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UVB-76

UVB-76 (Russian: УВБ-76; see § Name and callsigns for other callsigns), also known by the nickname "The Buzzer", is a shortwave radio station that broadcasts on the frequency of 4,625 kHz.[1][2] It broadcasts a short, monotonous buzz tone, repeating at a rate of approximately 25 tones per minute, 24 hours per day.[1] Sometimes, the buzzer signal is interrupted and a voice transmission in Russian takes place.[3][4][5][6]

UVB-76
A spectrogram of UVB-76, showing the suppressed lower sideband
Broadcast areaRussia, Soviet Union (Former)
Frequency4625 kHz shortwave
Programming
Language(s)Russian
FormatRepeated buzzing sound
Ownership
OwnerRussian Armed Forces
The Pip, The Squeaky Wheel
History
Former call signs
УЗБ-76 (Commonly mistaken to be УВБ-76), МДЖБ, ЖУОЗ, АНВФ
Former frequencies
4625 kHz
Links
A short clip of UVB-76's transmission as recorded in Southern Finland, 860 km (530 mi) away from the station in 2002.
UVB-76 - "The Buzzer", recorded on 24 March 2022

Name and callsigns edit

The station is commonly known as "The Buzzer"[7] in both English and Russian (Russian: Жужжалка). From its first voice transmission in 1997 to 2010, the station identified itself as UZB-76[8][9] (Russian: УЗБ-76). The callsign UVB-76 was never used by the station itself, but is rather a mistranscription of UZB-76.[2] However, the station is still often referred to by that name. In the following years of transmission, the main callsign of the station changed regularly.

Main callsigns of UVB-76 ("The Buzzer")
Callsign Timespan used
UZB-76 (УЗБ-76) 24 December 1997 – 7 September 2010
MDZhB (МДЖБ) 7 September 2010 – 28 December 2015
ZhUOZ (ЖУОЗ) 28 December 2015 – 1 March 2019
ANVF (АНВФ) 1 March 2019 – 30 December 2020
NZhTI (НЖТИ) 30 December 2020 – present

In addition to these main callsigns, The Buzzer also uses other "side callsigns" which are being used less frequently than the main callsign. Whenever the main callsign changes, all previous side callsigns are also discarded.[1]

The station transmits using AM with a suppressed lower sideband (USB modulation), but it has also used full double-sideband AM (A3E). The signal consists of a buzzing sound that lasts 1.2 seconds, pausing for 1–1.3 seconds, and repeating 21–34 times per minute. Until November 2010, the buzz tones lasted approximately 0.8 seconds each.[1][10] One minute before the hour, the repeating tone was previously replaced by a continuous, uninterrupted alternating tone, which continued for one minute until the short repeating buzz resumed, although this stopped occurring in June 2010.[11]

Since the start of broadcasting, The Buzzer broadcast as a repeating two-second pip.[12][13]

UVB-76 - "The Buzzer", recorded on 10 August 2022

Voice messages edit

Sometimes the buzzing sound is interrupted and a voice message is broadcast. These messages are always given in Russian by a live voice, and follow three fixed formats:[2][1][14][15]

UVB-76 - "The Buzzer", recorded on 3 August 2023

Monolith edit

  UVB-76 in 1982 on YouTube
  UVB-76 in 1989 on YouTube

A message in the Monolith format always consists of the following parts:

  • Callsigns, each of which read out twice in the readout. A callsign always consists of four symbols, each symbol being either a Russian letter or a digit
  • Five digit ID groups (amount of items usually follows the amount of callsigns)
  • Message blocks, each consisting of one code word and eight digits

Example of a Monolith message sent on The Buzzer with exactly one callsign, one ID group and one message block (most common type):

NZhTI NZhTI 34 511 GOLOSOK 80 17 81 54[16]

Monolith messages can however contain any amount of items from each part:

87OI 87OI A1JZh A1JZh 217O 217O DOTsU DOTsU MSZh7 MSZh7 02 189 44 871 71 132 13 155 27 420 VYMOKAN'Ye 18 97 35 87[17]
MTA3 OTQ2O Tg1NzM3 Mzk1ODE0NCAtP iAuLi0uIC 4tLi4gLi0g Li4uI C4uLi4g Li0uLi AuLiAtL S4gLi4uLiAt[18]
87OI 87OI 25 184 GOLOVChATYJ 31 10 33 40 VYeKShA 31 10 33 40[19]

Uzor edit

A message in the Uzor format always consists of the following parts:

  • Callsigns, each of which read out twice in the readout
  • Message blocks, each consisting of one code word and four digits

Example of such a message:

MDZhB MDZhB TsYeNTIM 61 51[20]

Nowadays, Uzor messages are rarely sent on The Buzzer.

Komanda edit

Komanda is the most uncommon type of voice message. Since it has not been heard for years, messages of this type are most likely not being sent on The Buzzer anymore. They consist of a callsign (read out twice), a codephrase (Russian: ОБЪЯВЛЕНА КОМАНДА, romanized: OB'YaVLYeNA KOMANDA, lit.'command announced'), and a following number.

Example of such a message:

MDZhB MDZhB OB'YaVLYeNA KOMANDA 135[21]

Unusual transmissions edit

Distant conversations and other background noises have frequently been heard behind the buzzer, suggesting that the buzzing tones are not generated internally, but are produced by a device placed near a live and constantly open microphone. Because of the occasional fluctuating pitch of the buzzing tones, it is supposed that the tones are generated by a tonewheel as used in a Hammond organ. It is also possible that a microphone may have been turned on accidentally.[22] One such occasion was on 3 November 2001, when a conversation in Russian was heard:[10]

Я – 143. Не получаю генератор... идёт такая работа от аппаратной. (English: I am 143. Not receiving the generator [oscillator]... that stuff comes from hardware room.[23])

In September 2010, several unusual broadcasts were observed; these included portions of the buzzer being replaced with extracts from Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake.[24]

On 11 November 2010, intermittent phone conversations were transmitted and were recorded by a listener (at 14:00 UTC) for a period of approximately 30 minutes. These conversations are available online, and seem to be in Russian.[25][26] The phone calls mentioned the "brigade operative officer on duty", the communication codes "Debut", "Nadezhda" (Russian for "hope", both a noun and a female name), "Sudak" (an alternate name for the Zander, and also a town in Crimea) and "Vulkan" (volcano). The buzzing tone can also be heard very faintly in the background of these calls, further suggesting the buzzing is generated externally. The female voice says:

Офицер дежурного узла связи "Дебют", прапорщик Успенская. Получила контрольный звонок от Надежды... поняла.[27] (English: "Officer of the duty station 'Debut', ensign Uspenskaya. Received a test call from Nadezhda... understood.")

On 17 July 2015, the station broadcast what appeared to be a RTTY signal in lieu of the buzzer.[28][29][30]

In January 2022, various signals with spectrogram-encoded images, visible through a spectrum analyzer, were broadcast on the same frequency.[31] There have also been reports of various songs airing on the station's frequency, many of which were connected to internet memes such as the 2012 K-pop song "Gangnam Style";[32][33] a Vice article attributed these broadcasts to pirates hijacking and spamming the frequency. The nationality of the pirates has also come into question by Vice in relation to the 2021–2022 Russo-Ukrainian crisis and 2022–2023 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[32]

Location and function edit

 
1984 aerial photograph of Povarovo, Russia, the former site of the transmitter for UVB-76

The purpose of the station has not been confirmed by government or broadcast officials. However, Rimantas Pleikys, a former Minister of Communications and Informatics of the Republic of Lithuania, has written that the purpose of the voice messages is to confirm that operators at receiving stations are alert.[11][34][35] Another explanation is that the broadcast is constantly being listened to by military commissariats.[36]

There is speculation published in the Russian Journal of Earth Sciences which describes an observatory measuring changes in the ionosphere by broadcasting a signal at 4,625 kHz, the same broadcast frequency as the Buzzer.[37]

The most likely purpose is that the voice messages are some sort of Russian/Soviet military communications. The station being a numbers station for intelligence agencies such as the FSB or the former KGB of the Soviet Union is extremely unlikely as messages occur at seemingly random, unpredictable times, while numbers stations use a fixed schedule which changes rarely. In addition to that, the non-changing frequency of 4,625 kHz and the low transmitter power are unsuitable for reliable communication from Russia to Europe, where spies would be stationed.[original research?]

The buzzing functions as a "channel marker" used to keep the frequency occupied, thereby making it unattractive for other potential users.[1] The signature sound could be used for tuning to the signal on an old analogue receiver. The modulation is suitable to be detected by an electromechanical frequency detector, similar to a tuning fork. This can be used to activate the squelch on a receiver. Due to the varying emission properties on shortwave bands, using a level-based squelch is unreliable. This also allows a signal loss to be detected, causing an alarm to sound on the receiver.

Another theory, described in a BBC article, states that the tower is connected to the Russian 'Perimeter' missile system, and emits a "dead hand" signal that will trigger a nuclear retaliatory response if the signal is interrupted as a result of a nuclear attack against Russia.[7] This theory is also very unlikely, given that The Buzzer stops / breaks down regularly.[23]

There are two other Russian stations that follow a similar format, nicknamed "The Pip" and "The Squeaky Wheel". Like the Buzzer, these stations transmit a signature sound that is repeated constantly, but is occasionally interrupted to relay coded voice messages.[1]

The former transmitter was located near Povarovo, Russia,[1][38] at 56°5′0″N 37°6′37″E / 56.08333°N 37.11028°E / 56.08333; 37.11028 which is about halfway between Zelenograd and Solnechnogorsk and 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) northwest of Moscow, near the village of Lozhki. The location and callsign were unknown until the first known voice broadcast of 1997.[39] In September 2010, the station's transmitter was moved to the nearby city of Saint Petersburg, near the village of Kerro Massiv. This may have been due to a reorganization of the Russian military. Prior to 9 August 2015, the station is not transmitted from the Kerro Massiv transmitter site ("Irtysh") anymore, possibly due to a reorganization of the Russian military for the particular area which may cause the frequency to be used only in the Moscow Military District. At present, The Buzzer appears to be broadcast only from the 69th Communication Hub in Naro Fominsk, Moscow.[3] In 2011, a group of urban explorers claimed to have explored the buildings at Povarovo to find an abandoned military base and, in it, a radio log record confirming the operation of a transmitter at 4,625 kHz.[better source needed][40][41]

Other callsigns edit

Besides the main callsign, there have been transmissions containing different callsigns such as:

  • LNR4 (Russian: ЛНР4)
  • 87OI (Russian: 87ОИ)
  • VM62 (Russian: ВМ62)
  • A1JZh (Russian: А1ЙЖ)
  • MSZh7 (Russian: МСЖ7)
  • OMP4 (Russian: ОМП4)
  • 7U8T (Russian: 7У8Т)
  • VLHN (Russian: ВЛХН)
  • 217O (Russian: 217О)
  • ANVF (Russian: АНВФ)
  • VZhCH (Russian: ВЖЦХ)
  • LNRCh (Russian: ЛНРЧ)
  • VShchCH (Russian: ВЩЦХ)
  • 34ShchK (Russian: 34ЩК)
  • YeDGShch (Russian: ЕДГЩ)
  • 58Shch1 (Russian: 58Щ1)
  • 5Ye27 (Russian: 5Е27)
  • M4Z2 (Russian: М7З2)
  • 'M4T (Russian: ЬМ4Т)
  • 5PTsB (Russian: 5ПЦБ)
  • LNTM (Russian: ЛНТМ)
  • ZhD9S (Russian: ЖД9С)
  • 28YA (Russian: 28ЫА)
  • KhIZhJ (Russian: ХИЖЙ)
  • 53AJ (Russian: 53АЙ)
  • AMVS (Russian: АМВС)
  • V'TD (Russian: ВЬТД)
  • YeIYJ (Russian: ЕИЫЙ)
  • ODVR (Russian: ОДВР)
  • TsZhAP (Russian: ЦЖАП)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "The Buzzer". October 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  2. ^ a b c "The Buzzer › Priyom.org". priyom.org. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  3. ^ a b Savodnik, Peter (27 September 2011). "Inside the Russian Short Wave Radio Enigma". Wired. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  4. ^ McLellan, Allison (November 2019). "Decoding Numbers Stations". QST. American Radio Relay League. 103 (11): 70–73 – via ProQuest. Perhaps the best-known is the Russian UVB-76, a misheard version of its first call sign, UZB-76. Transmitting on 4625 kHz, it was first noticed around the late 1970s, earning the nickname 'the Buzzer' because of its 24-hour droning hum.
  5. ^ "The Buzzer Primer" (PDF). Priyom.org. 25 March 2012. p. 1.
  6. ^ Harris, Shane (6 March 2016). "The Stupidly Simple Spy Messages No Computer Could Decode". The Daily Beast. The Newsweek–Daily Beast Company – via ProQuest. For most of its existence, which has been traced back to an original airdate in 1976, it has transmitted a short, high-pitched buzz, every few seconds.
  7. ^ a b Gorvett, Zaria (15 July 2020). "The ghostly radio station that no one claims to run". BBC. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  8. ^ UVB-76 MDZhB [24.12.1997] [21:58 UTC] (180 08 BROMAL 74 27 99 14), archived from the original on 17 December 2021, retrieved 20 October 2021
  9. ^ "UVB-76 MDZhB [23.08.2010] [13:35] (93 882 NAIMINA 74 14 35 74)". YouTube. 5 July 2014. Archived from the original on 17 December 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  10. ^ a b Boender, Ary (January 2002). . ENIGMA 2000 Newsletter – Issue 8. Archived from the original on 13 January 2020. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  11. ^ a b . 24 December 2000. Archived from the original on 7 September 2019. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  12. ^ "UVB". Youtube. 2 August 1976. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
  13. ^ Boender, Ary (1995). . Archived from the original on 25 January 2020. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  14. ^ "El misterio de las emisiones de radio secretas". ABC (in Spanish). 26 August 2010. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  15. ^ Turnbull, Alex (21 July 2009). ""The Buzzer" (UVB-76)". Googlesightseeing.com. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  16. ^ The Buzzer/UVB-76(4625Khz) February 3, 2021 15:25UTC Voice message, archived from the original on 17 December 2021, retrieved 20 October 2021
  17. ^ UVB-76/The Buzzer(4625Khz) 11th December 2019 Message #10 9:51UTC, archived from the original on 17 December 2021, retrieved 20 October 2021
  18. ^ The Buzzer/UVB-76(4625Khz) Feb. 6th 2020 12:16UTC Voice message #6, archived from the original on 17 December 2021, retrieved 20 October 2021
  19. ^ The Buzzer/UVB-76(4625Khz) Feb. 6th 2020 12:16UTC Voice message #6, archived from the original on 17 December 2021, retrieved 20 October 2021
  20. ^ UVB-76 MDZhB [26.01.2015] [05:59] (CENTIM 61 51), archived from the original on 17 December 2021, retrieved 20 October 2021
  21. ^ UVB-76 MDZhB [25.01.2013] [02:58] (OB'YaVLENA KOMANDA 135), archived from the original on 17 December 2021, retrieved 20 October 2021
  22. ^ "Mysteriózní rádio už 30 let vysílá záhadný signál a teď i tajnou šifru", Technet.cz, August 27, 2010 (English)
  23. ^ a b "The Unexplained Signals Of Russian Station UVB-76". Gizmodo Australia. 18 July 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  24. ^ "UVB-76 MDZhB [02.09.2010] Swan Lake". YouTube. UVB-76 Activity Channel. Archived from the original on 17 December 2021.
  25. ^ "UVB-76 2010-11-11 14.00 UTC". Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  26. ^ "Translation by a Reddit user". Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  27. ^ "Recording of the phone calls on UVB76". Soundcloud. 11 November 2010. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  28. ^ "The Buzzer has changed sound?". reddit.
  29. ^ "UVB-76 (The Buzzer) appears to be sending out a RTTY-like signal right now. Anyone care to decode it?". reddit.
  30. ^ "UVB76 with RTTY". YouTube. Archived from the original on 17 December 2021. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  31. ^ JuEdWa (12 January 2022). Possible pirate on top of UVB-76 The Buzzer! - January / 11 / 2022 (RARE!). Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  32. ^ a b Rose, Janus; Cox, Joseph (20 January 2022). "Pirates Spammed an Infamous Soviet Short-wave Radio Station with Memes". www.vice.com. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  33. ^ mussyu226 (16 January 2022). UVB-76でカンナムスタイル流れてて笑うwww. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  34. ^ . 2000. Archived from the original on 25 November 2007. Retrieved 29 August 2008.
  35. ^ Pleikys, Rimantas (1998). Jamming. Vilnius, Lithuania: Rimantas Pleikys.
  36. ^ "Военная "Жужжалка" на частоте 4625 кГц. "Buzzer" UVB-76. – Страница 4". Radioscanner.ru. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  37. ^ "Information-measuring complex and database of mid-latitude Borok Geophysical Observatory". 2008. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  38. ^ Geere, Duncan (August 2010). "Mysterious Russian 'Buzzer' radio broadcast changes". WIRED.CO.UK. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  39. ^ [The mysterious buzz of the UVB-76 radio station]. El Reservado (in Spanish). January 24, 2011. Archived from the original on January 27, 2011. Retrieved January 31, 2011.
  40. ^ wasd. . Blog.kwasd.ru. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  41. ^ "Sample Buzzer Logbook" (PDF). 22 September 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Handler, Stephen (December 2013). "Is Russia's Buzzer a Doorbell to Doomsday?". Popular Communications. 32 (4): 31–33. ISSN 0733-3315.

External links edit

  • History and Info on The Buzzer
  • NPR's Lost and Found Sound, 2000-05-26: The Shortwave Numbers Mystery
  • UVB76 at the Global Frequency Database
  • Wired.co.uk 2011 article
  • The ghostly radio station that no one claims to run, 15th July 2020, By Zaria Gorvett, BBC.

Live stream from WebSDR WebSDR in KO04SD.

buzzer, redirects, here, other, uses, buzzer, disambiguation, russian, УВБ, name, callsigns, other, callsigns, also, known, nickname, buzzer, shortwave, radio, station, that, broadcasts, frequency, broadcasts, short, monotonous, buzz, tone, repeating, rate, ap. The Buzzer redirects here For other uses see Buzzer disambiguation UVB 76 Russian UVB 76 see Name and callsigns for other callsigns also known by the nickname The Buzzer is a shortwave radio station that broadcasts on the frequency of 4 625 kHz 1 2 It broadcasts a short monotonous buzz tone repeating at a rate of approximately 25 tones per minute 24 hours per day 1 Sometimes the buzzer signal is interrupted and a voice transmission in Russian takes place 3 4 5 6 UVB 76A spectrogram of UVB 76 showing the suppressed lower sidebandBroadcast areaRussia Soviet Union Former Frequency4625 kHz shortwaveProgrammingLanguage s RussianFormatRepeated buzzing soundOwnershipOwnerRussian Armed ForcesSister stationsThe Pip The Squeaky WheelHistoryFormer call signsUZB 76 Commonly mistaken to be UVB 76 MDZhB ZhUOZ ANVFFormer frequencies4625 kHzLinks source source A short clip of UVB 76 s transmission as recorded in Southern Finland 860 km 530 mi away from the station in 2002 filehelp source source source UVB 76 The Buzzer recorded on 24 March 2022 Contents 1 Name and callsigns 1 1 Voice messages 1 1 1 Monolith 1 1 2 Uzor 1 1 3 Komanda 1 2 Unusual transmissions 2 Location and function 3 Other callsigns 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksName and callsigns editThe station is commonly known as The Buzzer 7 in both English and Russian Russian Zhuzhzhalka From its first voice transmission in 1997 to 2010 the station identified itself as UZB 76 8 9 Russian UZB 76 The callsign UVB 76 was never used by the station itself but is rather a mistranscription of UZB 76 2 However the station is still often referred to by that name In the following years of transmission the main callsign of the station changed regularly Main callsigns of UVB 76 The Buzzer Callsign Timespan usedUZB 76 UZB 76 24 December 1997 7 September 2010MDZhB MDZhB 7 September 2010 28 December 2015ZhUOZ ZhUOZ 28 December 2015 1 March 2019ANVF ANVF 1 March 2019 30 December 2020NZhTI NZhTI 30 December 2020 presentIn addition to these main callsigns The Buzzer also uses other side callsigns which are being used less frequently than the main callsign Whenever the main callsign changes all previous side callsigns are also discarded 1 The station transmits using AM with a suppressed lower sideband USB modulation but it has also used full double sideband AM A3E The signal consists of a buzzing sound that lasts 1 2 seconds pausing for 1 1 3 seconds and repeating 21 34 times per minute Until November 2010 the buzz tones lasted approximately 0 8 seconds each 1 10 One minute before the hour the repeating tone was previously replaced by a continuous uninterrupted alternating tone which continued for one minute until the short repeating buzz resumed although this stopped occurring in June 2010 11 Since the start of broadcasting The Buzzer broadcast as a repeating two second pip 12 13 source source source UVB 76 The Buzzer recorded on 10 August 2022Voice messages edit Sometimes the buzzing sound is interrupted and a voice message is broadcast These messages are always given in Russian by a live voice and follow three fixed formats 2 1 14 15 source source UVB 76 The Buzzer recorded on 3 August 2023Monolith edit nbsp UVB 76 in 1982 on YouTube nbsp UVB 76 in 1989 on YouTubeA message in the Monolith format always consists of the following parts Callsigns each of which read out twice in the readout A callsign always consists of four symbols each symbol being either a Russian letter or a digit Five digit ID groups amount of items usually follows the amount of callsigns Message blocks each consisting of one code word and eight digitsExample of a Monolith message sent on The Buzzer with exactly one callsign one ID group and one message block most common type NZhTI NZhTI 34 511 GOLOSOK 80 17 81 54 16 Monolith messages can however contain any amount of items from each part 87OI 87OI A1JZh A1JZh 217O 217O DOTsU DOTsU MSZh7 MSZh7 02 189 44 871 71 132 13 155 27 420 VYMOKAN Ye 18 97 35 87 17 MTA3 OTQ2O Tg1NzM3 Mzk1ODE0NCAtP iAuLi0uIC 4tLi4gLi0g Li4uI C4uLi4g Li0uLi AuLiAtL S4gLi4uLiAt 18 87OI 87OI 25 184 GOLOVChATYJ 31 10 33 40 VYeKShA 31 10 33 40 19 Uzor edit A message in the Uzor format always consists of the following parts Callsigns each of which read out twice in the readout Message blocks each consisting of one code word and four digitsExample of such a message MDZhB MDZhB TsYeNTIM 61 51 20 Nowadays Uzor messages are rarely sent on The Buzzer Komanda edit Komanda is the most uncommon type of voice message Since it has not been heard for years messages of this type are most likely not being sent on The Buzzer anymore They consist of a callsign read out twice a codephrase Russian OBYaVLENA KOMANDA romanized OB YaVLYeNA KOMANDA lit command announced and a following number Example of such a message MDZhB MDZhB OB YaVLYeNA KOMANDA 135 21 Unusual transmissions edit Distant conversations and other background noises have frequently been heard behind the buzzer suggesting that the buzzing tones are not generated internally but are produced by a device placed near a live and constantly open microphone Because of the occasional fluctuating pitch of the buzzing tones it is supposed that the tones are generated by a tonewheel as used in a Hammond organ It is also possible that a microphone may have been turned on accidentally 22 One such occasion was on 3 November 2001 when a conversation in Russian was heard 10 Ya 143 Ne poluchayu generator idyot takaya rabota ot apparatnoj English I am 143 Not receiving the generator oscillator that stuff comes from hardware room 23 In September 2010 several unusual broadcasts were observed these included portions of the buzzer being replaced with extracts from Tchaikovsky s Swan Lake 24 On 11 November 2010 intermittent phone conversations were transmitted and were recorded by a listener at 14 00 UTC for a period of approximately 30 minutes These conversations are available online and seem to be in Russian 25 26 The phone calls mentioned the brigade operative officer on duty the communication codes Debut Nadezhda Russian for hope both a noun and a female name Sudak an alternate name for the Zander and also a town in Crimea and Vulkan volcano The buzzing tone can also be heard very faintly in the background of these calls further suggesting the buzzing is generated externally The female voice says Oficer dezhurnogo uzla svyazi Debyut praporshik Uspenskaya Poluchila kontrolnyj zvonok ot Nadezhdy ponyala 27 English Officer of the duty station Debut ensign Uspenskaya Received a test call from Nadezhda understood On 17 July 2015 the station broadcast what appeared to be a RTTY signal in lieu of the buzzer 28 29 30 In January 2022 various signals with spectrogram encoded images visible through a spectrum analyzer were broadcast on the same frequency 31 There have also been reports of various songs airing on the station s frequency many of which were connected to internet memes such as the 2012 K pop song Gangnam Style 32 33 a Vice article attributed these broadcasts to pirates hijacking and spamming the frequency The nationality of the pirates has also come into question by Vice in relation to the 2021 2022 Russo Ukrainian crisis and 2022 2023 Russian invasion of Ukraine 32 Location and function editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp 1984 aerial photograph of Povarovo Russia the former site of the transmitter for UVB 76The purpose of the station has not been confirmed by government or broadcast officials However Rimantas Pleikys a former Minister of Communications and Informatics of the Republic of Lithuania has written that the purpose of the voice messages is to confirm that operators at receiving stations are alert 11 34 35 Another explanation is that the broadcast is constantly being listened to by military commissariats 36 There is speculation published in the Russian Journal of Earth Sciences which describes an observatory measuring changes in the ionosphere by broadcasting a signal at 4 625 kHz the same broadcast frequency as the Buzzer 37 The most likely purpose is that the voice messages are some sort of Russian Soviet military communications The station being a numbers station for intelligence agencies such as the FSB or the former KGB of the Soviet Union is extremely unlikely as messages occur at seemingly random unpredictable times while numbers stations use a fixed schedule which changes rarely In addition to that the non changing frequency of 4 625 kHz and the low transmitter power are unsuitable for reliable communication from Russia to Europe where spies would be stationed original research The buzzing functions as a channel marker used to keep the frequency occupied thereby making it unattractive for other potential users 1 The signature sound could be used for tuning to the signal on an old analogue receiver The modulation is suitable to be detected by an electromechanical frequency detector similar to a tuning fork This can be used to activate the squelch on a receiver Due to the varying emission properties on shortwave bands using a level based squelch is unreliable This also allows a signal loss to be detected causing an alarm to sound on the receiver Another theory described in a BBC article states that the tower is connected to the Russian Perimeter missile system and emits a dead hand signal that will trigger a nuclear retaliatory response if the signal is interrupted as a result of a nuclear attack against Russia 7 This theory is also very unlikely given that The Buzzer stops breaks down regularly 23 There are two other Russian stations that follow a similar format nicknamed The Pip and The Squeaky Wheel Like the Buzzer these stations transmit a signature sound that is repeated constantly but is occasionally interrupted to relay coded voice messages 1 The former transmitter was located near Povarovo Russia 1 38 at 56 5 0 N 37 6 37 E 56 08333 N 37 11028 E 56 08333 37 11028 which is about halfway between Zelenograd and Solnechnogorsk and 10 kilometres 6 2 mi northwest of Moscow near the village of Lozhki The location and callsign were unknown until the first known voice broadcast of 1997 39 In September 2010 the station s transmitter was moved to the nearby city of Saint Petersburg near the village of Kerro Massiv This may have been due to a reorganization of the Russian military Prior to 9 August 2015 the station is not transmitted from the Kerro Massiv transmitter site Irtysh anymore possibly due to a reorganization of the Russian military for the particular area which may cause the frequency to be used only in the Moscow Military District At present The Buzzer appears to be broadcast only from the 69th Communication Hub in Naro Fominsk Moscow 3 In 2011 a group of urban explorers claimed to have explored the buildings at Povarovo to find an abandoned military base and in it a radio log record confirming the operation of a transmitter at 4 625 kHz better source needed 40 41 Other callsigns editBesides the main callsign there have been transmissions containing different callsigns such as LNR4 Russian LNR4 87OI Russian 87OI VM62 Russian VM62 A1JZh Russian A1JZh MSZh7 Russian MSZh7 OMP4 Russian OMP4 7U8T Russian 7U8T VLHN Russian VLHN 217O Russian 217O ANVF Russian ANVF VZhCH Russian VZhCH LNRCh Russian LNRCh VShchCH Russian VShCH 34ShchK Russian 34ShK YeDGShch Russian EDGSh 58Shch1 Russian 58Sh1 5Ye27 Russian 5E27 M4Z2 Russian M7Z2 M4T Russian M4T 5PTsB Russian 5PCB LNTM Russian LNTM ZhD9S Russian ZhD9S 28YA Russian 28YA KhIZhJ Russian HIZhJ 53AJ Russian 53AJ AMVS Russian AMVS V TD Russian VTD YeIYJ Russian EIYJ ODVR Russian ODVR TsZhAP Russian CZhAP See also edit nbsp Radio portalDuga radar the Russian Woodpecker Letter beaconReferences edit a b c d e f g h The Buzzer October 2014 Retrieved 1 October 2014 a b c The Buzzer Priyom org priyom org Retrieved 16 October 2021 a b Savodnik Peter 27 September 2011 Inside the Russian Short Wave Radio Enigma Wired Retrieved 16 November 2020 McLellan Allison November 2019 Decoding Numbers Stations QST American Radio Relay League 103 11 70 73 via ProQuest Perhaps the best known is the Russian UVB 76 a misheard version of its first call sign UZB 76 Transmitting on 4625 kHz it was first noticed around the late 1970s earning the nickname the Buzzer because of its 24 hour droning hum The Buzzer Primer PDF Priyom org 25 March 2012 p 1 Harris Shane 6 March 2016 The Stupidly Simple Spy Messages No Computer Could Decode The Daily Beast The Newsweek Daily Beast Company via ProQuest For most of its existence which has been traced back to an original airdate in 1976 it has transmitted a short high pitched buzz every few seconds a b Gorvett Zaria 15 July 2020 The ghostly radio station that no one claims to run BBC Retrieved 16 November 2020 UVB 76 MDZhB 24 12 1997 21 58 UTC 180 08 BROMAL 74 27 99 14 archived from the original on 17 December 2021 retrieved 20 October 2021 UVB 76 MDZhB 23 08 2010 13 35 93 882 NAIMINA 74 14 35 74 YouTube 5 July 2014 Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2020 a b Boender Ary January 2002 Oddities ENIGMA 2000 Newsletter Issue 8 Archived from the original on 13 January 2020 Retrieved 16 November 2020 a b Russian HF Beacons 24 December 2000 Archived from the original on 7 September 2019 Retrieved 16 November 2020 UVB Youtube 2 August 1976 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Boender Ary 1995 Numbers amp oddities Column 1 Archived from the original on 25 January 2020 Retrieved 16 November 2020 El misterio de las emisiones de radio secretas ABC in Spanish 26 August 2010 Retrieved 16 November 2020 Turnbull Alex 21 July 2009 The Buzzer UVB 76 Googlesightseeing com Retrieved 16 November 2020 The Buzzer UVB 76 4625Khz February 3 2021 15 25UTC Voice message archived from the original on 17 December 2021 retrieved 20 October 2021 UVB 76 The Buzzer 4625Khz 11th December 2019 Message 10 9 51UTC archived from the original on 17 December 2021 retrieved 20 October 2021 The Buzzer UVB 76 4625Khz Feb 6th 2020 12 16UTC Voice message 6 archived from the original on 17 December 2021 retrieved 20 October 2021 The Buzzer UVB 76 4625Khz Feb 6th 2020 12 16UTC Voice message 6 archived from the original on 17 December 2021 retrieved 20 October 2021 UVB 76 MDZhB 26 01 2015 05 59 CENTIM 61 51 archived from the original on 17 December 2021 retrieved 20 October 2021 UVB 76 MDZhB 25 01 2013 02 58 OB YaVLENA KOMANDA 135 archived from the original on 17 December 2021 retrieved 20 October 2021 Mysteriozni radio uz 30 let vysila zahadny signal a ted i tajnou sifru Technet cz August 27 2010 English a b The Unexplained Signals Of Russian Station UVB 76 Gizmodo Australia 18 July 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2019 UVB 76 MDZhB 02 09 2010 Swan Lake YouTube UVB 76 Activity Channel Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 UVB 76 2010 11 11 14 00 UTC Retrieved 11 October 2012 Translation by a Reddit user Retrieved 3 August 2014 Recording of the phone calls on UVB76 Soundcloud 11 November 2010 Retrieved 18 May 2020 The Buzzer has changed sound reddit UVB 76 The Buzzer appears to be sending out a RTTY like signal right now Anyone care to decode it reddit UVB76 with RTTY YouTube Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 3 January 2019 JuEdWa 12 January 2022 Possible pirate on top of UVB 76 The Buzzer January 11 2022 RARE Retrieved 19 January 2022 a b Rose Janus Cox Joseph 20 January 2022 Pirates Spammed an Infamous Soviet Short wave Radio Station with Memes www vice com Retrieved 20 January 2022 mussyu226 16 January 2022 UVB 76でカンナムスタイル流れてて笑うwww Retrieved 27 January 2022 Single letter markers posts from the SPOOKS and WUN listservers 2000 Archived from the original on 25 November 2007 Retrieved 29 August 2008 Pleikys Rimantas 1998 Jamming Vilnius Lithuania Rimantas Pleikys Voennaya Zhuzhzhalka na chastote 4625 kGc Buzzer UVB 76 Stranica 4 Radioscanner ru Retrieved 9 October 2012 Information measuring complex and database of mid latitude Borok Geophysical Observatory 2008 Retrieved 10 February 2012 Geere Duncan August 2010 Mysterious Russian Buzzer radio broadcast changes WIRED CO UK Retrieved 12 September 2010 El misterioso zumbido de la estacion de radio UVB 76 The mysterious buzz of the UVB 76 radio station El Reservado in Spanish January 24 2011 Archived from the original on January 27 2011 Retrieved January 31 2011 wasd kwasd s blog Nebolshoj fotootchet s UVB 76 The Buzzer Zhuzhzhalka Blog kwasd ru Archived from the original on 10 September 2012 Retrieved 9 October 2012 Sample Buzzer Logbook PDF 22 September 2014 Retrieved 3 July 2016 Further reading editHandler Stephen December 2013 Is Russia s Buzzer a Doorbell to Doomsday Popular Communications 32 4 31 33 ISSN 0733 3315 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to UVB 76 History and Info on The Buzzer NPR s Lost and Found Sound 2000 05 26 The Shortwave Numbers Mystery UVB76 at the Global Frequency Database Wired co uk 2011 article The ghostly radio station that no one claims to run 15th July 2020 By Zaria Gorvett BBC Live stream from WebSDR WebSDR in KO04SD Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title UVB 76 amp oldid 1210010390, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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