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Recording the back of my scanner ... weird voices
I turned my scanner onto a particular "dead" frequency (actually, it
doesn't matter which frequency - every one I tried produced the same results) and of course heard nothing but static (and of course the squelch was 1 or 2 because anything higher would mute out the sound). I then plugged my IC recorder (digital voice recorder) into the back of the scanner and pressed record. I uploaded the recording to my computer with Adobe Audition and amplified the sound, and could hear human voices (this was confirmed by various witnesses) saying things that would have me in doubt that I was picking up a stray broadcast. Words were used like "ghosts", "spirit", the "n" word, along with meaningless dribble and weird animal sounds. This was in the same back bedroom where I set up my RF signal generator, scanner, and other recording equipment to mimic the 70s Spiricom "Mark IV" experiment. My question is this: can a digital recorder pick up voices through a frequency if plugged into the back of the scanner (of human origin) that cannot be heard through the scanner's speaker? The same recording was done of the room with the white noise of the dead frequency in the background and entirely different results were produced, with the voices sounding less monotone and more like others were in the room talking. Of course, it doesn't help that I was doing paranormal research using the digital recorder at a desolated black cemetery in town here and abruptly stopped to focus on 2-way communication as opposed to EVPs. Any way to easily explain away the voices that show up on the recording of the static/frequency but not the static/frequency itself when listened to in real-time? |
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