This is a copy of The Numbers Racket CD-ROM, which I prepared back in 1998. I am presenting it here, unedited, for historical purposes. Obviously most if not all of the information is 'out of date' today, but think of it as a snapshot of what the Spy Numbers scene was like in the late 1990s.
Like what you see here? Help support my work by taking a look at my software , and buy something of interest :) It's all available for download before purchase, so you can try it out.
Enjoy!
The Morse Code - A tutorial on morse code, with audio clips of all of the commonly used more characters.
Notes R4= Repeat for 4 minutes 5F= 5 Figure paired groups 197x3= Repeated 3 times // Parallel Frequency
0 A 1 N 2 D 3 U 4 W 5 R 6 I 7 G 8 M 9 T
M1 2-Tone hand-keyed M2 CW version of NNN, ends AR Long Zero M3 / Ends ==000 M4 LOLO Long Zero M05- 6 Fig 000000 Long Zero *M6 OLX M7 Formerly Rapid Dashes MCW ends 000 + TS M8 Cut Numbers, Ends AR AR AR SK SK SK M09- M10 Formerly Rapid Dashes CW 2 fig DK, End 000 M11 Variation of M1 M12 Ends 000 000(3 or 4 fig. DK) M13 Ends 3 long dashes M14 Ends 00000 or 5 long dashes M15- DEA 47 M16 8BY M17 MCW ends VA M18 4 fig pseudo time signal M19 MPL M20 V ends == 000 M21 ????? 14 fig pseudo time signal type. M22- 4XZ M23 Odd/Even Many Variants (all long zero) M24 Ends 5 long dashes, see M14 M25 KKN, KRH, KWS series M26 98 M27- BTV M28 HEP M29 VDE ends AR M30 M31- FDC, FDG etc series M32 (Russian Military Net) M33 P8K Long Zero M34 1 12345 2fig IDs, no ending M39 3 fig IDs + 4 elements of 5 figure M36 Deleted, it was actually P8K M40- CQ 3 fig M41- WZD M42- KUL etc network M43- 6XM8/C37A group M44 Continuous Letters M45 S21 Morse, ends 000 M46 3 fig cumulative M47 /2/3fig cumulative (JST) M48- Ciocirlia Morse M49- G8A morse M50 Hand Keyed 5431kHz+ 4947kHz Many Variants M51 100x 5L groups M52 2fig:6fig M53 YT / BVT Family? M55 3fg Null Message M56 1fig:5fig M57 ==4fg M58 ===3lt M63 A2A
This is a copy of The Numbers Racket CD-ROM, which I prepared back in 1998. I am presenting it here, unedited, for historical purposes. Obviously most if not all of the information is 'out of date' today, but think of it as a snapshot of what the Spy Numbers scene was like in the late 1990s.
Like what you see here? Help support my work by taking a look at my software , and buy something of interest :) It's all available for download before purchase, so you can try it out.