Then why isn't this ticking heard on all my other radios? I also tested with the same antennas, in the same position, and none of them pick that up. AND why can I actually manipulate the pulse by using the backlight switch, LO, or other keyboard activity? The keyboard doesn't just mute it temporarily, you can hear it restarting / jumping into the cycle.
There is also a thread that poo-poohed this very same observation about the birdies heard on the 72 and 95xlt's in vhf low-band. In this case, the birdies are clean, and strong enough to break the squelch when searching. What was maddening is that the birdies are walking - that is, they slowly move upwards in frequency. So if you listen long enough, the birdie moves - which makes it impractical to just do a lock out - or just put up with it for 20 seconds or so as it moves off frequency. Eventually it rolls around again.
And, just like this case, when you pull the antenna, the birdies aren't detected so an external noise source is determined by others to be the culprit, and the owners just don't know what they are talking about.
I'm in Los Angeles, and another user in Australia noticed the same thing and we went over this here as well. As experienced users, the first thing we went looking for was an external source and found it to be internal. But since most people don't care about vhf low anymore, and you could just write it off as something external - proved by the use of an antenna in the first place, the situation is ignored.
In fact, I used my 396xt to try and track down what I thought was the sweeping noise source affecting my 72/95's. To my dismay, the 396xt had the same issue on vhf-lo, on a narrower spectrum, only it was VERY muted, much slower to sweep, AND would not break squelch - so most won't notice it. You really got to dig for it on the 396.
Now, we are in the same boat - only the birdie is stable on a number of frequencies, but with a raspy clock pulse. It does not break squelch, but if it is on a frequency you have programmed, AND communications occur, you can hearing it mixed in with the audio on SOME frequencies. Of course, you have to have the antenna attached to notice it, which puts us back into user-error territory vicious circle.
Because it won't break squelch, it would take forever to find them with the squelch open on the 125AT. I started to slowly manually search with the squelch open, and found them also on the same frequencies the others mentioned, but also on 118.475, 119.2333, 134.4833 etc. They were lower in amplitude than the one on 128.375 (louder on 128.3833). The three frequencies first listed are not a problem for me since I don't have those programmed and they do not break squelch - even with the antenna attached - but they are there. I don't have time to move step by step through the spectrum with the squelch open.
I could easily see this going the same way the 72/95xlt vhf-low birdie issue goes - the owners must be crazy, and because the birdies are not detectable without an antenna attached, they are mis-diagnosing what must be a local issue. I'm crazy, but not THAT crazy.