Hi Chris, 

<<< I know from my own extensive experience that jammers change their sound 
over 
long distances (from my own words, as a matter of fact), but it doesn't 
sound like the 1566 laser jammer. The sound is too... smooth, and the 
pattern is too consistent and spread apart for it. It would be less 
consistent as it tries to break through typical audio, as you can hear in 
the clip below. But then again, I didn't hear any of your audio outside this 
clip, so it's hard to truly judge, and I don't know what the jammer would 
sound like overseas where it would obviously be mixing with Jeju's 
directional signal. I just feel it would be a hard time justifying this one 
as the jammer, in my opinion anyway, from someone who used to hear this pain 
in the ass every night. >>> 

The 1566 pulse-type jammer was first noticed here in September, although back 
then it had a simple, buzzing bee-sounding pulse very two seconds. An MP3 of 
that jammer signal on HLAZ's Japanese service at 1254 UTC on September 24, 2016 
is at the following link 

https://app.box.com/s/gm78l03yw105533ewwaocf42qzur08l9 

That MP3 was forwarded to the Real DX Yahoo group, where Mauno Ritola submitted 
it to Asian experts for investigation. They concluded that the Jammer was from 
North Korea, based on its similarity to the 1467-Mokpo Jammer. 

The 1566- N.K. Jammer has been augmenting its jam signal since then, however. 
In addition to the buzzing bee pulse every two seconds, in October it added a 
pulsing tone of about 2 kHz every two seconds, in cycles in between the buzzing 
bee pulse. The 2 kHz pulsing tone now seems to be the primary noisemaker, 
although the buzzing bee tone can still be heard in between the 2 kHz tones 
when the Jammer is strong. This is the current 1566-Jammer signal, as recorded 
at 1315 on November 26th 

https://app.box.com/s/gg15dn3r7k30hl9kjnif3zqs2ctgcmzq 

On most days the 1566-jammer shows up along with HLAZ here, although in the new 
sound format (like in the recording posted from this morning) it typically is 
only audible with the 2 kHz pulsing tone every 2 seconds. This would probably 
be the only weak indication of the Jammer for someone who is struggling to hear 
it in North America under HLAZ for the first time. Of course it is an 
independent TP station, so although it generally follows the same propagation 
as HLAZ, it fades in and out at different times than HLAZ. Rarely it is all by 
itself on the frequency. 

Gary DeBock (in Puyallup, WA, USA) 


----- Original Message -----

From: "Chris Kadlec" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2016 3:53:13 PM 
Subject: Re: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 12-20 

I know from my own extensive experience that jammers change their sound over 
long distances (from my own words, as a matter of fact), but it doesn't 
sound like the 1566 laser jammer. The sound is too... smooth, and the 
pattern is too consistent and spread apart for it. It would be less 
consistent as it tries to break through typical audio, as you can hear in 
the clip below. But then again, I didn't hear any of your audio outside this 
clip, so it's hard to truly judge, and I don't know what the jammer would 
sound like overseas where it would obviously be mixing with Jeju's 
directional signal. I just feel it would be a hard time justifying this one 
as the jammer, in my opinion anyway, from someone who used to hear this pain 
in the ass every night. 

http://beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_1566_Laser.MP3 

I am curious if any of you receive the super-powered 1467 jammer (//1566) in 
North America though, or any of the other North Korean jammers. That thing 
on 1467 has some serious oomph! But I feel it's aimed south. I have that 
feeling for most of the jammers, which are certainly high enough power to be 
heard across the Pacific, unless aimed south. 

-Chris Kadlec 



Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2016 23:21:37 +0000 (UTC) 
From: [email protected] 
Subject: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 12-20 

> 1566 HLAZ Jeju, S. Korea Japanese service at a thunderous level at 1311; 
> the pulsing, high-pitched tone every 2 seconds is the North Korean Jammer 
> (which sounded pretty wimpy up against HLAZ this morning) 
> https://app.box.com/s/lkfrr1cbokz9ui153xijgh437k7yxs28 
> 
> 73 and Good DX, 
> Gary DeBock (in Puyallup, WA, USA) 
> 7.5" loopstick C.Crane Skywave Ultralight + 
> Experimental 5" Baby FSL (29 Amidon Type 61 4" x .5" ferrite rods + 23 
> turns of 1162/46 Litz wire) 

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