At 06:24 03-12-16, Chris Kadlec wrote:
In regards to the type of jamming on 1566, if it was indeed jamming,
I can't really answer that. I suspect that they were using dead air
on 810 to jam as the audio was muddy but it was still
understandable. The intelligence service is largely
Kadlec
Date: Fri, 02 Dec 2016 17:59:56 +
From: Nick Hall-Patch <n...@ieee.org>
To: Mailing list for the International Radio Club of America
<irca@hard-core-dx.com>, <irca@hard-core-dx.com>
Subject: Re: [IRCA] South Korean MW Jamming
Message-ID: <bd9e455a2f362fcb435d0b
At 14:27 02-12-16, Chris Kadlec wrote:
The Gimpo jammer, while I have no absolute proof of it (they don't
share this information, obviously) is aiming south. Why? The purpose
of jammers isn't to defeat the signal they're up against. You don't
aim *at* the signal you're jamming. AM radio -
merica
<irca@hard-core-dx.com>, <irca@hard-core-dx.com>
Subject: Re: [IRCA] South Korean MW Jamming
Message-ID: <6a5233e9b2078ad2306b3735bf254b20@mtlp85>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
Thanks for doing this Chris. The subtleties
At 00:03 02-12-16, Nick Hall-Patch wrote:
Gimpo being in South Korea, what is it jamming from the
south? (which might be why we don't hear it on northerly
paths?)This siren is what I heard on 1053 years ago, have a
recording from 2007; the recordings from 2008 are without sirens. I
Thanks for doing this Chris. The subtleties are endless.
Couple of questions. These are all originating in South Korea, is
that correct? (except for video games on 819?)
\\
further:
This is the Gimpo siren jammer, THE most powerful jammer in Korea at
250kw, aimed south and on 16 1/2