They are still using this one. I live in Japan and when I am surfing around on my FT-101 ham radio I come across this exact jammer seemingly every night. It makes it nearly impossible to listen to. Either NK or China also blocks transmissions from a Philippine station which is too bad since the signal is quite strong otherwise.
@FirstToken
13 жыл бұрын
@marmaladekamikaze That is the assumption, yes. Note that my description says the jammer is "probably from North Korea". What is known is that the Korean language broadcast transmission is from South Korea and aimed at the North, it operates on multiple frequencies, and they are all almost always jammed. The most likely group that would want to jam such transmissions, Korean language transmissions sometimes opposing the North’s government, aimed at North Korea, would be the North Koreans.
@bigsky1970
7 жыл бұрын
I can hear this in northeast Montana here in the States, late at night and early in to the morning. Goes for several hours. Not quite this strong though, but I figured it was probably coming from North Korea, based on the time difference. The audio doesn't get much above the noise level but can be heard. I only discovered it by shifting my receiver in to LSB mode. The only way I actually found it is because there's a group of hams who meet every night on 3913 and shut down as the jammer starts up. The shortwave station it's jamming is "Voice Of The People" in South Korea.
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