Added: 3 years ago
From: vwestlife
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  • They're just mexicans. Just as they have no respect for our borders, language, and culture, they also have no respect for our laws pertaining to radio transmissions. They do it because just like spoiled children, they know they can, and nobody will hold them accountable.

  • Pescadores!

  • The hola, hola you hear are c.b ers / ham tuning and talking illegally on 10 kHz...the "double pulse /long tone is automatic inline accuracy recalibration from WWV.

    just letting you know.

  • lol "coordinated universal time HOLA HOLA HOLAAAAAA!"

  • i've picked this up too! is wwv in hawaii?

  • @GMSamuelRhine It's in Colorado

  • @gregorynr ok thanks i was confused because i found out there's also a wwvh

  • @GMSamuelRhine It could very well be the one in Hawaii too. But WWV is in Colorado and WWVH is in Hawaii. You will know when they identify the station at the top of every hour.

  • @gregorynr yeah i figured out that wwvh is female voice while wwv is a male.

  • I've heard this same thing on wwv for years. Sounds like a bunch of illegal Mexican radios testing their equipment. They're probably on SSB

  • Hola hola hola!

    This cracks me up everytime. Also lovel ooking at your others videos; so cool =)

  • Someones playing music, and saying ola ola coca cola.

    Basically they are using WWV to ship high levels of coca over the airwaves.

    If you listen close, you can hear the underground railroad.

  • I had been listening to shortwave radio for almost 17 years and it is very common to hear shortwave radio broadcasts in the background of the current shortwave radio station broadcast.

  • a bunch of illegal mexican radio transmissions it sounds like.

  • Wow! thats what you call a pirate party! i was able to receive this on the Central Coast, nsw in australia just last night with only the telescopic arial!

  • Sometimes there are single pulses and then double pulses, what's the difference?

  • @burtenheimer I'm sure there's some technical reason for it. WWV has a complete guide to the transmission format on their web site.

  • @burtenheimer The double pulses show in tenths of a second the difference between WWV's UTC, exactly 86,400 standard seconds/day, and UT1, which varies with the Earth's rotation. A leap second is added or subtracted when UTC and UT1 get too far apart. There have been 24 leap seconds added since 1972 when the system was introduced. None have been subtracted. Leap seconds may be abolished in 2013. Systems based on GPS time like cell phones use a different standard and do not have leap seconds.

  • @burtenheimer Used for time correction, Google "WWV Double Pulse Time Correction".

  • This doesn't surprise me much. They don't regulate the use of HF as hard in Latin America as they do here. I have heard of large "Fincas" or Ranches in Argentina setting up HF rigs for their coms and in some cases even inter-connecting them to 2-meters almost like Highway-Patrol does here.

    I doubt they can even hear the clock.

    Plus - I'm sure we do the same thing on 40 meters to the foreign broadcasters. And the "hola" may be SSB since WWV is providing such a nice carrier reference.

  • That might just be a ham testing his transmitter. When on AM or SSB, the power output varies with your voice. "Hola" is sometimes said to try to keep the watt meter pointing at the true output power at which your radio is transmitting, but of course, we probably won't ever find out the purpose of these "mystery" transmissions.

  • @TheLegoboy1997 I've heard that argument before, but I sincerely doubt there are so many hams all keying up their transmitter on the illegal frequency of WWV, and all choosing to yell "hola hola hola" into the microphone! That would give them false readings anyway, because 10 MHz is not part of or close to any ham band on HF>

  • @vwestlife 10Mhz is a valid ham band (30m) from 10.100Mhz to 10.150Mhz in ITU Region 2. Both WWV and WWVH are in this region.

  • @ladams00 No, the 30 meter band starts at 10100 kHz, far from 10000 kHz.

  • That is really really really, for want of a better word, 'SCARY'! It is frightening to have this suddenly come on at midnight in the dark! Been there done that.... YouTube glitched, I minimized FireFox and started working on some PCs... let's just say I jumped about eight inches into the air! Personally I don't have a clue what this is but.... either way it's very odd.

  • From NM, I can hear some what seems to be some nearby radio communications on the WWV bands during the day.

  • homero simpson

  • it has also been suggested that they are drug or gun runners or another form of contaband. they have been heard here since the early 80's

  • more likely a spy station was broadcasting on the same frequency as WWV. it is not uncommon to hear multiple radio station broadcasts on the same short wave radio frequency.

  • That is a Numbers Station (AKA Spy Station)

  • @samssoftwareuser

    I believe so as well.

  • Winamp my favorite media player. can you somehow send these clips to me. ill pm you with email. or point me to a link where I can dl them. thanks.

  • weird..CB interference

  • not likely. CB radios use the frequencies in 27 MHz. short wave frequencies are below 27 MHz.

  • My personal opinion is that there is someone that overlays on the frequency of WWV radio simply to disturb them... or probably a crypted message (like number station or spy stations) or a radioamateur, fisherman and so on... Between the minute 8:04 and 8:49 it's also possible to hear them singing... and at 8:49 the "Hola Hola Holaaaa" starts once again... unfortunately I've never received this signal in Italy, only the WWV sometimes... Have a nice day !!!!

  • I do sometimes hear whistling and similar things on WWV but i have never heard anything like this...wow.

  • Maybe these are voices from the other side, EVPs.

  • That's highly ilogical!

  • @xtreme01hac10docter Spock, Illegals are not logical. Because they can get away with it.

  • @Cotronixco lol I love you

    

  • SORRY-- Work ED.... 2 years ago...

  • LOL.. Yes, LOTS going on here.. I work for the Nat. Inst.. in Fort Collins.. I have always had this issue with the broadcast..

  • Thats from colorado, I think the time is from a nuclear clock

  • @sz42781 It's not nuclear, but atomic.

  • There is a lot going on in this video. The Hola Hola of course, at 0:45 and 2:55 is the morse code ID of the China time station "BPM". At 1:15 you can hear the time announcement from "YVTO" Venezuela time station. The very high pitched ticking at the beginning is the Russia time station "RWM" on 9996khz. Great video !

  • What do you mean it's the Morse code ID?? Who's saying it and why, and how is that morse code?

  • The Chinese station is under all the Spanish jabbering. It's a faint, fluttering tone. You can hear it clearly between 3:10 and 3:20. " _ ... ._ _ . _ _ " or "BPM" the call letters of their station. There is SO MUCH going on in this recording, the conditons were excellent to hear so much from all around the world at the same time. North America, South America, and Asia !!

  • Oh, okay.. but (sorry if I missed it), who IS doing all of the "hola, hola" and why on Earth?? I've heard it too.. who's it directed at? is it fishermen, or??

  • It's a selectivity problem. The whole radio spectrum signal is too strong for the radio and some stations 455 kHz up/down the dial and multiples leak through. When I hooked up my TV antenna to my Grundig G6 Aviator and used a headphone volume control to adjust the input level, I can hear a bunch of voices over the beeping when I turn the level of the antenna signal up.

    For fun, hook an LED to an LM-386 amplifier chip and hook a long wire to the LED, you'll hear loads of voices..

  • so you have PCB for that ???

  • I used a prototyping board, so it wasn't permanent. I just wanted to see what I could pick up. The LED goes on the input and the wire goes to the LED.

  • is there a site that streams shortwave?

  • Its just the Fort Collins time standard signal. It bangs out of Colorado at 10kW, so you should be able to pick it up pretty much anywhere. There are other time standard signals all the way up from long wave.

  • he is talking about background voice talking hola hola hola

  • i can also hear the same but in 5MHz

  • WWV broadcasts on 5 frequencies - 2.5, 5, 10, 15 and 20 MHz. The idea is you should always be able to get a clear signal on at least one of them because reception on each varies at certain times of the day. I remember 10 and 15 Mhz being stronger at night.

  • I can often hear this station very faintly in the UK, using my handheld SW radio.

    It always seems to fade out during the speech portions though, and I've never heard the Spanish hellos - very strange :)

  • how do i get this station?

  • You need a shortwave radio tuned to 2.5, 5, 10, 15, or 20 MHz. WWV is listenable in most of North America.

  • is that AM radio?

  • Yes, WWV transmits using AM. But an ordinary AM radio won't pick it up. You need a shortwave radio.

  • @vwestlife i listened the wwv in south america

  • @vwestlife actually U can listen it worldwide on certain atmospheric conditions

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