UVB-76 number station is going nuts...



Russians are crazy.

They make things in weird ways to run forever. They have radar stations that are nuclear powered so they dont have to run electricity wires to them.
 
From wiki for the lazy.
On August 20, 2010 at 12:11 AM CST, a garbled Russian voice was detected by amateur listeners. It made a short message with little interference and then repeated itself with noticeably more static. This followed recent activity on the station that included more static than usual and several instances of objects being moved/dropped. All of this was detected by amateur listeners and is unconfirmed at the moment.
On August 23, 2010 at 9:35 AM PST, a Russian voice was detected on UVB-76. The voice read out a single, short transmission several times before the line went dead, then returned to its normal broadcast. As the message was transmitted on upper side-band, reception with ordinary AM receivers was weak and distorted. The following recording was made at UVB-76 Internet Repeater in USB Mode (Recording of the voice transmission on 4.625MHz USB 4.5kHz bandwidth)
On August 24, 2010 at approximately 12:00 AM EST, a heavily distorted voice was heard by amateur listeners.[citation needed]
On August 24, 2010 at 9:25 AM EST, another heavily distorted voice was detected by several amateur listeners.[citation needed]
On August 24, 2010 at 12:43 PM CST, Hard to hear voices were heard over the transmission.[citation needed]
On August 24, 2010 at around 8:30 PM MST, distorted voices in addition to fast beeps and pulses were heard.[10]
 
I've heard of this before, absolutely love shit like this. Had no idea the live stream was available. It sounds like every once and awhile someone's ruffling papers in the background.
 
Lost_Desmond_Locke.jpg
 
IF it is an analog tone into a microphone they must have staff on a rotation less they start shooting each other from the madness.

Who thinks its part of the Dead Hand system?

That's the only thing I think it could be... The timing of it's discovery is somewhat right, and if you've read about the system, it seems to fit the description of a launch signal.

Either that, or we are all living in LOST.

o_o
 
Ya I think its part of the dead hand system. Its another tool to determine if there was a major nuke attack and the tower gets wiped out.

And with it being a set location you would know which location got hit. Or at least close. If a certain number of other alarms are going off the system would probably consider it doomsday and launch.

Dont fuck with Russians, they aim to make war so terrible that you never want to fight them.
 
On the "deadman's switch": I haven't time to cite articles, but basically, how it works is this -- There's a guy sitting in a bunker in Siberia 24/7 with a big red button. The button doesn't work, and will not work until either a) it no longer receives transmissions (this transmission??) from moscow or b) two officials (i think one state and one religious?) approve the use of it. In either scenario, this guy still has to press the button before any doomsday-ing happens. It will not go off on it's own.

I'm not an expert, this is just what I remember from some light wiki-stumbling years ago.
 
On the "deadman's switch": I haven't time to cite articles, but basically, how it works is this -- There's a guy sitting in a bunker in Siberia 24/7 with a big red button. The button doesn't work, and will not work until either a) it no longer receives transmissions (this transmission??) from moscow or b) two officials (i think one state and one religious?) approve the use of it. In either scenario, this guy still has to press the button before any doomsday-ing happens. It will not go off on it's own.

I'm not an expert, this is just what I remember from some light wiki-stumbling years ago.

Stanislav Petrov - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Scary scenario... and it wasn't even his shift.