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Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard in the1960s
Greetings:
Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some considerable power, with a very memorable sound. This will be a bit difficult to describe and I wonder if some folks would have audio recordings of spectrum surveillance from the 1960s for an actual sample, but in lieu of that I will try to convey a sense of what it was. I had always assumed that it was photo transmissions by the wire services, but listening to modern equivalents I have doubts; it actually sounds more like the early telephone voice scrambling systems that were acoustically coupled to the handset, and which produced a continuous noise irrespective of voice level. The sound on the air was much like hearing several P51 fighters approaching at high airspeed and props not in phase; the spectral power is mostly in the range of about 200 Hz to 500 Hz with a varying heterodyne of several Hz. It had a bandwidth of at least 25 kHz (can't say more precisely due to the cheap receivers I had at the time). I don't remember the frequencies, but at the time I would have been concentrating on monitoring 3 Mhz to about 12 Mhz, and these signals were strong at all hours on perhaps a dozen different frequencies. I always regarded them as annoying QRM. I did little SWLing from the mid '70s until somewhat recently, and of course there is nothing like this heard nowadays. At the time, my QTH was about 25 miles from the largest National Guard training camp in the midwest and there were four USAF bases within 200 miles as well, so it could well have been some modulation mode used by the military. I would really enjoy knowing if others remember a signal like this and knew its origins. Regards, Michael |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard inthe 1960s
msg wrote:
Greetings: Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some considerable power, with a very memorable sound. snip Thanks for the replies. I was surprised to discover these posts from an archived mailing list that described my signal in similar terms: From Sat Sep 9 13:18:00 1995 From: Subject: Coded Signal Identification ? Message-ID: Chameleon.4.01.2.950908231744.jproc@jproc Dear BA's, Back in the 1960's, I remember hearing very loud signals in the HF bands which sounded exactly like piston aircraft engines. Also evident, was a bit of alternating Doppler shift in the sound. Someone once told me this was some sort of high speed, coded message circuit. By the 70's or 80's, it looked like all of these signals vanished from the bands. Can anyone identify what I was receiving? Regards, ------------------------------------- Jerry Proc VE3FAB E-mail: Radio Restoration Volunteer HMCS Haida, Toronto Ontario From Sat Sep 9 13:18:00 1995 From: Subject: Re. Coded signal ident. Message-ID: to: Hello Jerry. The "aircraft engine" signals you used to hear weren't necessarily coded. These beasts were VFT, or Voice Frequency Telegraphy. Essentially, they were stacks of 8, 16, or 24 narrow shift AFSK signals that were used to modulate an SSB transmitter; i.e., they were multiplexed RTTY. The reason most of 'em disappeared (yes, there are still a few around) is that these point to point circuits have mostly moved to satellite. BTW, thereis a 50 channel version of the same scheme on the birds. 73's, Tom, K9TA From Sat Sep 9 13:18:00 1995 From: Steve Ellington Subject: Re. Coded signal ident. Message-ID: Pine.SOL.3.91.950909103627.2439A-100000@iglou The "aircraft engine" signals you used to hear weren't necessarily coded. These beasts were VFT, or Voice Frequency Telegraphy. Aw nuts! When I was a kid I had it all figured out that those were communist jamming stations. I would carefully tune around them trying to hear the Jammed broadcast to no avail. Later on I just decided they were really airplanes. Once, me and a buddy used that noise to record a skit for a school play involving some aircraft. I prefer to go on believing they are airplanes. :*o Steve At the time, I didn't associate the sound with aircraft engines since it was much more discordant and had a very aggressive quality when heard on AM through a wide filter. I used to hear the sound in nightmares... If anyone has this sound preserved in recordings from that era, I would appreciate the chance to hear it again and analyze it. Regards, Michael msg _at_ cybertheque _dot_ org |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard in the 1960s
On Jul 19, 11:50 am, BDK wrote:
(snip) It's an excellent time waster..if you have the patience. Sadly, starting in the late 80's, a lot of the good stuff, like press photos and ship traffic began to disappear. That's because it all went to satellites. Satellites are much more efficient at digital transmission. Satellite reception for home use still has a way to go, but satellite usage for data transmission has just about taken over except when the military wants to be unpredictable and keep potential eavesdroppers (such as Iran or North Korea) off guard. If you hear any sort of data today, it's almost always military. Voice HF utes are mainly used in international airplane travel and sometimes for older ship to shore rescue dispatch. (The Canadians still seem to rely on HF a lot for ship rescues.) The planes and Canadian rescue dispatch from the maritimes is ok, but can get boring especially if you don't know the jargon. I never really got into listening to the cops and the firefighters, most of what they do is pretty dull. Spectacular fires and frantic "officer down" calls are pretty rare. It got to be that the scanner craze of the 70s petered out and the only ones listening were the crooks, in order to avoid the cops. When Johnny Law realized that, they replaced their radios, kicking them up to the Ghz range and making the equipment to recieve the "trunks" costly and hard to find. Nowadays only the old scanner diehards listen to the public servants, and the crooks aren't organized enough to have somebody listening with a Trunktracker at a base QTH and then radio info out to the field. I suppose that Mara Salvatrucha and some of the more organized drug gangs could pull it off, but they usually don't get beyond cell phone level of electronic difficulty. |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard in the 1960s
"msg" wrote in message ... Greetings: Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some considerable power, with a very memorable sound. This will be a bit difficult to describe and I wonder if some folks would have audio recordings of spectrum surveillance from the 1960s for an actual sample, but in lieu of that I will try to convey a sense of what it was. I had always assumed that it was photo transmissions by the wire services, but listening to modern equivalents I have doubts; it actually sounds more like the early telephone voice scrambling systems that were acoustically coupled to the handset, and which produced a continuous noise irrespective of voice level. The sound on the air was much like hearing several P51 fighters approaching at high airspeed and props not in phase; the spectral power is mostly in the range of about 200 Hz to 500 Hz with a varying heterodyne of several Hz. It had a bandwidth of at least 25 kHz (can't say more precisely due to the cheap receivers I had at the time). I don't remember the frequencies, but at the time I would have been concentrating on monitoring 3 Mhz to about 12 Mhz, and these signals were strong at all hours on perhaps a dozen different frequencies. I always regarded them as annoying QRM. I did little SWLing from the mid '70s until somewhat recently, and of course there is nothing like this heard nowadays. At the time, my QTH was about 25 miles from the largest National Guard training camp in the midwest and there were four USAF bases within 200 miles as well, so it could well have been some modulation mode used by the military. I would really enjoy knowing if others remember a signal like this and knew its origins. Regards, Michael I remember what you are talking about. When I was a preteen in the late 60's using a cheap shortwave receiver we heard things such that we naturally said, "That sounds like an airplane." Sounded like someone left the mike open in the cockpit of an airplane. We suspected that they probably weren't airplanes because there never was a voice and who would just transmit airplane noise. Most likely they were, as others have said, VFT or something like it. They were almost certainly a Frequency Division Multiplexing or Frequency Diversity system, i.e. multiple carriers stacked in frequency, each modulated (with either PSK or FSK) and shifted in time relative to each other. The diversity is usefull against the frequency selective multipath fading of HF propagation. If multipath causes a dropout of one carrier the info is still available in the other carriers. I'm a little surprised to think they had that technology back then but maybe I shouldn't be. Ionospheric multipath fading can also give it a doppler-like sound, as if it were airplanes diving and banking. You can sometimes hear signals like you describe today. There is something like it now at 11455 kHz, s5, 04:55 utc, in socal. I hear VFT at 11010.55 and 11499 kHz occasionally. I have demodulated them down to bits and then run autocorrelations. The autocorrelations were flat indicating that they are encrypted. There are many utes using OFDM these days. They sound similar but sound more flat, more whitenoise-like. I've heard them at: 4.28480 4.5905 4.81020 5.0175 6.39250 6.39850 6.42320 6.4345 6.76525 6.84272 8.4884 8.541 8.553 8.6255 8.646 12.7243 12.805 13.41050 16.9435 17.07750 17.08250 17.098 all in MHz, all USB. If you find any old recordings I'd be interested in hearing them too. -- rb |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard inthe 1960s
Ron Baker, Pluralitas! wrote:
"msg" wrote in message ... Greetings: Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some snip Thanks Ron for your detailed reply. Some folks have reported those signals to be loud and harsh (high power) and not associated them with airplane engine sounds, as was also my impression of them -- the transmitters must have been nearby or very high power but who were the users (in a non-suburban town of 30,000 people why a dozen or more such signals)? As I had mentioned, I lived near a large Army training camp and thus suspected a military origin but also wonder if they had commercial users such as news wires to the media (newspaper, radio), telephone company, etc. There are many utes using OFDM these days. They sound similar but sound more flat, more whitenoise-like. I've heard them at: 4.28480 snip freq. list Please listen to two examples I just recorded, the filenames encode the freq. and date/time: http://www.cybertheque.org/homebrew/rcvr/audio I have heard this mode even on WEFAX frequencies during idle times. It is certainly pervasive on HF and not at all like the old signals. I had assumed by the spectral quality and frequency hopping character of some examples that this was a sort of spread spectrum signal. Anyone hearing an example of older VFT signals currently on the air, please post a freq. and/or record some audio. Regards, Michael |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard in the 1960s
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Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard in th...
On Jul 20, 1:02 pm, wrote:
www.scanningusa.com I own two scanners and I listen to them once in a while. That, www.cyberteque.org/homebrew/rcvr/audio site,,,, (I have heard those sounds before on shortwave radio.Cut that 48k one to an email and send it to George Noory and tell him it's coming from that bottomless hole in the Northwest, or wherever it's suppose to be.He would believe it too. cuhulin Cuhulin, Q - Can you tell me what this Noise Sounds like ? R - Well you are right it - Sounds exactly like Noise to me. :o) doh ~ RHF |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard inth...
Well, sometimes my little doggy, she snores soooo LOUD on her couch, it
sounds like a Freightrain. cuhulin |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard inthe 1960s
LORAN?
Northe wrote: Michael, msg wrote: Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some considerable power, with a very memorable sound. The sound on the air was much like hearing several P51 fighters approaching at high airspeed and props not in phase; the spectral power is mostly in the range of about 200 Hz to 500 Hz with a varying heterodyne of several Hz. It had a bandwidth of at least 25 kHz (can't say more precisely due to the cheap receivers I had at the time). I know exactly what you are talking about. One of the first things I remember hearing on shortwave radio was that type of signal -- my first thought was that I was hearing airplanes. So far I can't find a reference, but as I recall it was a type of multiplexed teleprinter transmission (maybe also incorporating voice circuits) -- "something-plex?." Northe N6KO Green Valley AZ |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard inthe 1960s
BDK wrote:
In article , _ says... Greetings: Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some considerable power, with a very memorable sound. snip, see thread It's called several terms FDM "Frequency division multiplexed" is the most common term. Also called VFT. There are several formats. It's basically a bunch of RTTY channels all blended together into one signal. Here is a purported sample of a VFT modulated signal (from a site with digital mode sound samples): http://www.kb9ukd.com/digital/vft.wav One can hear at least one rtty channel and the background drone (of FDM rtty 'spacing' on the other channels?). This is pretty much what I thought VFT would sound like with low baud rate channels; I can only extrapolate how faster rate channels would sound and I suspect that it would be very multispectral. The signal from the 1960s had only a few tones, closely spaced and harmonically unrelated, was very much harsher sounding and these tones had a phase-modulated characteristic sound with a period of about one second. (and it was non-random in character, not like qpsk, modem noise, etc.) The wide bandwidth it occupied didn't seem to be FDM related but appeared to be a consequence of its high percentage of modulation (and didn't appear to be restricted to one set of sidebands). It contained no audible frequency shifting as one would expect from FSK rtty. It may have been a self-clocked (manchester style) signal or set of muxed signals. One respondent suggested LORAN; even with the recent enhancements I don't think the description of LORAN modes is much like my old signal and the carrier frequencies are wrong. Geolocating it would help to narrow down the potential users of this signal; please, if you remember this signal, post a message about signal strength and where you were located. I will appreciate more recollections and comments ;) Regards, Michael |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard in
In article Uaeoi.72$zJ4.4@trndny03, HFguy wrote:
LORAN? Loran A was only around 1800 kHz and was a strange simultaneous up and down zipping noise. Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard in the 1960s
"Ron Baker, Pluralitas!" wrote in message ... "msg" wrote in message ... Greetings: Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some considerable power, with a very memorable sound. This will be a bit difficult to describe and I wonder if some folks snip The sound on the air was much like hearing several P51 fighters approaching at high airspeed and props not in phase; the spectral snip Regards, Michael I remember what you are talking about. Back in the late 60's using a cheap shortwave receiver we heard things such that we naturally said, "That sounds like an airplane." Sounded like someone snip Most likely they were, as others have said, VFT or something like it. They were almost certainly a Propagation doesn't seem to have been that good recently. (Height of summer I guess.) But I managed to catch a VFT signal tonight at 11103 kHz. Switched to AM mode. It didn't sound like what I remember from way back when. Also found a signal at 8488 kHz that I think is a mil-std-188-110 signal. Switch to AM mode. That sounded more like what I remember from the 60's. But mil-std-188-110 didn't exist in the 60's. Maybe there were similar signals at that time. |
Identify unknown signal or modulation mode commonly heard inthe 1960s
Ron Baker, Pluralitas! wrote:
"Ron Baker, Pluralitas!" wrote in message ... "msg" wrote in message ... snip Seeking opinions on an old, commonly heard signal (AM) on HF, of some considerable power, with a very memorable sound. This will be a bit difficult to describe and I wonder if some folks snip snip Also found a signal at 8488 kHz that I think is a mil-std-188-110 signal. Switch to AM mode. That sounded more like what I remember from the 60's. But mil-std-188-110 didn't exist in the 60's. Maybe there were similar signals at that time. I have recently located a friend from those days and the same town who may also shed some light on this question. Also I do remember lots of interference from medical equipment at the local hospital, especially diathermy machines, which may possibly be the source since the signals were _very_ strong, broadband, and at many frequencies. Regards, Michael |
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