urge you to take it up with the US government. thanks!
What country is the language English named after?
Here is the cause of September 2nd 2010 transmission:
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Mardakert_clashes
At that time Medvedev is the president of Russia, and is about to visit the region in order to stabilize situation. However, clashes still happen right before, and Russia let's Armenia know that it is gonna get punished. They do so by playing Swan Lake, as it is a known Russian secret code of announcing that point of no return has been reached and Russia has decided to use force. Just as it played Swan Lake right before invasion of Ukraine.
That said, the code does not tell what particular force will be used. Just that it will be.
Ever Heard of the DARK KNIGHT SATELLITE..! ?
Yes. It's also known as complete twaddle.
Remember it well. I started radio 1978 so I remember this very well ,love the video thanks George in Stoke 📻📡📟⛏️