4U-ADP

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4U-ADP
The Beeper
Broadcast areaTeudallum
Frequency8710 kHz (day)
3818 kHz (night)
First air dateOctober 21, 1965 (1965-10-21) (first heard)
FormatRepeated two-beep tone, ocassionally interrupted by voice transmission
Language(s)Serbian
Former callsignsPokriv-61, Galeb-10
Former frequencies5172 kHz, 8010 kHz
OperatorNikolian Royal Army (Unconfirmed)

The 4U-ADP, also known as the Beeper is a nickname given by amateur radio operators and listeners to a shortwave station that broadcasts on the frequencies 8710 kHz during the day and 3818 kHz during the night. Its distinctive interval signal is two beep tone similar to a dialing tone on landline telephones. The two beeps are separated by 0.5sec pause, while one second pause divides the two beep group, for a total of 80 beeps per minute, 24h a day.

The interval signal is sometimes interrupted with a continuous 5 second beep, followed by a 10 second pause, after which a live voice transmission in Serbian takes place. The first reports of this station happened in 1965, likely connected by the Nikolian intervention in the Caranad Conflict.

Name

Format

Voice messages

Sometimes the beeping interval signal stops, being followed by a continuous 5 second beep, after which a voice message with a fixed format follows. In the first recorded message in 1965, the Beeper used the callsign Pokrov-61, and the message was:

Pokrov-61, Pokrov-61, 24GPE 87 51 121 ZAHVAT 67 541 61 77, ponavljam, 2-4-Gustav-Pavel-Eva, 2-4-Gustav-Pavel-Eva, Zebra-Ana-Henrik-Violeta-Ana-Tomas 6-7 5-4-1 6-1 7-7 Pokrov-61 gotovo.

Unusual transmissions

Function

See also