Buzzer number station location found

Post Reply
User avatar
Pigeon
Posts: 18055
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:00 pm

Buzzer number station location found

Post by Pigeon » Wed Jun 11, 2014 1:34 am

One of our members (Who wishes to remain anonymous!) has found and been to one of the current broadcast sites of the buzzer:

60°18'40.1"N 30°16'40.5"E

The Buzzer source is fed to this shortwave site and other broadcasting locations using radio relay/phone lines directly from Moscow via St. Petersburg's 60th Communication Hub (codename Vulkan, from a previous phone leak in February 2014, transcript) on Palace Square.

Mutiple VGDSh antennas and other arrays then take care of distributing the 4625 kHz signal to Western Military District troops (UVB-76/UZB-76/MDZhB is a collective callsign for all the recipients).

We know that the Buzzer can use multiple transmitters from at least 2 locations (second location has been found, Naro Fominsk, 55°25'35"N 36°42'33"E, 69th Communication Hub).

Link


User avatar
Royal
Posts: 10562
Joined: Mon Apr 11, 2011 5:55 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Royal » Wed Jun 11, 2014 3:14 am

THIS IS GOING INTO MY NEXT MIX.

http://priyom.org/number-stations/noise/xsl.aspx

User avatar
Royal
Posts: 10562
Joined: Mon Apr 11, 2011 5:55 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Royal » Wed Jun 11, 2014 3:31 am


User avatar
Pigeon
Posts: 18055
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:00 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Pigeon » Wed Jun 11, 2014 4:32 am

Here is the Buzzer number station

User avatar
Royal
Posts: 10562
Joined: Mon Apr 11, 2011 5:55 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Royal » Thu Jun 12, 2014 5:32 am

Spectral analysis looks familiar :) ... any relation?

User avatar
Pigeon
Posts: 18055
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:00 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Pigeon » Thu Jun 12, 2014 1:15 pm

Royal wrote:Spectral analysis looks familiar :) ... any relation?
First cousin, twice removed, I think...

MH370 pinger...

User avatar
Pigeon
Posts: 18055
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:00 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Pigeon » Sun May 05, 2019 1:14 am


User avatar
Pigeon
Posts: 18055
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:00 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Pigeon » Sun May 05, 2019 1:28 am


User avatar
Royal
Posts: 10562
Joined: Mon Apr 11, 2011 5:55 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Royal » Sun May 05, 2019 3:27 am

Was looking into this the other day. A lot of conspiracy around it.


-The Duga radar (which translates as "The Arc") was once one of the most powerful military facilities in the Soviet Union's communist empire.

-Radar system that was maybe flawed

-costs (7 billion Russian Ruble) were twice as high as building the power-plant at Chernobyl.

-The signal was observed using three repetition rates: 10 Hz, 16 Hz and 20 Hz.
-The most common rate was 10 Hz, while the 16 Hz and 20 Hz modes were rather rare.
-The pulses transmitted by the woodpecker had a wide bandwidth, typically 40 kHz.

-The Ukrainian-developed computer game S.T.A.L.K.E.R. has a plot focused on the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant and the nuclear accident there. The game features many actual locations in the area, including the Duga-1 array. The array itself appears in S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Clear Sky in the fictional city of Limansk-13. While the 'Brain Scorcher' from S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Shadow of Chernobyl was inspired by theories that Duga-1 was used for mind control, it does not take the form of the real array.

-Construction of the Duga began in 1972 when Soviet scientists looking for ways to mitigate long-range missile threats came up with the idea of building a huge over-the-horizon-radar, that would bounce signals off the ionosphere to peer over the Earth's curvature.

-The purpose of the "Russian Woodpecker" is still not fully understood...Despite the gigantic scale of the project, it transpired the scientists lacked full understanding of how the ionosphere works -- unwittingly dooming it to failure before it was even built.

-Taken offline after the Chernobyl incident

User avatar
Pigeon
Posts: 18055
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:00 pm

Re: Buzzer number station location found

Post by Pigeon » Sun May 05, 2019 12:25 pm

The Military has much money to spend on projects, good or bad. Are people going to tell the guys with the guns, no.

Post Reply