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-   -   jammers in the 49 metre band? (https://www.radiobanter.com/shortwave/92480-jammers-49-metre-band.html)

JM Dumont April 9th 06 08:36 AM

jammers in the 49 metre band?
 
I live in Europe and I can receive very strong Soviet style jammers
around 6100 Khz in the afternoons. I thought this type of jammers had
disappeared in Russia jamming again? Have you heard these jammers in
North America?
All the best from the sunny Pyrenees in SouthWest France.
Jean-Marc

weatherall April 9th 06 06:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JM Dumont
I live in Europe and I can receive very strong Soviet style jammers around 6100 Khz in the afternoons. I thought this type of jammers had disappeared in Russia jamming again? Have you heard these jammers in North America? All the best from the sunny Pyrenees in SouthWest France.
Jean-Marc

I'm not usually listening during the European afternoon. I'm in California and I tend to listen around 0000-0700 UTC mostly. What do the Russian jammers sound like? The jammers I've heard so far have been from Cuba to jam Radio Marti and Radio Republica.

running dogg April 9th 06 09:08 PM

jammers in the 49 metre band?
 
JM Dumont wrote:

I live in Europe and I can receive very strong Soviet style jammers
around 6100 Khz in the afternoons. I thought this type of jammers had
disappeared in Russia jamming again? Have you heard these jammers in
North America?
All the best from the sunny Pyrenees in SouthWest France.
Jean-Marc


The only place that still uses Soviet jammers is Cuba. Have you heard
any Spanish on this frequency? It might be a Radio Marti or Radio
Republica frequency (or former freq, as it takes the Cubans a while to
realize that the station they're jamming is no longer there). I bet
dxAce would know, ask him.


dxAce April 9th 06 09:15 PM

jammers in the 49 metre band?
 


running dogg wrote:

JM Dumont wrote:

I live in Europe and I can receive very strong Soviet style jammers
around 6100 Khz in the afternoons. I thought this type of jammers had
disappeared in Russia jamming again? Have you heard these jammers in
North America?
All the best from the sunny Pyrenees in SouthWest France.
Jean-Marc


The only place that still uses Soviet jammers is Cuba. Have you heard
any Spanish on this frequency? It might be a Radio Marti or Radio
Republica frequency (or former freq, as it takes the Cubans a while to
realize that the station they're jamming is no longer there). I bet
dxAce would know, ask him.


If he's hearing the jammers on or near 6100 during HIS afternoon and they are
strong then I rather doubt that he's hearing the Cubans doing any jamming.

Propagation, propagation, propagation.

dxAce
Michigan
USA



Telamon April 10th 06 10:43 PM

jammers in the 49 metre band?
 
In article ,
JM Dumont . wrote:

I live in Europe and I can receive very strong Soviet style jammers
around 6100 Khz in the afternoons. I thought this type of jammers had
disappeared in Russia jamming again? Have you heard these jammers in
North America? All the best from the sunny Pyrenees in SouthWest


In general across the bands the most prevalent jammer heard here is the
Red Chinese music jammer (Chinese opera) followed by bubble jamming
from Cuba on the USA west coast.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

Mark Zenier April 11th 06 05:25 PM

jammers in the 49 metre band?
 
In article ,
running dogg wrote:
Telamon wrote:

In article ,
JM Dumont . wrote:

I live in Europe and I can receive very strong Soviet style jammers
around 6100 Khz in the afternoons. I thought this type of jammers had
disappeared in Russia jamming again? Have you heard these jammers in
North America? All the best from the sunny Pyrenees in SouthWest


In general across the bands the most prevalent jammer heard here is the
Red Chinese music jammer (Chinese opera) followed by bubble jamming
from Cuba on the USA west coast.


He said "Soviet style jammers", and the only place that still uses
Soviet jamming technology is Cuba, AFAIK. Ace didn't think that the
Cuban jammers could be heard in Europe during Euro afternoons (morning
in Cuba) because of the daylight path, but anything's possible. It's
possible that he means the Korean jammers, which would be more likely,
but I assumed that the North Koreans were using Chinese technology.


Given the situation there, is Belarus doing anything nasty like this?

Mark Zenier
Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com)



running dogg April 14th 06 03:40 AM

jammers in the 49 metre band?
 
Mark Zenier wrote:

In article ,
running dogg wrote:
Telamon wrote:

In article ,
JM Dumont . wrote:

I live in Europe and I can receive very strong Soviet style jammers
around 6100 Khz in the afternoons. I thought this type of jammers had
disappeared in Russia jamming again? Have you heard these jammers in
North America? All the best from the sunny Pyrenees in SouthWest

In general across the bands the most prevalent jammer heard here is the
Red Chinese music jammer (Chinese opera) followed by bubble jamming
from Cuba on the USA west coast.


He said "Soviet style jammers", and the only place that still uses
Soviet jamming technology is Cuba, AFAIK. Ace didn't think that the
Cuban jammers could be heard in Europe during Euro afternoons (morning
in Cuba) because of the daylight path, but anything's possible. It's
possible that he means the Korean jammers, which would be more likely,
but I assumed that the North Koreans were using Chinese technology.


Given the situation there, is Belarus doing anything nasty like this?

Mark Zenier
Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com)


Since everybody has just been speculating, I took the time to actually
look in Passport. Apparently the BBC has a broadcast out of Oman to "W
Asia" in a language that Passport classifies as "other" that is jammed.
This is on 6090 from 1600 to 2000 UTC. I'm not sure who in West Asia
would be jamming a BBC tx, or who this tx is aimed at. Iran, possibly?
One of the former Soviet republics in that part of the world? Nepal?
Passport breaks out Russian as a separate language, and it's not
Russian.


junius April 14th 06 05:53 AM

jammers in the 49 metre band?
 

running dogg wrote:
Since everybody has just been speculating, I took the time to actually
look in Passport. Apparently the BBC has a broadcast out of Oman to "W
Asia" in a language that Passport classifies as "other" that is jammed.
This is on 6090 from 1600 to 2000 UTC. I'm not sure who in West Asia
would be jamming a BBC tx, or who this tx is aimed at. Iran, possibly?
One of the former Soviet republics in that part of the world? Nepal?
Passport breaks out Russian as a separate language, and it's not
Russian.


Your first guess was right. It's Farsi, according to ILG; so the
transmission would be intended for Iranian audiences.



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