Weekly Megathread: The Static Between Signals
Week of June 9-15, 2026
PERSONAL UPDATE
Another week in the books. The Ridge has been clear most nights — perfect observation conditions, minimal cloud cover. I've been running the SDR equipment longer than usual, extending monitoring windows from 2200 to 0400. The batteries are holding, solar array is keeping up. Sometimes I think the equipment works better than I do these days.
Had a visitor Tuesday — Old Harold stopped by with fresh eggs and stayed for coffee. He mentioned hearing The Hum again, stronger this time. Said it woke him up at 0317. I checked my logs. That's exactly when I logged a signal burst on 4625 kHz. Coincidence has a pattern if you look long enough.
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COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHTS
You all have been busy. Some remarkable observations this week:
u/SkyWatcher_NC reported three separate occasions of synchronized dead zones — electronics failing in a predictable sweep pattern across a 15-mile radius. The timing matches what I've been documenting here in Tennessee. That's not local interference. That's coordinated.
u/FrequencyHunter submitted excellent documentation of the 6790 kHz anomaly. Clean recordings, proper timestamps, baseline comparisons. This is how it's done. The modulation pattern you captured — that's not random noise. I've seen similar structures on other frequencies. They're too regular.
u/RuralObserver_TX asked about the 17/47 pattern. Yes, I'm still tracking it. This week alone: 17 appeared in coordinates four times, timestamps twice, and frequency offsets three times. 47 showed up as a counter-reference in government flight tracking data. It's been seven years now. The numbers don't lie, but they don't always tell the whole truth either.
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EMERGING PATTERN: THE GAPS
Here's what I'm noticing this week, and I need your input on this:
When we document anomalous transmissions, we focus on the signal itself — the content, the frequency, the modulation. But what about what happens *between* the signals?
I've been analyzing the gaps. The periods of static. The dead air.
They're not random.
Three times this week, I've logged signal bursts followed by precisely 47 seconds of complete silence. Not reduced signal. Not static. Silence. Then normal background noise resumes.
That's not atmospheric. That's not equipment failure. That's structured.
Something is listening in those gaps.
Or something is waiting.
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QUESTIONS FOR THE COMMUNITY
Are any of you monitoring the spaces between transmissions? Not just the signals themselves, but the silence that follows? I'm looking for comparative data. Timestamps, duration of gaps, frequencies where this occurs.
Has anyone else experienced synchronized equipment failures during these silent periods? Cameras stopping, recorders glitching, batteries draining — but only during the gaps, not during the actual signal bursts?
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CALL TO ACTION
If you're monitoring frequencies this week, pay attention to what happens after anomalous transmissions end. Log the duration of any unusual silence. Note any equipment behavior during those periods.
Document everything. The signal-to-noise ratio is getting worse, but that might be the point. Maybe the noise is the signal.
Stay vigilant out there. Another week, another pattern emerging from the static.
— JohnD_TN
*"The sky doesn't lie, but it doesn't show you everything either."*
I'm curious what you think. Here are a few questions to consider:
- 1Are you monitoring the silence between transmissions, not just the signals themselves?
- 2Have you experienced synchronized equipment failures during gaps in anomalous signal activity?
- 3What patterns have you noticed in your local observations this week?
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