I could really use some assistance from those familiar with any TP
listeners in **Australia** and regions of the south.
As was mentioned in the past, all of you guys in the west coast
areas of North America (and apparently northern Europe) commonly
hear the "beehive" jammer on 1053 out of Seoul, which has an
exceptionally poor signal in South Korea as opposed to the far
stronger (sounding) 250kw siren jammer 16 miles to the west.
So I'm curious in the case of those living to the *south* - as it
appears the siren jammer is aimed in that direction - if the siren
jammer can be heard in regions south of Korea instead of the beehive
jammer heard elsewhere to the north and east.
If anyone can pass this along to anyone who may have such
experience, I'd really appreciate it! I'd like to have evidence of
the direction in which these jammers are aimed and as can be seen
with the 1323 CRI (Korean vs. Russian) signals that are/aren't
received in the US and Canada, it's the directional stations that
really get out. If my thinking is correct, those to the south would
regularly hear the *Korean* CRI while those in the states would hear
the Russian one.
Here are the two jammers:
http://www.beaglebass.com/dx/external/NIS_1053_Seoul_Gimpo.MP3
The Seoul beehive jammer is the first half of the clip. The Gimpo
siren jammer is the last half. Who hears what?
-Chris Kadlec
Seoul AM Radio Listening Guide