I've never heard of that term , STANAG before, you sure that's some sort of
digital communication?
I looked around your area (satellite) and see no military complex for miles
around. I suppose it could be a remote transmitter, but I'd have to ask why
Moscow Idaho?
At that signal strength I would expect the interference to be very close to
your location. Unless it is some sort of high power military remote
transmitter, then others would surely hear it too. Is it on 24/7 or just
certain times? Maybe you should log the times it's on then correlate with
times other commercial establishments are occupied. If you have a portable
receiver that tunes that freq, take it for a ride out of town, park and see if
you hear it.
Dale, k9vuj
On 28, Apr 2014, at 10:15, Kenneth G. Gordon <kgordon2006@frontier.com> wrote:
> From one of our list members who has heard my smaller-sized recordings of
> this garbage, it is STANAG, which is the defacto standard military digital
> mode.
>
> This is very seriously depressing me.
>
> I cannot even imagine who in this area might be using that mode. We have
> no military installations anywhere near this small town. The nearest one, an
> AFB, is in Spokane, WA nearly 100 miles north of us.
>
> It is centered on 4286 KHz and literally wipes out EVERYTHING at least 1.5
> MHz above and below that frequency.
>
> It is 25db over S-9 on 4286 KHz, and still 15db over S-9 on the LOW end of
> 80 meters.
>
> I intend to DF its location this week, now that I can easily recognize the
> signal.
>
> Kenneth G. Gordon W7EKB
>
> "Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway."--- John Wayne
>
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