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I was listening to a commercial FM radio station on 100.9 MHz, and this intermittent weird sound kept coming through it.

Here is a recording of it. The audio starts at about 15 seconds.

It sounded like some data signal or screeching and beeping interrupted my listening experience, it did so periodically. It sounds like if you accidentally call a fax machine and you get that buzzing and screeching sound.

It was powerful enough to take out the station; I don't know if it was coming from the station itself, or if it was interference from another source. I had problems before with Internet signals getting through.

No other stations that I get have this problem.

I have a single-wire loop antenna that I have to twist to get clearer reception, and a Kenwood digital tuner.

Another observation is that the day was cloudy. I had no problem with reception other than static.

Is there anything I can do to prevent this?

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    $\begingroup$ It could very well be local interference, for example the radio receiver (broadcast?) was sitting next to a computer or a monitor or similar. Without a recording, we will find it difficult to answer the question. As it stands, it looks like a candidate for closure as "unsure what you're asking" $\endgroup$
    – Scott Earle
    Aug 2, 2018 at 8:00
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    $\begingroup$ It could also be internal to the receiver itself, but like the other commenters said, without a recording, there's not much else we can say. $\endgroup$
    – Duston
    Aug 2, 2018 at 15:25
  • $\begingroup$ Is there anything near the antenna or receiver? $\endgroup$ Aug 6, 2018 at 16:26
  • $\begingroup$ Thank you for the recording, that is very helpful, but nothing I've ever heard before. $\endgroup$
    – Duston
    Aug 7, 2018 at 14:29
  • $\begingroup$ Guessing is what we used to do with audio signals but today they can be analyzed by software and digital signal processing techniques. My favorite tool for this is Mathematica (www.wolfram.com) which I use for all kinds of things every single day so I recommend it to the serious audio experimenter. To read some of the functions available and graphic capabilities, read: reference.wolfram.com/language/tutorial/AudioProcessing.html $\endgroup$
    – K7PEH
    Aug 17, 2018 at 16:39

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Welcome the land of QRM also known as man made noise.

I realize this came from the headphone jack, so it recorded as stereo. its really a mono signal, both channels have the same wave form. because you used a lossy compression it would be may make it harder to try and decode it. (not that I'm that good mind you)

It kind of sounds like a problem we had here with a paging company. They were putting out 50Kw and as the transmitter unkeyed, the transmitter frequency would drift down from 465mhz down to into the VHF ham band. You would only hear it if you were within about a mile of the transmission site, The repeater didn't hear it because it used a PL for interference reduction.

Here is how you go about tracking it down... First confirm you can hear it on more than one receiver and in more that one place. This means that the thing you hear is real (for other people's verification). Then you can either go the Foxhunt route yourself, or contact the Radio Station on 100.9 and hopefully they can convince someone to do so. If you can prove that the interference is over a chunk of their listening audience, and affects say, their advertising then getting them to act on it is easier.

If you look at the audio as a wave form, you can see that the noise starts earlier than 15 seconds and runs until about 23, starts just before 30, and runs to 38. so its 9-10 seconds with a 5-7 second gap between transmissions. The encoding is likely some sort of audio FSK.

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  • $\begingroup$ When I recorded it i had my tablet the only speaker it came out of was the center speaker on my radio. The change in volume comes from the fact i pushed the tablet closer to the speaker to get a better reccording. The issue is that reccorded it twice to make sure people had the whole thing. $\endgroup$ Aug 17, 2018 at 18:28

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