Russian Ionospheric Link

Russian Remote Relay network

Before the satelite communication was implemented Russian military bases located at the low-populated places such as shores of Arctic Ocean or frozen Siberian forests had to communicate somehow. It was practically impossible to connect them with wire because required too much effort, and was not secure at all - just a small cut off of the line would cause days of searching for it at -40 weather.

So Russian army has implemented the network of stations that fired their messages to ionosphere then the message was reflected from it and returned to the Earth surface - right to another station. By connecting those stations in relay chain they could communicate through all 10000 mile wide Russian land instantly.

After the sat connections came into play some of the stations were discontinued some were converted to satelite link.

Below you can see the map of this system, and the basic stations. People were sent there to serve their military service for two years guided by full time military commanders. Some still remember those times with a nice nostalgic feeling, some don’t - just imagine to live in the middle of the nowhere for couple of years with the only task to service some strange looking antenna.

Russian Remote Relay network 2





Russian Remote Relay network 3

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Russian Remote Relay network 6

Russian Remote Relay network 7

Russian Remote Relay network 8

Russian Remote Relay network 9

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Russian Remote Relay network 12

Russian Remote Relay network 13

Russian Remote Relay network 14

Russian Remote Relay network 15

Russian Remote Relay network 16

Russian Remote Relay network 17

Russian Remote Relay network 18

Russian Remote Relay network 19

Russian Remote Relay network 20

Russian Remote Relay network 21

Russian Remote Relay network 22

Russian Remote Relay network 23

Russian Remote Relay network 24

Russian Remote Relay network 25

via tllrsever.org

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    5:28 pm


    59 Responses to “Russian Ionospheric Link”

      • Miss India says:

        OMG Russians are so poor, look at their crumbling communication infrastructure, rotting, rusting and crumbling away just like poor Russia. I feel sorry for the poor people of Russia :(

        • you idiot slut, these were used 60 years ago, learn to read english properly before commenting next time

          • Miss India says:

            OMG Russians are so smart and industrious, 99% of countries do not have this technology TODAY much less 60 years ago. No wonder disgusting backwards Americans are so behind, what do you expect with a country of niggers, spicks, white trash and guineas, such a disgusting country, yuck! :(

            • Dennis says:

              go away Miss India, your being pathetic.

            • scot says:

              Marks for fake Russian Miss India = -10

              you always get -10 if there isn’t one redeeming feature in your post.

            • Jizzbomb says:

              Miss India is the world’s cum dumpster.

            • mr.india says:

              stop ruining arround you bitch..your bringing shame to our peoples…you just dont deserve to live elsewhere than home country..wtf with OMG THING…show some respect to the great country or shut the fuck off..randi saali…

              people….sorry for her…i still have doubt that this whore is is not indian alall..i an bet on it…so try to avoid creepy comments on indians….we are good peoples.

              my request to all of you..from now onwords mension her as ‘RANDEE’…similar to the whore…but just the indian way..

              btw no counrty is perfect.people makes it perfect….

        • Mark says:

          Miss India, look at your own country you stupid bitch and show me signs of progress. The Russia and the USA are wealthy countries while yours is a land of slumdogs and dogs and gypsies. Fuck Off.

      • Darren7160 says:

        I served at sites just like those when I was in the United States Air Force. On two mountain tops in Greece and one site in Turkey. Even on mobile equipment that fit on the back of a pickup truck. Awesome pics and it really shows how much we are alike, rather than how different we were. Same young people serving honorably for the old people to use.

    1. Me says:

      Who can tell me why they are pointing down?

      • peter says:

        perhaps they reflect the waves to a reciever on the ground

      • Chilean_dude says:

        Maybe the flat surface side of the antenna isn’t the “front” side…

        • DougW says:

          The large surfaces are just reflectors, the feed horn antenna is located above the ground in front of the reflector. The angles look odd but the beam will have a takeoff angle of about 20-30 degrees

          • gordski says:

            correct. It’s called “offset feed”
            it has many advantages, like:
            .easy access to feedpoints (the feed horns shown low down at the end of the horizontal “walkways” in some photos)
            .lower noise figure as the feedhorn aims against “cold” outer space rather than the “warm” earth
            .mechancal rigidity (due to feed arm being braced against the mass of the earth) helps focussing issues.
            .reflectors can be easily replaced or re-aligned (within limits)
            .additional off axis “skew” feeds can be fitted (though at much reduced gain)
            ..there are others..

    2. Starshii says:

      Wow. Cool stuff. 2nd.

    3. Chilean_dude says:

      Awesome.

      This is the kind of posts that make me love this website.

      Like old-soviet-conspiracy-abandoned-secret stuff.

    4. viperman says:

      You guys are nerds!!!!
      You probably get hard looking at these commuication/spy systems and wonder what its like to be James Bond!
      Good God Boys!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

      Picture this as the rest of us normal men would want to see - ok? Following me here?

      Naked Russia girls in front of these and its very cold out - you know what happens??? Thats right - hard nipples!!
      Now thats a fucking picture I want to see!!! Dozens of naked Russian girls dancing around these things - dancing to Akon, Usher or hell even that song called lolli lolli pop that body…..got to go…..

    5. Alec says:

      Fantastic. This is what I love about this website! Crazy, but I want to visit some of these places…

    6. Jason says:

      I believe this was the first guidence system for the goldeneye defense satallite.Dont believe the propaganda above!

    7. Gerry says:

      NATO had a similar network of communications called ACE High, it was used from the 60’s till late 80’s or early 90’s. It was pretty wide, from USA till Turkey throughout Europe. When I was child I remember some huge antennas on mountains’ peak, everybody was calling them “radars” but nobody knew their real purpose, we thought it was air defense system.

      After satellite communications were evolved (and became cheaper) all these projects were phased out.

    8. Gerry says:

      Find all soviet antenna stations here and zoom them in google maps:

      rammstein.dfmk.hu/~s200/tropo.html#sever

    9. [...] EnglishRussia hat mal wieder ein paar empfehlenswerte Reisetipps für Sammler und Jäger. Alte verlassene Militär-Stützpunkte am Rande des arktischen Ozeans oder in den eisigen sibirischen Wäldern. Da es über diese riesigen Entfernungen zu aufwendig war, ein Kommunikationsnetzwerk über den Ether zu spannen, baute die Regierung riesige Teleskope, für die Kommunikation durch die Ionosphäre. Nachdem die Statellitenkommunikation ins Spiel kam, wurden diese Anlagen nicht mehr betrieben. Eine kleine Karte zu diesem System und Bilder gibts bei EnglishRussia. Posted by admin | Filed in Urban Exploration [...]

    10. w says:

      Whaty would make greater photo opportunity would be photo from top of these giant. They must have some amazing views.

    11. All hail the Soviet Technocrats!!!

    12. Gerry says:

      I don’t find all these abandoned sites all that amusing. Some of the wankers here need to get some grasp of human history.

      And Miss India is a wanker.

    13. ly2aan says:

      Sure, this is certainly no communication antennaes, but long-distance over-the-horizon radar antennaes. If the map is correct they were used in order to spy on the Americans.

    14. Bilosh says:

      I always hating theses antenna! Theys reminding me of right-most portion of Evil Amerikan flag!!! Why did they not paint them to look a like nice Russian flag??

    15. spooker says:

      Interesting post, and these are tropospheric scatter systems, Cool!!. Indeed they were necessary to cover this large territory, while remains unknown to me if the transmissions were encrypted cause Americans develop SIGINT satellites like the Orion, Vortex, Mercury, Ferret, Magnum, Mentor and many others to eavesdrop on this systems, part of the signals dont bounce on atmosphere so they can be picked up by the large mylar antennas of those spy satellites. Maybe they get something or at least useful to get traffic analysis details. Anyway those pics are awesome, the source page even has videos of it.

    16. anonymouse says:

      Woah, bouncing signals off the ionosphere? Awesome pictures

    17. [...] C’è poco da dire, il sito English Russia continua a rivelarsi una miniera di diamanti per tutti gli amanti come me delle linee evolutive interrotte e abbandonate della tecnologia del XX secolo. Già la storia dei fari nucleari dismessi sulla Northern Sea Route e caduti preda di saccheggiatori di RTG ci aveva regalato manciate di sense of wonder e più moderni brividi di inquietudine. Be’, siete pronti per un nuovo giro sulla giostra dell’immaginario? E allora torniamo in Siberia, per scoprire l’altrettanto suggestiva storia dei collegamenti inosferici e delle radiostazioni a onde medie. [...]

    18. freethinker says:

      Miss India, sorry Miss “Indiot”, like to be fuck in the dirty ass by a donkey….she likes to eat fresh horse cum…..

    19. Joe says:

      Another enormous yet interesting russian structure. Keep posting.

    20. Alex says:

      you should really consider to put registration for the commentators and turn on moderatorial to ban idiots like Miss india and all those who reply to “it’s” posts.

    21. Vytas says:

      Miss India are you this blog writer? You are very active and agresive commenter. Maybe “she” is a PR of this blog?

    22. [...] Sunt din ce in ce mai impresionat de nebunia si in acelasi timp de performantele tehnologice ale fostului popor sovietic. In imaginile de mai sus/jos puteti vedea un sistem de radio telecomunicatie la mare distanta de tip pamant/ionosfera/pamant. Mai multe informatii si imagini pot fi gasite aici. [...]

    23. pakisatn is best fuck all the rest …hahaha idiots russian & usa … peoples ,,

    24. Panther says:

      oh my - how little is known ….

      OK, Everybody - these are actually (most of them) - yes wait for it - microwave receivers !!! On picture number seventeen (or so) you can see the round ones which are actual transmitters. These are used for long distance line-of-sight communication - that is why they build relay stations on high mountains / hills. They are mostly used by the military for telephonic type communication which is not reliant on the civilian telecoms infrastructure. They receive quite a strong microwave signal and if you manage to park a modern car close to an active station it can really mess with the electronics.

    25. George Myers says:

      In th4e US they had something similar during WWII. LArge tracks of land on Long Island in New York State (currently over 4000 acres as a State park formerly “RCA property”) and others one nearby another large “wireless” array near Princeton, NJ were used to send signals bounced I think off the ionosphere at night to Europe during the war. I think David Saranoff (or Saranov), then promoted to General, the RCA research center in Princeton, New Jersey today was in charge. Nearby Orson Welles landed the Martian invaders at Grovers Mill in the 1938 Halloween radio transmission of H.G. Wells “War of the Worlds”. The wire arrays, were more like gridded lines between telephone poles and did not stand out like these from what I know. The first “radio fax” of a picture was in 1924 perhaps used that way also. I was told the plans for the D-Day invasion were kept in a safe on Governors Island in NYC perhaps transmitted by ionospheric transmission too over the large networks just above the tops of “pine barrens” today preserved for rainwater recharge of aquifer.

    26. Sacha9378 says:

      Well you know the HAARP ?, It’s the same thing, project for ionospheric “control”, you remeber Katrina ? and the new magnetic weapon.
      sorry for my english.

    27. robb says:

      will those survive storm ?
      looks cool anyway, like intercepting alien communication.

    28. RUSSIA beautiful!!! so big, strong wanna get fucked?? comeon over.. talk is cheep

    29. My grandfather worked on a similar installation for the U.S. Army in Greenland.

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