| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
|
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
dxAce wrote: Several amateur reports following initial discovery Friday UTC by a ham in Los Angeles. I haven't heard it yet, but there are .wavs. It seems to come and go on a possible diurnal schedule. Same DSB databurst every 40 seconds, new (clipped and unintelligible) voice. Propagation and other amateur reports, including from the NM people, suggest the same origin (the MATIC contract facility in NM, where military radios are tested over varying terrain on the Laguna Pueblo Reservation). Thanks, guys, for all this info. Truly The Oddity That Keeps On Giving. -hugh (Stegman) (via WUN) My mistake... could have sworn the freq. was in there. It was 3890. Apparently at times according to reports there is a voice with the data burst, but it is a voice different than that of Yosemite Sam. dxAce Michigan USA |
| Reply |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| Looking for info on how a stroke-afflicted HAM might get back on the air | Equipment | |||
| "THE WORLD MADE YOU NUMBER ONE AND NOW IT'S TIME TO GIVE BACK TO THE WORLD" | Shortwave | |||
| Radio New Zealand International back on air | Shortwave | |||
| Radio New Zealand International back on air | Shortwave | |||