Hello and welcome back.... Found this interesting, if you own a Shortwave radio.. USB -Upper Side Band & LSB -Lower Side Band preferred..
NUMBERS STATIONS
Is it Spys, Is it Military?
what ever it is its creepy, and has been going since the 1970s. Number stations are all over the Shortwave band, often at night and close to the hour and can go for 20 - 50 mins at a time.
Sometimes its a robotic lady voice, sometimes a man s voice and says a string of numbers.. Eg =
16388khz 18-08-2014(date) 1110(time) E11a USB
952/34 Attention
02099 83383 80810 23769 26206 05664 86304 93712 36331 23821
11375 39324 95570 81160 36800 01773 85798 83001 11261 02711
48126 80869 24458 38837 76797 12651 09776 79744 49114 70028
63413 56302 56800 14380
Attention, rpt msg, out
This was from website hfunderground.com (many thanks) with enthusiasts logging these 'number' channels as they happen = link
Info below from hackcanada.com (with thanks)
SLOT MACHINE SOUNDS
These Shortwave sounds (called Japanese slot machines) are rumored to be from the Japanese Navy... Still, sounds weird
Check out frequencies = 8588(c), 4291(c), 4231.5 6445, 8704, 6250, (c) = confirmed
HAPPY LISTENING
NUMBERS STATIONS
Is it Spys, Is it Military?
what ever it is its creepy, and has been going since the 1970s. Number stations are all over the Shortwave band, often at night and close to the hour and can go for 20 - 50 mins at a time.
Sometimes its a robotic lady voice, sometimes a man s voice and says a string of numbers.. Eg =
16388khz 18-08-2014(date) 1110(time) E11a USB
952/34 Attention
02099 83383 80810 23769 26206 05664 86304 93712 36331 23821
11375 39324 95570 81160 36800 01773 85798 83001 11261 02711
48126 80869 24458 38837 76797 12651 09776 79744 49114 70028
63413 56302 56800 14380
Attention, rpt msg, out
This was from website hfunderground.com (many thanks) with enthusiasts logging these 'number' channels as they happen = link
Info below from hackcanada.com (with thanks)
Numbers Stations Well over a hundred "numbers" or "spy" stations have been reported, all rather closely following a pattern. On the typical numbers station, the announcer is - or seems to be - a woman. No one knows who the woman is or where she is broadcasting from. She speaks Spanish, German, or Korean. Save for a few words at the begining and the end of the transmission, the message consists of reandom numbers, announced in groups of five, four, or, rarely, three digits. As with the Morse code stations, the numbers stations are all on unauthorized frequencies. No government or organization owns up to the broadcasts; offically, at least, the FCC claims no knowledge of them. Many of those who have listened to the broadcasts carefully are convinced that the woman is in fact a robot. The voice has a mechanical ring, somtimes a click between each digit. It seems to be the same type of device used by the telephone company to give the time or to forward phone numbers. The exact format of the messages varies with the language and number of digits per group. With Spanish, five digit groups, for example, a typical transmission might be: Atencion 290 22...Atencion 290 22...Atencion 290 22 ...65438...34742...23453...23454...29584...24836... 22334...34635...10202...19375...34653...23457... 12345...94532...24643...27543...14795...24568... 75744...74755...87194...63549...Final,final. Broadcasts are during the night hours of North America and seem to start shortly after the hour. After the "Final,final," the transmission stops. It is claimed that a given transmission is repeated a few minutes later on a slightly different frequency. There seems to be no escaping the conclusion that the messages are numerical code. The second number (22 in the example) - is the number of digit groups in the message. There dosen't seem to be any demonstrable significance to the first number although it probably has some signifigance. Some think it is an identifying number for the sender or the receiver. It may also indentify the code used if there is more than one. Note that the numbers above are only random (except for 22) and were never really broadcast. The four-digit transmissions in Spanish are different. A three-digit number (perhaps that of the sender or receiver) is repeated several times, followed by the digits 1 through 10. ("uno, dos, tres...") and a string of Morse code dashes. the word "grupo" is followed by the number of four-digit groups to come and repeated once - for example, "Grupo 22, grupo 22." The message - groups of four Spanish numbers - follows. At the end the voice says, "Repito grupo 22," and the message repeats. The station goes off the air after the repeat. Any attempt to explain these broadcasts is complicated by numbers broadcasts in other languages. There are also broadcasts in German, Korean, and English. Occasional transmissions in Russian, French, Portuguese, and even Serbo-Croatian are reported. Somtimes a male (mechanical?) voice reads the numbers. The female robot voice doing English language broadcasts is often described as having an Oriental or German accent. Typical of the uncertainty surrounding numbers stations are the reported English messages prefaced with a female voice saying "Groups disinformation" and ending with "End of disinformation." Perhaps the voice machine has a bad rendering of "This information." Still other stations transmit messages consisting of letters from the phonetic alphabet (Alpha, Bravo, Charlie...). Some spice their broadcasts with music, which ranges from ethnic tunes to wierd tones that may or may not conceal a message. Reported frequencies for numbers and phonetic-alphabet stations include: F/M = Female/Male S = Spanish R = Russian F = French E = English P = Portuguese C = Czech SC= Serbo-Croatian G = German Frequency Male language (KHz) Female --------- ------ -------- 3060 F S (All are numbers stations 3090 F S unless otherwise noted) 3365 M SC 4640 M S 4642 F F 4670 F S&E Numbers & phonetic 4740 M S&P Interlude from Aida 4770 F G 5020 F S 5075 F S 5110 M C Slavic musical interlude 5812 F S 6770 F S 6790 F S 8875 F S 9040 F S&E 9345 F S 9450 F E + Musical tones 9463 F S 9950 F S 10450 F K 10500 F G 10532 F S 11545 F G 11618 F G 11635 F S 13320 M R 14947 F G 14970 F E + Beep tones 23120 F G 30050 E 30250 E 30420 E 30470 E Whatever is going on, it's a big operation. Harry L. Helms' "How to tune in the shortwave spectrum" has a list of sixty-two stations that includes only those with a female voice reading five digit codes in Spanish. Much time and effort are going into the broadcasts. Some numbers stations transmit on the upper sideband rather than using amplitude modulation (AM). Signals are usually strong. Because of ionospheric reflection, they can be picked up over most of the globe. This makes direction finding difficult. Two explanations are offered for the numbers stations. It is rumored that some of the stations are communications links in the drug traffic between the United States and Latin America. If so, Spanish is the logical language. The numerically coded messages could tell where drops are to be made, how much to expect, and other minutiae that would change from day to day. Weak support for this comes from some amateur direction finding, which seems to place many of the Spanish broadcasts Somewhere south of the United States. But even those who subscribe to this explanation agree that other numbers stations, probably most of them worldwide, are engaged in espionage - governmental or organizational communication with agents in the field. Which government? The Spanish stations are usually heard between 7:00 PM and 6:00 AM Eastern Standard Time. The night hours are best for clandestine broadcasting as weak signals propagate farther. So the spanish language broadcasts are probably coming from a time zone not far removed from Eastern Standard Time (the EST time zone includes the central Caribbean, Columbia, Ecuador, and Peru.) On the basis of signal strengths and broadcast times, it can be similarly be postulated that the German Stations are coming from Europe, or maybe Africa, and the Korean stations are coming from the Orient - oddly enough. As far as the Spanish stations are concerned, suspision points to Cuba. In 1975 U.S. listeners reported muffled radio Havana broadcasts in the background of the Spanish stations. A station at 9920KHz is said to have used the same theme music as radio Havana. But then there are American ham radio operators who swear that the spanish stations must be in the United States. "How to Tune the Secret Shortwave Spectrum" tells of listeners in Ohio who reported four digit numbers stations coming in stronger than anything else on the dial execpt for a 50 kilowatt broadcast band station a few miles distant. Similar reports come from the Washingtom, D.C., area. Probably the simplest of all the many possible explanitions is that the Spanish stations are opperated by Cuba for the benefit of Cuban agents in the United States. The Radio Havana Broadcasts in the background would have been a mistake. The engineer was listening to radio Havana and forgot the mike was on, or maybe radio Havana and some of the numbers stations share facilities and the signals got mixed. The local quality broadcasts heard in the U.S. could be Cuban agents reporting back to Havana. Each agent would have his own mechanical voice setup. Not that you can carry around a 50000 watt transmitter in your pocket. The actual explanation may not be the simplest, though. According to Helms, some shortwave listeners believe that the four and five digit number transmissions are totally differnt opperations. The four digit transmissions, at least some of which seem to originate in the United States, may be the work of the U.S. government. Only the five-digit transmissions may come from Latin America - and may be associated with local governments or U.S. foreign agents. Harry L. Helms speculates that the United States may have faked the radio Havana background just to divert suspission from an American espionage operation. Any glib explanation of the numbers stations is further challenged by another incident Helms cites. An unnamed listener was receiving a five digit numbers broadcast in Spanish. At the end of the broadcast, the station accidentally (?) stayed on the air, and faint female voices were heard reading numbers in German and English. If the report was accurate, then the numbers stations could be the work of one worldwide operation. Choice of language could be arbitrary. Whatever his or her native tounge, an agent need only need learn ten words of, say, Korean in order to receive a numerical broadcast in Korean. No one willing to talk has broken the code or codes used for the transmissions. If the codes are sophisticated enough it may be pointless to even try. A random four or five digit number added to each number in the group will scramble the code. The numbers would have to be agreed upon before transmission. If a different number is used for each number block and if they are not repeated it is mathematically impossible for outsiders to break the code. At 3820KHz there is a four-note electronic tune. At 12700KHz there is a plaintive, twenty-one-note, flutelike melody. At 15507 KHz there are beeps. The EXCHANGE serves as a message base for exchanging information dealing with radio frequencies. If you wish to post the frequencies from your area (confidential or not), get frequencies for other areas, post sample broadcasts, reveal the coding method or purpose of these broadcasts, or just talk to a friendly bunch of guys and gals feel free to call. The EXCHANGE : (904) 878 - 4413..24HRS..300/1200/2400 baud (Modem only, of course) Special thanks to William Poundstone (for the above info)
SLOT MACHINE SOUNDS
These Shortwave sounds (called Japanese slot machines) are rumored to be from the Japanese Navy... Still, sounds weird
Check out frequencies = 8588(c), 4291(c), 4231.5 6445, 8704, 6250, (c) = confirmed
HAPPY LISTENING
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