Here's a little bit about different jammers on the South Korean side of things 
for those who are interested. I have been sifting through 40 hours of unedited 
recordings of East Asia MW over the past week or so and can now view them in a 
more organized fashion than when I presented on the same topic in Madison last 
August (for the few of you who attended) with basically no preparation 
whatsoever. I'll leave the North Korean side of things for another time as they 
have their own unique sounds, especially the big metro Pyongyang frequencies 
(891, 900, 1143, 1467, 1566, and 1584, not to forget the freaking 75 kHz-wide 
711 that wipes out a fair chunk of the Seoul daytime band).

I'd like to share nine clips. Some are experimental while others are 24/7 
permanent. The experimental site south of Seoul just came online with 24/7 
full-power jamming with the obvious end result of their long-term testing and 
I'm not including that in here, though it's not drastically different from 
what's heard here (just more annoying).

First, here's the most basic form of the jammer the ROK has been using for some 
time. It's just the raw sound with nothing additional added in yet. This was at 
the experimental site 7 miles from my FM site.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Basic.MP3

Next, this is the standard jammer that has been used more or less for the past 
year in Seoul. Note the same sound with sirens added. There are minor 
differences now and then.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Standard.MP3

My arch-nemesis, the hum jammer. They're using these on multiple frequencies 
and via skywave and groundwave, I cannot identify the locations and they clog 
otherwise-listenable frequencies from China. This particular one is on 855 and 
near the coastal border.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Hummer.MP3

This is the Gimpo siren jammer, THE most powerful jammer in Korea at 250kw, 
aimed south and on 16 1/2 hours a day, yet still stupidly leaving a full hour a 
day unjammed. While it's the most heard in the country, the dinky Seoul jammer 
16 miles away is the one that gets out across the entire globe but can barely 
cover a 50-mile radius in Korea. We suspect its power is going up to the sky 
(or due north) as opposed to covering the ground as it should be.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Siren.MP3

Put them all together - the basic, standard, siren, and hummer, and you end up 
with this. This is a single jammer near the experimental site, meaning they 
have added it all together into one signal for that day anyway.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Angry.MP3

This one was heard in mid-June from the southern experimental site. I'm not 
even sure how to describe it... like a rubber band rapidly hitting something 
over and over. Annoyingly effective, but just a test. Never heard before or 
since.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Static.MP3

This one is used at tourist sites along the DMZ. This is recorded less than 10 
miles from the tower of 50kw 810 KCBS while standing beside the North Korean 
customs booth a half mile from the actual border, but a 60dBu silent signal 
very closeby is muffling it. These are mounted on little sticks on the side of 
buildings like 10-watt transmitters.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Low_Power.MP3

My favorite of all: the "now you hear it, now you don't, ha ha!" jammer from 
the southern experimental site. 1 min 40 sec of jamming, 40 seconds of no 
jamming, repeat. Local 657 Pyongyang can be heard in the lack of jamming, at 
noon.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Intermittent.MP3

And lastly, there is the jammer warfare with the two sides jamming each other. 
The video game-like jammer is 819 Pyongyang. The other jammer is the standard 
Seoul jammer.

http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/Jammer_Warfare.MP3

-Chris Kadlec
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