Lt. Savannah Rae Reporting:
It's been 12 days since the last CM transmission, due to the destruction of the communications module. I have pieced together a transmitter from spare parts, though I have no adequate means of testing the equipment. I am broadcasting on 4 non-standard frequencies (144.3255, 145.1285, 2404.35, 2404.45), in the hope that this and following messages reach Earth on at least one of the frequencies. I will broadcast once a day at this time until I can no longer do so.
6 comments:
Those frequencies are reserved for satellite communications...
Are the messages data or voice? On a lark, I monitored the frequencies indicated, but didn't receive anything. When did you supposedly receive the communication?
That was emailed to me. It sounded interesting, so I made a blog of it.
I got something! Though I don’t know how to translate it. I have equipment to monitor and record 30 different freqs simultaneously. Yesterday I set it up to monitor the four freqs mentioned in the CM log. I Checked the recording this evening and discovered a 5 second transmission burst at 16:37 EST.
I thought it was just static, but all four freqs had the same 5 second burst of static. The signals were weak and faded in and out, but the signal fragments aligned perfectly. In other words, the same information was on all 4 freqs.
It is definitely data, not analog. I have no way to translate it, for all I know it could be encrypted. I’m going to tinker with it, see what I can do, but you could save me a lot of time if you told me about the email and its source.
I have a friend who emails everyone with anything he finds unusual. He has a friend who is just like him, and he has a friend… I think you get the picture. Getting to the source may take some time.
No need, I think I got it!
I used previous recordings of 2 frequencies close to the ones mentioned. I reviewed the recordings from 16:00 to 17:00. I got a bleed over burst at 16:10 (Savannah didn’t do a good job of tuning her transmitter). Though the data was incomplete, it was enough to compare with your blog message… There is no encryption, it’s just a matter of decoding. Kind of like ASCII, but not anything I’m familiar with. As an example, S equals 01B2 in hex.
I am working on decoding the message now, but it takes time. If you give me rights, I will post the translation in your blog when I finish.
Done!
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