In the US 450-470 MHz is allocated to Private Mobile Land Radio where encryption is allowed, if only with a single, poor cypher. The FM receiver you're using is picking up the encrypted voice traffic of a group of local PLMR operators.
doomgod
When you kill a combine soldier in Half Life 2:
libertyordeath.
Sounds like the probe droids from Star Wars
Dishlawyer
Nah bro really said “rarrrerrerprerrriirr” 💀😭
Creative_YT
Their radios were most likely using a scrembler
marvinlamug
It’s Ned and Uncle Jimbo from South Park
huejazz
That's a USB (upper sideband transmission), as others here have mentioned, as well as a foreign language. Nice radio!
wallstreettrader
Yeah that's voice inversion scrambling or "encryption". I started listening to the scanner in 1991, and that was the standard kind of scrambling at that time. There have been several improvements in the technology since then. They're not legal, but you can get a device that will un-scramble this kind of transmission. The other kinds -- not so much. Compared to this, those are like fort knox, and this is like there being a key under the mat. LOL
radioboy
Sounds like Rabot from Aqua Teen Hunger Force
moxxy
sounds like voice inversion scrambling
lands
mothership zeta fallout 3 type shit rn bro
kath
Sounds like someone’s using a scrambler in the transmission.
TheTechPianoPlayerKid
They're just two stations on a pair of repeater offset frequencies so they can only hear each other with a voice inversion scrambler. I used to have a pair of radio shack gmrs FRS blister pack radios that had a voice inversion scrambler in it until they took it off the market.
RFBurns
It's just an imperial probe droid
-force-
Alastor from Hazbin Hotel tryna tell you a secret 😂
AFeralTrout
What type of radio is that? I've been looking for something like that.
numaorus
What is that device called ? Suddenly, I find I'm rather interested. How do you know who broadcasts on which ranges ? Can you also speak/broadcast using this device ?
dmmchugh
This isn't some giant mystery. Some jerk is illegally using encryption. Mystery solved.
ErnestGWilsonII
It's Voice Inversion encryption, 1st generation very old school, but still functional and useful for analog radios.
warrior-
Sounds like SSB to me. You can get a cheap sdr and some free software to listen to it. No license required.