DX LISTENING DIGEST 11-36, September 7, 2011
Incorporating REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING
edited by Glenn Hauser, http://www.worldofradio.com
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WORLD OF RADIO 1581 HEADLINES:
DX and station news about: Albania, Botswana, Canada, China, Cyprus
Turkish, Diego Garcia, Europe, Germany, Guam, India, Indonesia,
Ireland non, Iran, Israel, Korea, Libya, Madagascar, Mauritania,
Mexico, Mozambique non, North America, Peru, Portugal, Taiwan non,
Tajikistan, UK non, USA
SHORTWAVE AIRINGS OF WORLD OF RADIO 1581, September 8-14, 2011
Thu 0330 WRMI 9955 [confirmed on webcast]
Thu 1500 WRMI 9955
Thu 2100 WRMI 9955 [confirmed, not jammed]
Thu 2100 WTWW 9479 [confirmed]
Thu 2130 WBCQ 7415 [confirmed]
Fri 0330 WWRB 5051 [to move to 3195??]
Fri 0500 WRMI 9955
Fri 1430 WRMI 9955
Sat 0800 WRMI 9955
Sat 1500 WRMI 9955
Sat 1730 WRMI 9955
Sun 0400 WTWW 5755
Sun 0800 WRMI 9955
Sun 1530 WRMI 9955
Sun 1730 WRMI 9955
Mon 0300v WBCQ 5110v-CUSB
Mon 1130 WRMI 9955
Mon 1530 WRMI 9955
Mon 2130 WRMI 9955
Tue 1530 WRMI 9955
Wed 1530 WRMI 9955
Latest edition of this schedule version, including AM, FM, satellite
and webcasts with hotlinks to station sites and audio, is at:
http://www.worldofradio.com/radioskd.html or
http://schedule.worldofradio.org or http://sked.worldofradio.org
For updates see our Anomaly Alert page:
http://www.worldofradio.com/anomaly.html
WRN ON DEMAND:
http://193.42.152.193/listeners/stations/station.php?StationID=24
WORLD OF RADIO PODCASTS VIA WRN:
http://www.wrn.org/wrn-listeners/world-of-radio/
http://www.wrn.org/listeners/world-of-radio/rss/09:00:00UTC/English/541
OUR ONDEMAND AUDIO:
http://www.worldofradio.com/audiomid.html
or http://wor.worldofradio.org
DXLD YAHOOGROUP: Why wait for DXLD? A lot more info, not all of it
appearing in DXLD later, is posted at our yg without delay.
When applying, please identify yourself with your real name and
location, and say something about why you want to join. Those who do
not, unless I recognize them, will be prompted once to do so and no
action will be taken otherwise. Here`s where to sign up:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dxld/
** AFGHANISTAN. There has been no official SW service from Afghanistan
since October 2001; at that time the national broadcaster was the
Taleban-run Radio Voice of Shari`ah (formerly Radio Afghanistan) which
could be heard on 7085v kHz. I was listening to the station`s English
service on the afternoon of 8 October 2001 when, at 1610 UT, it
suddenly went silent: the very moment when the Kabul transmitter site
was destroyed in a US bombing raid.
The new transmitter is being reported on 6102 kHz by DXers in Asia,
Russia and Central Europe but is difficult to hear in the UK at the
moment. It should start to propagate better here by September with the
onset of autumnal conditions. The transmitter is a 100 kW Thomson at
Yakatut to the east of Kabul; it was financed by India (Dave Kenny, DX
News, Sept BDXC-UK Communication via DXLD)
6102, 1527 12 Aug, R. Afghanistan, Kabul. Song, 1531, ID ``This is
Radio Afghanistan - broadcasting on 6100 kHz in the 49 metre band, now
the news``. News from Iran, USA, etc. (Rumen Pankov, Sofia, Bulgaria,
HF Logbook, Sept BDXC-UK Communication via DXLD)
6102, 5/9 1610-1631*, Radio Afghanistan, talks and songs, Urdu, YL
final ID and sign-off at 1631 weak, better in USB (Giampiero
Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace
SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** AFGHANISTAN. REBUILDING OF THE RADIO AFGHANISTAN
Here are some photos of the Radio Afghanistan antenna mast and the
towers in Kabul, district Yakatut in process of construction
(coordinates 34- 32- 23.59N and 69-12-41.82E). I suppose that by the
end of construction the biggest tower started to to look a bit strange
(you can compare it with the second image on #1932). Are these masts
and the tower just for the MW only or for the SW as well (6102 kHz)
[Yakatut - Kabul, R. Afganistan. 1]
[Yakatut - Kabul, R. Afganistan. 2]
[Yakatut - Kabul, R. afganistan. 3]
[Yakatut - Kabul, R. Afganistan. 4]
[Yakatut - Kabul, R. Afganistan. 5 60m tower]
[Yakatut - Kabul, R. Afganistan. 6]
(Lev Lytovchenko, Canada, Sept 1, shortwavesites yg via DXLD)
** AFGHANISTAN. US ARMY RADIO STATION IN AFGHANISTAN: PASHTO BALLADS,
CALL-IN, JOKES, AND ARMY'S NARRATIVE. --- Posted: 06 Sep 2011
Washington Post, 24 Aug 2011, Kevin Sieff: "DJ Abed Lawang is one of
the biggest names on the airwaves, known for playing hit Pashto
ballads, telling jokes and hosting a popular call-in show about
farming practices. But there’s one key fact the disc jockey has never
told his listeners: He is broadcasting from a studio on a U.S. Army
base, delivering messages written by American military officers. He is
one of more than 20 radio DJs in Paktika province, and dozens more
across the country, who are engaged in what the U.S. military
considers a crucial operation: persuading residents in an area
dominated by insurgents to embrace Afghan and NATO forces. In
practice, that means he has to pause between Pakistani love songs and
passages from the Koran to read about the heroism of Afghan and
American armies, as well as the destruction wreaked by insurgents. The
commentary is not always well received; he uses the pseudonym to
protect himself... .
The radio campaign has been a boon to the U.S. war effort, enabling
the Army to advance its own narrative after successful operations or
destructive Taliban attacks. ... 'We hear the station’s messages about
the Afghan government and ISAF achievements. It is sometimes good
information, but many people here assume [Light FM] is run by
Americans. It doesn’t seem independent,' said Ali Mohammad Nazari, 20,
a Sharana resident." (kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
** AFGHANISTAN [non]. 15320, 7/9 1107, Radio Mashaal, via Thailand to
Afghanistan, rep. [?] in Pashtu, reports, fair // 15360
15680, 7/9 1126, Radio Free Afghanistan, via Thailand, rep. in Dari,
talks mentioning continuously "Afghanistan", fair. At 1130 change of
speaker and language with reports, mentioning also Pakistan (Giampiero
Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace
SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ALASKA. US CHRISTIAN BROADCASTER EXAMINES THE FUTURE OF SHORTWAVE
RADIO
Since the dawn of wireless communications, international broadcasters,
including the Voice of America, have used shortwave radio to
communicate with the world. While many broadcasters now are switching
to other technology to get their broadcasts out, privately funded
religious organizations in the United States still are devoted to
shortwave. VOA's Jerome Socolovsky visited a Christian broadcaster
near Nashville, Tennessee.
VIDEO STREAM on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XyFbqnI_VIE
DOWNLOAD VIDEO [18.8 MB]:
http://bbgvoa.edgeboss.net/download/bbgvoa/kickapps/videos/1630501.mp4
(via Dragan Lekic, Serbia, dxldyg via DXLD)
Nice reception of KNLS Alaska this am, 11870 kHz. Hi Everyone, Nice
reception of Alaska this am here on Anglesey. KNLS coming in at good
strength and clear at 10 UT. Full IDs "Welcome to the Saturday edition
of the English hour from the top of the world; this is your New Life
Station, KNLS, Anchor Point, Alaska"
This is what I heard; Please excuse me fiddling with the mode setting
at the very beginning. I`ve also cut out 50 secs of the interval music
after the first station ID, "This is Alaska calling...."
http://www.box.net/shared/2mx2cdpquglcmdngeos8
(Mark Davies, Anglesey, Wales, Sept 3, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ALBANIA. Dear Drita! What happened? I can’t for some time hear the
German service, neither on 1458 kHz, nor on 7465 kHz. Best wishes
(Hans Verner Lollike, DENMARK, Sept 3, to and via Drita Çiço, R.
Tirana, DXLD)
I am really sorry that we have no shortwave broadcasts for many days
now, with the Shijak station still off the air. Please can you let me
know when the broadcasts are expected to resume. Hope you are having a
pleasant summer. Kind regards, (Alan Holder, UK, Sept 1, to and via
Drita Çiço, R. Tirana, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Previously missing from the unofficial R. Tirana webcast, rechecked UT
Sept 2 at 0331 instead of silence, the English service is underway!
with opening frequency schedule; unfortunately I `tuned in` too late
to tell if Klara had corrected 13640 to 13735 for the 1845 and 2000
transmissions, which are still off the air, anyway. Yes, 7425, the
0330 frequency, is still absent too. Heard features alternating with
music including at 0347 `Around Albania` about two tourist villages in
the south. Ended at 0400 and back to silent streaming.
Christian Milling in Germany, who was involved in setting up the
stream with Radio 700, tells us:
``Hi, what I can confirm from checking the RT stream are the following
languages on the Webcast. All programs are now recorded and uploaded
to the webserver (sorry for the non-translation in the feed, but my
knowledge of Turkish and Serbian is rather low...)
1545-1600 Greek
http://www.radio700.info/podcasts/gr/al/tirana/tirana.php
1800-1830 German
http://www.radio700.info/podcasts/de/al/tirana/tirana.php
1830-1900 Turkish
http://www.radio700.info/podcasts/tr/al/tirana/tirana.php
1900-1930 French
http://www.radio700.info/podcasts/fr/al/tirana/tirana.php
2015-2030 Serbian
http://www.radio700.info/podcasts/rs/al/tirana/tirana.php
0330-0400 English
http://www.radio700.info/podcasts/en/al/tirana/tirana.php
The Greek Service consists only of an announcement and music non stop.
Unfortunately I can't hear the Italian programs online. Obviously they
are transmitted via the second audiochannel that is connected to the
transmitter sites, so here no recording possible.
It seems that the Webcast is fed to Fllakë Transmitter 2 programs and
Shijak Transmitter 1 programs, except for Italian and some of the
English broadcasts. During the day the webcast seems to carry the
domestic service of Radio Tirana 1.`` (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF
RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Checked the webcast at 1900: Italian on Aug 29 and Sept 2, French on
Aug 30, 31, Sept 1 (Jean-Michel Aubier, France, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
Webcast, Sept 3 at 0330, R. Tirana is indeed still announcing 13640
instead of 13735 for the English Mon-Sat at 1845 and 2000; 13640 with
an interference problem was replaced months ago. Moot anyhow, no SW at
all on the air currently (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
[non]. Dear Drita, I thought you would like to know that I found Radio
Tirana's 30 minute German programme last night. It was on the air from
1800 to 1830 UT on 6005 kHz. The signal was fair level here and there
was moderate interference from Radio Bulgaria on 6000 kHz.
At 1830 "Radio 700" programming started. I am guessing that Radio 700
(a private station in Germany) was relaying your German programme for
Europe. Do you know about this already? At least your German listeners
have the chance to hear Radio Tirana, now that the Shijak station is
off the air. I will check again over the next few nights to see if the
relay continues. Best wishes, (Alan Holder Isle of Wight (Queen
Victoria's home area - additional info by Drita), UK, via Drita Çiço,
R. Tirana, Sept 2, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Drita, I hope you are fine and enjoy the summer. In Germany we
renamed the seasons: spring, crap, autumn and winter... According the
relay on 6005 kc/s: yes, it'll continue until the Shijak transmitter
are back again, as proposed to Astrit Ibro, as a little help between
friends. I could imagine to do this for other languages like French or
English too. Regards and good luck fixing the faulty parts, (Christian
Milling, Radio 700, via Drita, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, ibid.)
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Radio Tirana
Sent: Tuesday, September 6, 2011 10:00 AM
Subject: announcement
Pershendetje Drita, Uroj te jesh mire. Te lutem ma shpernda kete
adresen e re te radio tirana english pasi adresen e pare dikush ma ka
mbyllur dhe nuk e di pse. Me shkruajne degjuesit dhe me thone te kam
derguar e-mail. Komunikimi yne ketej e tutje do te jete ne kete
adrese. Faleminderit, Klara Saliu, English section (via Drita Çiço, DS
LISTENING DIGEST)
New email address for Radio Tirana English Program:
Radio Tirana radiotiranaenglish @ live.com
(Drita Çiço, Monitoring & High Frequency (Short Wave) Manager
since 1981 & 2005 - at present, RADIO TIRANA, Sept 6, ibid.)
Dear Drita Çiço, I have noticed for the last few weeks that Radio
Tirana has not been broadcasting on shortwave in English. The English
broadcasts in the afternoon and evening are well received here and I
enjoy listening to your programmes. I hope this is just a temporary
problem with your shortwave transmitters. Please reassure me that
Radio Tirana will resume broadcasting in English on shortwave as soon
as possible. I await your reply. Thank you. Yours sincerely (Harry
Brooks, North East England, UK, via Drita, DXLD)
Dear Mr Harry Brooks, It is understandable your worry about Radio
Tirana English Program on Short Waves. As far as I know, it is said
there is a temporary technical problem at our Shijak R-station since
by the end of July. But, there are voices that there are plans to move
to the radio internet or so.
By the way, I greet you with the following Albanian song on the
internet at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SBYugk3xpU
Anjeza Shahini & Dren Abazi (English Sub) - Ti dhe une TOP FEST 8
or in English: "You and me"
Have a nice evening, and stay tune on short wave. We would hope to
come back soon again (Drita Çiço, Mrs., Electronic Engineer, RTSH-
Monitoring & HF Manager, since 1981 & from 2005 - at present, RADIO
TIRANA, ibid.)
7425, Sept 6 at 0352, R. Tirana is still silent; ditto 13625 at 1430;
what`s the problem, exactly? We hope they are not allowing SW to peter
out with a whimper (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Glenn, Tirana: The studio to transmitter audiolink is defective.
New equipment is ordered and shall arrive and be installed in the next
weeks (Christian Milling, Funkhaus Euskirchen, Germany, Sept 6, WORLD
OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
13625, Sept 7 at 1430: still nothing from R. Tirana. But Christian
Milling of Funkhaus Euskirchen, Germany informed us after yesterday`s
query: ``Hi Glenn, Tirana: The studio to transmitter audiolink is
defective. New equipment is ordered and shall arrive and be installed
in the next weeks`` (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ANGUILLA. 11775, Sept 1 at 1245, tune-in to dead air; could it be a
pregnant pause by DGS while he puffs a deadly cigar? No, after a
while, gospel music interlude ``Kick Yo Feet`` audio cuts on and off
and on and off, etc., then PMS starts talking about Labor Day weekend
without cutouts. CB still has its problems, but has remained on the
air whenever checked last several days, also 6090 at night (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ANTARCTICA. 15476, LRA36 still missing at the end of another week,
checked Friday Sept 2 at 1301; and 1404, when weak carriers from other
stations could be detected on 15470, 15480 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** ARGENTINA. X-band logs:
1610, R Guabiyú, Gregorio de Laferrere, Argentina; SS ad mentioning
establishment in “Gregorio de Laferrere”, songs; mixed presumed
Caribbean Beacon, Gpks, 0400 11/7 mah (Martin Hall, Clashmore,
Sutherland, Scotland, Perseus SDR, RPA-1 preamp, beverage: 400m at 231
degrees, terminated. Total Recorder, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1610, Radio Guabiyú, Gregorio de Lafferrere, Buenos Aires; SS nice
music, ads and anns; thanks to Henrik Klemetz for his help to ID
this station; personal first, 232/3, 0200 14/7 MvA (Max van Arnhem,
Hoenderloo, The Netherlands. Perseus, AOR7030plus; KAZ antennas at 35,
70, 160, 250, 290 and 340 degrees, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1610, R Guabiyú, Gregorio de Laferrere, Argentina; “Espacio
Publicitario” then La Matanza government announcement, commercial for
Rutatlántica travel company. All match Guabiyú’s web stream but no ID
during these 12 minutes of advertisements/announcements, then back to
accordion music. W[eak], 0300 14/7 AB (Andrew Brade, Holme-on-Spalding
Moor, East Riding of Yorkshire, England, UK, AOR AR 7030 plus and
Perseus SDR, Wellbrook phased array 290 , 305m beverage at 220 .
Recording on Sony MZ-NH1 minidisc + Total Recorder, Sept MW News via
DXLD)
1610, Radio Guabiyú, Gregorio de Laferrere BA; three tone chime,
“Guabiyú” OM/YL announcements promos & later accordion with vocals
music; thanks to Mauricio Molano Sánchez; likely station status as
pirate, W 0300 14/7 BD (Barry Davies, Carlisle, Cumbria. Perseus, 3.7m
x 10.0m Flag + FLG100 amp, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1620, Radio AM 16-20, Mar del Plata, Argentina; SS program, Argentine
music, ID, 232, 0316 14/7 MvA (Max van Arnhem, Hoenderloo, The
Netherlands. Perseus, AOR7030plus; KAZ antennas at 35, 70, 160, 250,
290 and 340 degrees, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1620, AM 1620, Mar del Plata, Argentina; “AM 16-20, AM Nuevo, 20(?)
Mar del Plata, Provincia de Buenos Aires, República Argentina”, F 0330
22/7 PC (Paul Crankshaw, Troon, Ayrshire. Perseus SDR, Flag antenna,
RPA-1 pre-amp, MFJ-1025 Phaser (modified), Sept MW News via DXLD)
1620, AM1620, Mar del Plata, Argentina; music including “Macarena”,
followed by “AM 16-20 AM Nuevo”; at 0330, “AM 16-20 AM Nuevo desde Mar
del Plata, provincia de Buenos Aires, República Argentina”, F, 0309
27/7 AB (Andrew Brade, Holme-on-Spalding Moor, East Riding of
Yorkshire, England, UK, AOR AR 7030 plus and Perseus SDR, Wellbrook
phased array 290 , 305m beverage at 220 . Recording on Sony MZ-NH1
minidisc + Total Recorder, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1620, AM1620, Mar del Plata, Argentina; YL with full ID at 2359 UT.
Personal First, Wk, 2355 22/8 SW (Steve Whitt, High Catton East
Yorkshire; AOR7030+ and dual K9AY antennae, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1630, Radio AM Restauración, Hurlingham, Argentina; religious content,
Argentine NA then ad for Muebles Cuyita, a furniture business in Cd
Tesei matching similar ad on station web stream. W 0307 7/7 AB
1630, Radio Melody, San José, Argentina; a new, and unlisted anywhere,
Argentine X-band station. F 0330 27/7 AB
Programme format was music and chat with an ID after the NA at 0303
and again at 0330 “Desde la cuna de la colonización entrerriana,
transmite Radio Melody, LRM 991, San José, Entre Ríos, Argentina”. The
location and some of the words were clear to me, but the word Melody
was not. Neither was it clear to HK, but his patient research came up
with Melody from the “991” clue. The station was heard, but without
ID, in Sweden by Hasse Mattisson, a week earlier. Thanks to Henrik for
his assistance in solving this riddle; personal first (Andrew Brade,
Holme-on-Spalding Moor, East Riding of Yorkshire, England, UK, AOR AR
7030 plus and Perseus SDR, Wellbrook phased array 290 , 305m beverage
at 220 . Recording on Sony MZ-NH1 minidisc + Total Recorder, Sept MW
News via DXLD)
1640, Kalikanto Radio, Distrito Chamaca, Provincia de Chumbivilcas,
Argentina, 322, 0307 27/6 MvA (Max van Arnhem, Hoenderloo, The
Netherlands. Perseus, AOR7030plus; KAZ antennas at 35, 70, 160, 250,
290 and 340 degrees, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1640, Radio Kalikanto; Peruvian music ID “Kalikante” weak, 222, 0327
23/7 MDe (Maurits van Driessche, Zele, Belgium. Perseus and R&S
EK07/D2, Supper Kaz 275 and 75 , MFJ 1026, 2 x preamp 20 dB, DBX
1215, Edirol UA-25EX (new, works great), Sept MW News via DXLD)
[see also PERU!]
1690, Cristo La Solución, San Justo (presumed); non-stop light
religious songs; actual 1689.969 kHz, Gpks 0400 11/7 mah (Martin Hall,
Clashmore, Sutherland, Scotland, Perseus SDR, RPA-1 preamp, beverage:
400m at 231 degrees, terminated. Total Recorder, Sept MW News via
DXLD)
1690, CLS, Cristo La Solución, San Justo, Argentina; Spanish
religioius song, male ann giving website; thanks to Henrik Klemetz for
his help to ID this station; personal first. 242 0317 14/7 MvA (Max
van Arnhem, Hoenderloo, The Netherlands. Perseus, AOR7030plus; KAZ
antennas at 35, 70, 160, 250, 290 and 340 degrees, Sept MW News via
DXLD)
1700, Fantástico, Once, Buenos Aires; songs, Spanish web ID, Gpks 0358
11/7 mah (Martin Hall, Clashmore, Sutherland, Scotland, Perseus SDR,
RPA-1 preamp, beverage: 400m at 231 degrees, terminated. Total
Recorder, Sept MW News via DXLD)
1700, R Fantástico, Buenos Aires; Spanish, no toth ID; “Fantástico”,
music, 252 0204 14/7 MvA (Max van Arnhem, Hoenderloo, The Netherlands.
Perseus, AOR7030plus; KAZ antennas at 35, 70, 160, 250, 290 and 340
degrees, Sept MW News via DXLD)
** ARGENTINA. 11710.43, RAE, 0156 end of program in Portuguese. 0056-
0100 tinkly 8 note IS with occasional "RAE, Argentina" IDs by M. 5+1
time ticks, then usual fanfare music theme with Spanish ID by W and
M, then multi-lingual IDs. Into what sounded like Japanese program to
0157. 0157-0200 same IS routine. Time ticks, and fanfare/ID routine.
0202 M with date and 3 nx headlines. "Unlimited sounds on the
International Service of the Argentine radio". M and W host chatter
and program rundown. Talk about a Cumbia artist then music. Fairly
decent with a very subtle drift. (9 August) (Dave Valko, NRD-535D and
T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
15344.21 31.8 2010 RAE hade ett specialprogram "Anecdotes de tango" i
vilket man på franska berättade just anekdoter från genres spännande
historia och dessutom spelades mängder av stilig tangomusik. En fröjd
för örat. Dessutom var Marocko inte igång vilket ledde till mycket god
mottagning. 4 CB
15344.21, 8.31 2010, RAE had a special program "Anecdotes of the
tango" where they in French were telling just anecdotes from the
genre's exciting history and also played lots of nice tango music. A
delight to the ear. In addition, Morocco was not on, which led to very
good reception. 4 CB (Christer Brunström, Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept 4,
translated by editor Thomas Nilsson for DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** AUSTRALIA. COLVIN'S TIME ON AIR CUT IN ABC RADIO REVAMP - National
News - National - General - Nambucca Guardian News
Some information on upcoming changes to ABC's Radio National that may
interest you.
http://www.nambuccaguardian.com.au/news/national/national/general/colvins-time-on-air-cut-in-abc-radio-revamp/2278568.aspx
"Big Ideas" is an interesting potpourri - that development looks like
a plus to me (Rich Cuff, PA, Sept 2, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Viz.:
Colvin's time on air cut in ABC radio revamp
TIM DICK, 02 Sep, 2011 12:00 AM
IF YOU like Fran Kelly's Breakfast show, there will be more of her.
But if you like Mark Colvin, you'll need to listen carefully, as
you'll have PM for half as long as you do now, at least on Radio
National's draft schedule for next year.
PM will still get an hour on local radio, and Colvin said on Twitter
shortly before he started his program last night: ''We would always
prefer to have more airtime, but the choice is Radio National's. It's
their station - we provide a service.''
If you like specialist programs like the Law Report, they will be
shifted to the early evening, alongside the resurrected media and
religion shows axed by previous management, and before a new two-hour
drive show at 6pm.
The review is against repeats and in favour of being live when
listeners expect it to be, but if you like broadcasting's immovable
elder, Phillip Adams, do not fret. While the deckchairs on the ABC's
ship of brainy listening are moved all around him, his Late Night Live
will remain repeated in the afternoons, making the show neither late
night nor live.
Gone from the schedule entirely is Artworks on Sunday and Australia
Talks during the week, while the daily Book Show becomes longer and
adds arts to its purview. Big Ideas goes four nights a week, and a
bunch of other programs are renovated and moved around as part of the
station's bid to ''reinvigorate itself''.
The station manager, Michael Mason, said in a note to staff: ''We are
here to help nurture the intellectual and cultural life of this
country, to be a vital part of the contemporary Australian
conversation.''
Radio National should ''never chase a mass market'', but its ability
to keep broadcasting thinking, ideas and debate would be limited if
''we fail to attract the next generation of 40+ listeners.''
In part, the revamp is a concession to modern reality: many are still
on the way to work when the specialist programs kick in at 8.30 am,
when they want news, and many do not leave for home until well after
PM ends at 6 pm.
But little is simple when you change anything on Radio National, and
Mr Mason and a committee is busy consulting staff for the next three
weeks (via DXLD)
Thanks for passing this on, Rich. Yeah, I would agree with your
assessment. Colvin is a fine journalist, but PM in its present form
does seem to be a bit too long. The resurrection of the weekly media
and religion review shows is certainly a big plus too. Keeping Adams
right where he is is a comfort as well. This does not have the odor of
retrenchment at all. Rather, it appears to be a sincere effort at
matching the network to perceived public needs and preferences. Radio
National is one of only two networks globally (BBC Radio 4 being the
other) that caters to the more intellectually curious listener. (If
that sounds elitist, you will get no apology from me on that score!)
We could use more, but cannot afford the lose one (John Figliozzi, NY,
ibid.)
Parts of CBC Radio One, RTE Radio 1, Radio NZ National, and even our
beloved NPR/PRI dyad would qualify too, but those are all a cut below
IMHO (Rich Cuff, PA, ibid.)
** AUSTRALIA. 2368.5, R. Symban, 1007 strong enough to hear and
differentiate music and talk, but that's about it. Nice to get some
audio though. A lot of thunderstorm static crashes. (14 August) (Dave
Valko, NRD-535D and T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
2368.5, R. Symban, 1154-1202*, September 4. Songs in Greek; still
abbreviated schedule (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1,
dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** AUSTRALIA. 8176-USB, VMC, *1300-1306* Aug 31. Weather and marine
warnings for northern, eastern, and southern coastal waters, including
Tasmania; off at 1206 with "end of transmission from VMC..." Good
signal // 6507 (fair/QRM) and 12365 (good). (John Wilkins, Wheat
Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
** AUSTRALIA. 11387-USB, Sept 4 at 1333, YL with flight weather, ID as
``Australian VOLMET, out`` and off; didn`t hear much, unsure if
robotic, also QRM from various ute noises. This reference
http://www.dxinfocentre.com/volmet.htm
shows AXQ421, Brisbane, on the hour and half-hour, presumably 24
hours, u.o.s.; alternating in this order every 5 minutes with Calcutta
[sic], Bangkok [sic], Karachi, Singapore, Bombay [sic], but the middle
three are not 24h (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** AUSTRALIA. IS DIGITAL RADIO A FLOP?
WA Today, Australia 5, September 2011
Is talk of a digital switchover premature?
After several false starts, digital radio finally launched in
Australia in mid-2009. It hasn’t had the same high profile media
coverage as digital television, in part because there’s been no
looming cut-off date for digital radio to encourage people to upgrade.
Considering this, it’s little surprise that take-up has been slow.
Like digital television, digital radio has initially been hampered by
reception issues along with the expense of new digital-capable gear -
although both are slowly improving. Another complication is the fact
that digital radio is currently metro-centric and there’s still debate
as to the best way to expand to cover the rest of the country.
At least digital radio has delivered on the promise of extra digital-
only content, as you can see at digitalradioplus.com.au. We already
have a wide range of digital-only radio stations, whereas it took
digital television many years to fulfill such promises. We’ve also
seen digital car radios hit the shelves, which should help boost take-
up.
A story in yesterday’s paper "Listeners give digital radio a poor
reception" paints a pretty grim picture of Australian digital radio.
Two years after its introduction, digital radio accounts for just 7.6
per cent of radio listening time in Australia, according to figures
from Commercial Radio Australia. Looking at previous reports, it seems
digital radio take-up is neck and neck with internet radio. With talk
of the NBN and improved mobile broadband networks, some people would
argue that digital radio may have missed the boat. Such predictions
tend to miss the mark, as they're generally made by tech-savvy early
adopters who fail to appreciate that they're in a minority.
What really caught my eye in yesterday’s story was talk of a cut-off
date for Australian analogue radio broadcasts from Commercial Radio
Australia chief executive Joan Warner.
“Our view is that there would have to be 80 per cent or upwards of
listening to DAB+ for the industry to agree to switch off analog. My
personal view is that getting to 80 per cent will take another five to
seven years,” Warner said.
I think that’s the first time I’ve seen the industry put forward a
rough timetable for an Australian digital radio switchover. It sounds
quite optimistic to me, especially considering we waited ten years for
the digital TV switchover to start. I think five or even seven years
from now you’d see a much greater backlash against a digital radio
switchover than there was against the digital TV switchover. Most
people own more radios than televisions and they tend to hang on to
them for much longer. There’s also the fact that your average radio
can’t be upgraded with a simple set-top box. The thought of throwing
away every radio they own and starting again isn’t going to go down
well with Australian consumers.
I’ve got nothing against digital radio, but I always imagined it would
be a sleeper technology - existing side-by-side with analogue radio
and given time to slowly mature. Do you think talk of a digital radio
switchover by the end of the decade is premature?
Read more:
http://www.watoday.com.au/digital-life/computers/blogs/gadgets-on-the-go/is-digital-radio-a-flop-20110905-1jtdu.html#ixzz1X40wYQam
(via Mike Terry, dxldyg via DXLD)
POOR REACH AND PRODUCT QUALITY MAKE LISTENERS TUNE OUT OF DIGITAL
Two years after its introduction, digital radio accounts for just 7.6
per cent of radio listening time in Australia, according to figures
from Commercial Radio Australia. And most of that figure is believed
to comprise the digital simulcast of existing radio stations. Nielsen
and Commercial Radio Australia do not release the ratings figures of
digital-only stations, but advertisers believe they are ”minuscule”.
Read more from the Sydney Morning Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/poor-reach-and-product-quality-make-listeners-tune-out-of-digital-20110903-1jreg.html
(September 3rd, 2011 - 16:36 UTC by Andy Sennitt, Media Network blog
via DXLD)
4 Comments on “Australia: Poor reach and product quality make
listeners tune out of digital”
#1 Richard Hunt on Sep 4th, 2011 at 10:53
There is a fuller version of the article in the Melbourne Age:
http://www.theage.com.au/technology/technology-news/listeners-give-digital-radio-a-poor-reception-20110903-1jrcg.html
#2 Pete Path on Sep 4th, 2011 at 17:31
It is strange that FM radio (developed in the 1930s) sounds better
than a lot of digital radio (DAB, DVB-T) developed in our days!
#3 ruud on Sep 5th, 2011 at 13:34
Has not got to do with technique, but with people. Everywhere there
are bad people around; in the digital radio industry it is the guys
that want to squeeze as many channels and data in one multiplex. To
make more money. This cannot be done with FM, but in the digital area
there is a wide open field for actions to deprive the audience of
quality, and just wait until they are gonna charge you for everything
that now is for free.
#4 Nigel Holmes on Sep 7th, 2011 at 07:47
“… strange that FM radio … sounds better than a lot of digital radio…”
Not so strange. Many Australian commercial broadcasters with FM
outlets run 32 kbs on DAB+. Even the bastions of “fine music” like ABC
FM & MBS FM run 64-80 kbs on their DAB+ outlets.
It boils down to affording a “presence”, or preferably several, rather
thsn offering listeners the true potential of the medium. Just another
example of the big con - tell the punters they’re getting a better
service often enough & the dears will believe it.
Same story with our miserable digital TV stations. SBS shovels the
same fare simultaneously into 3 SD channels & an HD channel for much
of the day. It’s called variety & it must be good because it’s digital
dammit… (Media Network blog comments via DXLD)
** BAHAMAS. Good signal from the Bahamas yesterday around 0500 UT.
http://www.box.net/shared/vqgrpy13rl6i3khl8d79
Best wishes (Barry :-) Davies, UK, Sept 2, MWCircle yg via DXLD)
1540, ZNS 0940-1100 with reports of hurricane approaching, also noted
on
810 ZNS, Both strong signals, professional low key ZNS messages to
reassure. [Wilkner and Ken Walters on FaceBook] (Bob Wilkner, NRD 535D
- Drake R8 - Icom 746Pro modified, Pompano Beach, South Florida, US
Sept 3, condiglist yg via DXLD) no dates
Re 11-35: ``The current address of the studio is : Harcourt (Rusty)
Bethel Dr. ,(see pic 12). The address is the former 3rd Terrace, which
is associated with the Tx site of the 1540kHz Station ZNS-1 (WRTH
2010). But it's not true.``
What do you mean? I don't see such address given in WRTH 2010. 73,
(Mauno Ritola, WRTH, shortwavesites yg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Dear Mauno, You're right the WRTH 2010 doesn't give you the direct
address, but send you to http://www.znsbahamas.com where you can read
NOW the new and old addresses - "Rusty" and the 3rd Terrace. Regards.
(Lev, ibid.)
** BAHRAIN. 9745, R. Bahrain, 2204-2257, Nothing but nonstop Arabic
vocals and Arabic music. Jammed in LSB. Clearer in USB. Another co-
channel station came on at 2230 and was equal to slightly stronger
after 2237. R. Romania International came on at 2257 and wiped it out.
May have had this earlier at 1934 heavily jammed then as well. (27
August)
9745, R. Bahrain heard on again with jammer at 0006. Arabic music.
Definitely USB +carrier. (2 Sept.) (Dave Valko, NRD-535D and T2FD
antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
** BELARUS. Awoken by neighbour`s antics 0045 UT. On with the radio!
Belarussian station coming in very well on 6070 kHz 0230 UT (20 dB
peak, no interference) playing contemporary jazz & pop mx with English
lyrics. Russian sounding YL presenter. ID at 0300 followed by what
sounded like a national anthem. Sank back into noise just after and I
sank back into bed. Hams literally having a field day on 80 meters.
All /Ps yelling "CQ contest!" (Ian David Evans, UK, Sept 4, BDXC-UK yg
via DXLD)
6070 Belaruskaye Radio 1 0000-2400 1234567 Belarussian 5 kW ND Brest
BLR 02354E5218N (Aoki via DXLD)
** BELIZE. 96.5 MHz, KREM FM, Belize City. 1356 September 5, 2011.
Just happened to punch on the Sangean PR-D5 portable, which was set to
this channel for some reason. Loud signal with non-Jahmaykan Caribe-
accented guy in the middle of a spot for an event at the Tropicana
Lounge, mentioning a long list of rappers and house DJ's appearing "on
Independence eve." Independence Day would be September 21 per Wiki.
Then, a commercial for Maya Island Air ("... so get ready Belize").
They, per their website, being a small commuter that flies to remote
towns throughout Belize, and to Cancún (Mexico), San Pedro Sula and
Roatán (Honduras), and la Aurora (Guatemala). And had one plane slide
off the runway upon attempted takeoff in 2007 per Wiki. A couple of
other local store ads and into rap format songs.
Per their website, they consistently treat KREM in all capital
letters, with the WRTVH erring as Krem. This may be my last log of
KREM FM on 96.5. I note that there is an application for another one
of those Radio Assist Ministry, Inc. FM translators in Largo, FL
pending, though it's been open for an awfully long time, so maybe
there's still hope:
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/sta_det.pl?Facility_id=146778
(Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, Florida USA, 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W,
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** BOLIVIA. 3309.97, R. Mosoj Chaski, Cochabamba, 0831-0841, Spanish;
S/on in progress; M & W announcers with brief talks between ballads;
poor-fair; 9/5 (Scott R. Barbour Jr. Intervale, N.H. USA, NRD-545,
MLB-1, 200' Beverages, 60m dipole, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** BOLIVIA. 4716.63, Radio Yura, Yura noted 1020 to 1035 on 1
September, seems regular from 0100 to 0230 (Bob Wilkner, NRD 535D -
Drake R8 - Icom 746Pro modified, Pompano Beach, South Florida, US Sept
3, condiglist yg via DXLD)
** BOLIVIA. 5952.37, R. Pio Doce, *1033-1048 Aug 24. Popped on at 1033
with an announcement about an upcoming live broadcast from somewhere
on August 30; mentioned "municipio de Llallagua" and Oruro; M
announcer continued with talk, taking several phone calls from
correspondents; many IDs. Fairly good signal until 1045, then began
deteriorating (John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-
foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
** BOLIVIA: R Kawsachun Coca. Also found this information on the web:
Desde el trópico de Cochabamba, cuna de las luchas bolivianas por una
patria digna, transmite: FM. 99.7, AM. 740, OC. 6075. Radio Kawsachun
Coca voz de la Revolución Democrática y Cultural. Carretera a
Cochabamba - Santa Cruz Km: 182 LAUCA-EÑE / SHINAHOTA.
TEL.- 44135860, E-MAIL - rkc_radionacional@hotmail.com /Thomas Nilsson
-----------
Official website for the station is http://www.kawsachuncoca.com/
They also have a live audio stream but unfortunately offline most of
the time. /TN (Thomas Nilsson, Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept 4 via DXLD)
KAWSACHUN COCA
TRANSMITIENDO EN VIVO DESDE LE TRÓPICO DE COCHABAMBA
RADIOEMISORA EN EL TRÓPICO COCHABAMBINO
En el trópico de Cochabamba, en el municipio de Shinahota se encuentra
la Radioemisora “Kawsachun Coca”, radio que emite su señal desde hace
dos años atrás, Renacer pudo conversar con su Director, el periodista
José Luis Colque Giménez, quien nos dio los pormenores de esta
emisora.
¿Cómo surge la radio?
“Kawsachun coca”, es el eslogan que durante los años 80 ha sido el
grito de revolución de miles de cocaleros productores en el trópico
cochabambino; hubo pérdida de vidas en confrontaciones en los
gobiernos de Paz Zamora, Hugo Banzer y también en el de Sánchez de
Lozada, cuando se pretendía erradicar de manera forzosa y aún habiendo
lo que es el desarrollo alternativo, que según declaraciones de los
propios dirigentes no alcanzó los objetivos para los cuales fue
trazado. Es así que este grito libertario se consolida dos años atrás
en una emisora.
¿Por qué una radioemisora?
La primera emisora que salió del trópico, como voz del trópico, fue
“Radio Soberanía” ubicada en Chipiriri, radio fundada por el
presidente Morales, en ese entonces dirigente cocalero y también por
la Federación del Trópico Cochabambino.
Una vez conocido el alcance y la importancia de contar con un medio de
comunicación alternativo, porque era la voz oficial de los cocaleros,
y había otra voz, “Horizonte” lo que era la voz de la Embajada
Norteamericana, lograron entender que deberían contar con una emisora
de las seis federaciones del trópico, a así que se consolida dos años
atrás Radio Kawsachun Coca.
¿Quién administra la radio?
La administración de la radio tiene un Directorio, que esta conformado
por miembros de las seis federaciones del trópico, habiendo una
dirección administrativa, otra financiera y otra periodística
logística.
¿Qué infraestructura tiene la radio?
Exactamente dos meses atrás recontaba solamente cos ambientes en
planta baja, en los que de manera improvisada se hizo una sala de
locución-emisión y una sala que servía como secretaría y también
grabación. Justamente el martes 22 de febrero, martes de challa, el
presidente Morales hizo un programa desde las seis de la mañana hasta
casi el medio día desde Radio Kawsachun coca para todo el país,
oportunidad en la que también se challó el edifico de tres plantas con
varios bloques, para en un futuro contar con un canal de televisión.
En este momento ocupamos el segundo piso que es destinado a la radio,
en cada piso contamos con cinco espacios, que en este caso sirve para
la sala de redacción, sala de emisión y también para los equipos de AM
y honda [sic] corta, de manera que en cuanto a infraestructura se
tiene los espacios. En cuanto al equipo técnico, tenemos lo necesario
micrófonos, computadoras para los periodistas con el software adecuado
para las grabaciones que luego son emitidas en el noticiero central.
¿Quién financia la radio?
En la primera etapa se contó con el financiamiento de la Embajada de
Venezuela, justamente con la instalación de las RPO`s, las radios
alternativas populares en todo el país, y en Cochabamba “Kawsachun
coca” se consideró una afiliada a las RPO´s; se recibió un
equipamiento básico. Posteriormente a eso, gracias al programa Evo
Cumple, se hizo el edificio, con el cual contamos ahora, el resto el
equipamiento, viene de aportes de los miembros de los distintos
sindicatos y federaciones del trópico cochabambino. Mensualmente hacen
una porte cada miembro y es de esa manera que se sostiene la radio,
pero también para esta gestión se tiene el desafió de buscar un auto
sostenimiento con el tema de la publicidad, mejorar la calidad de los
programas para que la radio pueda sustentarse sola y no depender de
los aportes de los propios cocaleros del trópico.
¿En la actualidad tienen publicidad?
En este momento tenemos contrato con el Gobierno, el ministerio de
Educación, la Dirección Nacional de Comunicaciones, también el
Ministerio de Salud y la Prefectura Cochabambina que se sumo este año,
y proyectos del trópico cochabambino.
Publicidad en si, solo algunas ferreterías, la venta de antenas
parabólicas, algunos avisos comunitarios, y ENTEL que en esta etapa de
surgimiento está apoyando a la radio.
¿Cuál es la programación de la radio?
La programación comienza a las 4:30 de la mañana hasta las 23:00 hrs.
[0830-0300 UT]. La misma fue trabajada por hermanos cubanos que
estuvieron en el trópico por más de cuatro meses, hicieron un estudio.
Además de una propuesta alternativa de una programación ideal, estamos
en la etapa de análisis y puesta en vigencia de las propuestas
trabajadas por ellos, con la participación de los propios trabajadores
de Kawsachun coca.
Se tiene programas exclusivamente en quechua; también tenemos el
programa en la madrugada el programa “Despierta Conmigo”, programa
bilingüe, una novela de producción nacional, Informativo en quechua,
enlace con la red Patria Nueva, programas especializados
periodísticos, que eran trabajados en Cochabamba, también producciones
con la radio “Soberanía” de Chipiriri en quechua, y un programa
variado en quechua y castellano por la inmigración de gente de Oruro,
La Paz y Cochabamba.
¿Por qué se eligió el municipio de Shinahota para montar la radio?
Fue una decisión de los ejecutivos; en Shinahota se encuentra el
conocido “gallinero”, que fue la primera sede revolucionaria de donde
surgieron los grupos de choque de cocaleros para confrontar la
arremetida de las fuerzas policiales y militares que mataron mucha
gente, con la intención de erradicar la hoja de coca en el Chapare, y
sobretodo erradicar el liderazgo de Evo Morales Ayma junto a los
cocaleros, que ya defendía la vida, los derechos humanos y la defensa
de la hoja sagrada de coca.
Es por eso que se decide tener un monumento histórico, como es el
medio de comunicación, justamente en el lugar donde se planificaron
movilizaciones y marchas, estamos a una cuadra del “gallinero”, lugar
donde el presidente Morales realizaba ampliados, y donde se
planificaba el surgimiento de una nueva etapa para Bolivia.
Kawsachun Coca se puede sintonizar en AM 740, y onda corta 6075, y
está en proyecto la implementación de una señal satelital. La radio
con base en el trópico cochabambino, tiene corresponsales en la ciudad
de La Paz y Cochabamba, y en un futuro en Santa Cruz. “Nuestro
compromiso es con el pueblo, informar de forma objetiva, aunque haya
amenazas para amedrentarnos, pero seguimos adelante con la cabeza en
alto”, afirma Nelson Colque, corresponsal de Kawsachun coca en
Cochabamba. Texto y Foto: Carlos Martínez P.
(From http://www.renacerbol.com.ar/edicion174/bolivia07.htm
via SW Bulletin Sept 4, via DXLD) Cf UNIDENTIFIED 6075+ this or not??
** BOLIVIA. 6154,92 1.9 2310 R Fides BOL är inte läsbar alltför ofta,
dock denna gång. Prat. AN
6154.92, 01.09 2310, R. Fides is not readable too often; however, this
time. Talk. AN (Arne Nilsson, Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept 4, translated
by editor Thomas Nilsson for DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** BOTSWANA. Radio Botswana. 621, Selebi Phikwi. 2011/08/29 Monday.
0312-0327 Afro music. Started good, but deteriorated to poor by 0325,
so I moved on to 1215 from Mahalapye, 0337-0340. This was in SeTswana
with afro music, followed by OM introducing Michael Jackson's ? "Not
Alone". Fair. Jo'burg sunrise 0425 (Bill Bingham, RSA, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** BOTSWANA [and non]. WikiLeaks: BOTSWANA INVITED US TROOPS TO GUARD
VOA TRANSMITTERS
Botswana invited the United States to send troops to guard a
transmission station used by the Voice of America’s Studio 7 to
broadcast into Zimbabwe, leaked diplomatic cables show. Botswana’s
Defence, Justice and Security Minister Ramadeluka Seretse is said to
have made the extraordinary request in July 2008 over concerns that
Zimbabwe would try to take out the controversial transmitters operated
by the International Broadcasting Bureau.
Read more from newzimbabwe.com
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/news-5999-Botswana+invited+American+troops/news.aspx
(September 7th, 2011 - 10:44 UTC by Andy Sennitt, Media Network blog
via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
** BRAZIL. 4885, Sept 3 at 0522, Brazilian music, poor vs noise level,
CODAR. Probably R. Clube do Pará, traditionally one of the best 24h
signals from Brazil, first time audible here in months. I lament my
lack of DX logs below 5 MHz, as my line noise level is horrific; must
get OG&E on the case, if they haven`t all been deployed to the east
coast (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** BRAZIL. 10000, PPE Time Station. Heard easily under WWV at this QTH
on 03 September 2011 at 0040 UT. Female voice saying Observatório
Nacional, then time, then three pips before the minute followed by a
pip every ten seconds during the minute. Heard best in USB mode. I
know, I know, nothing special, but it's been a slow week. 73 (Al
Muick, Whitehall, Pennsylvania, USA, WinRadio G303e, 100m longwire, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** BRAZIL. 15189.970, R. Inconfidência, Belo Horizonte MG, 24 hours in
Portuguese, poor S=5 signal, but very tiny at 0623 UT \\ 6010.018 kHz,
Aug 31 (Wolfgang Büschel, Aug 31, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD)
** BRAZIL. Res: Radio digital no Brasil volta a estaca zero.
Olá Michel, Paschoal,
Estive neste encontro em Brasília. O representante da ANATEL afirmou
textualmente que não é possível digitalizar as OM com as atuais
tecnologias e que o simulcast analógico/digital é inviável. O
representante do Mackenzie defendeu junto com um colega do CPqD um
sistema brasileiro de rádio digital, tal como foi feito com o SBTVD.
Há uma forte tendência pelo abandono das OM com a migração para o VHF,
mas o MINICOM encontrou uma série de entraves legais, o que foi
questionado por alguns radiodifusores. O Michel Penneroux (DRM) disse
que São Paulo é uma das cidades mais ruidosas do mundo e é justamente
isso que me preocupa. Outro detalhe: as OC/OT foram citadas várias
vezes como algo importante para a realidade brasileira e a ANATEL
pediu que elas não sejam apartadas do processo de digitalização, o que
foi confirmado pela representante do MINICOM, apesar das limitações da
Portaria 290 (Flávio PY2ZX Archangelo, Brasil, 3 Sept, radioescutas yg
via DXLD)
Amigos da lista: Acabei de ouvir na Jovem Pan que o Ministério das
Comunicações anunciou que irá recomeçar "do zero" a idéia do rádio
digital no Brasil.
Os motivos alegados são os que nós já sabemos e discutimos aqui na
lista: Depois de vários testes com os dois sistemas, chegou-se a
conclusão de que as deficiências que foram constatadas acabam
inviabilizando por enquanto a adoção de um sistema pelo Brasil.
Foi tambem mencionado o atual panorama da digitalização do rádio nos
EUA, onde, segundo a própria reportagem da JP, está ocorrendo um
recuo, pois as emissoras de FM americanas estão estagnadas com a
digitalização e há um notável desinteresse tanto por parte dos
radiodifusores como pelos ouvintes.
E mais, as emissoras de AM americanas estão abandonando mesmo o
sistema, devido aos problemas de interferências causados nas
transmissões analógicas e diminuição do alcance das rádios quando
operam em digital.
Por estas e outras, o atual ministro das comunicações, Paulo Bernardo,
informou no debate que ocorreu nesta quinta feira sobre o assunto, que
serão repensados os conceitos e tecnologias do rádio digital e que a
idéia é iniciar novos testes e pensar em outros formatos, inclusive
aquele que pleiteia o uso da faixa ocupada pela TV analógica para
alocar canais onde seriam então irradiados os programas das emissoras
digitais.
Eu particularmente espero que, com isto as nossas bandas de radio
analogicas sejam deixadas em paz. A cultura AM já liberou os canais
adjacentes que ela atrapalhava, falta agora a Bandeirantes fazer o
mesmo e deixar em paz os 730 e os 750 kHz para fazermos DX!
Um abraço a todos e boas escutas! (Michel Viani - Osasco - SP, ibid.)
Michel; Na verdade só adiaram a decisão; a migração para o sistema
digital é inevitável, não há como o rádio ficar fora do processo
natural da evolução tecnológica como já ocorreu com a televisão e a
telefonia.
Numa edição passada da Fenarcom, assisti uma palestra do jornalista
Geraldo Nunes que falou a respeito da atual baixíssima audiência das
rádios de AM que se traduz em falta de anunciantes, e a tendência é
que isso piore na medida que a tecnologia do AM permaneça como está,
parada no tempo e no espaço.
Acredito que se o rádio AM não evoluir será engolido por outras
tecnologias como já vem ocorrendo com o rádio pela internet, pois hoje
com um celular plugado na internet pode-se escutar milhares de
emissoras do mundo inteiro e não há como concorrer com isso, nem como
ignorar a tecnologia que está aí a nossa disposição.
Como saudosistas e amantes do rádio que somos ficamos tristes ao ver o
que está acontecendo, por outro lado não podemos ficar fora desse
processo de evolução que as comunicações vem atravessando, seria como
continuarmos utilizando um celular analógico como aqueles antigos
“tijolos� que a Motorola fabricou no passado e que hoje viraram
peças de museu, portanto que venha a tecnologia!
É provável que esta minha opinião seja única nesta lista, mas expressa
aquilo que eu penso e desejo com relação a este assunto que, polêmico,
sempre volta à pauta.
73´s a todos e bom final de semana! (Paschoal F. Fideli, São Paulo -
SP, ibid.)
Paschoal, Veja, a notícia veiculada pela Jovem Pan não diz que o rádio
digital não será implantado no Brasil e sim justamente que será
adiado.
Ocorre que na gestão anterior do Ministério das Comunicações, havia um
cronograma para o rádio digital, no qual estavam previstos os testes
que tem sido feitos ao longo dos anos pelas emissoras, onde o governo
pretendia definir qual o sistema de rádio digital que seria adotado no
Brasil e após esta definição seria implantado o sistema. Neste
cronograma, já estaríamos apartir de agora adotando o rádio digital no
Brasil.
Nesta reunião que ocorreu na quinta feira, chegou-se a conclusão que
os testes não foram suficientes para a definir um sistema e, pelo
contrário, geraram inúmeras dúvidas com relação à eficiência dos
sistemas até agora testados.
Além disso, a questão de que as outras mídias já estão digitalizadas e
o rádio não, não significa que o Brasil deva adotar um sistema na
marra, mesmo porque está provado que em outros países que adotaram o
rádio digital, o processo está passando por dificuldades. Melhor
exemplo disso são os EUA, detentores do IBOC, tecnologia esta que era
a preferida para ser adotada no Brasil e que lá não está tendo o
resultado esperado.
Muitas emissoras não estão ligando para a digitalização, as emissoras
que estão em funcionamento queixam-se de que o alcance não é
satisfatório, os ouvintes de emissoras do interior queixam-se de
interferências causadas pelo sinal digital das emissoras potentes e os
receptores não estão sendo comercializados em escala tão
representativa como deveria estar ocorrendo.
No caso da Televisão, a digitalização ocorreu com rapidez, pois o
próprio sistema de TV é complexo por si só, sendo analógico ou digital
e de qualquer forma, investir alto para se ter uma ótima imagem sem
mudanças significativas de alcance, acabam representando avanço para o
sistema como um todo.
No caso do rádio, a simplicidade de operação, tanto na transmissão
quanto na recepção é o seu grande diferencial. E o digital, até o
momento, tem ido na contramão dessa idéia. Por isso não tem dado tão
certo. Lembre-se de que ainda não fizeram receptores digitais capazes
de funcionar muitas horas com baixo consumo de corrente, o que
significa uma pedra no sapato para a idéia um simples rádio portátil
funcionando com pilhas...
Com relação às AM's, o próprio governo começou a admitir a
possibilidade de testar outras faixas de transmissão para alocação das
emissoras que atualmente operam em Ondas Médias. Uma das propostas
mencionadas na notícia que eu escutei hoje trata justamente da
migração das emissoras do AM para faixas de frequencia que atualmente
abrigam os canais analógicos de TV. Esta mudança, que já foi
anteriormente sugerida por engenheiros de telecomunicaçõ es, segundo a
proposta, seria interessante para que as emissoras pudessem emitir
utilizando canais mais adequados à transmissão multicast, onde vários
programas são transmitidos ao mesmo tempo pela mesma emissora.
Em AM esta possibilidade é menor, pois a banda passante utilizada
pelas AMs atualmente é de 10 kHz e no modo digital, algo em torno
entre 20 e 30 kHz, o que limita esta operação. Dessa forma, talvez
fosse mesmo interessante abandonar a idéia de digitalizar o AM (ondas
Médias) e migrar as emissoras para outra faixa. É justamente por isso
que os testes vão continuar pleiteando outras formas de transmissão
também, como esta que eu citei.
Dessa forma, segundo a notícia, o que o governo quer é testar melhor e
pesquisar melhor as opções de rádio digital que existem atualmente e
definir até um sistema brasileiro, independente, que mescle um pouco
de cada tecnologia e melhor se adapte ao Brasil, como aconteceu com a
TV, que foi digitalizada e este processo está sendo assimilado
normalmente com bons resultados.
Por outro lado, uma questão deixa os radiodifusores americanos
apreensivos, com razão e provavelmente deve estar assolando os
brasileiros também e esta questão está justamente ligada a viabilidade
de se digitalizar mesmo o rádio. Ocorre que atualmente, com a evolução
tecnológica das novas mídias que aí estão, um novo modelo de difusão
sonora digital pode muito bem surgir deste meio e acabar canibalizando
o rádio digital de vez, ou seja, mudando o conceito de transmissão de
áudio, de broadcast. Temos tantas tecnologias chegando aí, como a 3G
(nos EUA 4G), os receptores capazes de se conectar com as redes de
dados e captar o áudio das emissoras que difundem áudio pela Internet
no mundo todo... E por aí vai.
E novas tecnologias estão cada vez mais presentes no mundo. Você não
precisa de um rádio convencional para ouvir uma emissora qualquer no
mundo. Se ela tiver o áudio disponibilizado na Internet e você dispor
de um dispositivo capaz de converter isso você estará ouvindo qualquer
emissora. Aí é que está a questão: Com estas tecnologias, será que
compensa investir somas enormes de dinheiro em sistemas digitais para
ser transmitido via "rádio" como ocorre no analógico, sendo que com
muito menor investimento pode se disponibilizar o áudio por mídias já
digitais???
E aí todos ficam com a pulga atrás da orelha. Nem AM, nem FM, nem
Ondas Curtas, pode ser que o rádio mude totalmente sua maneira de ser
difundido nos próximos anos. Se alguém tem dúvida disso, basta ver o
que aconteceu com os discos de vinil: De uns 20 anos prá cá, milhões
de pessoas jogaram fora seus discos de vinil e toca-discos e gastaram
milhões comprando CD's e toca CD"s. E hoje, como isto está? Estão
virando peça de museu, pois agora o armazenamento está sendo feito de
maneira virtual e digitalmente não é mais necessário todo o aparato do
"disco digital" como eram anunciados no final dos anos 80.
Ironicamente, os colecionadores que conservaram seus discos de vinil
hoje estão dando risada, pois ocorreu um retorno, mesmo que em baixa
escala, de pessoas interessadas em ter suas músicas "palpáveis" em
vinil e temos lojas especializadas em discos e também em toca-discos
modernos para vinil. E artistas gravando e vinil... Lógico que isso é
em escala "colecionável", mas o que quero dizer é que tanto fizeram
para digitalizar o disco e hoje existem sistemas digitais de
armazenamento musical que engoliram o CD.
Por isso, tanto aqui no Brasil, como no resto do mundo, a
digitalização do rádio "como o conhecemos" ainda é uma icógnita...
Enquanto isso, o que temos a fazer é aproveitar o maravilhoso mundo do
rádio analógico, com todos os seus ruídos e faddings, pois o rádio só
tem graça mesmo desta forma.
Um abraco a todos e boas escutas! (Michel Viani - Osasco - Sao Paulo -
Brasil, http://www.transglobe.com.br
Membro do DX Clube do Brasil
DXCB - 30 ANOS DE DEDICAÇÃO AO RÁDIO
http://www.ondascurtas.com
http://www.dxcb.blog.br
radioescutas yg via DXLD)
** CAMEROON [non]. 11975, Sawtu Linjila - Voice of the Gospel, via
Issoudun [FRANCE], 1832-1858, Aug 22, mainly talk program in Fulani
with short pieces of instrumental music, 34443-33443-23432. QRM by
Albanian service of VOIRI on 11980 (Nobuya Kato, Fujisawa-city,
Kanagawa, Japan, visiting Bulgaria, DSWCI DX Window Sept 6 via DXLD)
No mention of Cameroon in the DSWCI item, but grouped under C for
``Clandestine and other target broadcasts``. This is considered a
`target broadcast` starting the sexion combined with Clandestines in
WRTH 2011, page 501. But is it really worthy of such special
treatment, as there are countless religious broadcasts targeted at one
country or a small target area, by dint of the language used?
E.g., AWR has a Ghana service, produced there and address there, but
transmitted from Austria, as in DXLD 11-16, but not singled out as a
such a target broadcast; why not? We have filed it under GHANA [non]
just to give that country some undeserved entries (Glenn Hauser, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** CANADA. CBC RADIO ONE RELEASES FALL LINEUP --- Press release from
http://www.broadcastermagazine.com/news/cbc-radio-one=-releases-fall-lineup/1000568783/
DAILY NEWS Sep 6, 2011 4:25 PM - 0 comments 2011-09-06
CBC Radio One launches a new season of returning favourites and
special 75th Anniversary programming. For the first time, fall
listeners will get a taste of the satirical comedy that rocked the
summer, as This is That joins CBC Radio One's fall schedule.
"CBC Radio One enjoys such a huge following in this country because we
reach people with the programming they want, the way that they want it
- compelling, Canadian and on multiple platforms," says Chris Boyce,
Executive Director, Radio and Audio, English Services. "This year,
during CBC's 75th anniversary on the airwaves, we expect even more
Canadians to join the millions who already make CBC Radio One part of
their day."
Highlights of the CBC Radio One Fall season:
This is That (Thursday at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 11 a.m.), the
completely improvised and consistently hilarious satirical program
continues in the fall with 16 brand new episodes. Hosts Pat Kelly and
Peter Oldring explore such topics as a Prairie Halloween, why NASCAR
is coming to Vancouver, and the blood sport of Beaver Fighting. This
is That doesn't just talk about the issues, it fabricates them.
Q with host Jian Ghomeshi (weekdays at 10 a.m./10:30 a.m. NT and 10
p.m./10:30 p.m. NT) launches this week with a broadcast exclusive with
the Icelandic pop queen Bj=F6rk, as she prepares to launch her much-
anticipated new album, and a rare interview with 1960s Canadian folk
legends Ian and Sylvia Tyson. Q's exceptional guest list for the fall
includes Michael Ondaatje, Roger Ebert, Don McKellar and Sarah Polley.
Host Anna Maria Tremonti launches the 10th season of The Current
(weekdays at 8:30 a.m./9:00 a.m. NT) with its new feature project
entitled Game Changer -- the stories of the people, inventions and
ideas that have changed the world. In the first week, Anna Maria
speaks with internationally-renowned Canadian photographer Edward
Burtynsky, whose epic landscapes capture the game-changing impact
human activity has had on the planet. The following week, The Current
travels to Calgary to explore 40 years of Progressive Conservative
governments in Alberta, with conversations with former Alberta Premier
Lougheed, Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi and former Senator Ron Ghitter.
Host Brent Bambury is back with the second season of DAY 6 (Saturdays
at 10 a.m./10:30 a.m. NT and Sundays at 1 a.m.) on September 10, 2011,
providing listeners a fresh perspective on the week that was in news,
current affairs, pop culture, the net, lifestyle and leisure. DAY 6
starts the season with its newest series Deep Sixed, presenting
provocative arguments and counter-positions on six things that are
potentially on their way out - among them, RIM, Rock =91n Roll and the
Euro. Listeners can have their say by voting on the most likely thing
to disappear this year.
Radio One's current affairs and news programs, including As It
Happens, The House, World At Six and World Report, continue to offer
listeners a comprehensive look at what's happening in the world and
here at home. Listeners can tune in to returning programs - among them
The Sunday Edition; Quirks & Quarks; The Debaters; Ideas; White Coat,
Black Art; and Spark - whose fantastic line up ranges from science and
technology to arts, entertainment and comedy. The best in literary can
always be found with The Next Chapter and Writers & Company. From now
until November 2, 2011, Radio One will feature special programming
celebrating CBC's 75th anniversary (via Dan Say,
alt.radio.networks.cbc via Mike Cooper, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
** CANADA. CKAC 730 will change format --- I just heard a moment ago
on CKAC 730 a canned message from the president of Cogeco Diffusion,
owner of CKAC that there will be a format change effective from next
Tuesday at 04:30 AM, DST. CKAC sports will become "Radio Circulation
730" (Traffic Radio 730). The sport programming including the Montreal
Canadians games will be transfer over the 98.5 FM frequency, already a
talk radio owned by Cogeco Diffusion.
They also stated that their web site will continue to emphasize
sports.
The use of this format may be adequate for now since there is
currently a known traffic chaos in Montreal due to many road repairs
and major construction sites but I don't believe in a long term
profitability and in my opinion, unfortunately this is the beginning
of the end of CKAC-AM.
http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/on-september-6-ckac-becomes-radio-circulation-730-montreals-first-dedicated-traffic-1556827.htm
(Sylvain Naud, Portneuf, QC, Canada
http://www.quebecdx.com Sept 3, IRCA via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
Cogeco, of course, had applied for 690 and 940 to be traffic stations,
but CRTC nixed that, at least inviting other applicants (gh, WORLD OF
RADIO 1581, DXLD)
CKAC 730 Montreal - change of format --- I don't think that it was
mentioned yet, but last week it was confirmed that CKAC 730 Montreal
will change its format from French speaking sports to French speaking
traffic and weather reports. It supposed to be done next Tuesday. Lots
of station jobs lost in that move (Jeff F. Brulotte, Sept 3, IRCA via
DXLD)
This is sad news indeed. CKAC is one of the great French stations in
Quebec. I QSL'd them from Seward AK back in 1965 (Patrick Martin,
Seaside OR, KGED QSL Manager, ibid.)
One wonders why a 50 kW powerhouse is needed for this? Basically a
waste of a freq. 73 KAZ, sorry for those who are losing their jobs and
who enjoyed this long time great French station (Neil Kazaross, IL,
ABDX via DXLD)
Actually, what makes CKAC so well-known is that it's the world's first
French speaking radio station. It is also interesting to read that in
1922, the station was transmitting with 2000w which is a considerable
amount of power for that time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CKAC
http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/listings_and_histories/radio/histories.php?id=495&historyID=246
(Sylvain Naud, ibid.)
News : Sports out and all-traffic in on Montreal's CKAC-AM | Radio-I
http://www.radio-info.com/news/sports-out-and-all-traffic-in-on-montreals-ckac-am
Monday, September 5, 2011 --- Montreal's only French-language all-
sports radio station will vanish as of 4:30am Tuesday, just in time
for the morning rush hour. That is when Cogeco's CKAC-AM "Sports"
(730) becomes "Radio Circulation," Montreal's only all-traffic and
weather radio station in either language. The new format, which will
receive $1.5 million in government funding, will also come with
another cost. Several of Cogeco's competitors, including Astral Media,
have filed opposition to the government funding plan and format
change. The CRTC will hold a public hearing on the matter, scheduled
for October 17, says the Montreal Gazette. In order to accommodate the
all-traffic & weather format, Cogeco will move the Canadian Football
League Montreal Alouettes and the NHL's Montreal Canadians broadcasts
to sister-station CHMP-FM (98.5), where some of the CKAC talk hosts
and on-air staff will also find a new home. Cogeco has withdrawn its
earlier application to create a French all-traffic station at 690, but
will continue with its plans for an English-language traffic outlet at
940. (via Kevin Redding, ABDX via DXLD)
LIST OF APPLICANTS FOR MONTREAL 690/940
A list of applications to be heard at an October 17 hearing was
released today.
For 690:
- Dufferin Communications, for a French-language LGBT-oriented
station.
- CKGM, to move from 990 to 690. (English-language all-sports. I'd be
a bit surprised if they change the language of 690.)
- A numbered corporation, for a French news/talk station.
For 940:
- Multimedia CMR, for the same English traffic information station
originally proposed.
- An English news/talk station, same numbered corporation as applied
for a French station on 690.
As I think you saw here, Multimedia CMR has already flipped their
CKAC-730 to the French traffic information they'd proposed for 690
(Doug Smith W9WI, Pleasant View, TN EM66, Sept 7, NRC-AM via WORLD OF
RADIO 1581, DXLD)
Thanks for the info, Doug. Having worked in the business world for the
past 40 years, I admit that I was not familiar with the term "numbered
corporation", but for anyone interested, Wikipedia (search "numbered
company") has a good explanation of this nuance applicable primarily
to Canada and Australia. 73 de (Joe, KJ8O, Troy MI, Miller, ibid.)
Note the last sentence in the Wikipedia article -- from what I've
read, these numbered companies are often subsidiaries of something
much better-known (and more normally-named!) – (Doug Smith W9WI,
Pleasant View, TN EM, ibid.)
** CANADA. Canadian DXers will know that tonight is the final regular
news broadcast of veteran news anchorman, Lloyd Robertson. Robertson
is considered to be "Canada's Walter Cronkite." Here's a link to a
letter he wrote to Canadians. It's on the CTV site:
http://www.ctv.ca/lloyd/
(Richard McVicar, AB2FN, On the outskirts of Navarino, New York, Sept
1, WTFDA via DXLD)
** CANADA. CANADIAN DIGITAL TV TRANSITION --- Yesterday, September 1
was the deadline for networks (except for the CBC) to abandon their
analogue transmitters in certain and switch over to digital. In
Saskatchewan, 8 transmitters were mandated to go digital or go silent,
all in Regina and Saskatoon. The CBC planned to discontinue
broadcasting their signals in Saskatoon rather than convert. With the
year extension granted them, we'll see in a year if it happens.
In Regina, the four transmitters were switched over:
CKCK-TV Channel 2 (CTV) switched over approx. 12:05 AM August 31.
Moved to channel 8 but displayed as CKCK 2-1 on my TV. Broadcasting in
1080i, local programming & commercials are displayed as 4:3 like on
analogue TV's. Most network programs are in 16:9 format.
CBKT Channel 9 (CBC) switched over sometime after 12:01 AM September
1. Stayed on channel 9, displays 9-3 on the "tube". Broadcasting in
720p, looks like most programming is broadcast in 16:9 format.
CBKFT Channel 13 (Radio-Canada French) also switched over September 1.
Stayed on Channel 13, displays 13-90 on the screen. Don't watch this
channel enough but looks like programming is 720p 16:9.
CFRE-TV (Global) Channel 11 was the early bird, they switched over
around August 10. Staying on channel 11, they are broadcasting two
signals: 1st channel is "11-1 CFRE-HD", 1080i 16:9 for network
programming and 4:3 local newscasts. 2nd channel is "11-2"
broadcasting in SD 480i, both identical programming but one is HD and
the other SD.
http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/info_sht/bdt14.htm if you want more info.
Anybody else note changes this week? Some places like Toronto,
Calgary, and others had digital for awhile (Terry Keyowski, Regina,
Saskatchewan, Sept 2, AMFMTVDX mailing list via DXLD)
** CANADA. Splitting CFGC2/CIII2 via Es --- On the Perseus, I can
finally see the carriers for both CFGC-2 and CIII-2. I had to go down
to the Zoom level of 0.782 kHz span to split them.
Tonight, CIII-2 measured in at 55.259.993, while CFGC-2 (the weaker
carrier) is at 55.259.984. The nominal measured value for CIII-2 is
55.260.00.
I don't profess accuracy better than 10 Hz, but the bottom line is
that CFGC-2 is 9 Hz lower than CIII-2. Unfortunately I doubt this will
help anyone during an E-skip opening. I was hoping for a bigger
difference to make ID easier. Well, at least now we know just how
close together they are.
-- (William R Hepburn (VEM3ONT22)
Grimsby ON CAN 43 10 59.5 -79 33 34.3
DX PIX : http://dxinfocentre.com/hepburn/
AUTOLOG : http://dxinfocentre.com/hepburn/logs/dxtv.htm
Sept 4, WTFDA via DXLD)
** CANADA. TEEN RADIO PIRATE GIVEN 15 MONTHS PROBATION
Threatened on-air personalities after equipment seized
By Andrew Seymour, Ottawa Citizen September 2, 2011
A "petulant" teenaged radio pirate who threw a tantrum and threatened
Ottawa radio personalities has been placed on 15 months probation.
The now 15-year-old had set up a radio station out of his home using
transmitting equipment he purchased with money from an inheritance and
began broadcasting without a license.
When Industry Canada shut him down and seized his equipment after
repeated warnings in January 2010, he threatened and harassed one of
the agency's investigators, a judge found.
Read more:
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Teen+radio+pirate+given+months+probation/5343578/story.html
(via Artie Bigley, DXLD)
** CANADA [non]. Keith now has a Wikipedia page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Perron
Keith Perron (born December 19, 1970) is a Canadian expatriate
international broadcaster currently based in Taiwan.
Born and raised in Montreal, Perron entered the broadcasting
profession at the age of 17 with local station CKUT. By the early
1990s he was an announcer and producer at Radio Canada International.
He left RCI in 1991 as a result of cutbacks at the service and, after
two years of freelancing for Radio Netherlands and other services,
moved to Cuba in 1993 where he worked at Radio Havana Cuba hosting the
service's English programming to North America and Europe as well as a
weekly jazz show. He also freelanced for other international
broadcasters such as Monitor Radio International and Radio Deutsche
Welle.
Moving to Vancouver in 1998, Perron worked at radio station CHMB
producing their international programming before being hired by China
Radio International in Beijing in 2001 and hosted Realtime China, a
half-hour programme of news about China produced for radio stationsi
in the United States. In 2005, he moved to Beijing Radio International
and, in 2007, moved to Taiwan in order to host a daily jazz programme
on the domestic Central Broadcasting System. In 2009, Perron founded
PCJ Media/Radio and relaunched and continues to broadcast the
venerable Happy Station show which had been the world's longest
running shortwave radio programme until it was cancelled by Radio
Netherlands in 1995. He also produces and presents the internationally
syndicated Jazz For The Asking, and a weekly media program called
Media Network Plus which is co-produced with Canadian based
broadcaster Paulette MacQuarrie and which is broadcast on the World
Radio Network.
He continues to freelance for Central Radio and for various other
radio stations in the Asian market as well as host and perform in an
annual 6 episode variety music series on NHK television in Japan.
In February 2011, Perron announced that PCJ Media would be launching a
new shortwave radio service broadcasting in five languages and aimed
at Latin America, Eastern Europe and the Asia Pacific in order to fill
a void left by the recently announced termination or reduction of
shortwave service to those areas by the BBC World Service and Voice of
America (via Mike Terry, dxldyg via DXLD)
** CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC. Thomas Nilsson: En av de mycket sällsynta
rapporterna som skickats från denna ända av Skåne har resulterat i ett
mail från R. ICDI, Boali på en rapport på 3390. v/s Josue Mbami. Han
utlovar QSL-kort per post inom nån månad. Kul med detta svar, jag var
nog en av de första att höra stationen på denna QRG som numera inte är
i drift längre.
Thomas Nilsson: One of the very rare reports sent from this end of
Skåne (most southern province of Sweden) has resulted in an email from
R. ICDI, Boali on a report on 3390 kHz. v/s Josue Mbami. He promised
QSL cards by mail within about a month. Very special with this reply;
I was probably one of the first to hear the station on this QRG which
is not in operation anymore (Thomas Nilsson, Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept
4 via DXLD)
** CHINA. 4805 20.8 1945 CRI Shijiazhuang. Min OID i förra SWB har nu
fått sin förklaring, visade sig vara en IMD produkt som uppstår i
sändarna: (2xF1-F2)! Rätt häftigt att den hörs ända hit!: Från Mauno
Ritola: ”Managed to ID it tonight: it's difference lower spur of CRI
Shijiazhuang site on 7235 kHz in Cantonese and 6020 kHz in Albanian.
Both audios heard there.” Tack Mauno! AN
4805, 08/20 1945, CRI Shijiazhuang. My unID from last SWB has now got
its explanation. It is an IMD product that origins in the
transmitters: (2xF1-F2)! Pretty cool to hear it all the way here!:
From Mauno Ritola: "Managed to ID it tonight: it's difference lower
spur of CRI Shijiazhuang site on 7235 kHz in Cantonese and 6020 kHz in
Albanian. Both audios heard there. "Thanks Mauno! AN (Arne Nilsson,
Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept 4, translated by editor Thomas Nilsson for
WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Or as we call it, a leapfrog; usually these are close together, but in
this case from the 7 to the 6 to the 4 MHz band (gh, ibid.)
** CHINA. 4950, V. of Pujiang, 1142-1215+ Aug 30. Pop music, chatty
M&W hosts; 5+1 pips at 1200, then talk or news segment; noted later
(1226) with vocal music. Fair/good and // 3280 (poor) and 9705 (poor
with band noise). (John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8,
100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
** CHINA. 7245-7275, Sept 1 at 1227, OTH radar pulses, presumed from
here, vs heavy QRM from various broadcasters and hams. More of the
same sound at 7335-7355. Both may have extended further if not blocked
by QRM (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CHINA (INNER MONGOLIA). 7269.98, Nei Menggu PBS, 1230-1303 Aug 25.
Sort of a "Mongolian Opera," i.e. man with semi-dramatic readings,
occasionally breaking into droning "song," accompanied by stringed
instrument. 5+1 pips at 1300, then into talk or news in presumed
Mongolian. Has been good past few days. QRM-free until *1259 of AIR
Chennai. Seems to a smidgeon off-frequency (John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge,
Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD) smidgin?
** CHINA. September 1, 2011 Firedrake Log. I was only able to listen
from 1130 to 1230 today.
7970, Weak 1225
13970, Strong 1143 (nothing lower) and 1227
14400, Good 1227
14720, Good-Strong 1144 and Strong 1228 Nothing Higher either time
frame, Good DX (Steve Handler, IL, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Firedrake Sept 1, before 1300:
7970, good at 1230
13970, very good at 1250; none in the 10s, 11s, 12s
14400, poor at 1251
14720, very good at 1250; none in the 15s, 16s, 17s by 1257
After 1300:
17170, poor at 1327 with flutter // others
15520, very poor at 1359-1400*
15430, very poor at 1311, het 15432; poor at 1323 // 15280; none 16s
15280, fair at 1307 plus noise jamming
14720, very good at 1323 // 11560 [as were they all]; music had an
abrupt edit to `ramshorn` at 1323
13970, poor at 1322
12025, poor at 1319 about level with CNR1 jamming; no others in 12s
11560, very good at 1320 // 12025. Unusual spot for FD, and no sign of
anything else; Aoki shows only YFR, Hu Wei, Taiwan in English 13-15!
11560 was even inbooming on the breakfast table radio with whip only
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Glenn, Here is today's Firedrake log (Sept 2); note the strong
signal on 18180
1030-1100
10300, Weak 1052. No other Firedrake frequencies heard
During this segment band sweeps were 7900-18000
1100-1130: I was Not listening for Firedrake
1130-1200
10300, Fair 1151 (Nothing heard lower)
12600, Strong 1152
13920, Good 1152
14400, Strong 1153
14720, Strong 1153
15670, Good 1155
15900, Good 1155
16100, Weak 1155
During this segment band sweeps were 7900-18000
1200-1230
10300, Good 1220 (Nothing heard lower)
12270, Strong 1221
13920, Fair 1222
14720, Strong 1222
15900, Good 1223
16980, Fair 1224
18180, Good 1225 (Nothing heard higher)
During this segment band sweeps were 7900-22000
1230-1300
10300, Fair 1257 (Nothing heard lower)
12270, Good 1257
13920, Good 1258
14720, Strong 1258
15900, Good 1255
18180, Strong 1256 (Nothing heard higher)
During this segment band sweeps were 7900-22000
1300-1330
13920, Weak 1317 (nothing heard lower)
15280, Good 1318
15900, Strong 1318
16100, Weak 1319
16980, Weak 1319
18180, Strong, caught sign on at 1314 (Nothing heard higher)
During this segment band sweeps were 7900-22000
1330-1400
10300, Weak 1337. (Nothing heard lower)
13130, Good 1339
13920, Weak-Fair 1339
15900, Strong 1341
16100, JBA-Weak 1341
16980, JBA 1342
17170, Strong 1342
18180, Good-Strong 1336 (Nothing heard higher)
During this segment band sweeps were 7900-22000
Good DX (Steve Handler, Chicago IL, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Firedrake Sept 2 at 1212 on 18180, 16980, 16100, 15900, 14720, 12270
(Tim Bucknall, Mobile in North Staffordshire, Icom IC-7000 +
"Modulator" CB whip, harmonics yg via DXLD) Not harmonix (gh)
Firedrake September 2, before 1300:
7970, very poor with flutter at 1240
10300, very good at 1246
12270, very good at 1247
13920, fair at 1247
14720, very good at 1250
15565, poor at 1252, het on the hi side
15900, very good at 1250
16100, JBA at 1259
16980, JBA at 1257
18180, very poor at 1258; no 17170
Before 1330:
7970, JBA at 1325
Before 1400:
18180, good at 1351 with flutter; Steve Handler getting it too in IL
17170, good at 1351 = 18180; none in the 16s now
15900, very good at 1353
15525, JBA at 1354
15430, good at 1354; none in the 14s
13920, open carrier at 1356 with flutter, JBA? Or maybe not FD
13130, very good at 1356 with flutter; none in the 12s
10300, good at 1359
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Sept 2: Firedrake on 18180, 16980, 16100, 15900, 14720, 12270 (Tim
Bucknall, Mobile in North Staffordshire, Icom IC-7000 + "Modulator" CB
whip, 1401 UT Sept 2, harmonics yg via DXLD)
September 3, 2011 Firedrake Logs from Steve Handler
1150-1200 Band searches yielded No Firedrake frequency from 7500-23000
1220-1226 Band searches yielded No Firedrake frequency from 7500-23000
During 1233-1240 Band search 7500-22000 found
10300, Fair 1233
12600, Strong 1234
13130, Good 1234
13970, Fair 1235
14400, Weak-Fair 1235
14900, Fair 1235 Nothing higher
Why could I not hear Firedrake on all of my previous band checks? Was
this a local issue or did others notice the same thing? Good Dx (Steve
Handler, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Unfortunately, that day I did not start until 1230. Now I am usually
DXing Mexico on MW from before 1200 until 1230 or so (Glenn Hauser,
DXLD)
[and non]. Firedrake Sept 3, in the ChiCom noon hour:
16100, JBA at 0456, while CRI Kashgar VG and fluttery in Russian on
15445, 15665
After 1230:
7970, very poor at 1231
10300, very good at 1236
12600, good at 1238
13130, fair at 1239
13970, JBA at 1240
14400, JBA at 1241
16100, very poor at 1243
16980, JBA at 1242, slightly better than the 14 and 13
18180, JBA at 1244
Before 1400:
12025, JBA at 1352 under CNR1 jamming
12270, very good at 1352
12500, very good at 1351
12980, very good at 1351
13970, poor at 1350
13920, poor at 1350, weaker than 13970
15430, fair at 1344 mixed with noise, Chinese
15555, very poor at 1344
16100, fair at 1347
17170, good at 1349 with flutter; none in the 18s, 14s
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Glenn, Here is my Firedrake Log for September 4, 2011. All
loggings were made using multiple band checks from 7500 to 22000 kHz
7970, JBA 1144
10300, Fair 1145
12270, Strong 1148
13920, Fair 1148 (Nothing higher heard in use by Firedrake)
10300, JBA 1223 (Nothing lower heard in use by Firedrake)
12270, Strong with s/on on 1224 preceeded by carrier with no audio
13920, Strong 1225
14700, Strong 1226
15900, Weak 1227 (Nothing higher heard in use by Firedrake)
12270, Fair 1255 with het (Nothing lower heard in use by Firedrake)
13920, Strong 1256
14700, Strong 1257
15900, Good 1258 (Nothing higher heard in use by Firedrake)
Additional Sept 4th Firedrake Loggings from Steve Handler
12500, Weak 1448
13970, JBA 1448
Good DX (Steve Handler, IL, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Firedrake Sept 4, before 1300:
16100, poor at 1251; none higher
15900, fair-good at 1254
15565, JBA at 1253 vs 15562 het
14700, fair at 1254
13920, fair at 1254
12270, poor at 1256
10300, poor at 1256
After 1300:
7445, poor at 1305, SAH with something. Unusual here; normally it`s
CNR1 jamming vs Chinese from R. Taiwan International (and CNR8 Beijing
in Mongolian also scheduled this hour on 7445)
15280, very poor at 1315 vs het 15283
15900, good with flutter at 1313
16100, JBA at 1315
1330-1400:
12270, fair at 1330
13920, poor at 1351
15900, good at 1354 with heavy flutter
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Firedrake Sept 5, before 1200:
7970, fair with flutter at 1145
13920, poor with flutter at 1149
14700, poor with flutter at 1150
15900, fair at 1150
Circa 1230:
15900, fair at 1228
10300, good with flutter at 1235
No others found 7-19 MHz
After 1300:
15280, very poor at 1310 vs 15283 het
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
September 5, 2011: 1310-1323 GMT several band sweeps and No Firedrake
frequencies found in use. Band conditions may not be good. CRI, CNR
and R Australia frequencies are not their normal robust selves (Steve
Handler, IL, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Glenn, During my 1230-1300 Checks and 1315-1330 band checks I found
No Firedrake frequencies in use. I checked 7900-18200 and found
nothing. CNR-1 jamming was heard loud and clear. Very unusual. Have
you heard Firedrake this morning? (Steve Handler, Sept 6, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
[and non] 9355, 5/9 1804, Radio Free Asia, Mariana Isl. (presumed)
talking in Chinese with strong QRM from Chinese Firedrake with music
jamming the channel (Giampiero Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with
Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Firedrake Sept 6, before 1300:
None found at 1240-1247, 10300 up; and not on 7970 earlier either; hi-
latitude paths are degraded, with CRI and CNR1 jammers weakened
Before 1400:
12270, poor at 1350
14700, very poor at 1353
15430, JBA at 1356, het on hi side
15900, JBA at 1354
No 10300, none in the 13s, 16s before 1400
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Glenn, As I mentioned in my earlier email this morning, during my
1230-1300 band checks and 1315-1330 band checks I found No Firedrake
frequencies in use. I checked 7900-18200 and found nothing. I was
able to hear CNR-1 jamming loud and clear including 11990, 12025 and
13830.
When I did my band check starting at 1350 Firedrake was heard on the
three frequencies listed below. I heard nothing above 14700.
Interesting.
12270, Good 1350 to 1400 s/off
12980, Fair 1351
14700, Weak 1352
Good DX (Steve Handler, Sept 6, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
[and non]. 15670, 7/9 1123, Chinese Firedrake jamming a station (Voice
of Free Asia? [sic]), very strong with usual terrible music (Giampiero
Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace
SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
10300, Firedragon music station. Sept. 7, 1030. Only fair, but the
only one heard at this session. None of the other "usual suspects"
appearing (Rick Barton, El Mirage, Arizona, Sept 7, Hammarlund HQ-200,
Drake R-8, Panasonic RF-2200, outdoor slinky, 70' Inverted-L wire,
100' random wire, Palomar Loop, ABDX via DXLD)
Firedrake: only band checked once today 7900-18200:
10300, JBA 1141
12270, Good 1148
Good DX (Steve Handler, IL, Sept 7, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Firedrake Sept 7, before 1200:
7970, very poor at 1142. Did not do a full bandscan in this segment.
Circa 1230:
10300, good at 1222
No others up to 18 MHz by 1228; propagation conditions degraded.
After 1300:
15430, JBA at 1306 with het on hi side, no doubt the jumpy V. of Tibet
via Tajikistan, which current Aoki shows on 15442 at this time. Aoki
is often updated every day, but as of Sept 7 it`s still headed:
``A11 Shortwave Frequency list August 26, 2011 2100UTC`` at
http://www.geocities.jp/binewsjp/userlist1.txt
so Aoki must be on a break (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CHINA. This morning, the 5th of September, I tuned across the 21
MHz band between 0630 and 0700 UT and found 8 parallel CNR
transmissions audible at varying strengths on 21530, 21535, 21565,
21645, 21690, 21720, 21775 and 21820. I assume these were intended to
jam RFA transmissions in Chinese and Tibetan, but I could not hear
them. There was more than one transmitter on 21690, but I could not
tell what the second one might have been (Noel R. Green (NW England),
dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CHINA. 9600, Sept 1 at 1237, a CRI interview catches my ear, sounds
like Al Gore, talking about American radio, then on to other topix
focusing on US/China relations and interdependency, // 9760, 11980,
13645, 13790. He was a two-term US senator. Finally outro before
hourtop as having been Gordon (Golden?) Brown on `Voices From Other
Lands`. Maybe the name is wrong as I don`t find any such person in US
Senate archives, by general Googling, nor on the CRIEnglish website,
which does not yet have anything about the latest VFOL. 9600 and 11980
site is Kunming, 13645 Kashgar, 13790 Wulumuchi, both EAST TURKISTAN.
Re: `Voices from Other Lands` guest on CRI in my previous report, Rich
Cuff helps out with a likely suggestion: ``Might it have been ex-
senator Gordon Smith? He was a two-term senator [from Oregon]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/12/AR2011021202489.html
and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_H._Smith
He's president of the NAB, which leads me to think he was the
contact``. Maybe will eventually be added here:
http://english.cri.cn/08webcast/voices.htm
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
My suspicions confirmed...
http://english.cri.cn/8706/2011/09/01/2422s656244.htm
and http://english.cri.cn/cribb/programs/voices.htm
Have a good Labor Day holiday, Glenn!
(Rich Cuff, Sept 2, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CONGO DR. 5066.338, 4/9 1803, tentative Radio Candip, Congo, talks
music, poor (Giampiero Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with Collins
51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST) see also UNIDENTIFIED
** CUBA. 1000, Radio Artemisa, Artemisa. 1552 September 5, 2011. A bit
taken back when tuning in to the Noticiero Nacional de Radio theme
followed by a reverbed NNdR ID by female. I quickly tuned to Rebelde,
but no NNdR in parallel, which is normally fed local 1:00-1:30 pm.
Turns out it was just a promo for NNdR on Radio Artemisa, and then
quickly back to a kiddie radio play, but followed by more quick breaks
("la radio más moderna") and a minute or so later, one for something
fútbol involving Paraguay. Final part of the program had cute horsey
and rooster SFX, then female canned, "Transmite Radio Artemisa,
emisora provincial" at 1600. Quick live male announcer chatter, and
into Cuban tropical pop vocals. Fair.
1020, Radio Artemisa, Bahía Honda, Pinar del Río. 1558 September 5,
2011. Parallel and stronger than 1000 kHz channel.
1220, Radio Caribe, Isla de la Juventud. 1059 September 5, 2011. Male
reading new items punctuated by pulsing synthesizer SFX. Good, with
presumed XEB under with anthem from 1100 (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater,
Florida USA, 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CUBA. RHC, 5040, full/data ``Old Fort`` QSL card, in 462 days. Also
received a personal letter, actually typed on a typewriter,
information on two different RHC contests that ended on March 31,
2011. Also received a station booklet. V/s Rosario Lafita Fernández,
Head of the Correspondence Department. The personal letter was dated
October 29, 2010. The original envelope was stamped February 26, 2010.
The stamped envelope was placed in another envelope – no date stamps.
I guess the letter got caught up in the postal spat between the US and
Cuba (Kivell, FL, QSL Report, Sept NASWA Journal via DXLD)
5040, Sept 4 at 0509, RHC on late in Spanish, so 5025 R. Rebelde still
has its companion (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CUBA. 9240, Numbers Station at 1025 Wednesday August 3, Spanish
female with 5-digit groups. Sign-off with ``final, final, final`` at
1042 with carrier remaining on without audio until 1048. ENIGMA
designation for this station is V02A. These broadcasts have been
reported to apparently be originated from the Cuban Dirección General
de Inteligencia (DGI) and broadcast via SW transmitters in Cuba. This
frequency has a regular schedule Wednesdays at 1000 GMT and the audio
portion lasting 42 minutes, 20 seconds.
Also heard 1037-1042 Wednesday August 10, woman broadcasting sequence
of five-digit numbers in Spanish. Audio ended at 1042 with the sign
off, ``final final final``. Altho audio ended, the carrier continued
until at least 1044 when I stopped listening.
The same station with same format also heard Wednesday June 8, 2011
(Steve Handler, IL, Sept NASWA Journal via DXLD)
9240, Aug. 24, 1010. Spanish language numbers broadcast. VG signal,
weak modulation. (Barton-AZ)
9240, Sep. 7, 1010. Spanish language "Cuban Lady" numbers broadcast.
Fair signal, weak modulation. Off at 1040, but unID ute with loud
"Braaaaaap" heard on the channel after transmitter went down (Rick
Barton, El Mirage, Arizona, Sept 7, Hammarlund HQ-200, Drake R-8,
Panasonic RF-2200, outdoor slinky, 70' Inverted-L wire, 100' random
wire, Palomar Loop, ABDX via DXLD)
** CUBA. 13740, China Radio International (via relay), Sept. 5, 1510.
Have been hearing loud QRM that sounded like that from someone turning
on older type TV set [horizontal sweep settling in??]. Bandscan showed
the same thing on 13820, clobbering station to the point it was
unidentifiable. QRM stopped at 1520, resumed after BOH. Maybe problem
coming from neighbors? Phoned DXer Frank Mezek, a few miles away in
Sun City, AZ, and he was hearing the same thing and played it into the
telephone. So it couldn`t be local QRM from next door neighbor here.
Cuban transmitter troubles? (Rick Barton, El Mirage, Arizona, Sept 7,
Hammarlund HQ-200, Drake R-8, Panasonic RF-2200, outdoor slinky, 70'
Inverted-L wire, 100' random wire, Palomar Loop, ABDX via DXLD)
This Cuban transmitter has had `troubles` forever, also some other CRI
relay and RHC`s own frequencies. But 13820 is jamming vs R. Martí,
quite different. Tune in 13740 about 1350 and listen to all the
garbage coming out of its ``unmodulated`` carrier before CRI (gh,
DXLD)
** CUBA. 12000, Sept 6 at 0516, lite pulse jamming against nothing,
where it is `needed` only at 23-24 (Tue-Sat -01) for VOA Spanish. Also
heavier pulse jamming, at least two transmitters overlapping, on 7365,
Sept 6 at 0521, while 7405 was usual wall-of-noise against R. Martí.
7365 jamming is `needed` only at 00-03 vs RM.
17865, Sept 7 at 1300, pulsing from the DentroCuban Jamming Command is
no match for the DRM noise just above it; third harmonic of 5955
transmitter vs Radio República which at this hour should be on 9965
instead, always jammed in the daytime. Then found roughly equivalent
signals from two more third harmonix of Cuban jammers: 17670 at 1302,
which is 3 x 5890, used by VOA Spanish only at 23-24 (Tue-Sat -01);
and on 18090, 3 x 6030 vs R. Martí which just closed at 1300. Way to
go, incompetent DCJC, as countless Cubans go hungry while you waste
precious electricity.
12000 at 1309 Sept 7 with more needless jamming, a fundamental, vs
non-VOA also ``needed`` only in evenings; at this time could not hear
second harmonix of the above third harmonix, i.e. 12060, 11910, 11780
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CYPRUS. 17460-17485, Sept 4 at 1355, OTH radar pulses, presumed
from here, QRMing Spanish SSB 2-way on 17474.
15055-15080, Sept 7 at 1308, OTH radar pulsing, presumed from here,
poor and fortunately just missing India weakie on 15050 (Glenn Hauser,
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** CYPRUS TURKISH. 6150.037, Tentative, Radio Bayrak program from
northern Cyprus. Nice signal in low modulation, noted from 0230 UT, -
increased signal in Europe, when heard during this hour til 0306 UT
Sept 2. S=8 signal strength checked on various remote SDR units in
Europe. Measuring procedure tone at 0300 UT, probably time signal on
the hour (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via WORLD OF
RADIO 1581, DXLD)
Re 6150v unID: Hi Martien, I think it was R. Bayrak. I had it closer
to 6150.04 kHz. I checked it here at various times and also via remote
receivers, but could never get readable audio. Today it was off, but
now suddenly came back on the air at 1849, as can be seen below. The
last time I heard from Bayrak was in June, when they said that the
antenna system for 6150 kHz is being repaired and partly renewed, but
the damage is bigger than anticipated. I asked now if they have
returned to air, but got no reply. Unfortunately seems that the repair
didn't help at al. /73, (Mauno Ritola, Finland, SW Bulletin Sept 4 via
WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
6150.038, 24.8 0227, unID, Heard several nights but extremely weak.
The carrier is there but only fragments of the music could be heard.
According to comments by Mauno Ritola in AN’s tip this could be R.
Bayrak. The antenna direction for best reception was pointing in 120o
indicating a possible Near East station. TN (Thomas Nilsson, Sweden,
SW Bulletin Sept 4, via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
** DIEGO GARCIA. Re GUAM: ``Hi Glenn, Have not kept an accurate day-
to-day log, but certainly AFN Guam has recently been off the air more
than they have been on. Same is true of AFN Diego Garcia (4319-USB).
Needs more checking. Ron, Monterey, CA`` (WORLD OF RADIO 1581)
Re: AFN Diego Garcia (4319-USB). After complaints of A-DX ng reader, I
checked Diego Garcia channels every day, BUT: Yes, at least a week or
more, no signals of 12759usb and 4319usb heard here. 73 wb (Wolfgang
Büschel, Sept 3, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
AFN Diego Garcia is off air for more than a month now. Here's a
response received on 29th Aug for a query posted on their website:
"Yours is the first report we've received of a possible shortwave
outage on Diego Garcia. By copy of this I am forwarding your email to
the Defense Media Activity Field Operations Office. I will send you an
update as soon as I hear from them. Thanks for bringing this to our
attention." Regards (Alokesh Gupta, VU3BSE, New Delhi, Sept 4, WORLD
OF RADIO 1581, ibid.)
** DJIBOUTI. 4780, Radio Djibouti, *0302:25-0303*, sign on with
National Anthem but abruptly pulled plug after about 30 seconds. Poor
to fair. Irregular. Sept 3 (Brian Alexander, PA, DX Listening Digest)
** DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. República Dominicana: Crece audiencia de inglés
por 102.5 FM --- Richard Vaughan, fundador de los cursos de Inglés de
Vaughan. FUENTE EXTERNA 4 Septiembre 2011, 9:16 PM
Fundador. Richard Vaughan vino al país para presentar Vaughan Radio
Escrito por: JORGE RAMOS C.
Cada día son más los dominicanos que se suman a la audiencia de 102.5
FM, frecuencia que desde hace unos meses es una escuela de enseñanza
del idioma inglés las 24 horas (Vaughan Radio). Richard Vaughan,
fundador de este novedoso sistema gratuito para aprender la lengua más
importante del mundo, estuvo de visita por República Dominicana, donde
presentó formalmente la programación de la emisora 102.5 FM, desde la
cual un grupo de profesores enseña de manera gratuita el idioma
inglés.
El comunicador explicó que la institución que dirige con sede en
España, instaló por primera vez fuera de su territorio una emisora de
radio con lo que procura la expansión para beneficiar al público. Dijo
que la alianza con la emisora 102.5, ha tenido un gran éxito y
esperan que continúe creciendo. “Este método fue concebido como una
apuesta segura para aprender inglés de forma distendida, eficaz y
amena, es la primera emisora que ofrece una programación bilingüe en
castellano e inglés”.
Richard Vaughan es profesor, locutor y presentador de televisión
oriundo de Houston, Estados Unidos y se asentó en España en 1972,
donde fundó, en 1977 el moderno Vaughan Systems.
Las claves
1. El método Vaughan
Es uno de los mejores y más cómodos para aprender Inglés.
2. Aporte a la ciudadanía
La estación 102.5 FM se dedica durante las 24 horas del día a la
enseñanza gratuita del idioma inglés.
FUENTE: http://bit.ly/qf3vo9
(Via Yimber Gaviria, Colombia, noticiasdx yg via DXLD)
** ECUADOR. Confirmação recebida - Radio Oriental, Tena / Ecuador
4781 kHz v. - Radio Oriental, Tena/Napo, Ecuador. Recebido PPC
assinado e carimbado + carta confirmatória + cartão de visitas, 1 ano
e 10 meses (cerca de 150 dias depois do 1º fp). Obs: pelo teor da
carta, fica claro que eles não receberam meu primeiro IR.
V/S: Luís Enrique Espín e Diana Espín Velin
IR enviado por carta. QTH: Radio Oriental - Av. Jumandy, nº 536,
Casilla 260 - Tena - Napo - Ecuador
http://www.qsl.net/yb0rmi/ecuador/oriental.htm
Visualização em breve no http://pqslfabricio.blogspot.com/
73 (Fabricio Andrade Silva, PP5002SWL, Tubarão, SC, via Dario
Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD)
** EQUATORIAL GUINEA. 15190, 2030 1 Aug, R. Africa, multilingual IDs,
English, SIO 333 (Nigel Reid, Middlesex, HF Logbook, Sept BDXC-UK
Communication via DXLD)
Once again I have to question this. Had been missing since May and yet
to see any definite logs. Yes, an ``ID`` should be definite by
definition, but I don`t think this station ever did multilingual IDs,
having no need for anything but English as in all the programming it
broadcast. There have been, however, multilingual (or at least not
just Portuguese) IDs reported from R. Inconfidência, Brasil upon
occasion, the only other station known to be on 15190 at that hour.
If it really was R. Africa, must have been a one-off reactivation with
unusual programming. We are still lacking any status info from R.
Africa`s controller, Pan American Broadcasting in California (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ERITREA. 7180.0, Voice of Broad Masses of Eritrea, Asmara, S=8-9 at
0437 UT Sept 2. Horn of Africa music. Accompanied by white noise sound
jammer from Ethiopia.
7175.0, Voice of Broad Masses of Eritrea, Asmara, S=7-8 at 0415 UT
Sept 3. Lute and Horn of Africa music.
7205.0, V of Broad Masses 1 (Dimtsi Hafash), from Asmara Selae Daro,
S=8 at 0420 UT Sept 3 (Wolfgang Büschel, Germany, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews
Sept 3 via DXLD)
9830.03, Voice of the Broad Masses of Eritrea, 0304-0315, vernacular
talk. Horn of Africa music. Fair. // 7174.99 - good. No other //s
heard. Sept 3. (Brian Alexander, PA, DX Listening Digest)
** ETHIOPIA. Unless I missed an update somewhere [that it could be
something else?], Radio Ethiopia is booming in at my QTH on 9705 at
0410 UT. Lively East African pop music at the moment (John Figliozzi,
Halfmoon, NY, Eton E1-XM, A/D DX Sloper, UT Sept 4, NASWA yg via DXLD)
** ETHIOPIA [non]. 15360, 5/9 1720, Voice of Asena, clandestine to
Ethiopia, long talks like politics, good (Giampiero Bernardini, Milan
city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a T2FD
antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ETHIOPIA [non]. New station ESAT Radio in Amharic:
1500-1600 NF 15790 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF, ex 15730 from Sep. 5
1700-1800 NF 15760 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF, ex 15750 from Sep. 5
Also test transmissions till August 31:
1500-1530 on 15790 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF // 15730
1730-1800 on 15770 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF // 15750
Also test transmissions from Sep. 1-4:
1500-1600 on 15710*KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF // 15730
1700-1800 on 15760 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF // 15750
* THIS IS NOT RADIO MIRAYA FM in English/Arabic!!!!
73! (Ivo Ivanov, Bulgaria, Sept 6, DX LISTENING DIGEST) see also
PRIDNESTROVYE; UNIDENTIFIED
** EUROPE. Laser Hot Hits --- 6940 has moved to 6920 with 4015 still
regular. 73's. (Gary Drew, South Herts., England, Sept 3, dxldyg via
WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
That's interesting, Gary. I heard a station that I tentatively
identified as Laser on 6940 from 0554 till 0657 UT on Friday 3
September. Do you know when they changed frequency to 6920? Thanks
(Bryan Clark, Mangawhai - New Zealand, ibid.)
2011-08-23 6940-18.55 Strong Signal Sinpo 54444.
http://irishpaulsradioblog.blogspot.com/
2011-08-26 6940,0 - LHH - 33333 - Laser effects 22.25utc
http://alfalima.net/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=10785
2011-08-27 6940 LHH 19.16- 34333 E
http://pirateradiolog.blogspot.com/
2011-08-28 6940,00 1755 LHH, E, ballad, pops 24322
http://franjadx.blogspot.com/
2011-08-31 6940 kHz 1635utc 33433
http://www.achimbrueckner.de/freeradio/audio/logsoffair/frlogs2011/082011.php
2011-09-01 6940 kHz 09utc 34433
http://www.achimbrueckner.de/freeradio/audio/logsoffair/frlogs2011/092011.php
2011-09-01 6940kcs, 19.00hrs, SINPO 25232 ( Pop music )
http://carolineteam.blogspot.com/
2011-09-02 6940 kHz 08 utc 34433
http://www.achimbrueckner.de/freeradio/audio/logsoffair/frlogs2011/092011.php
2011-09-02 [6920: R Trans Europe 2137 UTC, SINPO 25332
http://pjk-frlogs.blogspot.com/
2011-09-02 [6920,000 2139 R Trans Europe Q4]
http://lhu-dx-log.blogspot.com/
2011-09-03 6940: LHH @ 0910. Good signal. SINPO 44433.
http://www.shortwavedx.blogspot.com/
~~~~~~~~change~~~~~~6940 kHz ===> 6920 kHz between 09utc / 18utc
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2011-09-03 6920: LHH @ 1810. SINPO 54444 New frequency
http://www.shortwavedx.blogspot.com/
2011-09-03 6920 kHz 18utc LHH 23322
http://www.achimbrueckner.de/freeradio/audio/logsoffair/frlogs2011/092011.php
2011-09-03 6919,975 1910utc LHH
http://lhu-dx-log.blogspot.com/
2011-09-03 6920 LHH 19.39- 45333 E
http://pirateradiolog.blogspot.com/
2011-09-04 6920: LHH @ 0800. SINPO 34333.
http://www.shortwavedx.blogspot.com/
2011-09-04 6920 LHH 19.02- 45444 E
http://pirateradiolog.blogspot.com/
2011-09-04 6920 kHz, Laser Hot Hits is on 6920khz@2040utc 24322.
http://www.achimbrueckner.de/freeradio/php/wordpress/?p=22844
===============================================
73+55 (Roger2, Germany, ibid.)
It seems LHH moved again, this time to 6945; unless the station I'm
receiving right now is not Laser at all! As usual, 4015 (also audible)
remains on albeit with a different program. 73, (Carlos Gonçalves,
PORTUGAL, 2229 UT Sept 6, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
Yes, that's right. Yesterday evening (2011-09-06) LHH broadcast
definitely on 6945 kHz. I could receive the channel with 35333. At the
moment I can hear the LHH program only on 4015 kHz with O = 2 to 3
(compared to 5910 kHz Alcaraván-Radio currently with the same signal
strength; but the conditions at 80+40meters are currently not good.
On 6945 kHz I can see now only a weak carrier. QTH Germany, Saxony-
Anhalt, Halle/S. / Grundig S650+HDSDR2.1 / Dipol for the 40mB. 73+55
(roger2, Sept 7, ibid.)
Laser Hot Hits has moved from 6920 kHz to 6945 kHz at tune in 2030 UT.
Good signal at this QTH (Russ, North Ferriby, Cummings, Sept 6, BDXC-
UK yg via DXLD)
It surely seems 6945 does "contain" LHH - they were heard there this
morning in the UK acc. to a report I've just received. Conditions may
be adverse, but at 2158 UT yesterday, the rating was 45433! Not all
the time this good, of course, but at best. No other similar station
audible on that segment. The strongest signal usually comes from
Atlantic R, IRL, on 6960, when they're on and not just sending an
empty carrier. 73, (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, Sept 7, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
Audible about an hour ago, ID simply as "Laser International", but
it's surely the very same station we're talking about. Rated about the
same as yesterday. 73, (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, 1857 UT Sept 7,
WORLD OF RADIO 1581, ibid.)
So we have both just now heard the same station. I was doing tests to
further improve the radio reception (mixer, etc.) so I needed a
station with a weaker signal. But you can also see clear the QRM of
data-channels:
http://www.rhci-online.de/6945kHzLHH.gif
(I also heard the "Laser International" - announcement...) 73+55
(roger2, 1921 UT, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, ibid.)
** EUROPE. Reflections Europe now uses just two frequencies for weekly
Sunday broadcasts of religious programmes: 6295 and 12255 kHz. The
3910 kHz channel formerly used is no longer announced and has not been
heard for many months (tho it still appears in brackets on their
website http://www.reflectionseurope.com and QSL card). 12255, which
usually skips over my location, was heard with a surprisingly good
signal around 1600 UT 14 Aug. Schedule is Sundays ``3pm to 10:30pm
British Time`` [14-2130 UT] according to QSL. Reflections Europe uses
frequencies originally used by Radio Fax http://www.radiofax.org from
Ireland from 1988 (Alan Pennington, Caversham, Berkshire, Sept BDXC-UK
Communication via DXLD)
** EUROPE. Radio Waves International will operate under the name of
WCS World Communication Service and will repl[a]y the WTC911's program
we did in 2002 just one year after the trajedy of 9/11. Most of the
other program will be composed of patriotic songs. We will do a
special QSL card to confirm to all your reports. We will operate
around 6395 kHz from 48 mb.
On September 24th weekend we will join the FRC France Radio Club
meeting in CALAIS with some offshores personalities.
more details at http://www.offshoreechos.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Now listen to us on the net via http://www.pirateradionetwork.com/
RADIO WAVES INTERNATIONAL http://go.to/rwi
Country music show, French service, Rock City & Pirate memories
the sounds on short-waves around the world
"on the highway to freedom"
Peter HILLS & Philippe " The terrible twins"
For review and airplay send your promos to :
RADIO WAVES INTERNATIONAL
BP 130
92504 RUEIL Cedex
FRANCE
Attention: for UPS or Fedex mail ask us for a special delivery address
(via Roberto Scaglione, shortwave yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD) a
cold drop? (gh, DXLD)
** EUROPE. 21800, 14 August at 1048, SW Radio Malta, oldies nice
music, jingle ID add[ress?], English, SINPO 35533 (Zdenek Elias, Czech
Republic, Sept World DX Club Contact via DXLD) Pirate previously
reported on 6937 in May and June, really from Malta? (gh, DXLD)
** FINLAND. Good reception from SWR Finland tonight on both 6170 and
11720 kHz at 2121 UT [Fri Sept 2, monthly], both S7-8 signals with
6170 kHz suffering less side splatter (Russ, North Ferriby, UK,
Cummings, AOR 7030+, 60 ft long wire, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD)
Thanks to reminder from Russ Cummings that Scandinavian Weekend Radio,
Virrat Finland were on air this weekend, heard them on off-channel
11689.9 kHz half an hour before they closed down this evening (3 Sept)
at 2022 UT. Parallel 6170 audible but weaker and with co-channel
interference at this time. Recording of English ID on 11689.9 at:
http://www.box.net/shared/53uunpkvu70940bzj7d7
(Alan Pennington, Caversham, UK, AOR 7030+ / longwire, BDXC-UK yg via
DXLD)
** FRANCE [non]. DRM tests via GUIANA FRENCH: q.v.
** GEORGIA. IDs "Apsua Radio" & "Radio Respubliki Abkhazii" in
Abkhazian & Russian heard 0658-0810var UT on 9535 kHz on 22, 24 and 26
Aug, resptively Mon, Wed & Fri. Russian from 0800 UT, Avto Radio from
approx 0808 UT (Rumen Pankov, Bulgaria, Sept 1, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews
Sept 3 via DXLD)
** GERMANY [and non]. 3995: Reception reports with return postage are
requested to: HCJB, VozAndes Media, Casilla 17-17-691, Quito, Ecuador
or deutsch @ andenstimme.org
You can also send reports online to receive an e-QSL at:
http://hcjb.de/index.php?id=111
HCJB-UK can be contacted at 131 Grattan Road, Bradford BD1 2HS
info @ hcjbglobal.org.uk (Observations by Dave Kenny, see also
http://www.classicbroadcast.de/news.html
DX News, Sept BDXC-UK Communication via DXLD)
** GERMANY. 6190, 0450 20 Aug, Deutschlandfunk, Berlin, shipping
forecast and coastal station reports in German, 0459 ID, 0500 blocked
by strong CRI [Sackville] in English, SIO 443 (Alan Pennington, UK,
Sept BDXC-UK Communication via DXLD)
** GERMANY. 9479.935 kHz log MV Baltic Radio, Sept 4th, 2011.
MV Baltic Radio is on the air this Sunday the 4th of September 2011.
MVBR Schedule:
0900 to 1000 UT on 6140 kHz, 100 kW, Wertachtal, Quadrant non-dir
antenna
0900 to 1000 UT on 9480 kHz, 1 kW, tx Goehren Germany.
1200 to 1300 UT on 9585 kHz, 100 kW with a Test Transmission.
{Latter probably also 100 kW at M&B Wertachtal}
Log:
0900 UT Sept 4th on 6140 kHz via Wertachtal 100 kW non-dir Quadrant
antenna, Powerhouse to Central Europe target.
Measured exact on 9479.935 kHz at 0905 UT Sept 4th, TX Goehren, south
of Schwerin in M.V. province, Germany. Signal characteristic
precedence towards azimuth at {South}West-{North}East.
Weak on nearby Netherlands and Germany target, typical for 31 mb
antenna on close-up range. But strong signal measured on remote SDR
unit at Paris France S=9+10dBm,
S=9 in England,
S=9 in Finland,
S=7 on Atlantic coast line in CT-USA,
S=7 in Ireland,
S=3 in Steiermark Austria,
not audible in Athens Greece.
9585 kHz, MV Baltic Radio test transmission at 12-13 UT, Sept 4.
Observed good signal in most European places. Mentioned David Bowie
album at 1250 UT, "Heroes" 1977 album of West Berlin era. Talk also on
"Radio Day in Erkrath", phone number given at 1254-1255 UT, close-down
at approx 1256 UT.
S=8-9 in England,
S=5-6 in Moscow,
S=6 in Italy,
S=8 in Eastern Germany,
S=9+20dBm on Austrian-Hungarian border.
Address
M.V. Baltic Radio,
Seestrasse 17,
D-19089 Goehren, Germany
73 wb (Wolfgang Büschel, Sept 4, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
MV Baltic Radio to CeEu:
0900-1000 on 6140 WER 100 kW / non-dir 1st Sun (44544)
0900-1000 on 9480 GOH 001 kW / 230 deg Sept. 4 (24432)
1200-1300 on 9585 WER 100 kW / non-dir Sept. 4 (55544)
(Ivo Ivanov, Bulgaria, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** GERMANY. Some MBR changes:
Bible Voice Broadcasting Network (BVBN) in Luri from Sep. 4:
0400-0430 on 9410 WER 100 kW / 105 deg to IRN/IRQ Sat-Mon
Internal name - MSM in English, please check on Sep. 18:
0900-1000 on 6045 WER 100 kW / non-dir to WeEu 3rd Sun, new from Aug.
21. 73! (Ivo Ivanov, Bulgaria, Sept 5, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
Luri is on Eibi`s language abbr. list as in Iran, no further info:
http://www.susi-und-strolch.de/eibi/readme.txt
But this would be a new language on SW, nowhere in his present
listings; wiki says Lori represents a `continuum` between Persian and
Kurdish; more than 4 megaspeakers of its quadridialects a dekayear
ago, but enough to be worth Christianizing, only one million being the
lower limit (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** GERMANY [and non]. AUSTRIA/FRENCH GUIANA/FRANCE/GERMANY
MEDIA BROADCAST GmbH (formerly T-SYSTEMS - DTK)
A-11 period (27/03/2011 - 30/10/2011)
A-11 operational DTK schedule of September 1st 2011. Times are in UT
frq star-stop ciraf loc pow azi type day from-to broadc
5930 0000-0057 12, 14 GUF 500 215 146 1234567 1306-291011 YFR
5930 1700-1900 28E,29 W WER 250 45 205 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
5940 0030-0230 40 WER 250 105 215 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
5945 0700-0730 27,28N WER 100 300 215 1 2703-291011 BVB
5945 0700-0745 27,28N WER 100 300 215 7 2703-291011 BVB
5945 1100-1115 27,28 WER 250 ND 926 1 2703-291011 MWA
5955 0558-0800 27,28 NAU 500 210 216 1234567 2508-291011 RNW
5955 0800-1000 27,28 WER 500 ND 930 23456 2703-291011 RNW
5955 0800-1000 27,28 NAU 500 210 146 1 7 2507-291011 RNW
5955 1459-1657 27,28 NAU 500 210 146 1234567 2507-291011 RNW
6040 1600-1630 28E WER 250 135 215 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
6040 1630-1930 40 WER 250 105 215 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
6045 0900-1000 27E, 28 WER 100 ND 926 1 2108-291011 MSM
6045 0900-1000 27E,28 WER 100 ND 926 1 2703-291011 HLR*
6055 1030-1100 27,28 WER 125 ND 926 1 7 2703-291011 EMG
6060 1500-1700 28E,29W WER 125 60 215 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
6065 0300-0330 48 WER 250 135 215 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
6065 0400-0430 28E WER 100 120 201 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
6095 0230-0330 40 WER 250 105 215 1234567 2903-291011 IBB
6105 0645-0750 27 NAU 100 285 146 1 2508-301011 TWR
6105 0700-0750 27 NAU 100 285 146 23456 2508-301011 TWR
6105 0715-0750 27 NAU 100 285 146 7 2508-301011 TWR
6105 1700-1800 28E,29W WER 250 60 207 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
6115 2000-2200 37,38W WER 250 210 215 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
6120 0759-1000 27S,37N WER 500 255 215 23456 2703-291011 RNW
6130 1800-1815 28,29 NAU 100 69 216 56 2703-291011 BVB
6130 1800-1830 28,29 NAU 100 69 216 3 2703-291011 BVB
6130 1800-1900 28,29 NAU 100 69 216 1 2703-291011 BVB
6130 1815-1845 28,29 NAU 100 69 216 7 2703-291011 BVB
6140 0900-1000 27,28 WER 100 ND 926 1 2703-291011 MVB
6140 1300-1400 28 NAU 100 126 156 1 2703-291011 MVB
7215 1400-1430 28-30 WER 100 60 207 3456 2703-301011 TWR
7215 1400-1430 28-30 WER 100 60 207 2 2703-301011 TWR
7215 1400-1500 28-30 WER 100 60 207 1 7 2703-301011 TWR
7230 1900-1930 39N WER 250 105 215 1234567 0907-291011 FEB
7280 0230-0400 40 WER 250 105 215 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
7310 0300-0330 39S WER 125 120 201 1234567 2703-291011 BVB
7360 2200-0057 12,13,15 GUF 500 170 151 1234567 1306-291011 YFR
7375 0100-0300 2,3,4,6,7,WER 100 315 215 1234567 0709-291011 HRT
7375 0300-0500 2,3,6,7W,1WER 100 325 215 1234567 0709-291011 HRT
7375 2200-0300 11,12,13,1WER 100 240 215 1234567 0709-291011 HRT
7375 2300-0100 6,7,8,9,10WER 100 300 215 1234567 0709-291011 HRT
7405 0030-0115 41 WER 250 90 217 1234567 0309-291011 BVB
7420 2200-2300 37,38W WER 250 210 215 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
9410 0400-0430 39NE, 40 WER 100 105 205 12 7 1908-291011 BVB
9430 1800-1900 39,4 NAU 250 125 216 7 2703-291011 BVB
9430 1815-1845 39,4 NAU 250 125 216 1 2703-291011 BVB
9440 1529-1600 28 WER 100 105 201 7 2703-301011 TWR
9440 1529-1600 29S,39N WER 100 90 217 23456 2703-301011 TWR
9445 0030-0130 40E,41NW WER 250 90 217 1234567 2703-291011 GFA
9470 1900-2100 38E,39 WER 250 120 217 1234567 0407-291011 AWR
9505 0300-0330 48 WER 250 135 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
9515 1930-2000 37,38 NAU 250 150 216 1 0108-291011 PAB
9515 1930-2030 37,38 NAU 250 150 216 7 2703-291011 PAB
9520 2330-0030 41NE,43S,4WER 250 75 217 1234567 2703-291011 GFA
9585 1800-1900 28E,29 WER 100 75 201 7 2408-291011 CHW
9590 1900-2000 37E,38 WER 250 150 201 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
9595 2000-2100 46E,47,52NNAU 500 180 216 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
9600 1900-1930 47,48 WER 250 150 217 1234567 0407-291011 IBB
9610 0530-0600 46SE WER 100 180 217 23456 1106-291011 RMI
9610 1900-2200 46,47,52 WER 500 180 217 1234567 0906-291011 YFR
9620 2200-2300 38,39,40 WER 500 135 217 1234567 0604-291011 NHK
9655 1400-1500 18,27,28 MOS 100 275 805 1234567 0807-291011 TOM
9675 1630-1700 47,48 WER 250 150 217 23456 2703-291011 IBB
9715 2100-2200 46E,47,52NNAU 500 180 216 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
9735 0200-0500 6-8,10,11 GUF 250 320 158 1234567 2703-301011 VOR
9735 0500-0515 39,4 WER 250 105 205 6 2703-291011 BVB
9740 1600-1700 19, 29,30 WER 250 60 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
9760 1630-1800 40 WER 250 105 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
9765 1900-1930 37,38W WER 100 210 216 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
9765 1930-2000 37,38W WER 100 210 216 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
9765 2000-2030 37,38W WER 100 210 216 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
9780 1700-1800 40E,41NW NAU 250 90 216 1234567 0707-291011 IBB
9790 0900-1000 28W NAU 100 185 216 1 0409-301011 AWR
9805 1900-2000 29,3 WER 250 60 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
9810 0000-0200 12,14,16 GUF 250 195 153 1234567 2703-301011 VOR
9810 2030-2100 46,47 NAU 250 190 216 23456 2604-291011 IBB
9815 0300-0330 47,48 NAU 250 160 216 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
9815 0330-0400 48 WER 250 135 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
9815 1800-1830 47,48 WER 250 150 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
9830 1600-1630 28E WER 100 120 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
9830 2000-2030 46E,47W WER 100 180 217 1234567 0906-301011 AWR
9895 0459-0557 28S WER 500 120 201 1234567 2703-291011 RNW
9895 0559-0659 27S,28SW,3NAU 500 220 146 1234567 2703-291011 RNW
9895 0800-1000 27S,28SW NAU 500 220 146 17 2703-291011 RNW
9895 1459-1559 27S,28SW,3NAU 500 220 146 1234567 2703-291011 RNW
9925 1800-1900 57 WER 500 165 217 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
9935 2200-2300 12, 14 GUF 500 215 146 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
9935 2300-2357 12, 14 GUF 500 215 146 1234567 1306-291011 YFR
11605 2200-2400 12,13,15 GUF 250 180 153 1234567 2703-301011 VOR
11640 1400-1500 39N,40 WER 250 105 217 1234567 2007-291011 IBB
11670 1730-1800 37,38W WER 100 210 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
11695 1500-1530 29,3 WER 250 60 216 7 2703-291011 EMG
11755 2030-2100 46SE,47W WER 100 180 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
11810 0500-0530 37,38,46N,NAU 125 185 146 1234567 0906-291011 BVB
11810 1500-1600 29SE WER 250 90 216 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
11840 1900-2000 37,46 NAU 500 205 216 1234567 0806-291011 YFR
11855 1800-1815 39,4 WER 100 105 216 7 2408-291011 BVB
11855 1800-1830 39,4 WER 100 105 216 2 4 6 2408-291011 BVB
11855 1800-1900 39,4 WER 100 105 216 3 5 2408-291011 BVB
11855 1830-1900 39,4 WER 100 105 216 1 2408-291011 BVB
11885 1700-1759 39 ISS 250 110 216 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
11905 1730-1800 48 NAU 250 140 217 23456 0906-291011 IBB
11905 1800-1900 48 NAU 250 140 217 1234567 0906-291011 IBB
11925 1800-1900 48 WER 250 150 217 1234567 0906-291011 IBB
11925 1900-1930 48 WER 250 150 217 23456 0906-291011 IBB
11940 1500-1530 30S WER 250 75 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
11945 1930-2000 46SE WER 100 180 217 1234567 0806-291011 RMI
11955 1800-1900 37E,38 WER 250 150 201 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
11960 1700-1800 39,4 WER 100 120 201 7 1707-291011 BVB
11960 1730-1800 39,4 WER 100 120 201 1 1707-291011 BVB
11975 1830-1900 46S,47SE ISS 500 167 217 1234567 2703-291011 LWF
11980 0700-0800 37,38W WER 100 210 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
11980 0800-0830 37,38W WER 100 210 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
11995 1600-1630 47E,48 WER 500 135 217 1 1506-291011 RMI#
12010 0800-0830 37,38W WER 100 210 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
12010 0830-0900 37,38W WER 100 210 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
12015 1630-1700 47,48 WER 250 150 217 23456 2408-291011 IBB
12050 0400-0600 38E,39 WER 250 120 217 1234567 0407-291011 AWR
12080 1500-1600 46,47,52,5WER 250 180 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
12140 1530-1730 39,4 WER 100 105 217 1234567 2703-291011 BVB
13570 1500-1600 39N,40W WER 250 90 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
13580 1700-1720 39,4 ISS 250 115 217 23 56 2703-291011 BVB
13580 1700-1735 39,4 ISS 250 115 217 4 2703-291011 BVB
13590 1530-1815 39,4 WER 100 120 217 1 2408-291011 BVB
13590 1545-1600 39,4 WER 100 120 217 2 4 2408-291011 BVB
13590 1545-1615 39,4 WER 100 120 217 6 2408-291011 BVB
13590 1545-1620 39,4 WER 100 120 217 3 2408-291011 BVB
13590 1545-1645 39,4 WER 100 120 217 5 2408-291011 BVB
13590 1545-1700 39,4 WER 100 120 217 7 2408-291011 BVB
13590 1700-1800 39,4 WER 100 120 217 3 2408-291011 BVB
13600 1615-1700 39,4 WER 100 120 217 2 4 6 2408-291011 BVB
13600 1700-1730 39S NAU 125 130 218 1234567 2703-291011 BVB
13615 1400-1500 30S WER 250 75 216 1234567 0206-291011 IBB
13615 1600-1700 40 NAU 500 95 218 1234567 2507-291011 YFR
13620 0527-0557 47,48W NAU 500 156 218 1234567 1807-291011 PNW
13630 1532-1547 39,4 ISS 250 91 211 1 3005-291011 BVB
13645 1600-1700 39 WER 250 120 217 1234567 2405-291011 YFR
13700 1459-1557 28S,39W WER 500 120 217 1234567 2703-291011 RNW
13710 1100-1130 19,20,21,2NAU 250 30 218 7 2703-291011 EMG
13720 1630-1730 47,48 WER 100 165 217 1234567 2408-291011 BVB
13730 0459-0557 47,48W WER 250 150 217 1234567 1807-291011 PNW%
13730 1400-1500 30S,40N WER 250 75 217 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
13740 1500-1515 41,49NW WER 250 90 217 1 0407-291011 BVB
13740 1700-1800 40 NAU 500 95 218 1234567 0707-291011 YFR
13740 1900-1930 37,38,46N,WER 125 180 217 1234567 0806-291011 BVB
13745 1600-1700 29SE WER 250 90 217 1234567 2804-291011 IBB
13750 1800-1900 46SE WER 500 180 217 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
13790 1500-1558 41SE ISS 500 85 217 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
13810 1500-1531 28,29W,38EWER 100 120 217 1234567 2408-291011 TOM
13810 1531-1600 28,29W,38ENAU 100 130 218 1234567 2408-291011 TOM
13810 1600-1800 38S,39S,47ISS 100 131 206 2 5 2703-291011 BVB
13810 1600-1830 38S,39S,47ISS 100 131 206 1 6 2703-291011 BVB
13810 1630-1800 38S,39S,47ISS 100 131 206 34 2703-291011 BVB
13810 1630-1830 38S,39S,47ISS 100 131 206 7 2703-291011 BVB
13830 1630-1700 47,48 NAU 250 150 218 23456 0407-291011 IBB
13830 1700-1758 38E,39S,48ISS 100 126 216 1 4 2703-291011 SBO
13840 1700-1800 37,38 WER 100 180 217 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
13870 1730-1800 48 NAU 250 140 218 23456 2703-291011 IBB
13870 1800-1900 48 NAU 250 140 218 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
13870 1900-1930 48 NAU 250 140 218 23456 2703-291011 IBB
15110 1530-1600 40 WER 250 105 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
15155 1730-1800 48 WER 250 135 217 1234567 0906-291011 AWR
15160 1600-1700 48 NAU 500 140 218 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
15205 1400-1430 41 NAU 100 95 218 1 2408-291011 PAB
15205 1415-1430 41 NAU 100 95 218 234567 2408-291011 PAB
15205 1430-1445 41 ISS 250 83 217 1 2703-291011 PAB
15205 1900-1930 46S NAU 100 200 218 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
15205 1930-2000 46SE,47W WER 250 180 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
15215 1530-1629 40E,41NW ISS 250 86 217 1234567 2703-291011 GFA
15255 1500-1529 41N ISS 250 90 217 1234567 3005-301011 AWR
15255 1530-1600 41N ISS 250 75 217 1234567 3005-301011 AWR
15260 1900-2000 37,38W NAU 100 215 218 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
15275 1515-1530 40,41 ISS 100 90 217 7 0904-291011 BVB
15275 1515-1559 40,41 ISS 100 90 217 6 0508-291011 BVB
15275 1530-1559 40,41 ISS 100 90 217 45 0508-291011 BVB
15320 1300-1330 42,43W WER 250 75 217 23456 2703-291011 AWR
15320 1300-1330 42,43W WER 250 75 217 1 7 2703-291011 AWR
15320 1330-1500 42,43W WER 250 75 217 1234567 2703-291011 AWR
15350 1230-1500 41 WER 250 90 217 1234567 2405-291011 GFA
15360 1500-1530 41N NAU 250 85 218 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
15360 1530-1559 41N ISS 250 80 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
15380 1430-1630 40 WER 250 105 217 1234567 2405-291011 IBB
15380 1700-1800 39N,40 WER 250 105 217 1234567 0707-291011 IBB
15390 1330-1530 41NE,43S,4WER 250 90 217 1234567 2703-291011 GFA
15410 1700-1715 48SW ISS 250 140 217 7 0307-291011 ABA
15445 1700-1900 38,39,40 WER 250 135 217 1234567 2405-291011 NHK
15495 1500-1559 41E ISS 500 85 217 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
15495 1759-1957 48SW,52E,5WER 500 150 217 1234567 2703-291011 RNW
15565 1400-1459 41E ISS 500 83 216 1 7 2506-291011 YFR
15565 1400-1500 41E NAU 500 90 218 23456 2506-291011 YFR
15565 1500-1600 29SE WER 250 90 217 1234567 2605-291011 IBB
15650 1400-1700 30S WER 250 75 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
15670 1400-1600 41 NAU 500 95 218 1234567 2507-291011 YFR
15680 1230-1330 40 WER 250 90 217 1234567 2405-291011 IBB
15690 1400-1459 41S ISS 500 90 217 1234567 2703-291011 YFR
15710 1659-1727 47,52N WER 500 180 217 1234567 2703-291011 RNW
15715 0400-0900 40E,41NW WER 250 90 217 1234567 2703-291011 IBB
15720 1529-1627 47,48W WER 500 150 217 1234567 1807-291011 PNW
15720 1659-1727 47E,48,52ENAU 500 155 218 1234567 2703-291011 RNW
15750 1600-1700 47,48 WER 500 150 217 1234567 1807-291011 YFR
17485 1500-1600 38 WER 100 165 217 1234567 0807-291011 TOM
17495 1400-1430 41 NAU 250 95 217 1 0409-291011 BVB*
17495 1430-1500 41 NAU 250 95 218 7 2506-291011 BVB
17495 1430-1500 41 NAU 250 95 217 1 0409-291011 BVB
17535 0900-1000 38,39 WER 100 135 217 6 2703-291011 BVB
17535 1200-1230 41NE WER 250 90 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
17535 1230-1300 41NE WER 250 90 217 1234567 2703-301011 AWR
17575 1630-1700 48 ISS 250 130 217 1234567 3005-301011 AWR
17580 1300-1500 41E WER 500 90 216 1234567 0907-291011 YFR
17750 1400-1500 39N,40 WER 250 120 217 1234567 2806-291011 IBB
17800 1400-1559 41S ISS 500 90 217 1234567 0207-291011 YFR
17820 1630-1700 52 WER 250 180 217 6 2907-291011 IBB
*) 1st Sunday of the month Day 1 = Sunday ... Day 7 = Saturday
No 75 mb frequency registration anymore, YFR ceased EaEUR sce on 3975.
List of Broadcasters which are using MEDIA BROADCAST technical
equipment
ABA Radiyo Y'Abaganda (Ababaka)
AWR Adventist World Radio
BVB High Adventure Gospel - Bible Voice Broadcasting
CHW Christliche Wissenschaft
CVC Christian Vision - deleted
DVB Democratic Voice of Burma
EFD Ethiopeans For Democracy
ELF Eritrean Liberation Front
EMG Evangelische Missionsgemeinden in Deutschland
FEB Feba Radio UK
GFA Gospel for Asia
HCJ Voice of the Andes - deleted
HLR Hamburger Lokalradio
HRT Hrvratska Radio Televizija
IBB International Broadcasting Bureau
LWF Lutheran World Federation
MBR MEDIA BROADCAST (ex Deutsche Telekom, DTK)
MSM internal name
MVB Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Baltic Radio
MWA Missionswerk Arche
NHK Nippon Hoso Kyokai
PAB Pan Am Broadcasting
PNW% {"Press Now". wb.}
RHU Radio Huriyo (Xoriyo) - deleted
RMI Radio Miami International
RMI# [Voice of Oromo Liberation Front]
RNW Radio Netherlands World Service
RRP Radio Reveil Paroles de Vie - deleted
RTR Radio Traumland (Belgium) - deleted
SBO Sagalee Bilisummaa Oromoo, Voice of Oromo Liberation.
TOM The Overcomer Ministry
TWR Trans World Radio
VOR Voice of Russia
WRN World Radio Network - deleted
YFR WYFR Family Radio
Michael Puetz
MEDIA BROADCAST GmbH
Order Management & Backoffice
Josef-Lammerting-Allee 8-10
D-50933 Cologne, Germany
Please send your inquiries and reception reports to:
E-Mail:
% "Press Now"
Witte Kruislaan 55
1217 AM Hilversum
The Netherlands
T +31 35 62 54 300
website E-mail
(MBR, Sept 1, transformed by Michael Bethge-D WWDXC via wwdxc BC-DX
TopNews Sept 5 via DXLD)
** GERMANY [non]. 15275, Sept 2 at 1253 weak signal in French, with
some noise jamming which normally accompanies Firedrake jamming of V.
of Tibet around here, but neither of those. Collateral victim anyway
is DW at 12-13, 250 kW, 170 degrees to W Africa via Woofferton UK
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** GREECE. PICTURE ALBUM OF GREECE TRANSMITTING STATION
Here's the URL for photos of the IBB Greece Transmitting Station. As
you will see, I was using an early digital camera that had very low
resolution by today's standards.
https://picasaweb.google.com/118053668880107446079/VoiceOfAmericaKavalaGreeceTransmittingStation#
The album is best viewed using the site's slide show mode with the
browser set to full screen. The slide show defaults to a three second
hang time. You'll probably need to up that a bit to read the captions.
In case you're not familiar with picasaweb, you can make that
adjustment by hovering the cursor over the bottom of the screen until
the control bar comes up and hitting its plus sign a few times. Move
the cursor away from center to make the control bar disappear.
I was there from '97 to '02, first as Transmitting Station Supervisor,
and then for the final three years as Deputy Station Manager. Best,
(Charles Lewis, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** GREECE. Similar cuts [to PORTUGAL, q.v.] are affecting part of the
Greek shortwave services as well. In particular, the shortwave service
of ERT3, based on Thessaloniki is about to cease operation, after a
decision of the government, as part of the financial reform of the
Public Broadcaster. [1]
In that case though, there has already been a response by the
station’s target group, a big organisation of the Greek Diaspora. In
their statement [2], they argue that there is a big part of the
audience, mainly old Greeks living abroad, that do not have the
technological background to use multimedia and the internet, which are
offered as a replacement.
[1] http://www.thegreekradio.com/node/2840
[2] http://www.thegreekradio.com/node/2849
(Ell. Arthrografos, http://www.thegreekradio.com/taxonomy/term/266
on Aug 31st, 2011 at 21:39, MN blog comment via DXLD)
** GREECE. 6210, ERT Voice of Greece from Avlis in Greek, now and then
reported the Intermodulation between 15630 kHz minus 9420, observed at
0310 UT Sept 2. Sure not Lingala or Swahili of R. Kahuzi (Wolfgang
Büschel, Germany, Sept 2, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD)
** GREECE. unID in Filipino, 11645 kHz um 0920 UT ... SINPO 45444,
Berichte und Musik, noch keine ID gehoert. Ingrid meint, das sei Radio
Kaibigan, ein Programm von / fuer Filipinos in Griechenland, das ueber
die Frequenzen von Radio Filia ausgestrahlt wird.
Es wurde eine Telefonnummer genannt: 210 6000 325, man vergleiche dazu
die Nummer der filipinischen Botschaft in Athen: 210 6721 883 (Guenter
Lorenz, Germany, A-DX Sept 3 via BC-DX via DXLD)
So lautet der Wochenend Plan. Muss bei ERT und Filia nicht unbedingt
der Wirklichkeit entsprechen.
SATURDAY 666 AM FM 106.7 [excerpt]
UT Program
0800-0900 (Alternating) Bangladesh or
Praxis Humanitarian Organization
0900-1000 Radio Kaibigan
(Program By The Filipino Community)
1000-1100 Program By The Pakistani
and Indian Communities
1100-1200 Georgian Program
(John Babbis, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Aug 12, via BC-DX Sept 3 via DXLD)
** GUAM. 5765-USB, can`t trace AFN Sept 3 [not 4 as typoed in original
report] at 1226 avoiding as best I can WTWW 5755, nor several previous
mornings. Is AFN off again? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Glenn, Have not kept an accurate day-to-day log, but certainly AFN
Guam has recently been off the air more than they have been on. Same
is true of AFN Diego Garcia (4319-USB). Needs more checking (Ron
Howard, Monterey, CA, Sept 3, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
5765-USB, Sept 4 at 1246, AFN is back, detectable with W&W discussion,
but not // NPR delayed on KOSU 91.7 with a different W&W interview.
Ron Howard says it has been absent more than present recently (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
5765-USB, AFN. Nice to find them back on the air for two consecutive
days. September 4 at 1206 was audio feed of NBC TV; at 1338 found CBS
TV audio with Charles Osgood. No AFN Diego Garcia heard. September 5
heard at 1221; fair or better reception. Still no AFN DG (Ron Howard,
Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
5765-USB, Sept 6 at 1230, weak but readable signal from AFN has Matt
Lauer re-opening NBC-TV `Today` show on the half hour, mentioning Al
Roker, chat with co-hosts, etc. (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** GUAM. 11750, Sept 4 at 2158, heard a bit of talk with good signal,
not enough to decide on the language before cut off the air abruptly
at 2159*. HFCC shows it was KSDA in Chinese due northwest. KSDA uses
11750 only at 21-22 and 1300-1330 (Sun -1400) (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** GUAM. KTWR Guam testing in DRM mode --- More tests from KTWR
http://ktwrdrm.blogspot.com/2011/09/content-server-test.html
(Alokesh Gupta, New Delhi, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD) WTFK?
9910, so watch out for DRM noise around there. Item dated Sept 2 (gh)
9905-9910-9915, Sept 4 at 1307 DRM noise. Nothing in HFCC except KTWR
analog at 1100-1230 in Chinese, which we have often heard, with a
continuous het, jamming? Assume this is also KTWR testing DRM, as in
this item from their DRM blog pointed out by Alokesh Gupta:
http://ktwrdrm.blogspot.com/2011/09/content-server-test.html
which shows 9910 as their DRM frequency without any exact schedule.
[and non]. 9905-9910-9915, Sept 6 at 1238, DRM noise already on from
presumed KTWR which has posted that it is testing its new DRM
transmitter on 9910; previously heard DRM after 1300. Maybe started at
1230 when analog service in Chinese ends. They`d better quit by 1315
when AIR, another diehard DRM enthusiast, starts its Dari service in
analog on 9910 (tho registered from 1300). But DRM noise still there
at 1317, plus het heard underneath the noise, which I was also getting
against KTWR Chinese 9910 before they started the DRM tests, but now
AIR faces this double-whammy.
9910, Sept 7 at 1221, Chinese with less than 1 kHz constant het on hi
side, KTWR vs jamming? Need to hear if KTWR cuts to DRM test at 1230,
but missed rechecking today (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** GUATEMALA. Más potencia y mejor antena en Radio Verdad. Estimado
Sr. Hauser. Acabo de recibir respuesta por parte del Sr. Édgar Madrid
de Radio Verdad (Guatemala) respecto a mi reporte de recepción:
"Gracias, Ingeniero González Ahumada, por su buen reporte. Sí, estamos
transmitiendo con 650 watts de potencia, [p]ero con una antena muy
efectiva." Atte: (Ing. Civ. Israel González Ahumada, M.I., Yucatán,
Sept 3, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
4055, Radio Verdad, in Spanish, Sept. 6, 0528 tune-in to 0544 a
continuous medley of choruses by a children’s choir, 0544 an adult
choir singing hymns till 0552, then into many announcements, numerous
IDs, address, frequencies, xylophone music, all part of closing of the
broadcast, 0558 announcement in Japanese, 0600 national anthem. Fair
down to poor (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening from
my car with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, Editor of World
English Survey and Target Listening, available at
http://www.odxa.on.ca dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
PayPal for RV --- YOU CAN DEPOSIT YOUR OFFERING FOR RADIO TRUTH
ALREADY THROUGH PayPal. DO IT THROUGH THE FOLLOWING e-mail:
radio.verdad.em @ gmail.com
U.S.A. Agent for Donations: ELENA PALMA
If you deposit a donation for Radio Truth, tell us immediately to our
regular e-mail: radioverdad5 @ yahoo.com
DO NOT FORGET TO WRITE YOUR REGULAR MAIL ADDRESS.
¿Did you know that Radio Truth is THOROUGHLY NON PROFIT? Nobody pays
any money for any program here, but, the expenses are GIGANTIC (Dr.
Édgar Madrid, Radio Verdad, Sept 6, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** GUATEMALA. 96.5 MHz, unidentified. 1400 September 5, 2011. Trading
places wih Krem FM, Belize. Long ad string, mention of "gobierno
Departamento Guatemala" into another spot mentioning Guatemala, then a
Little Caesars spot! Spanish dance music format. Suspect "Atmósfera
96.5" Guatemala City, but didn't get to the live stream from their
site until after it faded out and didn't return (Terry L Krueger,
Clearwater, Florida USA, 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** GUIANA FRENCH. UNIDENTIFIED. 17875-17880-17885, Sept 1 at 1325, DRM
noise. Nothing whatsoever on 17880 or 17875 is on the supposedly
``always up-to-date`` DRM DX schedule at http://www.drm-dx.de/ dated
July 19! Furthermore there are no posts about this in the linked DRM
Software Radio Fora. Nor in
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/drmna/messages
We have sporadically heard DRM noise centered on 17880 before, but
HFCC shows nothing either, just 17875 at 13-20, 150 kW, 320 degrees
from GUF, plus 17-21 at 165 degrees. I made sure what I am getting is
on 17880, not 17875.
I was anticipating something like this because of a Media Network blog
item of Aug 30, ``Digital radio seminar in Brazil`` today only:
``The Brazilian Ministry of Communication has organised a high-level
one-day seminar on Digital Radio on 1 September 2011 in the capital
Brasília. The main objective of this event is to have an extensive
discussion with various segments of society about digital radio, which
includes what criteria should be used for the adoption of a digital
standard with emphasis on the practical implications for broadcasters
and the industry. [. . .]
Digital Radio Mondiale (DRM) is one of the systems under discussion
and the chair of the DRM Consortium Ruxandra Obreja will be present in
the meetings along with the Commercial Committee chair Michel
Penneroux, Alex Zink, vice-chair of the Association and vice-chair of
the DRM Technical Committee, and Jose Maria Matias of the University
of Mexico, involved in the recent DRM30 and DRM+ trials conducted by
DRM in Brazil.``
So I bet it is really Montsinéry with a DRM demo for this meeting, not
publicized for ordinary listeners, and on the 165 rather than 320
degree antenna.
17875-17880-17885, Sept 2 at 1403, weak DRM is here again today.
Alokesh Gupta forwards this from the drmna yg confirming my
suspicions, but why for a fortnight if the digital meeting in Brasília
was only on Sept 1?
``From Thursday 01 September to Thursday 15 September 2011 included,
new transmissions from Montsinéry (French Guiana) to Brazil:
13.00 to 16.00 UTC
P = 150 kW DRM
Freq = 17880 kHz
Az : 165
DRM Parameters:
B mode
Bandwidth = 10 kHz
MSC= 64 QAM
CR = CR0.6
Audio encoding = AAC + SBR
Program = RFI _L2 (only music).
RFI and TDF logos will be transmitted as data content. Wishing you
good reception. Sorry for late notice. Regards. Jacques GRUSON F6AJW``
17875-17880-17885, Sept 7 at 1300 found DRM noise already roaring, but
gone at 1402 recheck. The TDF test to Brasília is supposedly running
13-16 until Sept 15 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** GUINEA. 7125, Sept 5 at 0539, RTG on earlier than usual, poor
signal with hilife music, checked after finding MAURITANIA, q.v.,
absent from 7245. FWIW, WRTH 2011 shows sign-on times via FM as 0555
weekdays, 0800 Sundays, with 7125 irregular (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** GUYANA. 3290, Voice of Guyana, 0925 Oldies ballads into Caribbean
music, 30 August [Wilkner and XM-Cedar Key]
3290, Voice of Guyana, 0850 evening morning [sic] for last fortnight
to 1030 fade out in Florida [South Florida Group] (Bob Wilkner, NRD
535D - Drake R8 - Icom 746Pro modified, Pompano Beach, South Florida,
US Sept 3, condiglist yg via DXLD)
** INDIA. SW BROADCASTING STATIONS IN INDIA
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF INFORMATION AND BROADCASTING
RAJYA SABHA
QUESTION NO 2845
ANSWERED ON 29.08.2011
SHORT WAVE BROADCASTING STATIONS.
2845
SHRI BALAVANT ALIAS BAL APTE
Will the Minister of INFORMATION AND BROADCASTING be pleased to state
:-
(a) the names of Short Wave broadcasting stations in the country and
the details of such stations established in each year of the last
three years and current year, State-wise;
(b) the name of such stations which are more than three years old,
State-wise;
(c) whether Government proposes to increase their broadcasting
capacity;
(d) if so, the details thereof; and
(e) if not, the reason therefor ?
ANSWER
THE MINISTER OF STATE IN THE MINISTRY OF INFORMATION AND BROADCASTING
(DR. S. JAGATHRAKSHAKAN)
(a) At present, 28 Short Wave Broadcasting centres of All India Radio
are functioning in the country. No new SW centres / stations have been
set up during the last three years and the current year. The state-
wise details of the existing AIR SW stations are given in Annexure.
(b) All the 28 SW AIR centers are more than 3 years old.
(c) Yes, Sir.
(d) The following Transmitters are being digitalized during 11th Plan:
No. Station Power Nos. Remarks
------------------------------------------------------
1. Delhi 100 kW 2 Replacement by same power DRM transmitter
2. Aligarh 250 kW 2
3. Bangalore 500 kW 1
4. Delhi 250 kW 2 Conversion to digital mode.
5. Aligarh 250 kW 2
(e) Does not arise.
ANNEXURE REFERRED TO IN REPLY TO PART (a) OF RAJYA SABHA UNSTARRED
QUESTION NO. 2845 FOR ANSWER ON 29.08.2011
List of SW Broadcasting Centres
S. No. Stations STATES Nos. of SW Tx. Power Remark
----------------------------------------------------------------------
1. HYDERABAD ANDHRA PRADESH 1 50 KW
2. ITANAGAR ARUNANCHAL PRADESH 1 50 KW
3. GUWAHATI ASSAM 2 50 KW 50 KW
4. DELHI DELHI 15 50 KW ( 6 nos.) 100 KW (2nos.) 250 kW (7 nos.)
5. PANAJI GOA 2 250 KW 250 KW
6. SHIMLA HIMANCHAL PRADESH 1 50 KW
7. JAMMU JAMMU & KASHMIR 1 50 KW This is an old transmitter shifted
from Kingsway Camp, Delhi.
8. LEH JAMMU & KASHMIR 1 10 KW
9. SRINAGAR JAMMU & KASHMIR 1 50 KW
10. RANCHI JHARKHAND 1 50 KW
11. BANGALORE KARNATAKA 6 500 KW (6 nos.)
12. THRUVANANTHAPURAM KERALA 1 50 KW
13. BHOPAL MADHYA PRADESH 1 50 KW
14. MUMBAI MAHARASHTRA 2 100 KW 50 KW
15. IMPHAL MANIPUR 1 50 KW
16. SHILLONG MEGHALAYA 1 50 KW
17. AIZAWAL MIZORAM 1 10 KW
18. KOHIMA NAGALAND 1 50 KW
19. JEYPORE ORISSA 1 50 KW
20. JAIPUR RAJASTHAN 1 50 KW
21. GANGTOK SIKKIM 1 10 KW
22. CHENNAI TAMILNADU 2 50 KW 100 KW
23. PORT BLAIR UNION TERRITORIES (A & N ISLAND) 1 10 KW
24. ALIGARH UTTAR PRADESH 4 250 KW (4 nos.)
25. GORAKHPUR UTTAR PRADESH 1 50 KW
26. LUCKNOW UTTAR PRADESH 1 50 KW
27. KOLKATA WEST BENGAL 1 50 KW
28. KURSEONG WEST BENGAL 1 50 KW
Total Transmitters 54 nos.
http://164.100.47.4/newrsquestion/ShowQn.aspx
(via Alokesh Gupta, VU3BSE, New Delhi, Sept 3, dx_india yg via DXLD)
** INDIA. DEFUNCT CONDITION OF AIR RANCHI
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF INFORMATION AND BROADCASTING
RAJYA SABHA
QUESTION NO 2852
ANSWERED ON 29.08.2011
DEFUNCT CONDITION OF AIR RANCHI
2852
SHRI PARIMAL NATHWANI
Will the Minister of INFORMATION AND BROADCASTING be pleased to state
:-
(a) whether it is a fact that All India Radio, Ranchi has been working
as a defunct unit for more than a year;
(b) whether it is also a fact that the station does not have whole
time Director for the last 6 years and the post of Additional Director
is also vacant since last year;
(c) whether two transmitters installed at the station have not been in
proper working conditions for a long time because of being more than
40 years old; and
(d) whether the above facts are affecting people living in the
interior forests and villages by devoiding them of information?
ANSWER
THE MINISTER OF STATE IN THE MINISTRY OF INFORMATION AND BROADCASTING
(DR. S. JAGATHRAKSHAKAN)
(a) No Sir. The station is broadcasting three transmissions every day.
The total transmission hours on week days are 14 hours 35 minutes and
on Sunday it is for 16 hours 20 minutes.
(b) Yes Sir, The post of Station Director (SD) is vacant since
31.07.2006 & the post of Assistant Station Director (ASD) is vacant
since 21.01.2011 due to extreme shortage of staff in the network.
(c) No, Sir. AIR programmes (Primary Channel) from Ranchi are being
broadcast simultaneously on 100 kW Medium Wave (MW) Transmitter (549
kHz) as well as on 50 kW Short Wave (SW) Transmitter (4960 / 5985
kHz).
The existing 100 kW MW transmitter at AIR Ranchi was commissioned on
15.08.87 and has served its useful life of more than 20 years. This
transmitter is now being replaced by new Digital (DRM) transmitter and
the new MW Transmitter is likely to be commissioned by March 2013. The
50 kW SW transmitter was commissioned on 24.09.1999 and is not working
since 2006 due to malfunctioning in the Control circuit. Efforts are
being made to restore the transmitter. However, the same service is
available on Medium Wave transmitter throughout the Jharkhand State.
In addition to an existing 6 kW FM (Vividh Bharati) transmitter a 10
kW 2nd FM Channel is also being setup at AIR, Ranchi in 11th Plan
which is likely to be commissioned by March 2012. To further
strengthen the station, the schemes for Digitalization of Studios,
Networking and Connectivity, and Start of News- on- Phone service are
also under implementation.
(d) No, Sir. The Ranchi station of All India Radio is providing
information to all its listeners of the region by relaying National
News Bulletin for 2 hours 20 minutes and originating Regional News
Bulletin for 20 minutes every day. Besides, it is broadcasting News
from Districts for 5 minutes every day, Employment News of 5 minutes
for 4 days per week and Radio Newsreel of 15 minutes per week to
inform all the listeners of the region.
http://164.100.47.4/newrsquestion/ShowQn.aspx
(via Alokesh Gupta, VU3BSE, New Delhi, Sept 3, dx_india yg via DXLD)
** INDIA. 4820.75, AIR Kolkata. On September 3 and 4, while checking
for the // of 6050 (PBS Xizang Chinese Service) I found this off
frequency again. Normally Kolkata is on 4820.0.
4970, AIR Shillong, 1350-1400, September 4. In English with the first
Sunday of the month program “Legal Advice” explaining legal issues and
court procedures; 1400 local ID; poor.
9425, AIR Bengaluru - National Channel, 1445-1458, September 5.
“Vividha” program in English with Mondays “Earth Beat” show; jointly
produced by AIR and RNW; item about building transportation tunnels
underground instead of the usual roads above ground; fair. “Earth
Beat” is announced as being on every “fortnight” (2 weeks) (Ron
Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** INDIA. 5010, AIR Thiru'puram, 1237-1253 Sep 2. Talks in presumed
Hindi by M&W; items separated by flute music bridges. Signal was "fair
minus" today, which is better than usual here (John Wilkins, Wheat
Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
** INDIA. 15075, Sept 6 at 0340 past 0400, very poor to JBA
broadcaster with flutter, surely as in HFCC, AIR via Bengaluru site,
500 kW at 300 degrees, and another 500 kW at 240 degrees, in Hindi.
Not much left of the megawatt by the time it gets here! (Glenn Hauser,
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See also GUAM [and non], KTWR DRM collision
on 9910; and IRAN [and non], collision on 11620
** INDIA. Re 11-35: ``7270, AIR Chennai. Happened to catch the AIR IS
at 1259, August 29; weak (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón
E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
This is supposed to be a daytime = morning frequency only, 0130-0430
per WRTH 2011 (gh, DXLD)``
Hi Glenn, Per http://www.qsl.net/vu2jos/
which is an excellent source for information about Indian stations:
7270 100 kW Chennai
0000-0045 Tamil
0045-0115 Sinhala (Sri Lanka)
0130-0430 HS
1000-1100 English
1115-1215 Tamil
1300-1500 Sinhala (Sri Lanka)
Also per John Wilkins, posted Sept 1 to cumbredxyg:
** INDIA. 7270, AIR Chennai, *1259 Aug 25. IS commencing at 1259,
followed by ??. Very poor under NMPBS (John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge,
Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
John of course is correct. PBS Nei Menggu (Mongolian Service) has
recently been heard very well on 7270. Outstanding reception now that
Sarawak seems to have permanently closed down operations here and on
5030 (Ron Howard, dxldyg via DXLD)
``AIR Chennai`` should mean domestic service program origination; if
the same site/frequency for external service, should be ``AIR, via
Chennai`` (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
This is one of the rare cases in which the same transmitter is used
for both home and foreign service, so in WRTH you have to check also
in the International Radio section. In the bargraph guide they all can
be seen straight away (Mauno Ritola, Finland, WRTH, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
There are several:
3945 - Gorakhpur 0130-0230 Nepali (Nepal), 0230-0300 HS, 1330-1430
Nepali (Nepal), 1430-1735 Urdu (Pakistan)
4860 - Delhi (Kingsway) 0025-0440, 1220-1330 HS, 1330-1430 Nepali
(Nepal), 1430-1930 Urdu (Pakistan)
7250 - Gorakhpur 0700-0800 Nepali (Nepal), 0830-1130 Urdu (Pakistan),
1130-1140 HS
7340 - Mumbai 0015-0430 Urdu, 0830-1130 Urdu, 1130-1140 HS, 1230-1500
Sindhi, 1500-1600 Baluchi (Pakistan)
7370 - Delhi (Kingsway) 0030-0040 HS, 0100-0200 Sindhi (Pakistan),
1550-1615/1630/1700/1730v 1730-1740/1830 HS
7420 - Guwahati 0130-0230 Nepali, 0230-0300 HS, 0300-0430 Bangla,
0700-0800 Nepali, 0800-1100 Bangla, 1215-1330 Tibetan, 1330-1430
Nepali, 1445-1515 Bangla,1515-1600 HS,1600-1730 Bangla, 1730-1740 HS
9575 - Delhi (Kingsway) 1215-1330 Tibetan (Tibet), 1330-
1630/1700/1730v, 1730-1740 HS
9595 - Delhi (Kingsway) 0700-0800 Nepali (Nepal), 0810-0830 HS, 0830-
1130 Urdu (Pakistan), 1130-1140 HS
11620 - Delhi (Khampur) 0830-1130 Urdu (Pakistan), 1130-1140 HS, 1330-
1500 English (E SE Asia)
11710 - Delhi (Kingsway) 1115-1140 HS, 1215-1315 Burmese (Myanmar)
(Alokesh Gupta, VU3BSE, New Delhi, ibid.)
** INDIA. New website of AIR Shimla --- Elated to share this great
news from AIR Shimla with dx_india subscribers. Regards, Alokesh
--------
Dear Alokesh, Hi! You may asked your fellow listeners & DXers to
monitor AIR Shimla and I will send them confirmation. We are about to
launch website of AIR Shimla and that is http://www.airshimla.com It
will be uploaded in a week time.
--------
AIR Shimla has promised to send confirmations, please send your
reception reports to :
email : shimla @ air.org.in
OR
Director (Engg.),
All India Radio,
Chaura Maidan,
Shimla
Himachal Pradesh 171004
India
SW schedule at:
http://www.qsl.net/vu2jos/sw/freq.htm
http://www.qsl.net/vu2jos/sw/loc.htm
regards (Alokesh Gupta, Sept 6, dx_india yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581,
DXLD) Viz.:
#27 Shimla (1x50 kW)
4965 50 0025-0200, 1235v-1730(Sat, Sun 1741)
6020 ,, 0215-0410, 0700 (Sun 0415-1000)-0930 1130-1230
(via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
** INDIA. AIR EXTENDED BROADCASTS FOR CRICKET TODAY
The running commentary of Cricket Match between India & England being
played in England will be relayed by many stations on SW (4 MHz
frequencies) and MW as follows:
1230 to around 2100 UT or till end of play.
6 Sept 2011 i.e. Today
9 Sept 2011
16 Sept 2011
Most AIR stations usually sign off around 1745 UT. So the extended
transmissions till 2100 will provide some interesting reception. On SW
the following stations are usually there, but look out for other
channels also.
4810 Bhopal
4910 Jaipur
5010 Thiruvanthapuram (till 1730?)
5040 Jeypore
73 (Jose Jacob, VU2JOS, National Institute of Amateur Radio, Raj
Bhavan Road, Hyderabad 500082, India, Sept 6, dx_india yg via DXLD)
** INDIA. ALL INDIA RADIO SPECIAL TRANSMISSION FOR "MAHALAYA"
Date : 27th Sept, 2011 (Tuesday)
Time : 2230 UTC 26th Sept (0400 IST, 27th Sept) to 0015 UTC 27th Sept
(0545 IST, 27th Sept)
"Mahalaya" is a special two hour tranmission consisting of Sanskrit
recitation & music orated by Late Shri Birendra Krishna Bhadra. All
India Radio has been broadcasting this program since early 1930s.
Count down of Indian festival of Durga Puja starts from the day of
Mahalaya.
During last couple of years following AIR channels were noted carrying
special Mahalaya transmission:
SW
4760 - Port Blair
4820 - Kolkata
4835 - Gangtok
4880 - Lucknow
4895 - Kurseong
4940 - Guwahati
4965 - Shimla
MW
603 - Ajmer
621 - Patna A
648 - Indore A
657 - Kolkata A
666 - New Delhi B
675 - Chattarpur
711 - Siliguri
729 - Guwahati A
747 - Lucknow A
756 - Jagdalpur
774 - Shimla
801 - Jabalpur
810 - Rajkot A
819 - New Delhi A
846 - Ahmedabad A
909 - Gorakhpur
918 - Suratgarh
954 - Nazibabad
981 - Raipur
1008 - Kolkata B
1026 - Allahabad A
1044 - Mumbai A
1125 - Tezpur
1179 - Rewa
1242 - Varanasi
1260 - Ambikapur
1314 - Bhuj
1386 - Gwalior
1395 - Bikaner
1404 - Gangtok
1476 - Jaipur A
1584 - Mathura
1593 - Bhopal A
Private FM channel Big FM also carried this special on 92.7 MHz during
2009. Related links :
Mahalaya: Invoking the Mother Goddess
A Once-a-Year Popular Radio Program
http://hinduism.about.com/cs/audiomusic/a/aa092003a.htm
Mahalaya - Birendrakrishna Bhadra
http://calcuttaglobalchat.net/calcuttablog/mahalaya/
Mahalaya - Audio & Video
http://www.durgapuja-images.com/2008/09/mahalaya-listen-download-online-watch.html
----
(Alokesh Gupta, VU3BSE, New Delhi, India, dx_india yg via DXLD)
** INDONESIA. Kang Guru Indonesia - KGI --- Hi Glenn,
http://www.kangguru.org/kgi_latest_news.html
contains the Kang Guru Indonesia (KGI) updated news, which includes an
email from me. They now have an extensive website dealing with their
many activities throughout Indonesia. Also note KGI has some videos,
such as their recent visit to RRI Sabang
http://www.kangguru.org/travel/kgitravel2011_sabang_padang.htm#sabang_video
(Ron Howard, CA, Sept 4, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** INDONESIA. QSL: RRI Ternate 3345 kHz replied in about a day to a
Google-translated Indonesian report with MP3. The QSL was a frequency-
specific Word document in Indonesian from Naser Latumpo, Kasi Teknik
(Engineer) and Hari Sudaryanto, Kepala Stasiun (Station Manager). They
sounded thrilled by my reception; at least that's how the English
translation came across. Also included photos of station and local
attractions, station history, and other information. Report was sent
to multimedia45 at yahoo.com, which I found on their website
http://www.rriternate.co.id (Bruce Portzer, WA, Sept 5, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** INDONESIA. 4749.95, RRI Makassar 1231-1245+ Aug 31. Program of
vocal music, hosted by M. Fair (John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge, Colorado,
Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
** INDONESIA. 9525-, Sept 5 at 1313, VOI is fair with flutter peaking
S9+22, but you wouldn`t know it by listening, as it`s undermodulated,
during `Today in History` about a plane crash; also IADs of up to five
seconds at a time; 1316 onto next talk about the University of
Indonesia. Reception seems to be gradually improving.
9525-, Sept 6 at 1321, VOI English, very poor with Commentary, 1324
mentions ``Exotic Indonesia`` so they are still doing that on
Tuesdays, tentatively the RRI Bajarmasin guy`s voice then heard (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** INDONESIA. 9524.96, Voice of Indonesia, 1301, September 6.
Tuesday’s “Exotic Indonesia” program in English; starts with chatting
between Jakarta and Banjarmasin; into the news with items being given
from both places; today was fairly rare with decent audio; often the
Banjarmasin audio level is very low (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach,
CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** INTERNATIONAL INTERNET. Shut out
As a resident of Canada, I'm blocked from access to CBS radio stations
in the U.S. This is particularly annoying since I'm just across the
river from Detroit, home to all-news station WWJ (950-AM). While over-
the-air reception is excellent, it would be handy to have this station
(and several other CBS stations) available on my computer. I've read
something about using proxies to avoid this issue but am not really
sure how this works. Any guidance would be appreciated (Harry van
Vugt, Windsor, Ontario, Canada, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Also blocked from certain US stations here in the UK; it`s really
annoying, e.g. used to listen to WINS1010 quite often (Mike Terry,
England, ibid.)
The USG promotes/provides? proxy servers so repressed ChiCom netizens
can access news from abroad, as in some detail last DXLD under
INTERNATIONAL INTERNET, but that`s OK (gh, DXLD)
Two questions here: First - the idea works by fooling the sending
station (CBS in this case) into thinking you are a legitimate listener
within its area.
The reason is its a case of "broadcast rights". Although you can pick
up an off air signal, maybe even less than a mile away, technically
you are not allowed access to US web based copyrighted material in
Canada. (Specifically CBS, AOL and Yahoo made a conscious decision to
restrict access to their radio output - many other stations have not.)
Secondly - Don`t ask for help in acquiring illegal software on an
international open forum such as this. It won`t be forthcoming (Keith,
UK, ibid.)
Keith, Harry wasn’t asking for illegal software. Proxy software is not
illegal in the US or Canada nor is its use. Like many other legal
products, it can be used for legitimate or illegitimate purposes.
Those “illegitimate” purposes include people in Burma and China who
evade censorship through use of proxy software.
There are some excellent explanations of proxy software online
including Wikipedia. Use to access program streams blocked to your
country can be found by a Google search (Rob de Santos, ibid.)
The original question was framed to indicate it was to be used for an
illegal purpose - i.e. the listening of certain US stations, online,
that have been deliberately blocked to people outside the US.
Sorry - I did say "Don`t ask for help in acquiring illegal software",
where as what I should have said was "Don`t ask for help in acquiring
software for illegal purposes", i.e. slightly rephrased. I also
indicated it would not be a good thing for this (or any other) egroup
to be seen to promote such activity (KEITH, ibid.)
Here in the USA, we are sometimes blocked from access to UK stations
(Five Live Extra for example) for the same reasons. One alternative
way around it is to use the free software SDR-Radio Console and then
look at the list of remote radios you can listen to and choose a
receiver near a city that has the station you desire (Andy O`Brien,
ex-UK, NY, ibid.)
** INTERNATIONAL VACUUM. Studio DX in TV --- Grazie ad un accordo con
l'emittente Jolly Sat, oltretutto al momento inattiva, Challenger è
tornata ad occupare la sua storica posizione SKY 922 (Roberto
Scaglione http://www.studiodx.net Sept 5, bclnews.it yg via DXLD)
Once again this is very short on details, but seems to indicate that
Challenger Radio, the MW 1566 in Roma, is now carried on this TV
satellite, which theoretically could mean that whenever IRRS is
filling time on 1566 with WORLD OF RADIO [see 11-35], we would be
there too (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** IRAN [and non]. 11620, Sept 6 at 1306 solo singing by OM, not
Qur`an but somewhat reverent-sounding, seems S Asian language. 1310
cut to news theme and YL speaking, mentions kHz, with CCI music
underneath; 1314 Pakistan mentioned, 1315 music and different sounding
talk, flutter. I expected All India Radio to be here, but Aoki shows
it`s a collision with VIRI:
11620 1300-1427 IRN VO ISLAMIC REP. IRAN Urdu Kamalabad 1-7
11620 1215-1315 IND ALL INDIA RADIO Burmese Delhi Kham 1-7
11620 1330-1500 IND ALL INDIA RADIO English Delhi Kham 1-7
AIR probably leaves the transmitter on during the break with Tibetan
or something not appearing on schedules (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** IRELAND [non]. GAA ALL IRELAND HURLING AND FOOTBALL FINALS ON RTÉ
RADIO --- RTÉ Radio Worldwide
RTÉ is Ireland's national Public Service Broadcaster, serving the
public by telling the stories of Ireland's relationship with itself
and with the rest of the world.
Updated Information --- All Ireland Finals 2011 Coverage
RTÉ RADIO ASKS THOSE AT HOME TO HELP IN BRINGING THE GAA ALL IRELAND
FINALS TO FRIENDS AND FAMILY WORLWIDE
RTÉ Radio will broadcast the GAA All Ireland Hurling Final on Sunday,
4 September and the All Ireland Football Final on Sunday, 18 September
on all wavelengths and via the internet to Irish people and
communities around the world.
RTÉ is asking on those with relatives or friends abroad to let them
know that this coverage is available and to invite them to the biggest
party in Ireland's sporting calendar.
• Ireland: At home, audiences can listen as usual to the GAA finals on
RTÉ Radio 1 FM and on Longwave 252.
• Britain: Across most of Britain, listeners can receive our coverage
on Long Wave 252. In addition RTÉ Radio 1 is available on the UK free
to air satellite platform Freesat on channel 750.
• Worldwide: Across the world, the match commentaries will be
available online at http://www.rte.ie/radio1
• Shortwave to Africa: In Africa, where many Irish people live and
work, often in relative isolation with poor communications, RTÉ is
providing special transmissions on shortwave radio. See details below.
• Satellite Radio: Across the world, the match commentaries will be
available on satellite radios on WRN2, channel 328
• Note: For those living in Ireland, who wish to get details of the
shortwave frequencies to friends or family living abroad, RTÉ is
providing a special phone text service. Listeners text the word
"shortwave" to 51101 and they will receive a short text message with
the shortwave frequencies. These texts are charged at standard rates.
SHORTWAVE FREQUENCIES FOR AFRICA
Both Finals throw in at 3.30 pm Irish Time [1430 UT]
Coverage area Frequencies -- Time (Irish) [UT +1, tho west of Paris]
Southern Africa 7480 kHz 2pm to 6pm [1300-1700 UT; sites????]
East Africa 17880 kHz 2pm to 6pm
West Africa 17500 kHz 2pm to 6pm
These services are part of RTÉ's continued commitment to Irish people
overseas and, over the years, has proven especially popular with those
in geographically or technically isolated areas.
In addition to RTÉ Radio broadcasts, RTÉ will also broadcast the All
Ireland Finals on RTÉ One Television. Don't forget also the extensive
and dynamic online offering from http://www.rte.ie/sport
http://www.rte.ie/radio/worldwide.html
Irish Time is UT +1. Regards (Harry Brooks, North East England, UK,
Sept 2, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
So that`s 1300-1700 UT, same on all three for a change. Sites?
Oh, oh, 17880 clashes! with the Sept 1-15 DRM special from GUIANA
FRENCH to Brasil at 13-16 as in my recent report, and schedule via
Alokesh. DRM noise was JBA for me on Sept 3.
TDF does not bother to register its DRM broadcasts with HFCC! Latest
TDF schedule at
http://hfcc.org/data/schedbyfmo.php?seas=A11&fmor=TDF
only shows usual 17875 and not specified as DRM!
17500 should be clear, and only ACI on 17495 eastward from Nauen or
France at 1345-1500 on Sundays. If WRN is handling these RTÉ specials,
not in HFCC either.
Tnx to Harry Brooks in North East England for alerting DXLD yg members
two days in advance to the annual SW specials from RTÉ, Sunday Sept 4,
the GAA All-Ireland Hurling Finals, to reach isolated Irishpersons in
Africa depending on SW: 1300-1700 UT on 17880 to E Africa, 17500 to W
Africa and 7480 to S Africa.
Sites not specified, but likely Meyerton, SOUTH AFRICA, meaning that
17500 should carry on best to NAm. However, we had to warn that 17880
would collide with another special no one bothered to register with
HFCC or clear directly with other broadcasters: DRM test from Guiana
French to Brasil on 17875-17880-17885, Sept 1-15 at 1300-1600.
Might not be a problem in E African target, but as expected here, Sept
4 at 1300 and later, DRM was way atop any traces of analog talk on
17880. DRM totally dominant at 1358. 17500 at 1300 had very poor
signal with talk in sport-like urgency as if it were something
important, and only got weaker, often interrupted by ``bronx-cheers``
utility such as at 1357, otherwise JBA. As also expected, the third
frequency 7480 would not propagate here at all, checked anyway at 1304
in WWCR 7490 splatter.
Ireland will have another such special Sunday Sept 18, the All-Ireland
Football Final on the same frequencies at the same times.
These might be of more interest if there were SW direct from Ireland,
and also not just silly ballgames. RTÉ does have a daily news relay
via South Africa at 1930-2030 on 5840, inaudible of course in North
America; often reported to have ragged starts and ends typical of
Meyerton, with other stations or programs around the edges (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Also RTE Radio on Sep.4:
1300-1700 on 7480 no signal in BUL
1300-1700 on 17500 (45433)
1300-1700 on 17880 very poor reception in BUL+co-ch CRI Fr til 1400
73! (Ivo Ivanov, Bulgaria, 1422 UT Sept 4, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
I guess like in previous years SW outlets coming from Meyerton AFS
relay site? 17500 kHz was very strong on remote SDR rx unit in the
Netherlands, like a sidelobe outlet from Babcock transmitting site in
U. K. S=9+20dBm in HOL and S=9+10dBm U.K., S=9+5dBm in Moscow.
17880 kHz was always the weaker outlet today, on various rx monitoring
places like Moscow, USA, England, Germany, Paris, Austria, Italy.
S=7-8 in the Netherlands.
At 1345 UT Sept 4th an archive report in English on Hurling finals
history. vy73 wolfgang df5sx (Büschel, Sept 4, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
Re RTÉ special Sept 4 only: East Africa 17880 kHz 2pm to 6pm [13-17
UT] {bad selection on 16 mb, CRI Bamako-MLI in French to all Africa,
also co-channel 13-14 UT. 16 mb probably via Meyerton-AFS site, as in
2008-2010y (Wolfgang Büschel, BC-DX Sept 3 via DXLD)
** ISRAEL. 15850, Galei Tzahal, Lod, 1500-1532, Aug 22, short talk
program, presumably news including reports, then music program
continued from 1504 including short ann in Hebrew, 25332. The
reception was disturbed by heavy noise and deep fading. Also audible
on // 9235 with weak signal, but after 1530 the reception condition on
this frequency became better than that on 15850 (Nobuya Kato,
Fujisawa-city, Kanagawa, Japan, visiting Bulgaria [for EDXC], DSWCI DX
Window Sept 6 via DXLD)
9235, 5/9 1748, Galei Zahal, Israel, songs, fair // 15850
15850, 4/9 1826, Galei Zahal, songs, this evening really pleasant
signal (Giampiero Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1,
Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** ISRAEL. 15760, Sept 6 at 1355 tone test catches my ear, but right
off and into the majestic Kol Israel trumpet and drum IS, which used
to portend broadcasts in English and several other languages, but now
they think only Persians are worth reaching on SW. (If I were a BBC
Proms presenter, I might call it ``mighty``.).
HFCC shows due east from Israel at 1400-1630, while the winter timing
per WRTH was 1500-1630. That must mean Israel if not Iran is still on
DST. Yes, per
http://www.timeanddate.com/time/dst/2011.html
Iran All locations Tuesday, March 22 [to] Thursday, September 22
Israel All locations Friday, April 1 [to] Sunday, October 2
WRTH Update in May showed it`s really less than a sesquihour, (so the
1400-1630 overall registration covers shifts for both DST and ST):
``Revised Complete Schedule
Persian Days Area kHz
1400-1500 daily ME 13850isr, 15760isr
1500-1525 daily ME 13850isr, 15760isr``
(Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ITALY [non]. 15610, checking IRRS again Sept 1 whether it would
bring us KQED or BS: 1259 Aïda theme, very quick ``IRRS Signing on``
and right into BS. Not even a request for reception reports. Next few
minutes there is a raucous mix of music and Bible citations, sounding
like a mistake, but that`s what BS sends out before coming on to
announce he is on 15610 plus several other frequencies including 9980
which is not really on the air until an hour later via WWCR, and he is
speaking to the entire world --- what an ego this wacko has to feed.
1358:50 cut off BS as he was about to give his Walterboro P O Box
number, and now we get the full IRRS contact info for special QSL as
WEWN starts to mix in the Queen of Heaven. Poor reception thruout,
eastward via ROMANIA.
15610, Sept 2 at 1259, ``Triumphal March from Aïda`` opening theme of
IRRS via ROMANIA, marred by cutting off a few sex just before it
finished, then resumed with simple ``IRRS shortwave in Milan, signing
on``, dead air, then fade up and joining in progress, Brother Scare,
who continued for rest of hour at a couple chex; so another day
without defaulting to KQED programming.
15610, Sat Sept 3 at 1257 tune-in to M&W discussion in American
English; IRRS via Tiganeshti, ROMANIA must have been turned on early
with tail of something else, but 1258:40 cut to Aïda, 1300:10 quick
IRRS sign-on ID, dead air, until, until ---
1300:55 KQED Radio ID, discussion about upcoming cultural events in
the Bay Area, including Ensemble Paralelle with the opera Wozzeck;
Exploratorium; a new play, etc. 1307 outro as ``The Do List`` with
David Wiegand, San Francisco Chronicle; see
http://www.kqed.org/radio/programs/thedolist/
However, nothing about Wozzeck now but we find by searching the KQED
Events Calendar that Wozzeck was performing January 30, 2010, so
apparently a very old podcast we are hearing. Followed by jazzed-up
`Star Spangled Banner` but not to the extent of Jimi`s.
Poor signal at outset with deep fades, but getting a little better.
1312.5, into discussion of several of the week`s ``under-reported news
stories``; 1317 mentions program is `Between the Lines``; 1322 from
Blair Mountain WV, to cellphone hazards; 1340 ending show, with 203
area code, originates in Connecticut, and website. Found this to be
the August 19, 2011 edition:
http://www.btlonline.org/2011/110819-btl.html
but KQED is not listed as a station carrying it. Then PSAs and songs.
(I break away for another Firedrake scan.) 1354 discussion of aging
and Alzheimer`s with Susan Jacoby, author of `The New Old Age`` on
`Listeners` Forum`. Cut off at 1358.5 for IRRS sign-off and WEWN
ethereally heavenly sign-on QRM.
So it pays to keep checking this hour of IRRS, as once again they have
replaced Brother Scare with KQED or other noncommercial US public
radio programming. Is it a satellite mixup? I looked for KQED in
Lyngsat`s listing of free radio USA, not there. Maybe it involves
instead mixed up web feeds to Milano and/or Tiganeshti (Glenn Hauser,
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
I believe I recall reading or hearing earlier this year, that somehow
IRRS had appropriated The California Report, which originates at
KQED/88.5 MHz in San Francisco. The program is not heard in Los
Angeles, where we already know everything there is to know (GREG
HARDISON, playdx yg via DXLD)
Via ROMANIA. 15610, IRRS, 1259-1400*, tune-in to IRRS theme music.
IRRS ID at 1300. English program at 1301 about local concerts and
plays in the San Fancisco, California area. Mentions of San Francisco
Chronicle. “Between the Lines” program at 1312 with reviews of recent
news items including woman in Afganistan, Palistinian-Israel
relations, mountaintop coal mining and possible cancer from cell
phones. Promos on how to save money, AIDS, foster parents. Some lite
music. Folk music. “Writers Voice” program at 1353 about the elderly,
but program abruptly cutoff at 1359 followed by IRRS ID and contact
information. Fair but mixing with WEWN at their 1359 sign on. Once
again, no Overcomer Ministry with Brother Stair. Sept 3 (Brian
Alexander, PA, DX Listening Digest)
15610, looking for IRRS via ROMANIA, Sept 4 at 1259 but nothing
audible; 1304 I can make out Brother Scare, came on late? And also at
a few chex later in hour, so no KQED et al. today.
15610, IRRS via Tiganeshti, ROMANIA, Sept 5 at 1308 is running Brother
Scare instead of KQED, so promptly tuned out.
15610, Sept 6 at 1259 IRRS ``Aïda`` theme which always runs a bit past
hourtop, quick sign-on, pause and into Brother Scare, still going at
quick recheck 1356, so no KQED today either.
15610, Sept 7 at 1313, JBA but sounds like Brother Scare, so no loss
today with poor propagation from IRRS via ROMANIA (Glenn Hauser, OK,
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ITALY [non]. Re 11-34: New transmissions in Arabic from NEXUS-IBA
IRRS Shortwave: [Saturdays only] Tiganesti site 300 kW. 11910 Arab
Woman Today from Amman, http://arabwomantoday.com
Listen to recording today Sept 2 at 1400-1415 UT: Signal strength:
S=7-8 in Sri Lanka
S=9+10dB in U.K.
S=9+15dB in HOL and in Germany.
vy73 (Wolfy Büschel, to Tarek Zeidan, via DXLD)
** JAPAN. 9750, Sept 2 at 1242, ``My Love Is Here to Stay``, is it
Eartha Kitt or Diana Ross? Anyhow, more great eclectic music courtesy
NHK Japanese service, 1244 YL DJ announcement. This is 300 kW, 290
degrees from Yamata at 07-17 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** JAPAN. Wefax station JMH 13988.5 kHz sent QSL letter and F/D QSL
certificate in 2 weeks for surface report with printout of one of
their fax transmissions. Returned the $1 I had enclosed. No v/s,
letter came from Information and Telecommunications Division, Forecast
Dept., Japan Meteorological Agency, Ote-machi 1-3-4 Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo
100-8122 (Bruce Portzer, WA, Sept 5, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** JUAN FERNANDEZ. Para Los Amigos de Chile: si alguno puede aportar
alguna frecuencia que esté operativa para captar alguna comunicación
del operativo cercano a la Isla Juan Fernández, agradezco. Saludos
(Ernesto Paulero, Argentina, Sept 4, condiglist yg via DXLD)
Ernesto y amigos: En la frecuencia de 10024 USB están los contactos
aéreos entre el continente y la Isla Juan Fernández. 2220 UT. En vuelo
de la Isla al continente, avión Fach "Judas" con arribo a la quinta
región de Valparaíso. Fotos en vivo de Juan Fernández
http://www.aipchile.gob.cl/camara/show/id/41
http://www.aipchile.gob.cl/camara/show/id/13
http://www.dgac.gob.cl/portal/page?_pageid=242,1&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL
(ce3BBC, Hugo López C., Casilla 9570, Correo Central
http://www.qrz.com/db/ce3bbc ibid.)
Más frec Ernesto: Centro de control oceánico en USB
10024 8864 6649 kHz
SAR en USB: 3286 8364 13286. Se opera sólo de día.
(ce3BBC, Hugo López C., ibid.)
Gracias Hugo por la info! Ojo, Ernesto que en esta QRG podrás escuchar
varias estaciones de Aeropuertos. Entre ellos creo que está Ezeiza
(Arnaldo Slaen, Argentina, ibid.)
[and non] El que persevera triunfa, ja ja, LEAN --- Desde hace dos
días que estoy monitoreando la frecuencia de 10024 KHz USB, acabo de
captar a la aeronave "Barrabàs" de la FACH [Chilean Air Force]
comunicàndose con "Urano" a 82 millas de la Isla Robinsòn Crusoè;
informan su posición a Urano y nivel de vuelo. Si alguien quiere el
audio se lo envio (Ernesto Paulero, Argentina, ``Sept 5 4:43 PM`` [=
1943 UT?], condiglist yg via DXLD)
Sigo Captando FACH --- ahora Barrabas esta a 22 millas de Isla
Robinson Crusoe (Paulero, 2205 UT Sept 5, ibid.)
JF where there just was a plane crash, high-profile passengers aboard:
http://www.santiagotimes.cl/chile/other/22385-chilean-air-force-plane-crashes-in-juan-fernandez-with-21-aboard
(Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** KASHMIR [non]. 3975, Pakistan , Azad Kashmir Radio, Islamabad.
September 04, 0042-0050, Urdu/Kashmiri (listed) music probably local
Folk, short Qur`an, male and female talks, back Qur`an. 35533, 73’s
(Lúcio Otávio Bobrowiec, Embu SP Brasil, SW40 - Dipoles and Longwire,
dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** KENYA [and non]. IN KENYA, CONTROVERSY OVER DIGITAL TV DISTRIBUTION
CONTRACT TO CHINESE COMPANY. Posted: 03 Sep 2011
Africa-Asia Confidential, August 2011: "In Kenya, Chinese companies
have landed a couple of deals but not without riling the local private
sector and attracting criticism around issues of national security
issues. Pan African Network Group, a Chinese company, won a lucrative
bid to distribute digital TV signals across Kenya last month. Of at
least six bidders, only Pan African Network Group qualified, according
to Francis Wangusi, the head of broadcasting at the state-run
Communications Commission of Kenya.
James Rege, Chairman of the House Committee on Energy, Communications
and Information, said that he would launch an investigation to
determine why local companies did not qualify for the bid. Rege said
that the awarding of the licence to a foreign company, one from a
country prone to censorship, had opened Kenya to sabotage. The Nation
Media Group and Royal Media Services lost an appeal on the contract to
the Communications Commission of Kenya. The Kenyan controversy
followed the accusations in mid-June of pro-democracy Ethiopian
Satellite Television. The company accused Beijing of supplying
technology, training and technical assistance to allow the authorities
in Addis Ababa to block short-wave radio and satellite transmissions."
(kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
** KOREA NORTH. 3960, KCBS Pyongyang , Kanggye. September, 01 0932-
0939 male in Korean talks, elation music. As usual, short and sudden
appearance; at its brief peak 35523, 73’s (Lúcio Otávio Bobrowiec,
Embu SP Brasil, SW40 - Dipoles and Longwire, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** KOREA NORTH. 11710, VOK, Sept. 5, 1600, DPRK coming on with French
service, but English service audio and ID heard clearly underneath of
it at TOH, then more muddled after that. Not sure how this happens,
first noted after a headsup from Frank Mezek. Am hearing a second
carrier that I can "zero-beat" with BFO down to 11709.35 (Rick Barton,
El Mirage, Arizona, Sept 7, Hammarlund HQ-200, Drake R-8, Panasonic
RF-2200, outdoor slinky, 70' Inverted-L wire, 100' random wire,
Palomar Loop, ABDX via DXLD)
** KOREA NORTH [and non]. The Voice of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
or IRIB broadcasting, is another silent entity. I used to hear from
them all the time, but now not much.
Oh well, there’s always North Korea. I don’t think their government
has found out about my involvement with Amnesty International as a
national coordinator (my focus is the Koreas), or even what I’ve
written in AI correspondence about their customs officials soldering
radios so that people can’t tune into foreign radio stations. They
still send “Happy New Year” cards to me every year (they don’t
celebrate religious holidays) as well as other neat stuff, like
magazines, propaganda newspapers and even little lapel pins which I’ve
turned into earrings! I guess they haven’t figured out yet what we’re
all about.
I’d like to know if people are filing reception reports, and if so,
what they are getting back, whether QSL cards, or just email
responses. In the meantime – 73. Sue --- BTW I am now on Twitter as
@suehickey, so tweet me at your convenience! (Sue Hickey, CIDX Forum,
Sept CIDX Messenger via DXLD)
** KOREA NORTH. RECORDINGS FROM PYONGYANG, NORTH KOREA
It's taken me a little while to start sorting out my radio captures
following my recent trip this month to North Korea due to a busy time
back here in Australia. I have edited some files so anyone interested
can hear what the FM band in Pyongyang sounds like. From my room on
the 32nd floor of the Yanggakdo Hotel right in the downtown
overlooking the Taedong River I found 14 FM radio outlets across the
band though only 2 different programs were heard across these
frequencies. The TV audio from Channel R-5 on 99.75 MHz was not
present.
Here is a photo of my listening post, receiver and loop antenna:
https://files.me.com/markwilliamfahey/p0kp4h
105.2 carried Pyongyang FM Pangsong which opened each morning with a
few minutes of test tone, an interval signal and then the 6AM time
signal.
106.5 Carried another service which was parallel on 89.2, 91.2, 92.9,
93.3, 93.9, 94.5, 96.7, 97.3, 97.7, 98.1, 99.6 and 101.8
I hope someone can help me identify the 106.5 station/service name.
Here are some samples of the recordings I made of the two stations:
105.2 Pyongyang FM Pangsong, Interval Signal and Station Opening - 5
minutes (8MB File)
https://files.me.com/markwilliamfahey/8f3g6u.mp3
105.2 Pyongyang FM Pangsong, Test Tone, Interval Signal and Station
Opening and first 2.5 Hours of Programming (231MB File)
https://files.me.com/markwilliamfahey/gzchnq.mp3
106.5 Pyongyang, Interval Signal and Station Opening (9MB File)
https://files.me.com/markwilliamfahey/44fqrf.mp3
106.5 Pyongyang FM, Interval Signal and Station Opening and first 1.4
Hours of Programming (109MB File)
https://files.me.com/markwilliamfahey/2xe61z.mp3
I will eventually write up a full article for my website, but in the
meantime I hope anyone interested enjoys the samples above.
If you want to have a look at the photos I took in the DPRK you can
view the best 622 of the over 4000 photos I took here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/32265037@N08/sets/72157627375852761
Cheers, (Mark Fahey, Sydney, Australia, Sept 7, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
Dear Mark, 106.5 MHz is Pyongyang Broadcasting Station-Pyongyang
Pansong. I can confirm an announcement of "Pyongyang Pansong imnida"
by a male voice after IS of your file. // 657, 855, 6250, 6400 kHz
(S. Hasegawa, Japan, ibid.)
** KOREA NORTH [non]. 6135, Shiokaze/Sea Breeze, *1330, September 4.
The N. Korean jamming was already on before their sign on; in Korean.
September 5 also jammed at 1403; in Japanese (Ron Howard, Asilomar
State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** KOREA NORTH [and non]. From South to North in Korean heard as
follows on Aug 24th: 6230 kHz same type noise jammer which was used in
Bulgaria before 90s and same as on 6518 kHz now but different type
jammers were on 6600 kHz, without jammers on 3480 and 4450 kHz. Heavy
sound jammers were on 3012 [sic, should be 3912 --- gh], 3985 and
6348 kHz - all at 1645-1655 UT (Rumen Pankov, Bulgaria, Sept 1, wwdxc
BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD)
** KOREA SOUTH. 4450, Voice of the People. What happened to the Korean
Nat. Dem. Front (N. Korea) that was heard here in the past mixing with
VOP? Off the air September 4 (1318-1326 + 1344) and 5 (1241-1248),
leaving VOP in sole possession of this frequency; fair with patriotic
singing and in Korean.
4450, Voice of the People. 1219, September 6. Continues without the
QRM of Korean Nat. Dem. Front (N. Korea) (Ron Howard, Asilomar State
Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** KURDISTAN. IRAN/IRAQ: Both Voices of Kurdistan were noted at 1520
UT - one on 3929 kHz and another on 4870 kHz with different programs.
The close/downs were: on 3929-3930 kHz at 1534 UT and on 4870-4871 kHz
at 1527 UT - all on Aug 24th. On Aug 18th at 0240 UT they were on 3930
and on 3970 \\ 4881 kHz (Rumen Pankov, Bulgaria, Sept 1, wwdxc BC-DX
TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD)
3929.53, 0230-0250, CLANDESTINE, 02.09, R Voice of Kurdistan, via
Salaimaniya, Northern Iraq, Kurdish talk about Kurdistan, Kurdish
music on flute, 45344, First jammed from *0247
3975.04, 0240-0250, CLANDESTINE, 02.09, Voice of Iranian Kurdistan,
via Salah Al-Din, Northern Iraq, Kurdish talk by man and woman,
jammed, 22332 [not to be confused with Azad KASHMIR Radio; see KASHMIR
and UNIDENTIFIED]
4869.90, 0245-0255, CLANDESTINE, 02.09, Voice of Iranian Kurdistan,
via Salah Al-Din, Northern Iraq, Kurdish talk about Kurdistan by man
and woman, weak jamming + CODAR QRM, 33333 (Anker Petersen, from
Skovlunde, Denmark on an AOR AR7030PLUS with 28 metres of longwire,
via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD)
** KURDISTAN [non?]. 4885, 0315 2 Aug, V. of Iranian Kurdistan,
Kurdish with Iranian jamming, SIO 222. Was on 4870 at 0329 (Rumen
Pankov, Sofia, Bulgaria, Tropical Bands Logbook, Sept BDXC-UK
Communication via DXLD)
** KURDISTAN [non]. Denge Mezopotamya in Kurdish from Sep. 4:
1600-1800 NF 7540*SMF 300 kW / 129 deg to WeAS, ex 11530
1800-2000 on 7540*SMF 300 kW / 129 deg to WeAS, no change
* not on new 7460. 73! (Ivo Ivanov, Bulgaria, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
7460 would have interfered with 7465 R. Tirana if on the air. So
before 1600 presumably remains on day channel 11530 (gh, DXLD)
** KUWAIT [and non]. 21540, Sept 1 at 1315, R. Kuwait is the SSOB of
the moment, better than 21505, 21610, 21780 with Arabic song well atop
Spain underneath, but REE gains and by 1412 is atop 21540 with
`Españoles en la Mar` report on Somali piracy (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
15540, Radio Kuwait, 2005-2010, English. M announced a program
entitled “Behind the Pearl of the Gulf”, a program about Bahrain’s
past present and future. M&W presenters with program about the History
of the Post Office and Postal service in Bahrain. This was followed by
about 38 minutes of music with a number of different songs. Followed
by the news, some more songs and then a sign off. There were several
IDs between 2050 and 2059 English sign off. Very Good signal. 08/28/11
(Steven Handler, IL, Icom IC-7200, Tecsun PL-660 and Sony ICF-7600
with various dipole and longwire antennas, NASWA Flashsheet via DXLD)
So R. Kuwait is still/regularly broadcasting items from/about Bahrain,
how neighborly (gh, DXLD)
[and non]. 17550, Sept 6 at 2044, carrier from R. Kuwait Arabic to C&W
NAm is JBA, as propagation conditions deteriorate; starting such a hi-
latitude path at such a high frequency at 11 pm local time is
inadvisable except at midsummer. Still fairly good on 15540,
simultaneous English to NAm; that too is bound to deteriorate as we
get into winter, while RK continues to pretend it is on 11990.
Meanwhile, we had super signal from RHC in Arabic on 17560 (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** KYRGYZSTAN. On August 29, 2011 at 0018 UT on the frequency 4050 KHz
adopted the broadcast of the Radio of Russia through Kyrgyzstan. SINPO
35443. It was also heard (with the worst quality) broadcasting of the
Kyrgyz Radio on 4010 and 4795 kHz (Vitaly Lisovsky, Ukraine /"from
deneb-radio-dx" via RusDX 4 Sept via DXLD)
4050, Kirgizstan, R. Rossii (presumed), Bishkek. September, 04 0051-
0101 at tune in talks, then music, alternating music and talks. Able
to differentiate talks than music only, no details. Primary signal
level, 15521 (Lúcio Otávio Bobrowiec, Embu SP Brasil, SW40 - Dipoles
and Longwire, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** LESOTHO. 1197 MW transmitter, Family Radio, now relaying LM Radio
from Mozambique in daytime: see MOZAMBIQUE [non]
** LIBYA. Voice of Africa was heard intermittently until mid August on
its SW frequencies 17725 and 15215 kHz, some days on, most days off.
By 13 August there were reports of fighting in the vicinity of
Sabrata, the coastal town between Tripoli and the Tunisian border,
where the SW transmitters are located. Libyan Radio domestic service
was heard on 8500 kHz daytime until 18 August, but not heard since
(Dave Kenny observations 1-21 August, DX News, Sept BDXC-UK
Communication via DXLD)
** LIBYA [non?]. Psyop transmissions to Libya were reported in early
August on new 9376 and/or 10125 (ex 6877 and 10405) (DX News, Sept
BDXC-UK Communication via DXLD)
Psy-op attiva --- Ciao, le trasmissioni di guerra psicologica della
Nato continuano, adesso sono attive a 10404 khz Usb, segnale molto
forte. 73 And HK – (Andrea Borgnino IW0HK - HB9EMK, 1209 UT Sept 4,
bclnews.it yg via DXLD) Since ``organization`` is feminine, NATO is
too, so not ``dello NATO`` (gh, DXLD)
** LIBYA FREE. 1449 kHz, 2204 16 Aug, Voice of Free Libya, Misrata,
Presumed news reports, nice ID at 2219 ``Huna Sawt Libya al-Hurra min
Misrata`` music, Arabic, SIO 333 (Tony Rogers, Birminham, MW Logbook,
Sept BDXC-UK Communication via DXLD)
** LIBYA. When discussing the news from Libya at the Reading
International Radio Group meeting last Saturday, I noted that the new
station of the National Transitional Council just IDs as "Radio
Libya". Dave Kenny made the good point that this was presumably the
translated name and that in the original Arabic it would be Idhaat
Libya, or similar.
I had to confess that I wasn't 100 per cent sure, so made a point of
checking this with my own ears today and can confirm that even in
Arabic (the only language it is using), the station does in fact
exactly call itself "Radio Libya". I'm not sure I have heard an
Arabic-language station use the word "Radio" in its title before.
Also, it was announcing the use of FM, and saying "FM" as we would in
English (eff em), not the Arabic equivalent. It has a canned ID
announcement that it repeats regularly, which I will get translated.
Radio Libya is on 1053 AM, 96.6 FM and the Rascom satellite at 2.8
east (4102 MHz). (Chris Greenway, UK, Sept 5, dxldyg via WORLD OF
RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST) So how to say `FM` in Arabic? (gh)
See http://de.kingofsat.net/tp.php?tp=5861
It appears that they have switched on the uplink again without any
changes to the configuration. All the old program IDs are still in
place, and the TV channels now all carry an identical program stream
"Libya TV" (click on "zap" for a screenshot). No radio service shown
there so far, but of course modulation could well appear on the
satellite mux in the same manner.
The Ku band transponder on QAF 1R appears to be still off. All the
relays on other satellites (Nilesat etc.) should be checked
separately. If they did not reemerge it just shows that it was no good
idea to shut down the uplink. On the other hand the question is if
there is an interest to continue these leases at all. The same of
course goes for any foreign radio service on 1251 kHz and/or shortwave
(Kai Ludwig, Germany, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hello Kai, Yes, they haven't been running a separate radio channel
(i.e. audio only) on the multiplex. They've taken over the TV feeds,
and play the audio of "Radio Libya" on the audio track of all the TV
channels on 4102, with the video just showing a still of the NTC
("rebel") Libyan flag. Clearly still "work in progress"!! (Chris
Greenway, Sept 6, ibid.)
** LIBYA. MISRATA TV USES GADDAFI TRUCK TO BROADCAST
A shining white truck sits imposingly behind an building off the
combat-blasted main avenue in Libya’s port city of Misrata, a rebel
bastion that was besieged for months by loyalist forces. Misrata TV’s
outside broadcast unit - once owned by Moamer Gaddafi - is currently
the only way the rebel station can air its limited programming.
An anonymous one-storey white building, spared in the otherwise
stricken zone, is home to Misrata TV, the rebel television channel
that broadcasts by satellite to north Africa, southern Europe and the
Gulf. For the past two weeks, it has put out four hours of programming
a day - edited sequences of stills and moving images on the
tempestuous history of the city over six months of uprising. The
broadcasts are accompanied by voice-over or music, praising the
eternal glory of Misrata and its “thowar” or revolutionary fighters.
“We have about 150 people working for us, all volunteers,” says the
head of the Misrata media committee, Mohammed Darrat, who wants to
create “an information and opinion channel.” For the moment, though,
all programmes are recorded. But a studio has already been prepared
for live broadcasts, targeted within four weeks. The three-camera
facility boasts a backdrop in the green, black and red colours of the
revolution.
But for the moment it is the enormous outside broadcast vehicle, its
satellite antenna pointing to the sky, that relays Misrata TV’s
output. Mr Darrat revealed some of the story behind the vehicle.
”Gaddafi used this truck to make broadcasts when he was constantly on
the move in order not to be taken. Our men took it in battle,” Mr
Darrat said, declining to go into specifics. With its fitted carpet,
wooden interior, editing suites and multiple screens, the monster of
an outside broadcast unit is over-equipped to the extent that it can
cause cold sweats among its technicians.
Of the station’s output, Darrat said it is independent. But up to a
point. Misrata TV broadcasts what it wants “unless we do something
illegal, against our culture or our religion, or if we talk about
someone who is dead without the family having been informed,” he said.
What would be deemed illegal for Libyan journalists since the
revolution? ”There is no law. It’s complicated. We are trying to do
our best not to hurt but to help the revolution. We are looking for
freedom, to improve the media,” added Darrat, who also heads Radio
Misrata which played a major role in making the rebels’ views known
since March.
The people certainly like Misrata TV. ”It shows how we won the battle
of Misrata and conquered Zliten,” the nearby town, on August 19, said
Idriss Ilglib, who is in his forties. ”They have incredible footage,
and a whole lot of it. Everyone in Misrata is supplying them with
pictures,” he added. Much of this material has been recorded using the
cameras on mobile phones, of poor quality but in some cases remarkable
content -showing everything from firefights to destruction, death and
celebration to a martial music soundtrack. (Source: AFP)(September
2nd, 2011 - 11:12 UTC by Andy Sennitt, Media Network blog via DXLD)
CNN INTERNATIONAL REPORT CATALOGUES PRO- AND ANTI-GADHAFI LIBYAN
TELEVISION CHANNELS. Posted: 05 Sep 2011
CNN, 2 Sept 2011, Nima Elbagir: "Pro- and anti-Gadhafi television
channels are popping up across Libya. CNN's Nima Elbagir reports."
Video report.
http://edition.cnn.com/video/#/video/world/2011/09/02/elbagir-gadhafi-tv.cnn?hpt=hp_t2
(kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
** LIBYA [non]. A new Pro Gadaffi TV station on Atlantic Bird 4A Sat 7
Degrees West --- Hello DXers, checking the latest activities in Libya,
I noticed today a new TV station broadcasting the latest message by
Gadaffi celebrating the 1st of September, The Libyan revolution day.
The channel is called Mwkawama, which means Resistance in Arabic; it's
transmitting on the Atlantic Bird 4A Satellite, 7 Degrees West,
frequency 10911, Vertical. As I'm writing this, they are
rebroadcasting a speech by Gadaffi to the Libyans for Eid el Fitr
occasion. All the best (Tarek Zeidan, Cairo, Egypt, 1425 UT Sept 2,
dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Tarek, Yes, it is in effect a clandestine TV station! It is
suspected that it is coming from Syria, as it is associated with the
Damascus-based anti-US channel Al-Ra'y TV. However, Al-Ra'y's owner,
Iraqi businessman Mish'an al-Juburi, says the new station is coming
from an outside broadcasting van in Libya. It is also on Eutelsat
Atlantic Bird 2 (8 degrees west), 11170 Horizontal.
Note to others: In addition to Tarek's transliteration, the name could
also be give as Muqawama, Mukawama, etc. (Chris Greenway, UK, ibid.)
** MADAGASCAR. 5010, Radio Madagasikara, 0302-0334 Aug 29. Tuned in to
“Amazing Grace” sung by choir followed by a man with long religious
talk over instrumental music in presumed Malagasy language. At 0316 a
woman announcer spoke accompanied by flute music ending religious
programming. ID followed by discussion by man and woman announcers
until news at 0330. Poor to fair (Rich D'Angelo, 2216 Burkey Drive,
Wyomissing, PA 19610, Ten-Tec RX-340, Drake R-8B, Eton E1, Eton E5,
Alpha Delta DX Sloper, RF Systems Mini-Windom, Datong FL3, JPS ANC-4,
NASWA Flashsheet via DXLD)
5010, R. Madagaskira [sic] (presumed), 0309-0340 Sep 3. A bit of
music, then YL talk in presumed Malagasy with mention of "Madagascar";
mostly YL, but occasionally a man put in a comment or two. Fair peaks
but slowly deteriorating; still there, weakly, at 0340 (John Wilkins,
Wheat Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
4910, R. Madagasikara, 1437-1444, September 6. Very strong in USB, but
also heard weak LSB, so calling it unbalanced double side band AM. Ex-
5010 (leaving AIR there in the clear with fair reception). African Hi-
Life music and African pop songs; possible ID at 1438; almost fair;
clearly // weak 6135.27 (in the clear after Shiokaze's scheduled sign
off at 1430). Via long path. Probably just a frequency entering error?
4910, R. Madagasikara continuing to be heard here; ex-5010. Strong in
USB compared to the weak LSB reception + AM; September 7 from 0258 to
0310 and also from 1352 to 1424 (long path, which is the better
reception). Time will tell if this is just an error in entering the
frequency or an actual schedule change (Ron Howard, Asilomar State
Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
It also happened a year+ ago as in DXLD 10-34 (gh, WORLD OF RADIO
1581)::
``** MADAGASCAR. Aug 19th [2010y] at 1744 noted unID Afro-sounding
station on 4910 USB. I guess it's Madagascar off nominal by some
mistake. Nothing heard on 5010 at that time (Jari Savolainen,
Kuusankoski, Finland, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1527, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
Hi Jari, Have heard the same station here only once, around the same
time you logged them, on 14 August [2010y]. However, it was in AM
mode, not USB. Quite possibly Madagascar, however, the music sounded
more "southern African" to my ears. 73s (David Sharp, NSW Australia,
dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1527, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Yep, it's Madagascar. Going on past 1900. Still there at 1913 when
writing this. Recheck at 1947; no signal here (Jari, WORLD OF RADIO
1527, ibid.)
4910 USB, Radio Madagasikara, 0350-0400, August 20 [2010y], local
African
music. Talk in local language. Weak but readable. Nothing heard on
5010. New frequency or punch-up error. Thanks to Jari Savolainen tip
(Brian Alexander, PA, WORLD OF RADIO 1527, DX Listening Digest)
5010, R. Madagasikara, Antananarivo. August 21 [2010y], 0305-0315
Malagasy
(listed) male and female talks, “Madagascar” alternating short
instrumental, choral music. 35333 (Lúcio Otávio Bobrowiec, Embu SP
Brasil - Sony ICF SW40 - Dipole 18m, 32m, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO
1527, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Dear Jari, 4910 seem to be the mistransmission of 5010 kHz. Only in
Aug. 19, I can't receive it Aug. 20 and 21 [2010y]. Thank you for
information.
http://bcl2isid2over60.cocolog-nifty.com/blog/files/100820_040000_4910E2Uqd.mp3
by Show in Nagoya at 1900UT on Aug. 19 (S. Hasegawa, Japan, dxldyg via
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
I rechecked PERSEUS data on 4910 kHz at about 1800 UT for few days.
Not a signal for Aug. 14, 15 and 16 [2010y]. I was able to receive
broadcast seem to be Madagascar in AM and LSB (not USB) on Aug. 17 and
18.
http://bcl2isid2over60.sakura.ne.jp/dl/sound/100819_030800_4910E2Lqd.mp3
at 1810 UT on Aug. 18. de Show (S. Hasegawa, Aug 22, WORLD OF RADIO
1527, ibid.)``
Hi Ron, thanks for a tip. I had some minutes time to sit at the radio
Sept. 6 at 1815. On 4910 there was a station in AM mode with weakish
modulation. It appeared to be AIR Jaipur with some extended sports
program in parallel with 5015. Nothing else could I hear on 4910 at
that hour. Also 5010 seemed to be empty. Best 73, (Jari Savolainen,
Kuusankoski, Finland, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Everyone, 4910, Radio Madagascar, 1758 UT, 7/9/11 --- YL and OM in
"banter" presumed Malagasy. Then ID "Radio Madagscar" @ 21 secs, then
audio drop (whilst putting needle on record !) and into African pop
music. Recorded in USB signal also in AM nothing on LSB. This is what
I heard:
http://www.box.net/shared/5xq4hado497ag9bmmezd
I wonder if this is to be a regular fixture? (Mark Davies, Anglesey,
Wales, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, ibid.)
** MALAYSIA. Heard on Aug 24th on 9835 kHz at 1747 UT. NHK in Japan
playing the song Bohemian Rhapsody, but at 1755 UT the dominated
station was (according to the ID) "Radio Malaysia Sarawak" and at 1800
UT "Dua fadi a salom Aleikum" said a man and lady and news in Malay,
but on Aug 25th at 1630 UT was noted on 9835 \\ 11665 kHz. On 7295 kHz
at 1659 UT a DJ Lady said "Trakssss [Traxx] FM" and at 1700 UT "Good
Morning, the News" on Aug 25th (Rumen Pankov, Bulgaria, Sept 1, wwdxc
BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD)
SARAWAK (MALAYSIA) 9835, R. Malaysia Sarawak, Local Sarawak news by W
after 1003, ID during news at 1006. 1010 jingle and back to music.
Fairly good at this time. Came back later and caught Koran at 1156-
1202, then back to music. RTTY QRM from 9830. (28 August) (Dave Valko,
NRD-535D and T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
9835, RTM, 1726 4 Sept, joget song, S3 224x3 with some QRM from 9840
but best on SSB. Also heard on 11665 with QRM by ??? and total signal
S9. New tune in 1833 with S7 and 33333 for 9835. Also heard 2140 for
5.9 with S2 max and Hari Raya songs (Zacharias Liangas, Greece, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** MALAYSIA. Re: Malaysia – Salam FM on 6050.02v - Hi Glenn, Certainly
with the end of Ramadan there has been an unsettled schedule here.
September 1 on 6050.02v found Asyik FM programming from tune in at
1222 till end of their program at 1500. There was not the normal
switching over to Radio Suara Islam at 1400, but unlike yesterday`s
Salam FM programming after 1400, today they just continued with Asyik
FM with no breaks at ToH (no 1+1 pips). Today at 1500 (also no 1+1
pips) they switched over to Salam FM programming with many singing IDs
and reciting from the Qur'an. Time will tell just what their final
schedule will be for the post 1400 time period, but for now this seems
like a good chance to hear the not often reported Salam FM (Ron
Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Glenn, More post Ramadan developments: September 3, RTM not heard
on 49m band, checking from 1332 to 1444. No 5964.6v Klasik Nasional
and no 6050.02v Asyik FM/Salam FM broadcasting today.
On 6050 heard clear PBS Xizang/Tibet (Chinese Service) // 4820 (with
AIR Kolkata again on 4820.75) and nothing else on 6050.
5030 and 7270v of course continue to be silent.
9835 heard Sarawak FM via Kajang, near Kuala Lumpur, in vernacular
with their normal Saturday program of indigenous chanting/singing; not
sure about 11665 Wai FM due to very heavy CNR1 jamming, but assume was
probably on as usual.
7295 Traxx FM was normal.
September 5 at 1216 found both 6050.02v (Asyik FM) and 5964.6 (Klasik
Nasional) back on the air as normal. Asyik FM programming ended at
1500 and switched over to "Salam FM" with singing jingles and reciting
from the Qur'an. Nice to have them both back again after being off the
air for two consecutive days (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA,
Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** MALAYSIA. September 7 from 1426 to 1512.
6050.02, Asyik FM till 1500; then switched over to Salam FM with
a series of IDs (promo); sudden 1502:04*. MP3 audio of promo at
http://www.box.net/shared/sl0qnkda6lae6c81kmty
Seems they are experimenting with different scheduling here. Looks as
if Radio Suara Islam programming is actually gone. Had always started
at 1400.
11665, Wai FM. A rare day indeed to find no CNR1 jamming; two OM DJs
with pop songs; segment of non-stop indigenous chanting/singing; Wai
FM promo with montage of songs (some in English); MP3 audio
http://www.box.net/shared/q263n018h6se80u44gr5
of promo. After 1500 several songs in English (C&W and also Doris
Day with “Que Sera Sera”). Very pleasant without CNR1 (Ron Howard,
Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** MALAYSIA. 5964.70, Klasik Nasional (presumed), 1252-1320+ Sep 5.
Vocal music to ToH, then two pips and presumed news in Bahasa Malaysia
to 1309; a mix of music and talk followed. Fair signal but tough copy
in the band noise. Back on after a 2-day absence. (Wilkins-CO)
6050.02, Asyik FM (presumed), 1328-1340+ Sep 5. Usual mix of music,
talk, and phone calls; seemed mostly talk today. No ID heard but
presumed Still running Asyik FM at this time. Fair at best; slightly
better than Klasik Nasional on 5964.70. Both stations back after a 2-
day hiatus. Wish 5030 and 7270 would return but it looks like they're
gone for good. (Wilkins-CO)
7295, Traxx FM, 1300-1335+ Sep 2. Two pips, then M with news to 1309,
then a couple of ads or stingers; back to music at 1312, hosted by YL;
occasional jingle. All in English. Fairly good signal but marred by
ham QRM (John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW,
Cumbre DX via DXLD)
** MAURITANIA [and non]. Last night TAs in QC --- Here in Quebec,
conditions were quite interesting last night during a DX session I had
prior to my sunset (around 2340 UT). There, I've spent most of my time
monitoring the sneaking-in Angolan on 1088 kHz from which I had at
least some weak audio with man talk. I remember that there wasn't too
much action coming from the Middle-East especially on the higher part
of the band (except for the 1521 Saudi and maybe Iran 1503 but I don't
recall precisely) so I didn't pay too much attention there (missing
something else maybe). I didn't go to check LW either.
From a few notes along with a 400 kHz Perseus recording, here's a
couple of logs here and there, most of them with at least fair audio,
beginning with at least a dozen of Spaniards (or Canarians), UK 909,
1053, 1089, 1215, Netherlands 747, Germany 756 & 1422, France 945,
1206, 1242, Iran 963 (mixed with Spain), Algeria 531, 549 & 981,
Portugal 1035 playing Beach Boys' "California Girls" and most likely
Morocco 1044 buried beneath one of WBZ IBOC sidebands.
But the star of the night was beyond doubt, Radio Mauritanie at 783
kHz with a huge signal. This one draw my attention before I had my
focus on 1088. Actually, this is my best copy ever:
http://www.quebecdx.com/mp3/mauritania_783a.mp3
(Sylvain Naud, Portneuf, QC, CAN, rx: Perseus SDR, ant: 230m
terminated Beverage @ 88? towards Africa; ant: 110m unterminated
Beverage NW-SE; MFJ-1026 w LF mods, Sept 7, IRCA via DXLD)
** MAURITANIA. 7245, Sept 1 at 0545, post-Ramadan IGIM chanting, still
on the air earlier than pre-Ramadan.
7245, Sept 3 at 0135, weak Arabish talk so IGIM continues 24-hours,
post-Ramadan, why? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Or was it?
7245, 0152 01/09, Voice of Tajik (presumed), Tadjikistan, Tajik,
talks OM. 45434 tg [?? He puts tg after every SINPO - for Tony
Garcia?] (Antonio Laurentino Garcia, Brasil, PY7024SWL, radioescutas
yg via DXLD)
Can either of us really tell Arabish from Tajik in poor reception? His
was not so poor. V. of Tajik supposedly does not start until 0200
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
7245, Radio Mauritanie, Nouakchott, discussion in Arabic, at 0425 UT
Sept 3, S=9+10dB (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via
DXLD)
7245, Sept 5 at 0538, no signal from IGIM, so I left a BFO on 7244 and
heard the carrier cut on at *0542:40, JIP music. They have finally
reverted to pre-Ramadan practice of turning it on sometime before
0600, rather than 24 hours. A few minutes later into characteristic
chanting.
7245, Sept 6 at 0343, lo-key YL in Arabish talk, made out a few words
such as `professor`, same monolog at 0401 recheck. So IGIM can
apparently still run all-night, altho on Sept 5 I caught it cutting on
at *0542:40.
It`s tough to get a definite ID from this one, but I am sure it was
Arabish, not Tajik; too, Tajikistan altho maybe active after 0200 is
at a great propagational disadvantage, hi-latitude to here, getting
into daytime, and there was no CCI audible (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF
RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** MEXICO. 53 ESTACIONES CAMBIARÁN DE FRECUENCIA DE AM A FM
http://www.deradios.com/nota.php?ID=2530
En las próximas semanas se dará a conocer por parte de la Secretaría
de Comunicaciones y Transportes (SCT) la lista de estaciones de Radio
de Hermosillo, México que tendrán permiso para migrar de Amplitud
Modulada (AM) a Frecuencia Modulada (FM).
El delegado de la SCT en Sonora, Luis Serrrato Castell informó que en
el caso de la entidad se habla de 53 estaciones de AM, cuyos permisos
se evalúan para pasarse a FM, ya que hay que recordar que algunas de
ellas ya comparten la dualidad de estaciones.
"Según se establece, el concesionario o permisionario deberá iniciar
operaciones en la frecuencia de FM en un plazo no mayor de un año,
contado a partir de que se notifique el cambio de frecuencia,
atendiendo a los parámetros autorizados, esto es, podrá transmitir
simultáneamente durante un año en ambas frecuencias", señaló el
Delegado.
Serán Sonora, Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León y
Tamaulipas las que en esta ocasión se sumen al cambio, el cual
mejorará su calidad, ya que se tiene detectado que en FM se supera por
tres veces la calidad auditiva a la AM.
En aquellas poblaciones en las que no exista alguna estación de FM, se
llevarán a cabo licitaciones para nuevas estaciones, comentó Serrato
Castell. (deRadios.com Sept 1 via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
** MEXICO. Sunrise DX Sept 1, UT:
920, Sept 1 at 1205 mentions ``Hermosillo, la ciudad más bella de
México``; yes, it is a pretty little place, i.e. R. Capital, XEHQ
again, meanwhile mixing with NA from another XE:
920, Sept 1 at 1205 instrumental NA mixing with XEHQ, 1207 mentions
Radio Noticias, Chihuahua2, so Cantú IDs this as:
920 XEQD 920 Noticias Chihuahua, Chih. 1,000 250
The USA QRM is getting worse at sunrise across MW, but 870 remains a
nice clear frequency for XETAR, with WWL faded out and nothing much
from The Metroplex.
Sunrise MW DX Sept 2, UT:
1030, at 1157 UT Sept 2, ``Radio Fórmula 10-30 AM``, then 1158 Mexican
NA, so probably had already been programming. Only one in Cantú list
is: 1030 XEYC Radio Fórmula Cd. Juárez, Chih. 5,000 500
1130, at 1158 UT Sept 2, ID as ``La H-N``, i.e. per Cantú:
1130 XEHN Ke buena Nogales, Son. 1,000 D
1130, at 1158 UT Sept 2 overtaking the above, ``La Poderosa FM [algo]
y 11-30 AM, . . . Sinaloa``, both in KWKH null, so this one is:
1130 XEMOS La Poderosa + FM 94.1 Los Mochis, Sin. 1,000 250
Doesn`t seem powerful to me!
980, at 1158 UT Sept 2, mentions ``Mexicano de la Radio``, 9-80 AM,
announcer Marco Campos, then conversing with a YL. I suspect that the
slogan was fully ``Instituto Mexicano de la Radio``, i.e. the
government group including notably XEB-1220 and XERF-1570. Cantú
frequency list unfortunately does not show ownerships or affiliations,
but the IMER website http://www.imer.gob.mx/ has a dropdown list of
Emisoras, not all of them including frequency, but I spot one match
with Cantú`s 980 roster: ``La FQ, Cananea, Sonora`` which goes to:
http://www.lafq.imer.gob.mx/ which Cantú lists as:
980 XEFQ La Voz de la Cd. del Cobre Cananea, Son. 2,500 500
990, at 1202 Sept 2, long multi-verse choral NA past 1203 but losing
to QRM; at 1205 Spanish music to ``Somos la -- [algo]`` could well be
another station, then to Elvis` ``All Shook Up``.
900, at 1207 Sept 2, numerous ads with addresses at various kilómetros
on ``Carretera a Álvaro Obregón``. This Googles right to Cuauhtémoc,
Chihua2, so Cantú has it:
900 XEDT La Reina Cd. Cuauhtémoc, Chih. 5,000 1,500
I couldn`t find a place called Álvaro Obregón in any of my atlases,
but Google maps locates it as a colonia due north of Cuauhtémoc on
highway 5.
870, at 1210 Sept 2, low-key YL DJ, quite a relief from the super-hype
on so many commercial stations, plus no QRM, with birthday greetings,
time as 6:11, into a polca, of course from:
870 XETAR La Voz de la Sierra Tarahumara Guachochi, Chih. 10,000 D
880, at 1212 Sept 2, US béisbol homerun statistics, including some
player for ``Los Metropolitanos de Nueva York`` --- ``Mets`` is just
too hard to pronounce in Spanish! Beyond that, no clues; could be US
or Mexican. Only US SS in new NRC AM Log around here is KJOJ in Conroe
TX, near Houston, but supposed to be AC format. Of the nine Mexicans
on 880 there are at most four possibilities at this hour. Maybe XEV,
R. Fórmula, Chihua2?
Sunrise MW DX Sept 3; the lowest frequencies generally fade out first,
so today I start tuning at band-bottom:
550, at 1154 UT Sept 3, TC 5:54 en Tapachula(? sounded like), 23
grados. Per Cantú, no Chiapans, but likely this one:
550 XEZK Poder 55 Tepatitlan de Morelos, Jal. 2,500 1,000, if not:
550 XETNC Radio Nayarit Tepic, Nay. 2,500 150
710, at 1157 UT Sept 3, DJ giving his work sked as he starts a shift,
also on other stations in the group, 3 pm on R. Lobo, elsewhen on R.
Sabrosita. 1202 full ID as XEDP, La Ranchera de Cuauhtémoc, claiming
7500 watts contrary to WRTH and to Cantú:
710 XEDP La Ranchera Cd. Cuauhtémoc, Chih. 7,000 100
880, at 1158 Sept 3, federal and Estado de Coahuila PSAs, ergo:
880 XETC 880 AM Torreón, Coah. 10,000 1,000
660, at 1201 Sept 3, many local announcements about Ciudad Delicias so
660 XEACB Radio 660, La Tremenda Cd. Delicias, Chih. 3,000 1,000
870, at 1204 Sept 3, rustic music, then M&W alternating with detailed
sign-on for XETAR including e-mail address, schedule 6 am to 6 pm;
6:03 TC, YL DJ begins her show for 3 de setiembre from:
870 XETAR La Voz de la Sierra Tarahumara Guachochi, Chih. 10,000 D
BTW, the town used to be spelt Guachóchic, requiring an accent on O
610, at 1208 Sept 3, TC for 5:09, 1.5 Hz SAH mixing with KCSP Kansas
City which is gaining. Timezone means it has to be a relog of:
610 XEGS La Ley Guasave, Sin. 1,000 500
770, at 1211 Sept 3, poor signal with Los 40 Principales singing ID:
770 XEREV Los 40 Principales + FM 104.3 Los Mochis, Sin. 5,000 100
1300, at 1216 Sept 3, in QRM mentions Puente Internacional, which I
have traversed between Ciudad Juárez/El Paso, and XEP:
1300 XEP Radio 13 Cd. Juárez, Chih. 38,000 200
Note refined power level, odd 38 kW vs. nominal as in WRTH 50 kW
During evening thunderstorm, external antennas disconnected, so a
chance to do some MW monitoring on the DX-398 with internal antenna,
which is my usual setup at sunrise:
770, UT Sept 4 at 0244, plug for ``Grupo Fórmula, en todo el país, y
Estados Unidos``, dominating frequency. Cantú shows:
770 XEACH Radio Fórmula Primer Cadena Monterrey, N.L. 25,000 1,000
Sounds more like 25 kW than one to me
880, Sept 4 at 1159 UT, network ID only for 970, XERFR in the DF,
Grupo Fórmula. As usual, their only outlet on 880 is per Cantú:
880 XEV Radio Fórmula Chihuahua, Chih. 5,000 250
1040, Sept 4 at 1213 UT, slogan as ``Vega(?), la Número Uno,`` funny
song ``Qué guapo soy, que bárbaro``; 1216 TC for 5:20 ``en La Once, la
Número Uno``. Once again it`s this; not sure about the Vega reference:
1040 XEGYS La Primera + FM 90.1 Guaymas, Son. 5,000 250
Sunrise DX Sept 5; skipping repeats of several recently logged signals
on 610, 650, 770:
540, Sept 5 at 1203 Mexican NA, and ID as XETX, ``La Ranchera de
[something], 5000 watts, Nuevo Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, Grupo G-M
Radio``, then into quick spoken prayer with familiar pronoun tú, and
seeming hymn. Cantú shows lower power:
540 XETX La Ranchera de Paquimé Nuevo Casas Grandes, Chih. 1,000 250
5 kW or 1 kW, a nice catch, I think as I continue to be amazed that
XEWA SLP is not a problem on 540 with its listed 150 kW day and night;
I think that must really be QRP.
710, Sept 5 at 1206, ``Noticias 7-10``, W&M, starting with efemérides
items, not exactly news. I assume, but am not positive this was a
program on ``XEDP, La Ranchera de Cuauhtémoc`` which I had heard but
not relogged with equally good signal 4 minutes earlier, full ID
claiming 7,500 watts
830, Sept 5 at 1201, `La Grande de Sinaloa``, 6:02 time, noticias:
830 XEVQ La Grande de Sinaloa Culiacán, Sin. 5,000 1,000
920, Sept 5 at 1159, ID mentions 104.1 y 920, ``Nueva Nueva``, so:
920 XECQ La Nueva Ranchera + FM 104.1 Culiacán, Sin. 5,000 500
990, ``Radio Éxitos, 9-90 AM, La Mejor``, is not a Mexican but a
Metropolexan: see U S A: KFCD
1040, Sept 5 at 1218, ``La Once, número uno, la primera`` also
mentions 90.1 FM. I think I finally get it, Once = two firsts, 1 and 1
as in the slogan!
1040 XEGYS La Primera + FM 90.1 Guaymas, Son. 5,000 250
Sunrise DX Sept 6, UT:
980, Sept 6 at 1208, IMER mentioned, so I thought it must be the only
IMER station on 980, XEFQ in Cananea, Sonora, as recently logged;
quite dominating frequency next few minutes, and I don`t think two
stations were overlapping, but after opening ``Servicio Nacional de
Noticias``, gave timecheck for 7:09 while it`s 5:09 in Sonora.
Network feed from DF? Locutor Mario Campos, informally previewing
stories to be covered. Then mentions ``Estéreo Vida, 93 FM``, gave two
8-digit phone numbers, and an 800 number, Twitter. 1212 over to YL
with national weather summary, timecheck as 7:13. 1214 losing out to
KMBZ. Now it looks like I was getting this per Cantú:
980 XETU Estereo Vida + FM 99.3 Tampico, Tamps. 10,000 1,000
so would they carry news from government`s IMER? Or maybe just a PSA.
1000, Sept 6 at 1204, NA ends and ID as ``La Rancherita``, Ciudad
Juárez, so per Cantú this is:
1000 XEFV La Rancherita Cd. Juárez, Chih. 1,000 D
For some time I have been hearing Mexican under KTOK, so glad to pull
this ID. There are four other possibilities in N/W Mexico. KTOK is
hard to null; other OKC groundwavers have sharper nulls such as 930
and 890, why?
1180, Sept 6 at 1200 ID mentioned ``Romántica`` and only one listed in
Cantú, also most likely target area is:
1180 XEDCH La Romántica Cd. Delicias, Chih. 5,000 1,500
Sunrise MW DX Sept 7; Heard NA on numerous frequencies around 1200 UT,
but only caught one definite ID. It`s always a cat-and-mouse game, as
they often fade out before the NA is finished, and you never know
whether it will be a short, or long version with the same melody
repeated over and over until abrupt ending.
640, Sept 7 at 1201 after NA, ID as XEJUA, 5000 watts, Milenio, Ciudad
Juárez, and other sign-on data such as street address. Soon faded and
I was hearing KFI with not much signal yet from nulled nearby WWLS OK.
Cantú shows:
``640 XEJUA Milenio TV (audio del canal) Cd. Juárez, Chih. 5,000 D``
So he says it`s carrying soundtrack of this TV channel now! As
recently as WRTH 2011, it was ``Radio Recuerdo, Canal 640``
Milenio is mainly a newspaper, but website http://www.milenio.com
includes live audio and video. I`ve not heard of it being TV on the
air; maybe just pay cable as implied in their contact info listing
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** MEXICO. I got a new one for me tonight on my Grundig G5 Naked and
Confirmed on my Grundig G8, 1610 Radio Chapingo, XEUACH. SINPO is
4,4,3,4,3. 73, (Kevin Raper, KJ4HYD, CE WCKI WQIZ WLTQ, 0131 UT Sept
1, ABDX via DXLD)
You can distiniguish this Kevin from the other Kevin in the ABDX
group, Redding, who spells (and says?) it `nekkid``. Still eludes me;
1610 ought to be a relatively clear frequency, but suffers from KATZ
1600 IBOC (gh, OK, DXLD)
** MEXICO. Mexican state anthems: Going to:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UzgN8yQUf2M
I see lots of other state anthems served up on the right. If time ever
permits, I'll have to find the best of and compile a single list
(Terry Krueger, FL, Sept 4, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See 11-35
** MEXICO. 1390, XETY, Tecoman, Colima, 0530 UTC, 9/5/11, fair sig at
best playing mostly pop music. Frequent "Los Cuarenta Principales"
IDs. // online stream.
760, XEEB, Ciudad Obregon, CH, 0603 UT, 9/5/11, again this logging was
tnx to a tip from Richard Allen. Talk about some good timing. Within
seconds after tuning in this station, a male announcer gave a full
call letter ID which was 100% copiable. No sign at all of XEABC or
XEES which are two of the more 'regulars' here (Kirk Allen, Ponca City
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
As Glenn noted a few weeks ago, our sunrise DX window has really been
good for hearing the Mexican MW stations. A few recent XE loggings are
below and logged on the tiny Sony T-615. These are all new stations
for my Oklahoma MW log. [starting with above two]
920, XEQD, Chihuahua, CH, 1200 UT, 9/3/11, Two XEs here playing the NA
near the TOH. Despite their slogans that mention "Radio Noticias",
they were playing mostly playing back to back pop music songs, many of
which were old US/British pops from the 1970s. I heard a full "XEQD de
Radio Noticias" ID right after their NA. Also noted a mention of
"Radio Noticias en Cadena."
790, XEGAJ, Guadalajara, Jalisco, 1200 UT, 8/28/11, all-talk format
with many "Grupo Fórmula" network IDs. A local M announcer broke in
with call letter ID and mentions of "Escuchas Primera Cadena en 9-70
kilohertz, Radio Fórmula." A quick TC mentioning "en Jalisco" and back
to network programming. Very good signal until rapid fade out 1230 UT.
1540, XESTN, Monterrey, NL, 0430 UTC, 8/27/11, with an all-talk
format, they were discussing all kinds of topics (wish I knew exactly
WHAT they were). Taking phone calls at times. Heard a few "Radio Red"
IDs and a full call letter ID at 0450. // their online stream.
1480, XEHM, Ciudad Delicias, CH, 0820 UT, 8/27/11, mostly playing pop
styled music. Long ad strings with many mentionos of Chihuahua. Noted
several "La HM Radio" IDs. One station promo mentioned "Su emisora en
Chihuahua".
680, XEORO, Guasave, Sinaloa, 1115-1205 UT, 8/24/11, mostly back to
back music. Played a variety of songs from ranchera to Brasilian
sounding música de amor with instrumental guitars. Numerous "La Mera
Jefa" slogans heard. Full ID with call letters at 1155. After 1200
they were all talk until fade out. Heard mentions of "noticias en
punto" during this time.
920, XECQ, Culiacán, Sinaloa, 1133-1153 UT, 8/23/11, ad strings,
bandera music, and station promos/IDs heard until a US station (not
sure who) went to day power and wiped everyone else out. IDs/slogans
heard were: "La Nueva Nueva", "La Ranchera AM", and "La Ranchera
Culiacán." I also noted one call letter ID with a heavy echo. G signal
during their peaks. Good DX to all and 73 for now (Kirk Allen, Ponca
City, OK, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** MEXICO. 890, MÉXICO, XEBY Radio Fórmula, Tuxpán, Veracruz. 1100-
1120 September 4, 2011. This one has been teasing me for a couple of
weeks on my local sunrise, with the national anthem at 1100, followed
by a state anthem. Decent enough signal today to confirm the latter
anthem is Veracruz, though a much snappier choral version than here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuhBwfhQeaM
followed by call letters and slogan at 1105, another Radio Fórmula ID
at 1115. Dominating over Radio Progreso today, for a change. A decent
catch if really the listed 1000/250 watts. No other Veracruz stations
on 890 in Fred Cantú's online list (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater,
Florida USA, 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Tuxpan?
** MEXICO. 90 AÑOS DE RADIO EN MEXICO --- LA RADIO MEXICANA
[excerpt; original will not copy; says only four border stations, all
FM, have implemented IBOC. Can anyone think of an equivalent English
saying to ``a lot of noise, not many nuts``?]
TRANSMISIONES FRONTERIZAS
Y ya que hablamos de radio digital, resulta que con base en los
lineamientos, de mayo de 2008, para la adopción voluntaria del
estándar IBOC en la frontera norte, solo 25 radiodifusoras solicitaron
permiso para llevar a cabo transmisiones digitales y de estas
únicamente cuatro las iniciaron:
la XHFG (Pulsar 107.3), de Tijuana, el 23 de febrero de 2009;
la XHNK (Extasis Digital 99.3), de Nuevo Laredo, el 17 de enero de
2011; la XHGU (Romance 105.9)
y la XHH (Magia Digital 100.7), ambas de Ciudad Juárez, el 8 de marzo
de 2011.
Esto es, <>. Los lineamientos fueron un
fracaso, si se considera el universo de radiodifusoras fronterizas y
las que finalmente lanzaron sus señales digitales. Los datos
anteriores fueron obtenidos en una solicitud via la ley de
transparencia.
FUENTE: 90 años de radio en México - El Universal - Columnas
http://bit.ly/mODdFl (Via Yimber Gaviria, Colombia, DXLD)
** MOROCCO. 15341.138, 7/9 1112, RTV Marocaine, Arabic songs, very
good (Giampiero Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1,
Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** MOZAMBIQUE. Radio Mozambique Emissora Provincial Niassa. 1260
Lichinga. 2011/08/29 Monday. 0340-0343 Afro music, YL singing. Poor.
Radio Mozambique Emissora Provincial Manica. 1026 Chimoio. 2011/08/29
Monday. 0332-0334 End of music to OM talking in portugese, mentioned
"Pemba". Fair.
Radio Mozambique Delegação de Beira. 873 Sofala (Beira). 2011/08/29
Monday. 0328-0329 Women and kids singing and clapping hands. Poor.
Radio Mozambique Emissora Interprovincial Maputo & Gaza. 1008 Maputo.
2011/08/29 Monday. 0331-0332 Afro music. Fair.
Radio Mozambique Emissora Nacional. 1206 Inhambane. 2011/08/29 Monday.
0335-0337 Afro music. Fair.
Radio Mozambique Emissora Provincial Tete. 963 Tete. 2011/08/29
Monday. 0329-0331 OM singing in unidentified afro language. Fair.
Radio Mozambique Emissora Provincial Gaza. 810 Xai-Xai. 2011/08/29
Monday. 0327-0328 Unidentified language, OM talking, but not portugese
for a change. Fair. Jo'burg sunrise 0425 (Bill Bingham, RSA, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** MOZAMBIQUE {and non]. LM RADIO AVAILABLE ON AIRWAVES IN THE FREE
STATE --- Media Update, Southern Africa, 5 September 2011
http://mediaupdate.co.za/?IDStory=41031
LM Radio, Mozambique’s English language music radio station which hit
the airwaves in October 2010 can now be heard in Lesotho and the Free
State Province.
LM Radio’s programmes are music led with a minimal amount of talk. The
music style recalls Lifetime Memories, no matter what the age - with
popular, happy, sing-a-along, feel good music, designed to uplift and
entertain the listener. Presentation style is relaxed and intimate,
like a familiar friend. Songs range in era from the sixties to present
day. The chat is mainly about music, lifestyle, travel, health and
interesting topics.
The target market is 35 years plus with an LSM 8 -10. LM Radio
broadcasts 24 hours a day on FM to listeners in Maputo and surrounding
areas, on free to air satellite and Internet streaming via
http://www.lmradio.net
The big news is that LM Radio can now be received on 1197 AM (Medium
Wave) within 200 km of Maseru, Lesotho during daylight hours. The
official launch date is 1 October 2011 but test transmissions are
currently being broadcast.
LM Radio has signed a long-term agreement with the Lesotho National
Broadcasting Service (LNBS) to rent airtime on the 1197 kHz Medium
Wave (AM) transmitter located near Maseru. In terms of the agreement,
LM Radio’s programmes will be carried on the 1197 AM transmitter
during the hours 07:00 to 17:00, 7 days a week.
LM Radio presenters include some very familiar household names
including: Brian Oxley, Tinky Pringle, Reg de Beer, Peter de Nobrega,
Dave Simons, Nick Megens, Anne Williams plus of course the station`s
founder and breakfast show host Chris Turner.
Initial transmission coverage is expected to reach Maseru,
Bloemfontein, Welkom, Kroonstad, Virginia, Winburg, Ficksburg,
Caledon, Ventersburg, Bethulie, Colesberg, Bethlehem and Aliwal North.
Listen live online: http://www.lmradio.co.mz and click on the listen
live button (via Mike Terry, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
No sign of it on 1197 mw on South Africa Global Tuners at 0820 UT
(Tony Magon, Australia, ibid.)
Hi Glenn, These are presumably local times (UT + 2), or they would be
stomping on Harold's toes. I wonder what he thinks about sharing the
transmitter with a popular music station? ``Thank you for calling and
sharing and shall we take our next caller`` (Bill Bingham, RSA, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
Is there some political, regulatory or business reason this English-
language service is still operating out of Maputo, instead of directly
in South Africa? (gh, DXLD)
Ramblings on LM Radio --- Hi Glenn, I wonder why LM Radio chose to
transmit on 1197 kHz from Lesotho, with its very limited (population-
wise at least) daytime coverage. As it is described in their press
release, it would seem to consist mainly of isolated farming
communities, a few mining towns, and one or two largish towns such as
Bloemfontein (that description should bring down a hail of abuse from
the Free State locals). Quite how well a self-professed english-
language station will fit in there remains to be seen; as the "Lonely
Planet" guide to South Africa says, the Free State is an "Afrikaner
heartland".
Contrast that with Gauteng; although the smallest province in South
Africa it is the most densely populated and includes both Pretoria and
Johannesburg. The population is over ten million and includes more
than 40% of the country's white population. It accounts for 65% of the
entire country's GDP, and about 25% of the GDP of the African
continent! And whilst Afrikaans is extensively spoken in Pretoria (so
is English), English is more common in Jo'burg.
Does anyone know if the old "702 Talk Radio" Medium Wave (MW)
transmitter at Ga-Rankuwa (north of Pretoria) is still sitting idle ?
A recent check of Sentech's website showed it still registered to 702,
but in fact 702 were prohibited from using it after they got their FM
licence some years ago, and in so doing lost a huge chunk of their
listeners. That MW transmitter covered the whole of Gauteng, and
beyond, during the day, and at night it could be heard in Cape Town
more than 900 miles away, especially on car radios.
Coupled with 702's sister station "567 Cape Talk" on MW in Cape Town,
which largely broadcasts identical content with one or two breakaways
each day, a massive part of the country was covered (the opposite also
occurs; 567, still on MW, can occasionally be heard in Jo'burg at
night, but not well). Now of course 702 is limited to local FM
coverage in Jo'burg, and in Pretoria which has its own relay on
another FM frequency. The rural communities which it used to serve
were just tossed aside, unless they have access to satellite or
broadband internet (which the bulk of the population doesn't).
All of that is academic, since LM Radio will apparently only be
available during daylight hours when Family Radio is off-air. That is
a missed opportunity. Using the old 702 transmitter, if it is still
there, might have enabled 24 hour broadcasting with widespread good-
quality coverage at night (good-quality at least according to those
many rural, and some not so rural, listeners who complained to 702
about the changeover; why does a station that only broadcasts music
over the weekends, and spends the rest of the week on talk, need to be
on FM anyway? My guess would be pure ego on the part of the owners and
management).
Even if the Maseru 1197 transmitter should ever become available at
night, although the range will increase, quality will likely be
unpredictable. I have reviewed my B10 and A11 logs for night time
reception, in Gauteng, of Family Radio from the same Maseru 1197
transmitter. They show a few "good", many "fair": and a lot of "poor".
Most of the more affluent South Africans are so irrationally besotted
with digital technology that I suspect very few who can afford better
will tolerate "fair" or "poor", and will use satellite or internet.
Medium wave from Maseru will become the realm of the poor, and it is
debatable how much the content (as described) will appeal to that
group. Especially with such an apparently racially-unrepresentative
list of "household names" as presenters.
Whoever they are, their names sound exclusively "white" and, unless
there are special laws here for radio stations, I suspect that might
fall foul of South Africa's labour laws. I am not making a political
point here; merely suggesting that the majority of the potential local
MW audience might find the choice of presenters unacceptable. Time
will tell. And maybe the few who are left will fit in with the
station's self-proclaimed target audience of "35 years plus with an
LSM of 8-10", whatever that means in English.
Personally, I think LM Radio could probably have achieved a much
larger audience, not that I begrudge the Free State audience their
privilege. LM Radio must have researched this before signing the deal
with Maseru. Maybe there are perfectly sound financial, legal, future-
planning, transmitter-unavailability or other reasons why they took
this approach.
But I'm only a listener, albeit one who was brought up listening to
the real LM Radio of the 1960's. The one which supplied its listeners
with tiny self-adhesive yellow triangles to mark the correct position
on analogue tuning dials. How times have changed, both politically and
technologically! (Bill Bingham, RSA, Sept 6, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX
LISTENING DIGEST) Whatever became of the Orangeness of Free State?
** NETHERLANDS [non]. 9650, Sept 2 at 1327, under music from CRI
English via CANADA, talk in Indonesian until cut off at 1328*. No
doubt the IBB Tinang, PHILIPPINES relay at 1300-1327 in Dutch stayed
on one minute more with this bonus of RNW Indonesian; too bad it`s no
longer English. Altho it`s possible the entire transmission was in
Indonesian by mistake (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** NETHERLANDS [non]. KBC RADIO TO BROADCAST ON SHORTWAVE FROM 30 OCT
Dutch-based KBC Radio has published the following information: “The
Mighty KBC will start broadcasting on shortwave on 30-10-2011 Saturday
and Sunday between 1100–1600 UT. There is a good chance that we will
use our new frequency during weekdays as well in the future. Within a
few weeks we will announce our new frequency.” (September 7th, 2011 -
13:27 UTC by Andy Sennitt, Media Network blog via J L Burke, DXLD)
** NEW ZEALAND. QSL: Auckland Volmet, 6679 sent F/D e-mail reply in 10
days for surface report with MP3 & $1. Also sent signed and stamped
hard copy of the QSL message via mail. v/s Tim Halpin. Address:
Airways New Zealand Limited, ZKAK Auckland Radio, Fred Ladd Way,
Auckland International Airport (Bruce Portzer, WA, Sept 5, dxldyg via
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** NIGERIA. 6035, June 15 at 0620, R. Nigeria, Abuja, music program in
English, SINPO 43434 (Dzever Ishenge, Benue State, Nigeria, Kchibo
KK979, telescopic + longwire, Sept World DX Club Contact via DXLD)
Unfortunately here is one Nigerian who isn`t online, and neither is
the WDXC log editor, accounting for long delays in publishing his
logs, and we also get Contact by p-mail. I was thinking that Abuja had
been reported once before, maybe by him, on this unlisted frequency,
but can`t find it now. RNW via VATICAN is also on 6035 during this
hour, maybe obscuring it further away. Can anyone else hear any trace
of it? Maybe the transmitter which was heard, weakly on 7275, 7350 and
then back to 7275 a year ago tho WRTH lists as 100 kW (Glenn Hauser,
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** NIGERIA. 15120, V. of Nigeria with English OM talk re banking and
religious beliefs (was this somehow related to the terrorist car
bombing this week?) that either because of his heavy accent or my
sleepiness really didn’t make a whole lot of sense. ID at :51 and
starting to fade up to better quality signal 3+44+4+4 but there was a
low pitch rumble/whine and a HF het still (started out at 23+4+4+3 and
was often hard to understand). YL vocal song “360” to ToH and then ID
and YL read English news after t/c as “7 AM here in Nigeria, 6 hours
GMT” and drums. Mention of Goodluck Johnathan’s (doesn't he have one
of the best names in politics today?) talk re terrorism control after
the bombing, etc. and continuing with Weekend Magazine programming.
Closed down English at 0700 with a stirring rendition of a ‘slogan’ /
jingle sun by a YL chorus: “Nigeria: good people, Great Country” and
mention by YL announcer that they would be back at 0900 with more
English, and mention they also broadcast in Hausa, French, etc. Into
French at 0702. 0547-0705 28/Aug (Kenneth Vito Zichi, MI, MARE
Tipsheet 2 Sept via DXLD)
[and non]. 15120, Sept 3 is another good night for VON reception, 0456
undermodulated YL with ID in passing, program summary, including what
will be on 9690 later, 0501 into headlines by same announcer instead
of OM as last time. Atop Chinese radio war on 15120. Would have
expected more from China, as had big signals in Russian on 15445 and
15665, but those are both via Kashgar, EAST TURKISTAN (Glenn Hauser,
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
15120, 4/9 1818, Voice of Nigeria, in English, cultural reports about
Yoruba, very good (Giampiero Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with
Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** NIGERIA. RADIO HIT BY STRIKE 5/9/11
Lagos - Workers in Lagos State government media organisations,
yesterday, put the premises under lock and key as they began a three-
day warning strike over failure of the government to implement the
N18,000 minimum wage structure for its workers.
The warning strike was backed by the Lagos State chapters of the
Nigerian Union of Journalists, NUJ, and Radio, Television and Theatre
Arts Workers Union, RATTAWU.
Workers of the Lagos State Television, LTV, and Radio Lagos,
barricaded the entrances into the two stations as early as 7am. They
said that the strike became necessary because the state government had
refused to fulfill its own part of the agreement on the
implementation, accusing the government of "discrimination against
us."
One of the protesting workers, who spoke on condition of anonymity,
said: "The airwaves would be shut down for three days to press home
our demand, following which further action would be decided. The state
government has continuously reneged on its promise to implement the
wage, which it had begun to implement with our other colleagues in the
same civil service. Why is our own different?
"The strike is against the marginalisation of media workers in the
state, who have not benefited from the minimum wage paid to other
state workers since January. We can't understand why the government
decided to shut us out of the new wage structure and why, after so
many assurances, they refused to implement the new wage for media
workers."
The state Acting Chairman of the NUJ, Mr. Deji Elumoye, who led the
demonstration, said NUJ took the decision at an earlier congress to
back the strike following a deadlock on the matter (via Steve Whitt,
MW Circle yg via DXLD)
Does that also affect the external service Voice of Nigeria? Of course
not worth mentioning in domestic media (gh, DXLD)
15120, Voice of Nigeria, Ikorodu. September 05, 1857-1900 outside male
in English talks, studio female “Nigeria”, alternating instrumental
music, male talks. 1900 sign off, 34433. 73’s (Lúcio Otávio Bobrowiec,
Embu SP Brasil, SW40 - Dipoles and Longwire, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** NORTH AMERICA. 6960-USB, Sept 3 at 0516, big pirate signal at
S9+12, rock music with heavy modulation. No carrier at all, so tuning
is touchy especially with the FRG-7 BFO which drifts a bit when first
engaged. Professional-sounding DJ with XFM ID, live timechex and song
info breaks: 0522, ``22 after 5 UTC``. G-mail address, ``This is the
power of X``, then ``Get Up, Stand Up`` song for gay rights. 0527,
27>5 TC, says shifting gears to Urban Astronaut, inviting requests by
e-mail. M. Manson coming up, listen on the web at http://xfmlive.com
then techno. 0535 Plasmatix; still going past 0614. XFM has been
reported a lot lately by others. Er, shouldn`t this be ``XUSB``?
(Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS. QSL - RFA 9455 sent Tokyo Hamfair card in
6 days for e-mail report + MP3 to qsl at rfa.org (Bruce Portzer, WA,
Sept 5, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** OKLAHOMA [and non]. 780, UT Sept 4 at 0237 steady open carrier from
direxion of Stillwater, no doubt 250-watt daytimer KSPI, illegally
making fast SAH of approx. 12 Hz with mutually-nullable WBBM. Could
not however detect the usual +/- 4 kHz spurs from KSPI; perhaps they
appear only while modulating? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** OKLAHOMA. 960, KGWA Enid, my local, Sunday Sept 4 first noticed
around 1200 UT that it was dead air, with some hum; still at 1221. At
1229, what I thought had been some weak station underneath was
realized axually to be just-barely-modulation from KGWA itself since
it was absolutely steady. Risked turning up the volume: something
about a camp in Abilene, Civil War history. Is no one paying attention
at Williams Broadcasting? Still the same at 1237. Or, is no one at
Williams Broadcasting? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** OKLAHOMA. 1640, Sept 1 at 1217 UT, Faith 1640, supposedly an Enid
station, KFXY, but ad for OCCC, and OKC traffic report by Connie
Carson. Is she doing this from a studio in OKC, or Enid? Or anywhere?
KFXY, unusually direxional for an X-bander, just happens to have a
major lobe toward OKC. BTW, notably undermodulated, as it has been for
some time now, I have been intending to outpoint. 1640 has been on the
air ten years already, so about time for some significant transmitter
problem (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** OKLAHOMA. Re 11-35: All three major OKC TV stations carried a live
news conference on the fires at noon = 1700 UT Sept 1, even KOCO which
deleted noon news months ago. They have it ``contained to an 18-
square-mile area``, working on hotspots; depends on whether wind kicks
flareups again. Meanwhile there were plenty of shots of raging fires,
live or recorded? Next news briefing at 5 pm = 2200 UT. I expect these
stations are streaming plenty about the wildfires for those who can`t
get them on TV.
Heavy wildfire coverage continued on KFOR, KOCO and KWTV the afternoon
of Sept 1, but they all condescended to go back to network news at
2230 UT, all on main channels; NBC at least had a report from OKC. CBS
focused on Fort Worth where they own a station, KTVT. Scott Pelley
intoned those call letters strangely, stressing the V instead of the
final -T (Glenn Hauser, Enid, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 3205.0, Radio Sandaun, West Sepik, 1000 to 1100
fades up with good signal, 1 September [Wilkner and XM-Cedar Key]
5960, Radio Fly, 1020 fading up to 1110 best signal 1 September, 27
September [sic] Same (Bob Wilkner, NRD 535D - Drake R8 - Icom 746Pro
modified, Pompano Beach, South Florida, US Sept 3, condiglist yg via
DXLD)
5960, R. Fly, 1241-1315 Aug 17. Usual program of English pops with few
announcements. Fair signal. 3915 is still off (John Wilkins, Wheat
Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
** PARAGUAY. 570, ZP15, LV del Amambay, Pedro Juan Caballero; clear
Spanish ID, “Ésta es Radio Primera do Marzo, 780 AM, la primera … de
Paraguay … comunicaciones integrado por … Radio Canal 100 …” before
disappearing into the mix with a list of network stations, seemingly
// 780 kHz; this must be ZP15 (rather than ZP39), since it carries a
programme called “Página 780 AM” between 0000 and 0400 local time,
according to the station website, and also carries another programme
‘Contacto con 1º de Marzo 780 AM’ at two other times during the week;
personal first. Fpk [fair peaks] 0358 11/7 mah (Martin Hall,
Clashmore, Sutherland, Scotland, Perseus SDR, RPA-1 preamp, beverage:
400m at 231 degrees, terminated. Total Recorder, Sept MW News via
DXLD) Amambay sounds familiar; think it used to be on SW (gh)
** PERU. 1440, Radio Solar, Espinar, Perú; peculiar music and ID
“Radio Solar en 1440 kHz AM”. This station is not listed in WRTH and
was on a frequency of 1440.26 kHz. HK assisted with the ID and
commented that the station had been logged in April by Fredrik
Dourén and Torolf Johnsson but identified thanks to three people, one
in Borås, Sweden (HK), the other one in Lima (I assume Alfredo
Cañote), and the third one in Sicuani (Cusco)!”; personal first
F 0206 6/8 AB (Andrew Brade, Holme-on-Spalding Moor, East Riding of
Yorkshire, England, UK, AOR AR 7030 plus and Perseus SDR, Wellbrook
phased array 290 , 305m beverage at 220 . Recording on Sony MZ-NH1
minidisc + Total Recorder, Sept MW News via DXLD)
** PERU. 1640, Radio Calitano, Chumbivilcas, Perú; formerly Onda Cero,
this station identified as Calitano phonetically, but definitiely not
“Kalikanto” [as in ARGENTINA, q.v.]. This requires further
investigation, but is a personal first. F 0201 6/8 AB (Andrew Brade,
Holme-on-Spalding Moor, East Riding of Yorkshire, England, UK, AOR AR
7030 plus and Perseus SDR, Wellbrook phased array 290 , 305m beverage
at 220 . Recording on Sony MZ-NH1 minidisc + Total Recorder, Sept MW
News via DXLD)
** PERU. MW LIMA PERU con links
540 Inca http://www.radioinca.com.pe
560 Oriente http://www.radiooriente.com/LAORIGINAL/index.php
580 María http://www.radiomariaperu.org/
600 Cora http://radiocora.pe
620 Ovación http://ovacion.pe/Radio
640 Del Pacifico http://www.grupopacifico.org/radio.html
660 Inolvidable
700 Integridad http://radiointegridad.blogspot.com
730 RPP http://www.rpp.com.pe/
760 Mar http://www.radiomar.com.pe
780 Victoria http://www.radiovictoria.pe
820 Libertad http://www.radiolibertad.com.pe
850 Nacional http://www.radionacional.com.pe
880 Unión http://www.radiolibertad.com.pe
900 Felicidad AM http://www.felicidad.com.pe/radioenvivo.html
930 Moderna http://www.modernaradiopapa.com
960 Panamericana http://www.radiopanamericana.com
990 Latina http://www.radiolatina.com.pe
1010 Cielo http://www.radiocielo.pe
1040 Metropolitana http://www.metropolitanaradioperuana.com/index.html
1060 Exito http://www.radio-exito.com
1080 La Luz http://www.radiolaluz.com
1110 Feliz http://www.radiofelizperu.com
1130 Bacan http://www.radiobacan.com
1160 Onda Cero http://www.ondacero.com.pe
1180 NSE Radio http://www.nseradio.com
1200 Cadena http://www.cadenaradio1200.com
1220 Radio Fé http://radiofe1220.com
1250 Miraflores http://radiomiraflores.net
1300 Comas http://www.radiocomas.com
1320 La Crónica http://www.radionacional.com.pe
1340 Alegría
1360 Nueva Q http://www.radionuevaq.com.pe
1380 Nuevo Tiempo http://www.nuevotiempo.org.pe/radio.html
1400 Callao http://www.radiocallao.com
1420 San Isidro
1440 Imperial II
1470 Amor
1500 Santa Rosa http://www.radiosantarosa.com.pe
1530 Milenia http://www.radiomilenia.com
1550 Independencia http://www.radioindependenciadelperu.com
1570 Bethel http://www.bethelradio.fm/index.php
1590 Agricultura http://www.laperuanisima.com
(DXSPACEMASTER, ALFREDO BENJAMIN CAÑOTE BUENO, Lima, Perú, condiglist
yg via DXLD)
** PERU. 3329.53, Ondas del Huallaga, Huánuco 0920 to 0950 om en
español, music mix with CHU notched on 746Pro, good audio. Tnx John
Herkimer [Wilkner]
3360, 0800 to 1000 with strong carrier but no usable audio, 27, 28, 29
August [Wilkner and XM-Cedar Key].
6173.864, Radio Tawantinsuyo, Cusco 2350 to 0000 lost, 29 August, tnx
Don Jensen. 73s de (Bob Wilkner, NRD 535D - Drake R8 - Icom 746Pro
modified, Pompano Beach, South Florida, US Sept 3, condiglist yg via
DXLD)
** PERU. 3360, Radio JPJ (Jesús Párraga Jiménez), 0824 definite music
here from this new OA. 0826 what sounded like a jingle with last
syllable in last word repeating like an echo. Into lively pop-like
music sounding like Ramones "I Wanna Be Sedated"!! Another rock song
and 0833 another brief echo jingle. Definitely "Eye of the Tiger" by
Survivor at 0837-0840, then echo jingle again but local QRM taking
over. 0844 same jingle as at 0826. Stronger audio at 0850 with jingle
just before "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" remake by Cyndi Lauper. Dance
remake of "Bette Davis Eyes" at 0858 going to 0900, and into next
Dance song. "Sweet Child O Mine" by Guns N Roses at 0917. Sounded like
more Tropical LA Pops at 0955. Gradually faded but still audible at
1007. The jingles heard on the website match up pretty well with what
I heard. It would have been much easier if not for the horrendous QRN.
(11 August) (Dave Valko, NRD-535D and T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA,
HCDX via DXLD)
3360, presumed Radio JPJ, Lima, 0710-0733 Spanish; continuous Andean
flavored music; weak under band noise; this is the earliest I've ever
checked for this one; several days checks around 0900 turn up nothing
at my locale; 8/31 (Scott R. Barbour Jr. Intervale, N.H. USA, NRD-545,
MLB-1, 200' Beverages, 60m dipole, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
3360 31.8 0345 Radio JPJ Lima PRU gick väldigt bra denna tid. Ända upp
till S5 och ovanligt bra mod till den mx som spelades. Den 1.9 gick
dom hyfsat redan 23.30z AN
3360, 08/31 0345, Radio JPJ, Lima was very good at this time. Up to S5
and unusually good modulation of the music played. On Sept 1 also good
reception already at 2330z AN (Arne Nilsson, Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept
4, translated by editor Thomas Nilsson for WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** PERU. 4850,756 1.9 2320 R Genesis PRU gick faktiskt att få fram
ljud ifrån trots störningen där. Sång/prat. AN
4850.756, 1.9 2320, R Génesis; actually it was possible to get audio
despite the disturbance there. Vocals / speech. AN (Arne Nilsson,
Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept 4, translated by editor Thomas Nilsson for DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
Har kollat denna frekvens många gånger och nån gång då och då finns
stationen där men sällan går det att få fram nån audio. Den är svår.
TN
Have checked this frequency many times and some time, now and then the
station is there but seldom you get any audio. It is a difficult
station to catch. TN (Thomas Nilsson, ibid.)
** PERU. RADIO TROPICAL, 50 AÑOS AL SERVICIO DE LA SOCIEDAD
SANMARTINENSE
Tarapoto. Radio Tropical cumple 50 años al servicio de la región San
Martín y desde esta tribuna deseamos que sean 50 más. Tropical fue el
sueño de Juan Pablo Mori que se hizo realidad un 2 de setiembre de
1961, pero antes de estar en el espectro de la radiodifusión, Tropical
estaba en todas las esquinas de Tarapoto bajo la señal de
altoparlantes. El gerente de la radio Luis Mori Reátegui, recordó
anécdotas tropicalinas, como el incendio que se produjo el 5 de enero
de 1979, quemando casi la totalidad de equipos, y que Ricardo Mori
salvó un torna mesa; «el incendio fue en la madrugada y Tropical salió
nuevamente en la mañana del día siguiente, esta vez en las
instalaciones de la parroquia de Tarapoto, que gentilmente fue
ofrecida por el párroco Ignacio Zumárraga.
En la década de los 80, Tropical realiza cambios en su programación
creando programas de música rock con la conducción de Pedro Arévalo
Velásquez, además de los programas noticiosos siempre con la
conducción de Eduardo Gonzales, quien en 1991 deja la posta a Ramón
Amaringo, luego ingresa Hely Flores en dupla con el «Puma» Rodriguez,
tomando la posta el extinto Darwin Pinchi haciendo dupla con Enith
Fasanando, y últimamente Luís Felipe Morey; cabe destacar que Gonzales
Inga retornó a Tropical para el programa «Actualidades del Mediodía».
Estos últimos tiempos se consolida Tribuna Libre, como el programa más
escuchado de la radiodifusión tarapotina. También salen del recuerdo
programas como «Café con Música», «Los Panchos y sus invitados»,
«Primera Plana», «Cancionero azteca» y «Golazo Deportes», que retornó
a la programación.
Tropical ya dejó atrás las frecuencias onda media, onda corta y
amplitud modulada [sic], ahora con su señal 99.1 de la FM, y 102.3 en
el Alto Mayo, llega a todo el mundo por internet. (Julio Quevedo
Bardález) RADIO TROPICAL. 50 años FUENTE: http://bit.ly/nhzygZ
(via Yimber Gaviría, Colombia, Sept 2, DXLD) WTFK on SW? (gh, DXLD)
Cómo olvidarla, Amigos DX! Emitían en los 4935 kHz. 73 (DXSPACEMASTER,
ALFREDO BENJAMIN CAÑOTE BUENO, Lima, Perú, condiglist yg via DXLD)
** PHILIPPINES. 15190, PBS, 1859 Heard again with usual promo/ID
announcement by M with both R. Pilipinas and PBS IDs, followed by long
list of network stations by M and W. Best heard since 30 May, but
still not as good. Heavy fast QSB. (21 August)
15190, PBS Went off in mid-song at 1930 today. No usual ID
announcements. Did hear the ID before at 1913+. Getting some local
static-like QRM, and also from 15205 slop, and co-channel
Inconfidência 15189.97. (27 August)
15190, PBS, *1730 caught s/on with ID announcements to start, full ID
with sked, ID jingle, then into music at 1732. (28 August) (Dave
Valko, NRD-535D and T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
** POLAND. INTERVIEW WITH HEAD OF POLISH RADIO EXTERNAL SERVICE
The launch of the Economic Forum in Krynica two decades ago coincided
with a reorientation of the Polish Radio External Service toward
Poland’s eastern neighbors. Next to the existing Polish, English and
German services, broadcasts in Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian were
introduced, along with a dedicated service for Polish communities in
the East. In an interview with The Warsaw Voice, Marek Cajzner, head
of the Polish Radio External Service, describes the station’s mission
as building bridges with Eastern European nations with a view to
helping forge business contacts. Read the interview:
http://www.warsawvoice.pl/WVpage/pages/article.php/23894/article
(September 3rd, 2011 - 11:03 UTC by Andy Sennitt, Media Network blog
via DXLD)
At http://www.thenews.pl the English-language portal of Polskie Radio,
I did not find a section devoted to news about Belarus. After a
search, the most recent news item about Belarus was from 25 August.
Mr. Cajzner's responses position the Polish Radio External Service as
both a provider of news and a public diplomacy instrument to promote
Poland. A look at thenews.pl, however, reveals a serious news site,
with no hint of a public diplomacy mission. Promoting Poland as a
"good partner for business," etc., is probably best accomplished by
60-second television ads on foreign channels, not by an entire radio
station. These ads would ideally be commissioned by a Polish public
diplomacy agency, not by a news organization. See also Polska: "the
official promotional website of the Republic of Poland."
http://en.poland.gov.pl/
(Kim Andrew Elliott, kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
** POLAND [non]. AUSTRIA/NORWAY/UAE/U.K. Polskie Radio Warsaw A-11 BC
schedule 27 March to 30 Oct 2011. mos=ORS Moosbrunn via BAB-Babcock
ENGLISH 1200-1259 11675mos 11980wof
1700-1759 7265kvi-drm 9770mos
POLISH 1030-1059 11790mos 15265wof 1530-1629 11640skn
2100-2159 6155skn 7245wof
GERMAN 1130-1159 9435wof 9610wof 1530-1559 9495rmp
1930-1959 6035skn 6135wof-drm
RUSSIAN 1100-1129 15265wof 15460wof
1300-1329 15480wof 17860uae
1430-1459 11760wof 1800-1829 11730wof
1900-1929 15155skn
BELARUSS. 1330-1429 11955rmp 15480rmp 1630-1659 11760rmp
UKRAINIAN 1430-1459 15500wof
1500-1529 13730rmp 15265wof
1830-1859 11730rmp 15155wof 1900-1929 11730wof
HEBREW 1800-1829 11865skn
(BAB/PRW A-11, August 28 vi BC-DX Sept 3 via DXLD) Any changes now??
Victor in Sri Lanka asked for the file. See-saw changes: PRW services
transmitter locations from U.K. change every 2nd week according to
HFCC listing, -- sharing between WOF and RMP and v.v. It's hard to
follow the present TX usage. 73 wolfy (Wolfgang Büschel, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** PORTUGAL. Re 11-35: RTP: there is ``every reason`` to suspend
shortwave
Moral of story, when appealing to a broadcaster to remain on
shortwave, use snail mail; sending an email proves to the broadcaster
the listener can hear them via the internet (Paul, New Zealand, HCDX
via DXLD)
An individual or group of activists or hobbyists can never reverse a
trend such as this. Overall, SW broadcasters are leaving the air
because the bulk of listeners can be convinced to assume the bulk of
the technical investment; the computer, the power, the broadband
internet connection.
In reality, the overall global cost is higher to broadcast to blocks
of individuals via the internet when you factor in the above
expenditures. That said, this is the trend now - the individual pays
for everything.
The upside for the rest of us is: With the bulk of the semi-Megawatt
SW broadcasters eliminated, we can concentrate on actual DX; 300W
flea power broadcasters from here, there and everywhere.
(Colin Newell is the editor and creator of Coffeecrew.com, DXer.ca and
BobHarris.com Amateur Radio VA7WWV - Victoria B.C. Canada |
Twitter.com/coffeecrew, ibid.)
And the same day this report came out the Portuguese government
announced further budget cuts, so it looks like RDPi is most likely
finished on SW. Not a priority when a country is drowning in debt.
VOA is facing the same situation, if U.S. federal spending is brought
under control. Tough economic realities, and SW is not immune (Steve
Luce, Houston, Texas, Sept 1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
John Figliozzi on Sep 2nd, 2011 at 14:27:
Well, I will miss them. Already do. RDPi (along with VoG) was a great
source for exotic music on shortwave evenings in North America. I know
this was not its raison d’etre and a budget to provide me a little
pleasurable music at night is indefensible domestically. I also know I
can get this via the internet stream if I want. But it’s not quite the
same thing and a little sad that there’s one more piece of evidence
that a medium that served us all so well for so long is slipping into
obscurity and antiquity (Media Network blog comment via DXLD)
As we could say in Portuguese, the arguments voiced by the RTP
against the country's own HF service, are like a mere act of hiding
something from the Sun with a sieve. Fools, and only fools can
genuinely accept this; and fools alone would ask for a sieve instead
of using a proper tool.
In other words, cutting some of the RTP expenses where the domestic
listener / tax payer doesn't notice (countries that have an overseas
service share the very same the situation) is only too appealing not
to implement.
In good reason, I do suspect the whole process got a new momentum
after rumours that a new cabinet would study the privatization of
parts of the RTP, so if you put the pieces together, you'll easily
end up realising such an administration would be only too eager to
show less expenses to the a new government that expresses this
idea and, again, suppressing what's poorly known in domestic
terms is the simplest, albeit foolish, option.
Instead, cuts should be done elsewhere within the RTP itself, surely
starting in many aspects that are not even related to radio &/or TV,
e.g. the administration itself, and why not the head of the board of
directors himself to start with? I'm confident he does deserve to be
given the boot.
The ignorant in any government, here or abroad, will only tend to find
similar arguments no less appealing, if cutting expenses is in the
order of the day... for cutting [unnecessary] waste is perhaps not
that appealing, if it means reducing privileges, govern. jobs and
other amenities kept for years on end at the expense of the tax payer
who's ultimately called upon to save the mess "engineered" by
governments through more &/or heavier taxes as it is the case right
now.
For instance, in the USA - a country whose public debt is no less
worrying that those of certain other countries, but which, as I said
in an earlier comment here in DXDL yg, is something the American
public tend to ignore in different ways -, a similar argument re. HF
used the word "sunset." I recall that was the word I read here in DXLD
yg.
The question was not addressed properly, "sunset" is only too mild an
expression; why not being straightforward about this and call it a
severe consideration to gradually cut the huge expense the American
taxpayers have in their backs in order to keep the VoA and the
[political] "treats" like RFA, RFE/RL (to name only a few of the
many other overseas channels) running solely for political reasons
that matter the US politics alone.
I strongly believe the public stations should preserve their own
overseas services, but not as heavily as it has been done to
this date as cuts elsewhere would probably do the trick.
DW is one of the most recent examples; why not keep a reduced
operation instead? The same could be said about former services
like those of Norway, Finland, etc., even if the languages of
these countries have not the same weight as others do on a
worldwide scale. 73, (Carlos Gonçalves, PORTUGAL, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
PORTUGUESE GOVERNMENT SHEDS LIGHT ON MEDIA SHAKE-UP PLANS
Minister Miguel Relvas has this week detailed outlines of the
Portuguese government’s plans for the future of state-financed media
companies to the Commission of Ethics, Citizenship and Communication.
Prior to meeting the commission Mr Relvas, Parliamentary Affairs
Minister, had already told journalists that the government would pre-
pay €225 million in debts owed by the state-owned broadcaster RTP in
2012 within the framework of preparations for privatisation.
Furthermore, he said that the future of local channels RTP Madeira and
RTP Azores was “not possible” at a joint annual cost of €24.7 million
with immediate plans to cut back broadcast time to four hours daily.
Minister Relvas told the commission directly that RTP’s international
channel was also currently under review and should count on the
“involvement of private operators.”
However, the plans were met by opposition from some commission
members. Opposition Socialist member, Inês de Medeiros stressed the
importance of independent public service broadcasting and that the
plan to privatise one of RTP’s two national channels ran counter to
trends across Europe.
However, with a clear emphasis on the financial reality following the
EU/IMF bailout of Portugal, Mr Relvas informed the commission he had
asked RTP both to rethink its €2 million contract with the Euronews
channel and “to find synergies” with national news agency Lusa,
particularly in terms of international bureaus. Both entities are
included in the coalition government’s privatisation programme.
(Source: TPN/Lusa via theportugalnews.com)(September 2nd, 2011 - 10:38
UTC by Andy Sennitt, Media Network blog via DXLD)
O QUE SE ESCONDE POR DETRÀS DO ENCERRAMENTO DA RDP INTERNACIONAL.
A venda de terrenos de emissor de onda curta "é capaz de tapar o
buraco total" da RTP.
O provedor do Ouvinte da RTP disse hoje que uma eventual alienação dos
terrenos onde se situa o emissor de onda curta "é bem capaz, se houver
interesses imobiliários, de tapar o buraco" financeiro do grupo RTP.
"É natural que chegue para compensar o passivo todo. Daí que se
compreende que o interesse económico se sobreponha e vá para além dos
interesses políticos e da comunidade portuguesa de emigrantes",
declarou Mário Figueiredo aos deputados da Comissão de Ética,
Cidadania e Comunicação, onde foi ouvido.
O emissor de onda curta situa-se próximo de Pegões, freguesia do
concelho do Montijo. Fonte: Site RTP - http://tinyurl.com/3gxof4l
(João Costa, Portugal 2 Sept, radioescutas yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581,
DXLD)
WHAT LIES BEHIND THE CLOSURE OF THE RDP INTERNACIONAL
The sale of land for short-wave transmitter "is able to plug the
complete hole" of the RTP.
The RTP listeners` ombudsman said today that an eventual sale of land
which runs alongside the short-wave transmitter "is quite capable, if
there are real estate interests, to plug the hole" financially of the
RTP group.
"It's natural to get around to offset the liabilities. Hence it is
understandable that economic interests overlap and go beyond the
political interests of the community of Portuguese emigrants,"
declared Mario Figueiredo to members of the Ethics, Citizenship and
Communication Commission where it was heard.
The shortwave transmitter is located near Pegões, parish of the county
of Montijo. Source: RTP - http://tinyurl.com/3gxof4l
(Joao Costa, Portugal Sept 2, radioescutas yg, translated by Google,
refined by Glenn Hauser, for WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Glenn, One of the possible reasons why RDPi's HF site, CEU/CEOC at São
Gabriel, might close was the [halted] plan for the new airport for
Lisbon, which would be built in grounds currently used by the
military. See 1st photo, "CEU_imediações" (=surroundings). An airport
that close to a strong RF field could be a recipe for serious
disaster.
For that [technical] reason alone, there were other plans for
CEU/CEOC. I am afraid I cannot go into details about that, though it
would certainly amaze many. Perhaps I'm able to disclose this some
day in the future.
Using photo "CEU-RDPi-RTP", then open Google Earth and explore
around GC 38º 47' 05.28" N 08º 41' 40.24" W.
Now, if you use that same photo and check Google Earth, you may find
the tx site is actually surrounded by rural areas, certainly not urban
ones, so the economic interests mentioned by RTP/radio Ombudsman would
perhaps be real, only if law could simply turn rural property into
land where one might make some development which on the other hand is
only too appealing for those in that business.
Frankly, that is not the same that happened elsewhere up north:
some 29 km to the north of São Gabriel, at Glória do Ribatejo, the
former RARET [RL/RFE, later VoA too] site, was finally allowed to be
developed under the name of Herdade de Nossa Senhora da Glória; see
http://maps.google.pt/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&t=h&oe=UTF8&msa=0&msid=118111094998459816941.000485b12bceb29c52ad4
That actually belongs to some developer in the north of the country
after the whole site was bought from the state. RL/RFE was
established in grounds that, unfortunately, were put at their
disposal by the Portuguese State.
I am still to find out whether the thing started, is under
construction or was simply halted by the new owners. All I know for
now is that the antenna towers were removed and the buildings left as
they were.
The geographical situation of the Glória site cannot be compared to
that of our RDPi as the former is simply next to Glória do Ribatejo,
with existing houses very near the tx site perimeter and others being
built in the course of the years. The perimeter is roughly in the
shape of a triangle with one of the corners near Glória's centre and
one side along houses SW of the small town. See 3rd photo.
Ultimately, I hope that homonymous of me, as one might call it,
minister M. Relvas, and the cabinet he belongs to, decide to use some
good sense and cut expenses on the right departments, and then
order the RTP to reactivate RDPi-R.Portugal on HF. 73, (Carlos
Gonçalves, Portugal, Sept 6, dxldyg [where the attachments are
available] via DX LISTENING DIGEST
LOS TRABAJADORES DE RADIO DIFUSION PORTUGUESA SE OPONEN AL CIERRE DE
LA ONDA CORTA Y EXIGEN APLICACION DE LA LEY ---- 06/09/2011 [sic:]
Comité de Trabajadores (CT) de la RTP, dijo que el objetivo final de
“fin definitivo” a las transmisiones de onda corta de la RDP
Internacional contradice lo que está escrito en la ley y la
Constitución.
“La ley exige que se emite de onda corta. Es la Ley de Radio y de la
Constitución que la emisión de onda corta, debe ser emitida por el
operador público “, dijo un miembro de los miembros de RTP CT de la
Comisión de Ética, Ciudadanía y Comunicación, cita lusa.
miedo de que lo que está en vigor no es el estudio para evaluar el
servicio, que, dicen, sería legítimo y cayó dentro de la ley, sino más
bien una “final” de la misma.
TC de la empresa pública se vio en la suspensión del Parlamento sobre
las emisiones de onda corta RDP Internacional.
Los trabajadores fueron escuchados después de la hierba ministro
Miguel, quien asistió a la Comisión de Ética de la mañana, el
proveedor escucha de las antenas de la RTP, Figueiredo Mario, y el
presidente de la junta directiva de la empresa, Guilherme Costa.
La suspensión de onda corta las transmisiones de la RDP ha sido
autorizada por una decisión del ex ministro de Asuntos Parlamentarios,
Jorge Lacão.
En la radio, onda corta corresponde a la transmisión que cubre una
distancia mayor.
RTP anunció en mayo decidió suspender temporalmente, a partir del 1 de
junio RDP Internacional de las emisiones de onda corta, citando a
reducir el número de oyentes y la necesidad de reducir los costos
(pysnnoticias via GRA blog via Sept 6 via DXLD)
Arnaldo: Qué traducción tan horrenda del artículo habéis hecho, ¿Nadie
ha dedicado unos minutos a editar el articulo? Saludos (Tomás Méndez,
Spain, noticiasdx yg via DXLD)
** PRIDNESTROVYE [and non]. A-11 Schedule of WRN
UT zone FMO TX Beam kW From date To date
Broadcaster 'For new organization'
6225 1430-1530 44 WRN Alma Ata 132 100 27-May-29-Oct-2011
15540 1430-1500 48 WRN Grigoriopol 160 300 27-Mar-29-Oct-2011
15730 1500-1600 48 WRN Grigoriopol 170 300 25-Aug-29-Oct-2011
5810 1530-1730 40 WRN Grigoriopol 100 100 27-Mar-27-Oct-2011
17590 1530-1600 48 WRN Grigoriopol 160 300 20-May-29-Oct-2011
15750 1700-1800 48 WRN Grigoriopol 170 300 25-Aug-29-Oct-2011
(HFCC, WRN entry Sep 1 via BC-DX Sept 3 via DXLD)
What services??? These are just registrations:
6225: Democratic Voice of Burma
15540: reserve for Radio Xoriyo (now 1530-1600 on 17590)
15730: Radio Esat tests
5810: Radio Eagle of Iran (KRIHT) currently 1600-1700 UT only (its
days vary)
17590: Radio Xoriyo
15750: Radio Esat tests
ESAT = Ethiopian Satellite Television, from outside, which has been
jammed; also has a radio service at least on web (Glenn Hauser, DX
LISTENING DIGEST) see also UNIDENTIFIED in the 15s
** ROMANIA. 13800, Sept 2 at 2051, rap music in Spanish, what`s this,
Sawa, Farda? No, RRI, of course, with its eclectic, unpredictable
music. 2052 `Practical Guide` talk in English about bus fares in
Bucharest. 2055 frequencies for next English broadcasts, IS and off.
Modulation excellent, signal very good, nothing comparable direct from
Europe at this hour.
17600, Sept 4 at 1317, ``Typewriter Song`` by Leroy Anderson, complete
with end-of-carriage bells, inexplicable to the kiddies, so I bet an
RRI mailbag segment had just ended; into bit of rock music, Chinese
announcement, classical. Poor but facilitated by absence of Spain from
17595 on Sundays, a detail missing from their HFCC registrations
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** RUSSIA. Tnx to Glenn Hauser tip, DXLD 11-35, pointing out my
earlier log listing "Monchegorsk" is most likely Petro-K, with a nice
greyline to NH, as my version of GeoClock & these most recent
parallels from Arman, both indicate:
5930, R. Rossii, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky 0925-0932 Russian; M
announcer with talk; W over piano music at 0930 then back to M; fair;
// 5940 (fair) & 7320 (poor)-Arman; 9/1 (Scott R. Barbour Jr.
Intervale, N.H. USA, NRD-545, MLB-1, 200' Beverages, 60m dipole,
dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** RUSSIA. [Re telling apart the two sites on 5930:] To check 5930 kHz
program content at 09-10 UT slot is very easy, due of powerful signals
TO COMPARE on 7320 and 5940 via Russian FE site [Magadan] Arman
Radujnyi. See my recentlog of Aug 27:
Radio Rossii domestic program in Russian, noted in Pacific night
around 0950 UT Aug 27 on 7320 and 5940 kHz both [Magadan] Arman
Radujnyi relay site, in Russian Far East Siberia, and 5930 kHz via
Yelizovo Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky. Nice old Russian saloon music of
the movies in 20ties and 30ties era in past century (wb, wwdxc BC-DX
TopNews Aug 27) 73 wolfy (Wolfgang Büschel, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** RUSSIA. 6155, 5/9 1633, Radio Russia, DRM, label "DRM RUVR 1A",
German, classic music, audio only sometimes (Giampiero Bernardini,
Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a
T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** RUSSIA. 15510, Sept 1 at 1256, classical music with hum, so VOR
Pashto service is modulating today (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** RUSSIA. In addition to these [see CHINA], I was surprised to find
Voice of Russia on 21790 peaking at fair to good strength, but also
fading into oblivion from time to time. I assume this is a recent
change from 15405 - perhaps from today the 5th or even Sunday the 4th
when the band was closed here - as "the 19 metre band" was still being
announced for Australia. One of the GFC's September changes. I could
not hear 15405. The HFCC registers 21790 from March, but I don't think
it has been operating until now [RUS VOR GFC]:
15405 0500 0900 55,59 K/A 250 180 1234567 270311 291011 D
21790 0600 0900 44,50,54,55,59 IRK 250 152 1234567 270311 301011 D
My guess is that I was hearing it off the back of their antenna at 332
degrees (Noel R. Green (NW England), dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** RUSSIA. Buryatia -------------- On August 30, had to 6195 kHz with
2230-2300 GTRK Buryatia. SINPO - 34443. Sent report. Now got a reply
from Moses ?.?. that they have no QSL (Alexander Golovikhin, Toliatti,
Russia / "deneb-radio-dx" via RusDX 4 sept via DXLD)
** RUSSIA [and non]. The new DX program – RADIOPANORAMA. In Russian.
The author and presenter of Vadim Alekseyev, Moscow.
I invite all of you to the new, but at the same time and the previous
program. Magazine about the radio and other means of communication,
will be aired from September 3 to the following schedule (time - UT).
On the waves of the WRN (World radio network) :
Saturday – 1116,
Saturday – 1946,
Sunday – 0646,
Monday – 0316.
Take these broadcasts can be:
- in Moscow and Moscow region MW 738 kHz,
in Europe, the European part of Russia, the Middle East and North
Africa - satellite Hot Bird 13 degrees c. d., The Channel No. 94,
12,597 GGz, vertical polarization, the name of the digital channel WRN
Russkij,
- on the Internet online site http://wrn.ru section Where and How to
Listen to Us.
In the air of the Stavropol Radio 26:
Sunday – 1630,
Monday – 2130,
Thursday – 0630.
Take these broadcasts can be:
- on Internet online site http://radio26.net tab Direct Broadcasting;
- participants of the NokiaKlub - can use the application NokiaRadio,
for listen to the flow you need to select Radio 26 Stavropol;
- in the network KeyHoleTV - using he needs serious operation Ifon and
Ipad (now in the name of the the station is written characters, but in
the nearest future it is planned to supplement the the Latin script).
Every one of you, dear listeners and fans of radio, can take part in
the our program and share their interesting information:
- by e - mail to letters @ wrn.ru
- at 24-hour answerphone, the number of 95 06 738, code of Moscow 495;
- in Skype - id wrn-russia.
Welcome to the wave Radiopanorama!
information from the DXportal: http://dxing.ru/ (Dmitry Kutuzov,
Ryazan, Russia /"deneb-radio-dx" via RusDX 4 Sept via DXLD)
** RWANDA. Radio Rwanda. 6055 Kigali. 2011/09/02 Friday. 0320-0335
KinyaRwanda. YL talking and afro music. Id at 0333 "Radio Rwanda".
Fair at first, with co-channel QRM in spanish (surprisingly from Radio
Exterior de Espana in Noblejas, targetted towards N. America). QRM
gone by 0330, leaving Rwanda loud and clear. Jo'burg sunrise 0420
(Bill Bingham, RSA, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** SAO TOME. VOA, 4960, partial/data card in 43 days via email report.
The QSL card, ``Maintenance Riggers Climb Tower`` has the frequency of
4960; however, I think it should have been the 15580 data. The 4960
data has a range form 10/31/10 to 03/26/11. Time 0400-0500. Altho I
have sent reports for 4960, the report referenced above was the only
one that I mailed directly to the ST site. In addition, the return
address on the brown envelope has the typical Washington DC address.
The return mail on the Belgium Postal Meter is P O Box 3168, 1934 EMC,
Brucargo, Belgium. I also received a VOA calendar, program schedule,
listener questionnaire and a ``Through the Lens Photo Package``.
Somewhat confusing (Kivell, FL, QSL Report, Sept NASWA Journal via
DXLD) See also GREECE, linx to photos of São Tomé site and scenes
** SAUDI ARABIA. 17729.975, BSKSA Riyadh, 1st Arabic program observed
at 0725 UT Aug 31. 295 degrees outlet, S=9+10dB Arabic singer. And the
difference on 310 degr outlet on \\ even 17740 kHz, S=9+25dB.
17895 kHz even frequency BSKSA Holy Quran program morning prayer, S=7-
8. \\ 15379.977 kHz powerful prayer signal, S=9+20dB at 310 degrees.
17570, BSKSA Holy Quran program prayer at 1140 UT Aug 31, at 70
degrees towards ME/SAs. \\ much stronger S=9+20dB signal at same time
on 17614.973 kHz at 1150 UT Aug 31, at 100 degrees at SE
Asia/Malaysia/Indonesia/Philippines (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX
TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD)
** SOUTH AFRICA. BBC WS relay. 3255 Meyerton. 2011/08/29 Monday. 0244-
0244. False start; on for a few secs only, but clearly BBC WS although
poor. Started properly at *0254, listened until 0312. YL reporting,
but almost unreadable, very poor. Returned to it from 0345-0350, found
Egyptian music, followed by YL's talking about Angola and its leader,
dos Santos, who is now the longest serving (dictating?) leader in
Africa. He has been running the place for 32 years. I think I'll blame
him for my never being able to get Angola on MW, whilst Mozambique
(even northern) is all over the band. Good from 0345-0350. Jo'burg
sunrise 0425 (Bill Bingham, RSA, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** SOUTH AFRICA. Radio Okapi 11690 sent paper QSL in 2 weeks for
report to Fondation Hirondelle. Unreadable v/s. F/D except for
transmitter site (Bruce Portzer, WA, Sept 5, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** SPAIN. Yes, REE Noblejas 15585 kHz at 1418 UT Aug 28th has two
symmetric sideband splatter on
15558 to 15579 and
15593 to 15614 kHz
Noted on various remote SDR receivers in Holland, Germany and Austria.
(Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD)
6055, REE, 9/6 0156 UT - First heard at 0146 with what sounded like a
long documentary piece read in Spanish by male. Much Oriental music
underneath, and heard several mentions of "Tibet", "Korea", and
"Szechuan". A clear "Radio Exterior de España" ID was noted at 0156
after the conclusion of the program. An astonishingly loud signal
throughout -- was this really coming from Noblejas (as the 2010 WRTH
suggests) and not Cariari de Poroci? (Rick Dau, South Omaha, Nebraska,
Kenwood R-5000, ABDX via DXLD)
It`s Pococí. Yes, direct. More so than any other European now,
especially with Portugal proto-kaput on SW, Spain is willing and able
to put super signals direct from Spain deep into North America. Other
such signals are 17595 in the mornings, 15110 afternoons here. Besides
high power and obviously high-gain antenna systems, it has a
geographical advantage at the SW corner of the continent, closer and
with a lower-latitude path to us.
According to the not always accurate REE program grid at
http://www.rtve.es/radio/radio-exterior/programacion/
this program was `Travesías`, segunda edición, UT Tue-Fri at 01-02:
http://www.rtve.es/alacarta/audios/travesias/
Presentado por: Maria Alvarez de Eulate y Marta Fajardo
"Travesías" es un viaje sin rumbo fijo; cada día nos ponemos en camino
para dirigirnos a destinos de los cinco continentes y a través de
diferentes historias, conocer lo que allí se cuece. Si os quereis unir
a nuestro periplo diario arrancamos a las 18.05 hora española de lunes
a viernes. También nos podeis escuchar aquí. BLOG:
http://blogs.rtve.es/travesias/posts En Facebook: travesías.rne
with 563 previous programs audio-archived! (Glenn Hauser, OK, ibid.)
** SRI LANKA. 9770.207, Odd signal in English language at 0220 UT Sept
1. SLBC Ekala fair S=6 signal. Local female singer from the island at
0226-0229 U. (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Sept 1, dxldyg via
DXLD)
SLBC: Namaste India (Hindi & English) program missing last night on
11905 kHz at around 1530 UT. However 11750 monitored in Sinhala at
that time in which they were also heard mentioning about Namaste
India. Thanking you, Yours sincerely, (Jose Jacob, VU2JOS, National
Institute of Amateur Radio, Hyderabad, India, http://www.niar.org
cell: 91 94416 96043, UT Sept 3, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
11750, 4/9 1829-1830* Sri Lanka BC, song, talk, abrupt signal off at
1830 (Giampiero Bernardini, Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1,
Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** SUDAN. 7200, SRTC, *0235-0410, sign on with Arabic talk. Qur`an at
0241-0249. Local tribal music. Indigenous vocals. Poor to fair with
occasional HAM QRM. Sept 3 (Brian Alexander, Mechanicsburg, PA, USA,
Icom IC-7600, two 100 foot longwires, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** SURINAME. 4990, Radio Apintie, Paramaribo 0900 to 1000 noted with
decent signal on 27, 28 and with om vocal at 0950 on 30 August (Bob
Wilkner, NRD 535D - Drake R8 - Icom 746Pro modified, Pompano Beach,
South Florida, US Sept 3, condiglist yg via DXLD)
4990, Suriname, R. Apintie, Paramaribo. August 29, 0845-0857 male in
non stop Dutch talks, soft female choral like religious music.
Brazilian 4985 was off, some fades, at peak 35433 (Lúcio Otávio
Bobrowiec, Embu SP Brasil, SW40 - Dipoles and Longwire, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
4990.00, 0215-0225, 02.09, R Apintie, Paramaribo, Dutch talk and
music, 15221. Best 73, (Anker Petersen, from Skovlunde, Denmark on an
AOR AR7030PLUS with 28 metres of longwire, via Dario Monferini, playdx
yg via DXLD)
4990, Radio Apintie, 0937-0945, 03-September-2011, in Dutch. Male
announcer w/several commercials then religious talk, fair signal (Ed
Wlodarski, N2ED, New Jersey, Ten Tec RX340 & 100 Ft Long Wire, NASWA
Flashsheet via DXLD)
4989.98, R. Apintie, A strange mixture of songs after 0907. Carnival
like song, fast version of presumed NA, then M with mention of
Apintie, and W with spiritual talk. 0918 M again mentioning FM stereo
and Internet. Strong but very low modulation. (4 Sept.) (Dave Valko,
NRD-535D and T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
4990, R. Apintie, Paramaribo, 0846-0902 M announcer with lengthy talk
in listed Dutch; "canned" announcer into choral music at 0855;
percussion/bongos at 0858 into talk over music; ID at ToH followed by
presumed ad string; weak but clear; best logged here in some time; 9/5
(Scott R. Barbour Jr. Intervale, N.H. USA, NRD-545, MLB-1, 200'
Beverages, 60m dipole, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** SWAZILAND [and non]. 15360, Sept 3 at 1401, heavy CCI with fast
SAH, South Asian song mixing with RHC. It`s TWR at 1400-1415 only,
daily at 43 degrees in Urdu, the only ``TWR India`` broadcast via
Manzini, and you have to find it under India [sic] in WRTH/Update. We
are way, way, offbeam and offtarget for such good reception, were it
not for RHC in the way, unknown to HFCC (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** SYRIA. 9330, 5/9 1757-1758*, Radio Damascus, talks YL Russian,
short music, fair, low modulation sign-off at 1759
9330, *1800 5/9, Radio Damascus, signal on after 2 minutes off, start
of broadcast in German, fair, low modulation (Giampiero Bernardini,
Milan city, Italy, with Collins 51S-1, Perseus, RFSpace SDR-14 and a
T2FD antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** TAIWAN [non]. 5950, RTI relay via WYFR is totally SNAFU, Sept 2: at
0552 I hear talk in French! Then some rock music, 0555 more M&M
conversing in French, 0556 rock song in English, 0559, French again,
mentions fréquences but cut off before any given.
Just before 0600 we heard a few words of RTI ID in Spanish mixing with
WYFR ID in English. 0600 switch to RTI English giving part of their SW
schedule, on 7445. 0600:38 ends a timesignal, and switch to sign-on of
RTI Spanish service, news for 1 September.
5950 is supposed to carry English at 05-06, Spanish at 06-07. I assume
they were totally screwed up in Taipei, playing out the wrong program,
French which is scheduled only at 19-20 and never via YFR. Around 0600
I can imagine them madly pushing buttons trying to get the proper
Spanish recording on air, and finally succeeded.
5950, Sept 3 at 0520, RTI managed to broadcast the proper language via
WYFR, English, W&M conversing, instead of French last night (Glenn
Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** TAJIKISTAN. 2321,933 30.8 1730 OID igen! God signal men med
”murrigt” ljud gjorde det svårt att få ID. S/off 19.01. Efter en del
mail mellan mig och Mauno Ritola så kom han med lösningen: ”I am
certain, that this is the 2nd prgr. of Tajik Radio. It was a programme
of birthday wishes and "muzyka po zayavkam", i.e. music requests. I
changed from Perseus to AOR and could get better audio, but it was
still rather distorted. At 1859 here is the closing ID in probable
Tajik, sounds like mentioning Dushanbe.” /Mauno Ritola. De sänder på
1160,967 och jag hörde alltså 2a övertonen! Tack Mauno! AN
2321.933, 30.8 1730, unID again! Good signal but the "unclear" audio
made it difficult to get the ID. S/off 1901. After some emails between
me and Mauno Ritola he came with the solution: "I am certain that this
is the 2nd program of Tajik Radio. It was a program of birthday wishes
and "muzyka po zayavkam", i.e. music requests. I changed from Perseus
to AOR and could get better audio, but it was still rather distorted.
At 1859 here is the closing ID in probable Tajik, sounds like
mentioning Dushanbe."/ Mauno Ritola. Their fundamental is on 1160.967
and thus I heard the 2nd harmonic! Thanks Mauno! AN (Arne Nilsson,
Sweden, SW Bulletin Sept 4, translated by editor Thomas Nilsson for
WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
2321.939, 2.9 1840, unID with good strength and language sounding like
coming from Eastern Russia. This day no distortion in audio. Probably
Dushanbe just as Mauno Ritola suggests. Closedown at 1859. Tajik Radio
uses three networks, TR1 = Radio Tajikistan National Network and TR2 =
The Voice of Dushanbe (Sado-i Dushanbe). TR3 is only on FM. Three
languages are used, Tajik, Uzbek and Russian. I set my Perseus to
record this one on Sept 3 but forgot to reverse the antenna for Asian
direction instead of the normal CA direction, so the signal was barely
audible! I will check this one again tonight for a definite ID. TN
(Thomas Nilsson, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, ibid.)
** TAJIKISTAN. 02.09.2011, 1200-1300, 7245 KHz - "the Voice of
Tajikistan" in Arabic, SINPO=34443. 1259 handed to the announcement in
English, and at 1300 began to transfer to English. In 1301 on the
frequency joined a strong signal China Natinal Radio-2 and all scored
(Vladimir Kovalenko, Tomsk, Receiver - "Aikom-8500", the antenna wire
length of 40 m./ "open_dx" via RusDX 4 Sept via DXLD) see MAURITANIA
** TAJIKISTAN. 11500, Sept 5 at 1232, open carrier with hum, flutter
peaking S9+12, so Dushanbé is back to wasting watts instead of
relaying V. of Russia in English as scheduled.
11500, Sept 6 at 1240, flutter, hummy signal has some undermodulation
in English, so VOR lux out today, rather than no modulation out of
Dushanbé.
11500, Sept 7 at 1223, poor signal, open carrier with hum instead of
VOR English relay; 1311 improved to fair signal, still no modulation
in silent Hindi (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** TAJIKISTAN [and non]. Read US embassy report about 800 kW MW IBB
Sender 972 kHz {Thomcast unit built up by IBB Ismaning Germany
engineers}, as well as a single 250 kW SW unit in Orzu Tajikistan
(Wikileaks report), TJK-US negotiations held in Jan 2007.
Download of this big data file takes 20 minutes dowload time in
Germany:
Cryptome :
7-zip condensed file, 360 MB big.
(BC-DX Sept 3 via DXLD)
** THAILAND. 6765.02, Bangkok Meteo, 1249-1300+ Aug 31. IS at 1249,
then automated voice with English weather, followed by presumed Thai
and Khmer segments (not automated). Fair and // 8743-USB, also fair
(John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8, 100-foot RW, Cumbre
DX via DXLD)
** THAILAND. QSL: RFE/RL Russian service via Udorn 17730, replied in 7
minutes to e-mail report+MP3 direct to site, thanking me for report
and saying the QSL was on its way. Card arrived 12 days later.
Report was sent to manager_thailand at tha.ibb.gov (Bruce Portzer, WA,
Sept 5, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** THAILAND. 17760, Sept 5 at 1152, BBCWS about football, fluttery but
readable signal on this 25 degree USward beam from Nakhon Sawan at 09-
12, just before sunrise here and sunset there, so it`s rather
graylinish (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** TIBET. 6050, PBS Xizang (Chinese Service), 1332 on September 3 and
1152, 1230 and 1311 on September 4. Normally this frequency is covered
by a fairly strong Malaysia, which was absent for two days; // 4820;
both equally fair.
4905, PBS Xizang via Lhasa, checking from 1200 to 1419 on September 6.
A rare day with no RTTY; fair; // 4920. RTTY QRM was back the next
day. It was while checking back and forth between these two
frequencies that I happen to come across Madagascar on its new 4910
(Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** TIBET [non]. Voice of Tibet from Dushanbe Yangi Yul 1330-1400 UT on
15287 kHz, Tsching-Bumm Firedrake jammer on 15285 kHz (Wolfgang
Büschel, Aug 28, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews Sept 3 via DXLD) See also CHINA:
Firedrake logs which are prompted by this, offset-frequencies (gh)
Lunedì 29 agosto 2011, 1219 - 15542 kHz, VOICE OF TIBET - Yangi Yul
(Tajikistan), Tibetano, reportages OM/YL, Segnale buono-sufficiente,
Firedrake on 15545 but very low.
Venerdì 2 settembre 2011, 1250 - 15567 kHz, VOICE OF TIBET - Yangi Yul
(Tajikistan), Tibetano, tk OM, Segnale sufficiente, Jamming not heard.
(Luca Botto Fiora, G.C. 09E13 - 44N21, Rapallo (Genova) - Italia,
playdx yg via DXLD)
** TIBET [non]. REPRESSION SEPARATES TIBETAN REGIONS FROM THE REST OF
CHINA
http://www.voanews.com/tibetan-english/news/Repression-separates-Tibetan-regions-from-the-rest-of-China-129069298.html
(Windows Media)
Kunleng invites Jamphel Monlam, TCHRD, Dharamsala, and Rinchen Tashi,
China analyst, ICT, Washington, DC, to discuss the crackdowns,
restrictions, detentions and quasi legal actions that have taken place
throughout Tibetan areas in recent weeks.
Kunleng TV is simulcast on television via satellite, on shortwave
radio, and via the Internet in real time. Tune in every Wednesday and
Friday at 1400-1500 UT, 10:00 pm to 11:00 pm Lhasa time. From Tibet
and China Call toll-free 108888 AT&T 866 837 5159. From elsewhere
US at 1-202-619-3774 (Tell the operator to reverse the charges and we
will pay for the call.) Or send your name and phone number in advance
so we can contact you during the show. If you are not able to join us
in person please send your questions to us via fax or E-mail to:
tibetanTV @ voanews.com or Fax: 1-202-382-5596 (via Zacharias Liangas,
Greece, DXLD)
** TUNISIA [and non]. 7275, no signal at 0505 Sept 4 from one our
regulars often listened to as a lullaby; supposed to be on from 0400v
to 0626*. Earlier I noticed it on 9725. Not sure if 12005 (scheduled
to 0510) was still on as higher-band propagation is declining. 7295,
Algeria via France was still in well as a substitute, mostly
Qur`aning. As was 7245, Mauritania with non-chanting music now.
In keeping with our policy of referring to Arabic-speaking stations by
proper Arabic names, or acronymized, instead of French or something,
Radio Tunisienne is really per WRTH 2010 page 368: ``Idha`atu-l-
Wataniya at-Tunisiya`` = IWT.
7275, Sept 5 at 0538, whew, IWT is back after missing 24.5 hours
earlier, music and Arabic talk (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U K [non]. 15370, another Saturday, Sept 3, so what does the BBCWS
relay via Meyerton, SOUTH AFRICA have on this week? At 1401 check,
it`s in French! This is the hour supposedly in Somali, as we were also
hearing French in July, further discussed in early August DXLDs (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U K. BBC WORLD SERVICE LAUNCHES LIFELINE BROADCASTS FOR DROUGHT-
AFFECTED IN HORN OF AFRICA
Date: 01.09.2011 Category: World Service
Thursday 01 Sep 2011 Press Release
BBC World Service has launched special radio broadcasts to serve the
Somali-speaking population affected by famine and drought in the Horn
of Africa. The purpose of the daily 15-minute radio programmes by BBC
Somali is to help people to make informed decisions that may help them
survive the famine.
At 14.15 local time (11.15 GMT) every day, Gurmad (Rescue) on BBC
Somali delivers special news bulletins, practical information and
expert advice for refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs). It
will also reach those who have stayed in their home towns and
villages.
Editor of BBC Somali, Yusuf Garaad Omar, comments: "We have been
covering the humanitarian crisis in the Horn of Africa since it
started to unfold, and our reporters were overwhelmed with questions
and suggestions on relief aid - or lack of it. So we decided to devote
a special programme to address these issues, and as a majority of
those affected are Somali-speakers, it was also obvious that BBC
Somali is the right channel to reach these people. We hope that
timely, up-to-date information, provided by experts, about issues
these people are facing every day, will help them survive this crisis.
We will do our best to maintain the supply of such knowledge to all
those who are in need of it."
Particularly aimed at the refugees in Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti and
Yemen, as well as IDPs in Mogadishu and other locations in Somalia,
the lifeline broadcasts bring a wealth of information on how to get
access to food aid and health services, on safety on the roads, advice
on legal matters, nutrition, water and sanitation.
News bulletins with the latest on the relief efforts and humanitarian
situation are followed by interviews and reports by the BBC's
correspondents across the region. Along with giving listeners a
platform to share their experiences, a special slot in the programme
channels their questions to aid workers, doctors and authorities.
Gurmad also informs the Somali diaspora, who are willing to contribute
to the international relief effort, about the type of need required as
well as on where and how the assistance is distributed.
Available on shortwave and BBC FM relays across the Horn of Africa,
Gurmad is also rebroadcast by the BBC's partner radio stations:
Kenya's Star FM, whose network covers Dadaab refugee camp and
Mogadishu; Shabelle FM in Mogadishu, Somalia; and the private Somali
network, SBC. Gurmad also features on a special index on
http://bbcsomali.com in text and audio.
BBC World Service Publicity (via Mike Cooper, DXLD) WTFK? Geez. 15530
and 17780 both via CYPRUS at 1100-1130 (Glenn Hauser, DXLD)
** U K. BBC Receiving Station Crowsley Park - January 1985 - YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rD36-CHwUQ
A short film of BBC Monitoring Station, Crowsley Park
(Mark Palmer, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD)
** U K. Re 11-35: Hardly anything new:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/11/14/ofcom_gps_jam_email_alert/
And of course it's not OFCOM jamming GPS but MoD jamming selected GPS
frequencies. OFCOM limits itself to allowing you to subscribe to a
mailing list to be notified in advance, if you are a civilian using
GPS:
http://www.ofcom.org.uk/static/subscribe/gpsjamming.htm
73s (Andy Lawendel, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U K. BBC PROMS DISRUPTED BY PROTESTS
Fot the very first time in history of the BBC Proms festival, on
September 1, 2011 it has been disrupted by protesters (pro-Palestinian
protesters have disrupted the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra's
performance at the BBC Proms concert in London's Royal Albert).
You can download these 2 videos from BBC News:
BBC Proms disrupted by protests - First report [mp4 video, 23.6 MB;
2min 12s]:
http://news.downloads.bbc.co.uk.edgesuite.net/mps_h264_hi/public/news/entertainment/773000/773303_h264_1500k.mp4
BBC Proms disrupted by protests - Second report [flv video, 7.6 MB;
2min 1s]:
http://flashuhe5.streamuk.com/bbcViewer/channels/streams/4c247b02-2757-102f-82cc-001aa0073023.flv
Also, in this E-Mail, you may access BBC Radio 3 recordings, as
attachments. Description of 3 audio attachments in this E-Mail:
You can hear at the end of the musical piece how the protesters talk
and sing loud:
BBC R 3 110901 1940:16-1941:59bst.wma
The protesters are yelling and the orchestra could not start to play:
BBC R 3 110901 1944:43-1946:27bst.wma
After the pause, the protesters are yelling and the orchestra could
not start to play:
BBC R 3 110901 2039:01-2040:46bst.wma
If you prefer one download, here is a ZIP file with all of 3 audio
recordings [1.8 MB]:
http://www.mediafire.com/?x69mxmf69oq9a8f
(Dragan Lekic, Serbia, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
BBC did not make this broadcast available as listen-again for a week,
but instead put up an edited version starting Sept 7:
About this event --- BBC Statement 1 Sept 2011
http://www.bbc.co.uk/proms/whats-on/2011/september-01/73
We regret that as a result of sustained audience disruption within the
concert hall which affected the ability to hear the music, tonight’s
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra Prom was taken off air. The invitation
to the Orchestra was a purely musical one, offering the opportunity to
hear this fine Orchestra in conductor Zubin Metha’s 75th year, so we
are disappointed that BBC Radio 3 audiences were not able to enjoy the
full performance. BBC Radio 3 broadcast recordings of the same music,
however the performance continued in the hall.
Throughout the concert approximately 30 people were removed by
security which had been increased in anticipation of the prospect of
disturbances.
Zubin Mehta returned to the Proms with an orchestra he has been
conducting for 50 years and which awarded him the title of Music
Director for Life in 1981.
Read more on this story at the BBC news website
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-14756736
We broadcast part of the concert on Wednesday 7 September at 2.30pm.
Listen now until 14 September
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01463b3
(via DXLD)
** U K. STEAM FAIR FM - PIRATE RADIO PROGRAMME SUNDAY 4TH SEPTEMBER
Re: Below is a full list of the September RSLs (updates the list in
Sept. Communication) : [Restricted Service Licences]
Blandford, Dorset 87.9 Steam Fair FM - 27 Aug-5 Sep - Great Dorset
Steam
Thanks for this, Dave/Alan. I've highlighted my favourite RSL, which
is doing a grand job from Wessex as I type. Listening this morning, as
my brother returned from a 24-hour visit to the show where several of
his friends are exhibiting a stationary engine again, I was delighted
to hear of this programme tomorrow night:
"Pirate Radio" on Steam Fair FM 21.00-23.00 GMT Sunday 4th September.
Http://www.steamfairfm.com for the live stream.
Steam Fair FM is definitely my "favourite" RSL, and I look forward to
its appearance every year whether as a visitor to the show or, as is
the case this year just as a listener at home via the internet.
Steam Fair FM do an excellent job of capturing the "colour" of the
show, while providing a very useful service of information to both
exhibitors and visitors through the week long event. And, best of all
for us anoraks, they provide one of the best music mixes around,
complete with their own bespoke jingles from PAMS which are so
evocative of the sixties offshore stations. "Remember, this golden
classic" (go on, you're humming it to yourself even now!) reworked as
"Remember this sixties classic" is just one example. There are more
clips on their website.
I decided not to go to the fair in person this year- too much walking
for my current level of fitness!- but my brother has just returned
from a 24-hour visit, camping on site overnight. He reports that he
was able to hear an identifiable signal from the station at Fleet
Services on the M3- a good 65 miles from the massive steam fair site,
actually located at Tarrant Hinton which is about 6 miles east of
Blandford.We have heard the station a good many miles from the site in
previous years, but I think this was a record.
Finally, as an aside, Tarrant Hinton is just a few miles from the now
seemingly doomed Rampisham HF transmitting station. Oh how are the
mighty fallen - but not, at least, at Steam Fair FM! (Mark Savage,
Sept 3, BDXC-UK via DXLD)
** U K. Can anyone solve this riddle? No easy answers are to be found
on various DX forums. Where does the RAF Volmet on 5450 transmit from?
I have two possibilities. Either somewhere outside Witney - or from
the giant antenna farm at Inskip. Or some other site? Can anyone help?
73's Dan Goldfarb, Brentwood, England, Sep 5, via BDXC-UK yg via DXLD)
Thanks to Tony (also Mike Terry and Martin Peters) for confirming the
TX site is now RAF St Eval (Dave Kenny, ibid.) Viz.:
The original site was at RAF Chelveston just off the A45 in
Wellingborough but on closure it was transferred to RAF St Eval down
in Cornwall.
Frequencies: 4.70, 5.45, 11.233 MHz. The use of 4.235 was discontinued
at the time of the transfer.
Mode: USB,
Call Sign: "RAF VOLMET"
Co-ordinates: 50.475575823464 / -5.001509785652
An old, (sorry bad quality), recording can be downloaded from:
http://www.mediafire.com/?od9pwcmzuk94fjk
Hope this helps (Tony Boreham, ibid.)
** U K [non]. The British Forces Broadcasting Service (BFBS) has
launched a new radio website. http://www.bfbs.com/radio
The site gives listeners the latest news from the three main military
radio services and the 11 local radio stations, including BFBS
Afghanistan. Visitors to the site can listen live to the UK DAB
schedule, BFBS Radio 2, BFBS Gurkha and programming from BFBS Germany,
BFBS Northern Ireland and BFBS Falkland Islands. (Source: Coventry
Telegraph)(September 6th, 2011 - 16:12 UTC by Andy Sennitt, Media
Network blog via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
** U K. THE DIGITAL REBELLION --- By Paul Revoir 29th July 2011
Radio revolution threatened as analogue sets outsell DABs three to one
Digital radio switchover plans are facing a new crisis after it was
revealed that three analogue sets are still being sold for every one
which has the new technology. With millions continuing to buy
traditional sets the ‘aspirational’ target of 2015 to move all major
stations off FM and AM and on to digital looks even more unlikely.
The true scale of public apathy emerged in a report from
communications regulator Ofcom which revealed that only 1.9 million
digital radios were sold in the year to the end of March 2011. This
compares with 6.6million analogue sets. Digital now represents just 22
per cent of those radios sold, despite a massive marketing push by
ministers, the BBC and commercial radio.
Critics yesterday praised the report for ‘shining a light on a
shambles’ and said the sales figures showed that any hope of hitting
the 2015 date was now ‘dead in the water’.
Digital sales were down from 2.1 million in 2009 and then dropped to
1.9 million last year and were flat again this year. The report also
found that fewer than 1 per cent of vehicles are fitted with a DAB
(Digital Audio Broadcasting) radio. And 51 per cent of those without
the new technology were not likely to purchase a DAB set in the next
12 months.
In any event, the report revealed that only an estimated 66 per cent
of UK households can get local digital radio services. The technology
has failed to grip the public’s imagination as the shift to digital
TV did, and there is opposition from FM loyalists who cannot see the
point of moving the major stations off the analogue service.
Many of those who were unlikely to buy a digital radio said they felt
there was ‘no need’. Many were happy with the current service, others
blamed the cost or poor reception and some said they could access
radio through their digital TV.
The lack of interest comes despite the fact that the average price
paid for a DAB radio set has been dropping in recent years. It is now
£78. But the report did suggest that more than a third of adults now
have DAB sets, which was up 5 percentage points on the previous year.
The Government has said a decision on switchover can only be made once
50 per cent of listening is via digital. The Ofcom report puts it at
26.5 per cent. DAB coverage must also be comparable to FM, and locally
reach 90 per cent of the population on all major roads.
The country’s fourth largest radio operator, the UKRD Group, welcomed
the report for ‘shining the light on a shambles’ and urged the
Government to drop the 2015 switchover target date ‘before it makes a
complete fool of itself’.
A Department for Culture, Media and Sport spokesman said: ‘The
Government has always been clear that switchover cannot be imposed on
an unwilling public.’
A spokesman for Digital Radio UK, the organisation overseeing the
process, said: ‘In the past year there has been positive growth in
household digital radio penetration from 33 per cent to 38.2 per
cent. The report shows that digital radio sales are increasing as a
proportion of all radio sales.’ Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2020020/Radio-revolution-threatenedanalogue-sets-outsell-DABs-one.html#ixzz1TVjl48Sy
(via Sept Mediumwave News via DXLD)
** U S A [non]. http://afrtsarchive.blogspot.com/ Yup, it’s what you
think it is, the best of all your favorite AFRTS radio stations over
the years, including Vietnam, Korea and Germany (lou josephs, on Sep
6th, 2011 at 18:56, Media Network blog comments via WORLD OF RADIO
1581, DXLD)
** U S A. VOICE OF AMERICA'S ROLE IN INTERNET AGE
http://www.npr.org/2011/09/03/140163727/voice-of-americas-role-in-internet-age
September 3, 2011
Listen to the Story - Weekend Edition Saturday [4 min 43 sec]
Host Scott Simon speaks with David Ensor, who took over directorship
of Voice of America last month. A longtime journalist for NPR, CNN and
ABC News, his most recent post was in Afghanistan, where he was
director for communications and public diplomacy at the U.S. Embassy
in Kabul.
SCOTT SIMON, host: The Voice of America has a weekly audience of 123
million people around the world. Its highly-regarded news and music
programs are heard in 44 different languages, from Afan Oromo and
Bosnian to Uzbek and Vietnamese. But in this day of the Internet and
social media, and a time of shrinking budgets, what interest does the
United States have in spending $200 million on a government broadcast
service when there are so many sources of information and
entertainment available around the world? We're joined in our studios
now by the new head of the Voice of America, David Ensor, who was a
correspondent for ABC, CNN, even NPR. Most recently, he was director
of communications and public diplomacy for the U.S. Embassy in Kabul.
Mr. Director, thanks for being with us.
DAVID ENSOR: Scott, thank you so much for having me here.
SIMON: I wanted to read a quote to you that New York Times had earlier
this summer. They said, quote, "Digital technology risk turning these
services" - and they meant VOA, Radio Martí, Radio Sawa in the Middle
East - "turning these services into relics of a bygone era when
dissidents in closed societies huddled over their transistor radios
for scraps of information from the West. Now, dissidents these days we
know get a lot of news from Facebook and Twitter, so is the Voice of
America still necessary?
ENSOR: It's still very necessary and it's on Facebook and Twitter. And
in fact, the dissidents you're speaking of in many of the countries
that you just mentioned are tuning in to us through those media. There
are lots of new platforms now. The ways that humans communicate with
each other are diversifying and changing rapidly. Some people think if
a golden era when Voice of America was on shortwave radio and there
were the huddled masses listening and then looking for the secret
police to knock on the door and hide the radio. That's not where we're
at now.
SIMON: Well then let me come at you from the other direction, because
next month the VOA plans to end all radio and TV broadcasts in
Mandarin and Cantonese. There's been some criticism of that. The
Californian congressman Dana Rohrabacher says it looks like we're
succumbing to the wants of the communist Chinese. Now, particularly in
a society where Internet communication is so tightly suppressed, isn't
there still a lot to be said for those shortwave services?
ENSOR: We had to look at them on a case-by-case basis. Our data shows,
for example, that shortwave is still a very good way to reach quite a
bit of Africa. It's still probably one of the best ways to reach the
North Korean population. It has become far less effective in China. My
personal feeling is that China's one of the most important places for
us to reach, and some of these new platforms that you're talking about
- social media, satellite television - are where we need to be headed
in China.
SIMON: I was very moved when I was reading up for this interview to
read the first words that the Voice of America ever broadcast. Are you
familiar with those?
ENSOR: I'm not.
SIMON: February 1, 1942 - obviously, early days of World War II for
this country - they played "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" and said
today and every day from now on, we will be with you from America to
talk about the war. The news may be good or bad for us. We will always
tell you the truth.
ENSOR: We're still doing that. And we need to do more of it. And what
I want to try to help my colleagues to do is get more people out doing
more reporting from stories. We've done some very good stuff out of
Libya recently. We're telling the story of the drought in the Horn of
Africa, which frankly the commercial networks are not covering very
well. It's a story that needs to be told.
And, by the way, on September 6th, we'll start some special
broadcasting. This is kind of surge broadcasting, if you will, where
we're going to use the frequencies of one of our sister stations and
start broadcasting information that's useful to the refugees. Tell
them about where to find shelter, food, medical help and so forth, try
to help the NGOs that are working with the starving people of the Horn
of Africa to sort of organize things better and help people know
what's going on.
SIMON: You expect calls for cutbacks?
ENSOR: At VOA?
SIMON: Yeah.
ENSOR: I think the whole federal government is going to have to look
closely at its budgets. I don't think we're immune. The United States
has got a serious economic problem and the government has to do - and
we are going to do - more on less. But trying to make a virtue out of
it, when you have to cut the budget a bit, you can also make change at
the same time. We mentioned shortwave radio. You know, it is less and
less useful, and there's a certain amount of money being spent on it
that should move quickly, and I will try to accelerate that process,
into, you know, new media, into Internet sites that are mobile device-
friendly, into satellite television broadcasts that can reach in some
of these countries. So, we're working on that hard.
SIMON: David Ensor, new director of the Voice of America. Thanks so
much.
ENSOR: It's a pleasure.
Copyright © 2011 National Public Radio®. All rights reserved. No
quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media
without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is
provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms
of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our
permissions page for further information. [referenced on WORLD OF
RADIO 1581]
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for
NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in
its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be
aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.
Comments:
david swerdloff (davearlington) wrote:
I have not worked for VOA for several years. But I would like to
assure skeptics that nearly all the people I worked alongside were
very careful to live up to the Charter -- which was really captured by
those first words broadcast during WWII on VOA. Nearly everyone was
focused on telling the truth - warts and all - about the world and our
country. I helped to host and produce daily programs specifically
about America that followed a similar format to NPR's Morning Edition
and All Things Considered (longer reports, features and interviews).
We tried each day to be honest about the challenges within the USA,
and how they were or were not being addressed. We were not shills for
the government or corporations, no matter what some of the comments
below might argue. And, I suspect, much of the same attitude still
prevails -- even as my former colleagues try to reach people largely
through new media. That being said, I wish Mr. Ensor had known the
early history of VOA.
Martha Hyde (Ratcatcher) wrote:
...They may also be only using publicly available computers to avoid
being tracked. Furthermore, their own English is not good enough to
formulate comments themselves, so they copy and paste comments by
someone else that sound something like what they would say in
response. They may also be using Google Translate, which itself may be
a poor performer of that task for the foreign language in question. (I
do not know if Google Translate is available for translating into
English from all foreign languages.)
There must be a whole other world for young people from these
countries, who hear about the Arab Spring, and see what others can say
about their own countries, and these "spam" comments may be reflecting
that reality. We have seen that there are thousands of voices
desperate to be heard in this new e-global world, that could not be
heard when Radio-Free Europe and Voice of America was established. It
would be great if our news reporters were to ask if people are doing
as I describe in many of these countries, but obviously, the person
interviewed is often not in a position to speak freely.
Martha Hyde (Ratcatcher) wrote:
...There is no reliability of getting that response at a blog or other
"comment-able" forum on the web, nor are these comments causing any
denial-of-service attack. Obviously they are not advertising the
company whose URL is associated with their email address because it
doesn't exist. In fact, I got a comment from someone who worked at a
company offering pills for male reproductive organs who thought my
blog was too "spammy", because I allowed many such comments as I
described. This "spammy" comment provoked my wondering "Is spam in the
eye of the beholder?".
I wonder if the people whose comments are filtered by my blogsite
prover as spam are from any kind of Western, freely democratic
country, or if they are just young people who have no safe access to
the internet at home. They may fear being found out that they are
visiting websites where opinions are freely given, so they make up a
name, a valid but temporary email address, and a company website to
gain entry to the comment section (even though providing a URL is not
required) -- all to be taken seriously. The different comments from
the same fake URL may actually be the same person who makes up new
names and email addresses for every comment....
Martha Hyde (Ratcatcher) wrote:
David Ensor is right to say that now dissidents have a lot of other
avenues for communicating with the outside world. That is also true
for those not necessarily dissident, but just wanting to "join the
rest of the world" when they live in countries where they feel they
just cannot speak out at all or feel too isolated. I have seen
comments classified as "spam" by my blog server which I strongly
suspect are not "spam" simply because the filters assume conditions as
we see in Western free democracies. Yes, these commenters claim to
have websites that do not exist and there are a lot of spelling and
grammar mistakes in them. Furthermore, when you do a search on the
website provided, you see a lot of other people under other names with
the same website and exactly the same or very much similar comments on
other blogs. Many of these comments are more substantive than just "I
love your website", or "I agree". Thus I have to take what they say
seriously, even if it is often difficult to interpret.
However, to call them spam begs a question. Spam implies that the
person wants a response of some kind...
beth aaron (bethaaron) wrote:
VOA what is your intent? To push western consumerism to all the so
called "developing" nations so we can then say, the world runs on
Dunkin, which, if translated, really means the world rund on chemical
additives, processed sugar and caffine? Now that's some billing.
beth aaron (bethaaron) wrote:
TRUTH AND LIBERTY!!! Where are you? Liberty of corporations to sell
toxic food made in labs! Liberty to demolish any environmental
regulations that might curb increases in respiratory diseases in
children, lung diseases in every age group, asthma! Liberty to pay
taxes that are used to bail out multi-national banks that use every
loophole to lend money so people can have "The American Dream," even
if they can't pay it back and call it a free market system? American
Gd!!!! Gd weeps at what this nations ethics, values, consumerism,
commodity driven destruction of HIS CREATION is doing by our
systematic RAPE of Mother Earth.
Truth! The TRUTH is that we are at war for energy, war to take over
the global food system, forcing genetically modified poisonous seeds,
"TERMINATOR" seeds, what an evil name for Gds gift to humankind, down
the throats of other nations...Truth, we sicken our own infants in
the womb with thousands of carcinogens approved and legalized by the
FDA, a corrupt, industry friendly, TAX fuded agency that protects drug
companies, approves toxic food additives, and food from science labs.
Got ADD/ADHD, Immunological disorders?
Frumpy Demon (LudicrousMeanie) wrote:
This makes so proud I have to thump the pecs of my red, white and blue
American heart. The brilliant voice of America proclaiming the
righteous truth of liberty for all the world to hear. New media is the
new weapon of choice and will blaze a new path in the tradition of
Kenneth Tomlinson. Thank our lucky American God for the brave souls
like Scott Simon who combat the proliferation of Islamic extremist
philosophy. Make those insurgents confess their crimes on Facebook and
Twitter. Thanks to stalwart American Patriots like Michael McManus,
Armstrong Williams, Maggie Gallagher, Jeff Gannon, Karen Ryan and
Scott Simon, the VOA now can bravely speak it's name to it's own
people. Hallelujah! (all via Zacharias Liangas, Greece, DXLD)
Mr. Ensor's main challenge will be to keep VOA relevant during a new
era of content overabundance, rather than the content scarcity of
previous decades.
During the interview, Mr. Ensor says that on 6 September, VOA will
begin special broadcasts with information for Somalia refugees. His
reference to working with a "sister station" suggests use of the Radio
Sawa medium wave relay at Djibouti. See previous post about similar
broadcasts of BBC Somali (Kim Andrew Elliott, kimandrewelliott.com via
DXLD)
** U S A. AN IMPORTANT FUNCTION OF THE BBG FIREWALL IS TO PROTECT US
INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING FROM THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION. Posted: 01
Sep 2011
Heritage Foundation, 31 Aug 2011, Helle Dale: "The U.S. should work
with the Broadcasting Board of Governors to make international
broadcasting part of an integrated government-wide U.S.
counterterrorism communications strategy. The firewall established by
the U.S. International Broadcasting Act of 1994 between State and BBG
to ensure editorial independence for the broadcasters has turned into
a detriment in terms of resource allocation and lack of congressional
oversight." (kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
I think the Heritage Foundation misses the Soviet Union. The USSR
provided a large, easy-to-hit adversarial target. The Soviet Union
also established central planning, which is what the Heritage
Foundation would like to employ to "integrate" the content US
international broadcasting. Instead of market based international
broadcasting, which provides the audience with the credible news they
are seeking, a central committee for the coordination of content would
determine what the audience should listen to. Except that the audience
will tune elsewhere (Kim Andrew Elliott, ibid.)
** U S A [and non]. BBG SEEKS PROPOSAL FOR VOA SOCIAL NETWORKING
STUDIES IN LAGOS, JAKARTA, AND - EVEN THOUGH VOA NO LONGER HAS ARABIC
- CAIRO. Posted: 05 Sep 2011
FedBizOpps.gov, 29 July 2011: "The Broadcasting Board of Governors
(BBG), International Broadcasting Bureau (IBB) Governors [sic: meaning
the BBG governors responsible for the IBB?] requires a contractor to
conduct a social networking study of the following markets: Lagos,
Nigeria, Cairo, Egypt, and Jakarta, Indonesia. The Broadcasting Board
of Governors operates the Voice of America (VOA) is a U.S.-based,
publicly funded international broadcaster dedicated to providing
objective news and information to audiences in under-served media
environments around the world.
While traditionally focused on delivering its content via broadcast
media, VOA is moving aggressively to expand distribution via new media
platforms. In particular, recognizing the explosive growth of social
networking around the world, VOA is interesting in exploring how this
phenomenon can best be used to supplement and enhance its traditional
methods of content distribution. To succeed in this effort, VOA
requires a deeper and more comprehensive understanding of exactly how
web and mobile-based social networking contributes to the flow of
information in key markets." (kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
Cairo? VOA no longer broadcasts in Arabic. Arabic has been turned over
to Alhurra and Radio Sawa.
The report of such a study should say this, but probably won't: In the
shortwave era, VOA had 120 million listeners. With the advent of
social media, VOA will have 120 million competitors. Going back to
shortwave is not the answer (too late now, anyway). But what is the
answer in this new age of overabundant content sources? What will
elevate US international broadcasting to more than a spit in the
ocean? As a first step: the entities of US international broadcasting
must quit competing with each other. It is time to consolidate their
resources and talents.
By the way, I'm responsible for VOA audience research in Indonesia.
This is the first I've heard about the Jakarta study. One of the
reasons I curate news about international broadcasting from the house
where I live is to find out what is going on inside the building where
I work (Kim Andrew Elliott, ibid.)
** U S A. VOA en RadioWorld --- Excelente artículo de la actualidad de
La Voz de América (VOA) en la edición digital de RadioWorld, entrando
a
http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/newbay/rwla_201109/index.php#/0
(Rubén G. Margenet, Argentina, Sept 7, condiglist yg via DXLD)
Starts on page 1, an illustrated visit to Greenville, translated from
English you may have already seen (gh, DXLD)
** U S A. 15976 approx., Sept 1 at 1831, very distorted FMy spur with
no carrier spreading 15970-15982 in Spanish. First thought is CVC,
which has previously put a nasty spur in the 16`s, but no match to
Chile 17680. Talking about Cuba and Venezuela, but RHC is nowhere on
the air at this hour. So third choice is Radio Martí --- yes, matches
13820, which is 2156 kHz lower, so spur from Greenville --- but could
be from one of the two other RM frequencies, 11930 or 9565. Can`t
figure out any formula to account for 15976 mixing with RM or any
other Greenville frequency (and there aren`t any active after 17820
VOA Portuguese closed at 1830).
Recheck at 1955, still going, and significantly, continues after 2000
when GB turns 13820 off and over to Sackville, which is initially
inaudible under the jamming, weaker than GB had been. Noticed that the
spur is nicely centered in between RTTY on 15960 and 15990, not
bothering them. An hour later at 2058 I still hear 15976, and enough
of // RM on 13820 to confirm that it`s now out of synch, being routed
thru Sackville. The two remaining GB channels with RM, 11930 and 9565,
are scheduled until 2400*. I am listening to 15976 again at 2358 and
it seems to stop at 2358:30* a bit before the fundamentals do? Hard to
tell vs jamming when they really go off. So that`s inconclusive.
Meanwhile I had notified GB of the problem, no doubt caused or
exacerbated by Irene which blew the entire plant off the air for a
biday. So is it from the 9565 or 11930 transmitter? Sept 2 at 1400 I
could tell that 11930 had started up as scheduled, under the jamming,
a trihour before 9565, but no 15976 audible yet. Checking again at
1656, still no spur, nor even after 9565 had started up at 1700. So it
may have been fixed in the meantime.
R. Martí was weak, but the daytime-absorbed jamming was weaker, so I
heard them promoting a special broadcast Thursday Sept 8 at 8 pm --- I
surely hope it`s Pres. Obama`s much-anticipated speech to a joint
session of Congress, rather than a silly ballgame, which usually
appear on weekends (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A [non]. 15145, very poor Sept 4 at 1326, Khmer talk mentioning
Washington several times, so suspect IBB; cut off at 1329 without a
VOA closing. Yes, HFCC shows 15145, 1230-1330, 250 kW, 73 degrees in
Khmer via Iranawila, SRI LANKA, and Aoki refines it as RFA rather than
VOA (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) see also unID 21650 etc.
** U S A. WORLD OF RADIO 1580: not ready in time for 0330 UT Thursday
on WRMI, so first airing at 1500 on 9955. Further opportunities:
Thursday 2101 on WTWW 9479, and WRMI 9955; Thursday 2130 on WBCQ 7415.
WWRB website says from Sept 1 they are on `winter`! schedule using
3215 and 3195, which I think implies that 5051 will no longer be in
use. For WOR UT Friday 0330v check 3195 if not heard on 5051.
More WRMI airings: Friday 1430, Saturday 0800, 1500, 1730, Sunday
0800, 1530, 1730. WTWW, UT Sunday 0400 on 5755. WBCQ, UT Monday 0300v
on 5110v-CUSB (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
WORLD OF RADIO 1580 monitoring: at 2100 UT Thursday Sept 1, confirmed
on WTWW 9479 and starting later in the minute on WRMI 9955, not jammed
but weak here. Also confirmed at 0330 UT Friday Sept 2 on WWRB still
on 5051. Their `winter` switch to 3215/3195 as of Sept 1 has not
happened yet, nothing from WWRB on either frequency earlier in
evening. At 0500 UT Friday Sept 2, confirmed on WRMI webcast, starting
shortly after ACB Radio Mainstream webcast, which repeats 2-hourly
thru 2330 Fridays, via http://www.acbradio.org/mainstream
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 12100, Sept 4 at 0455 I notice WTWW-3 is still going in
Portuguese Bible-reading; vanished at 0459:30* when I was not
listening closely, but don`t think there was a sign-off. It returns
circa 1300v in Arabic (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 9330, Sept 1 at 1233 weak carrier, can`t make out any
modulation, WBCQ or completely off uncovering another? But there is
nothing else except Syria registered, tho never known active before
1600. Anyhow, by 1407, 9330 is WBCQ modulating about Solomon.
9330, Sept 5 at 0537 no signal from WBCQ (instead of reduced carrier
and no modulation); tho 9370 WTJC was in as usual, along with
propagation from France, 9535 Algeria relay. Next check at 1317, 9330
back on as usual with distorted music on CUSB (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 17510, Sept 4 at 1302 while checking for IRELAND [non] on
17500, found huge buzzing carrier here with frying sound. Next check
at 1318, 17510 was off, but I have little doubt it was a tuneup/test
from WHRI, which does occupy 17510 later on Sundays: 1408 VG with
screaming gospel huxter. But not any more if we may believe HFCC
registrations showing WHRI 17510 expires Sept 4: had been Sat/Sun
1400-1500 at 57 degrees, Mon-Sat 1500-1600 at 87 degrees. But that
doesn`t mean it was even really on the air all those hours (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 9265 WINB 2250 4 Sept, delirious man shouting! (Zacharias
Liangas, Greece, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hmm, I would put it more politely as ``screaming gospel huxter`` --
let`s check their posted program schedule to see who it might be? That
was Sunday: ``Terry Blalock``, oh yeah, him again (gh, DXLD)
** U S A. WWCR 3215 sent F/D QSL card in 7 months. V/s Cathy, Program
Director, apologized for long delay, saying she'd found a stack of
unanswered reports on someone else's desk (Bruce Portzer, WA, Sept 5,
dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
15825, Sept 5 at 1224, WWCR is inbooming instead of inaudible, tnx to
sporadic E activity (there was an opening yesterday evening I totally
missed over eastern USA, reaching FM), with gospel huxter, splattering
15800-15840, and also matching modulation spikes circa 15670 vs the
Chinese radio war. (Today by 1430, there is more Es on the 50 MHz DX
Sherlock map all over central USA.)
Recheck at 1252, `Ask WWCR` in progress, saying that they did test
17580 twice in the 21-24 UT period with the `spare` WWCR-4
transmitter, received no reports except from their own monitoring, got
into Slovakia, Germany, western USA, excellent results, and ``may work
it into the mix later``. 9350 after 21 is beginning to weaken and may
replace it with 5070 soon; also will be using 3195 [which WWRB also
says it is using, but really not yet].
Since I had missed the first half, I listened online to the `latest`
edition, #346 for Aug 27-Sept 9, but it wasn`t the same! Discussed
upcoming HFCC and said this edition might run 3 weeks instead of 2 as
they would be away at the conference disrupting usual scheduling. Said
``two Mondays ago in the early evening hours``, CR-1 was down with a
blown switch, so they substituted the spare CR-4 transmitter for it
and did not lose any airtime.
15825, Sept 6 at 2017, WWCR is once again enhanced by off-season
sporadic E on HF to VG signal of S9+22+, which also audiblizes the
matching modulation spike field approx. 15620-15705 peaking 15670, and
a slightly weaker one 15480-15530, fortunately barely missing Kuwait,
the only decent signal in the area, on 15540. However, this time I
could not hear the +/- 15.6 kHz spur carriers circa 15810 and 15840,
altho splash outward from 15825 was reaching that far. And still I
don`t find spike fields to match on the high side which if exactly
mirroring would range 15945-16030 and 16120-16170. Of course, WWCR-1
really ought to be occupying no more than 15820-15830 max (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A [non]. 17690, Sept 1 at 1827, ümlauty talk in Türkish
mentioning Germany. HFCC reveals it`s YFR at 17-19, 250 kW, 102
degrees via BaBCock, Woofferton UK (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** U S A. 11175-USB, Sept 3 at 0506, Andrews AFB, Maryland, SE of
Washington DC, with coded message in military fonetix:
6CPZWFYIZ6ZSUN2NKY6RMKYNRMHIJZUGOSFSZLIOM4
Finished with, `This completes [something]. . .42 characters, Andrews,
Out`` And indeed there were 42. Just for fun, I Googled on that and,
would you believe, no hits. But there will be now (Glenn Hauser, OK,
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 580, UT Sunday at 1207, President Obama`s weekly `media`
address on need for Congress to pass transportation bill ASAP upon
reconvening. 1209 segué to Home Depot ad with no outro, no doubt our
daytime dominator WIBW Topeka, doing its duty by broadcasting the
president, but in the Sunday morning ghetto for as small an audience
as possible some 22 hours after original availability.
Checking program schedule at
http://580wibw.com/programs.html
this is listed as 7:00-7:15 am Sundays, tho he never runs more than 5
minutes. WIBW is not so bad with the only obvious far-right wacko on
its lineup being Glenn Beck, partly because of its dual identity as
sports talk and regular talk (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 910, Sept 3 at 1246 UT, Latin mass stix out, whence? Surely
not KVIS Miamuh OK, not Catholic. EWTN affiliate list
http://www.ewtn.com/radio/amfm.asp
has only one on 910, Guadalupe Radio Network, KATH Dallas-Fort Worth.
http://grnonline.info/
And its program schedule confirms daily mass from EWTN [also on WEWN
SW, unchecked] at 7-8 am = 12-13 UT; Sundays for a sesquihour:
http://grnonline.info/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=64&Itemid=70
KATH is really licensed to Frisco TX, 1000/500 watts. What a great
call, ``KATH-olik`` (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. MEXICO [non]. 990, at 1220 UT Sept 2, most of the Mexicans
have faded out, but still a strong dominant signal here and hard to
null, with SS ballad, 1222 ``Radio Éxitos`` singing ID, then more
upbeat ballad by YL or kid with a big voice; 1226 ``El Amor --- Radio
Éxitos 9-90 AM, La Mejor``. 1230 a more extensive ID/promo just
lacking the needed details: ``Radio Éxitos 9-90 AM``, something about
not saying any dirty words. Next song romantic, including
refrain/lyrix ``se va muriendo, quiero vivir``, ``en mi casa, en mi
alma, hay un sitio para ti``.
Major suspect is The Metroplex outlet hijacked several years ago from
Wichita Falls, now KFCD, COL Farmersville TX. New NRC-AM Log still
shows it as Spanish religion, but Googling on slogan and frequency
gets hits on KFCD including Wikipedia with this update note: ``On june
4 2011 Till Today Is Broadcasting Spanish Hits 70" 80" Called Radio
Exitos 990 Recuerdos y Mas`` (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, WORLD OF RADIO
1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 1060, Sept 2 at 1158 UT, Spanish gospel music, ID ``La I-H-
N``; I had previously learned to avoid this one as non-Mexican, but
for the record this season: it`s really KIJN, 10 kW daytimer in
Farwell TX, panhandle next to NM; as in In Jesus` Name (or In His
Name?).
Guess what, this is well before local sunrise, as it`s a few minutes
before sunrise even here in Enid far to the east of it. FCC AM Query
has no pre-sunrise authority info, but NRC AM Log 2011-2012 shows psra
of 3 watts. I don`t think so. (Date is correct; omitted from
yesterday`s log).
Also hearing Spanish gospel music on 1060, Sept 3 at 1247, still some
skywave, after not hearing KKOB on 770 from 1245 when it is supposed
to switch to non-direxional day pattern. Should start showing later in
September.
1060, UT Sept 4 at 0259, Spanish song mentioning `pecados` = sins,
making me suspect it`s the gospel huxter in TX also heard before
sunrise: yes, at 0301 UT, in QRM caught ``Farwell`` mentioned in ID.
So KIJN is Doing God`s Work illegally at night, as FCC AM Query
confirms it`s licensed strictly as a 10 kW daytimer:
http://transition.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/amq?list=0&facid=4931
And the SR/SS times for it converted to UT are:
September 1230-0100
October 1300-0015
November 1330-2345
December 1345-2345
Anything beyond that is `cheating`.
1060, Sept 6 at 1201, Spanish ID for KIJN, Farwell, Tejas. Cf my
previous report, Wayne Heinen, editor of the new NRC AM Log, 2011-
2012, just out (see
http://www.nrcdxas.org/catalog/books/index1.html
for ordering info; highly recommended!)
points out that pre-sunrise and post-sunset authorizations are not
found via FCC AM Query pages, but instead ``via FCC`s CDBS site. Using
the CDBS station search:
http://licensing.fcc.gov/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/sta_sear.htm
Go to Details on the station`s search form. Then View Correspondence
Folder. This link will show the PSRA and PSSA documents for the
station if any exist."
If you follow these, you get a pdf that lists KIJN`s PSRA at:
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=3821
which shows they may use up to 3.0 watts starting at 6 am CST/CDT
yearound, except in June a hefty 6.0 watts (since sunrises are
earliest, and the ``limiting station``, XEEP can tolerate ``twice`` as
much QRM!). KIJN is also very fortunate to be just barely in the CDT
zone, as if licensed to Texico NM just across the border they could
not sign on their ``three watts`` until 1200 UT summer, 1300 winter.
KIJN also has a PSSA at
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=1857
showing they may also use 3.0 watts for two hours after official
sunset yearound, which in Sept means 0100-0300 UT. My last log was
just after 0300, but maybe they were about to sign off. Currently they
should not be on the air even with 3 watts between 0300 and 1100 UT,
but Wayne says, ``KIJN has been running all-night for quite a while
with no authorization that I can find.``
The fact remains that when I hear them in the PSRA or PSSA periods,
they can`t possibly be running only three watts. I have read that it`s
difficult-to-impossible to power down many transmitters to that level
even if they wanted to, so it could be the full 10 kW, or anywhere
between that and some reasonably audible lower power at this distance.
A longer discussion of this, with the complete PSRA/PSSA tables for
KIJN will be in DXLD 11-36 (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, WORLD OF RADIO
1581, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Glenn, from page ix of the new 32nd edition of the NRC AM Log:
"Beginning this year a proofing of the PSRA and PSSA in the FCC`s CDBS
has begun. We have added codes for LSRA `Limited Sun Rise Authority`
and LSSA `Limited Sunset Authority`. These indicate where the station
has an Authority but it is limited in the number of months out of the
year that it has been authorized. This is done to protect other
stations on the channel from interference during these periods. Those
wishing to find the exact Authority can review the documents at the
FCC`s CDBS site. Using the CDBS station search:
http://licensing.fcc.gov/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/sta_sear.htm
Go to Details on the station`s search form. then View Correspondence
Folder. This link will show the PSRA and PSSA documents for the
station if any exist."
If you follow KIJN for these you get a pdf listing the following at:
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=3821
**********************************************************************
NOTICE OF PARAMETERS FOR
OPERATION UNDER PRE-SUNRISE AUTHORITY (PSRA)
FEBRUARY 27, 2007
(Post this letter with your current authorization )
**********************************************************************
Pursuant to Section 73.99 of FCC Rules and Regulations, Pre-Sunrise
operation (PSRA) is permitted in accordance with the parameters listed
below. The powers listed below are maximum values that may not be
exceeded. However, operation at any power not in excess of those
listed is permissible.
**********************************************************************
FACILITY ID: 4931 CALCULATIONS BASED ON:
CALL: KIJN CITY: FARWELL STATE: TX LICENSED FACILITY
ANTENNA: DAYTIME FREQUENCY: 1060 KHZ BL-19970114AB
MONTH START CONVERSION NOMINAL LIMITING
TIME FACTOR POWER-WATTS STATION
JANUARY 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
FEBRUARY 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
MARCH (STD.) 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
MARCH (ADV.) 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
APRIL 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
MAY 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
JUNE 6:00 0.0244 6.0 XEEP
JULY 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
AUGUST 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
SEPTEMBER 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
OCTOBER 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
NOVEMBER (ADV.) 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
NOVEMBER (STD.) 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
DECEMBER 6:00 0.0173 3.0 XEEP
And:
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=1857
REVISED PARAMETERS FOR OPERATION UNDER POST-SUNSET AUTHORITY (PSSA)
FEBRUARY 28, 2007
(Post this letter with your current authorization )
THIS AUTHORIZATION SUPERSEDES ANY PREVIOUS POST-SUNSET AUTHORITY
**********************************************************************
Post-Sunset operation as set forth below is authorized. These values
may not be exceeded, but operation at lower power is permitted.
**********************************************************************
FACILITY ID: 4931 CALCULATIONS BASED ON:
CALL: KIJN CITY: FARWELL STATE: TX LICENSED FACILITY
ANTENNA: DAYTIME FREQUENCY: 1060 KHZ BL-19970114AB
----------------------------------------------------------------------
| MONTH | TIME | POWER | CONV. | | MONTH | TIME | POWER | CONV. |
| | PERIOD | WATTS | FACTOR| | PERIOD | WATTS | FACTOR |
|------------------------------------- -------------------------------
| JAN | 6:00- 7:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | JULY | 9:00-10:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
| | 7:00- 8:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | |10:00-11:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
|------------------------------------- -------------------------------
| FEB | 6:30- 7:30| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | AUG | 8:45- 9:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
| | 7:30- 8:30| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | | 9:45-10:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
|------------------------------------- -------------------------------
| MAR | 7:00- 8:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | SEP | 8:00- 9:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
|(STD.) 8:00- 9:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | | 9:00-10:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
|(TIME) | | | | | | | |
|------------------------------------- -------------------------------
| MAR | 8:00- 9:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | OCT | 7:15- 8:15| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
|(ADV.) 9:00-10:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | | 8:15- 9:15| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
|(TIME) | | | | | | | | |
|------------------------------------- -------------------------------
| APR | 8:30- 9:30| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | NOV | 6:45- 7:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
| | 9:30-10:30| 3.0 | 0.0173 | |(ADV.) 7:45- 8:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
| | | | | | (TIME) | | | |
|------------------------------------- -------------------------------
| MAY | 8:45- 9:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | NOV | 5:45- 6:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
| | 9:45-10:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 | |(STD.) 6:45- 7:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
| | | | | |(TIME) | | | |
|------------------------------------- -------------------------------
| JUN | 9:00-10:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | DEC | 5:45- 6:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
| |10:00-11:00| 3.0 | 0.0173 | | | 6:45- 7:45| 3.0 | 0.0173 |
|---------------------------------------------------------------------
--(All times listed are PM local time) [copied and reformatted by gh]
AM Query is not where psra & pssa info is found. You are very correct
that KIJN has been running all-night for quite a while with no
authorization that I can find. Hope this will allow you to find these
elusive buggers in the future (Wayne Heinen, CO, editor of NRC AM Log,
Sept 5, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Tnx, Wayne. So that means they are authorized 3 watts starting at 6 am
CST/CDT, i.e. 1200/1100 UT, except 6 watts in June (because of
earliest sunrises), and also 3 watts during the specified pm CST/CDT
hours after sunset. The conversion factor has to do with how to
achieve the authorized power with input to the full-power transmitter.
I don`t know why there are two different one-hour time periods in the
evening shown, but what it amounts to is that they have two hours
(only) after official sunset times (0100 UT = 8:00 pm CDT in
September) to remain on the air, with 3 watts. So currently they
should not be on the air at all between 0300 and 1100 UT; my log above
shows I just happened to hear them just past 0300, but I don`t know if
they were about to close down, with all the QRM.
The fact remains that when I hear them in the PSRA or PSSA period,
they can`t possibly be running only three watts. I have read that it`s
difficult-to-impossible to power down many transmitters to that level
even if they wanted to, so it could be the full 10 kW, or anywhere
between there and some reasonably audible lower power at this distance
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. AFTER 57 YEARS, WTMP-AM [sic] Faces New Future Without
Familiar Voices --- By Eric Deggans, Times TV/Media Critic In Print:
Friday, September 2, 2011
WTMP-AM's 57-year tradition of serving as the voice of Tampa's black
community may end today, as new managers take over the programming,
fire the old staff and start a new format.
The new programming may not begin until after Labor Day next week. But
the syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show — one of the most popular
programs among black listeners nationwide — and The Michael Baisden
Show will no longer air on WTMP. [. . .]
http://www.tampabay.com/features/media/article1189220.ece
[. . .] The station's AM signal at 1150 (along with a weaker FM
broadcast at 96.1) also was difficult to hear in many parts of the
Tampa Bay area. Outgoing local sales manager Angela Brewton estimated
about a dozen full- and part-time staffers will lose jobs in the
change (via Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, Florida USA, DXLD)
SEPTEMBER 01, 2011 --- WTMP-AM [sic] MAY END 57-YEAR HISTORY AS VOICE
OF TAMPA'S BLACK COMMUNITY AT 6 P.M. FRIDAY [1150 kHz]
http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/media/content/wtmp-am-may-end-57-year-history-voice-tampas-black-community-6-pm-friday
Tampa radio station WTMP-AM's 57-year tradition of serving as the
voice of the local black community may end Friday, as new managers
take over the programming, firing the staff and starting a new format.
The new programming for WTMP (heard at 1150 on AM and 96.1 FM) may not
begin until after Labor Day next week. But the syndicated Tom Joyner
Morning Show — one of the most popular programs among black listeners
nationwide — and The Michael Baisden Show will no longer air on WTMP.
An executive behind the change would not confirm or deny rumors that
the station will transition to a Spanish-language format at 6 p.m.
Friday.
But former staffers and fans are left feeling as if Tampa’s black
community has lost its biggest broadcast institution — just four years
after a struggle over debt wrested control of WTMP from the black-
owned, family-run media company who had operated it for 10 years.
“It’s like a death in the family,” said Alex Jordann, 53, the
station’s former program director, who was raised in Tampa and
returned to work for the station last year. “It was a voice for the
black community...a station I grew up listening to that inspired me to
get into radio. It’s Tampa without the A’s.”
(See a detailed St. Pete Times story on WTMP's legal and financial
issues by clicking here)
http://www.tampabay.com/news/humaninterest/how-hedge-fund-deal-cost-minority-owners-their-control-of-wtmp-in-tampa/1086601
Starting Friday, WTMP will be programmed by Davidson Media Group, a
company with 32 stations in 12 markets known largely for Hispanic-
centered radio.
WTMP has been at the center of a complex and heated legal battle since
2007, when difficulties in repaying a $20-million loan from a New York
hedge fund led the Florida-based Cherry brothers to lose control of
nine radio stations owned by their Tama Broadcasting Inc., including
the Tampa station.
In 2008, Texas-based Scott Savage was appointed as a receiver in
control of Tama’s broadcast licenses by the hedge fund. Savage said
Davidson Media will pay to run the programing on WTMP, selling
advertising on the station and pocketing any profits.
His hope is that a successful run by Davidson would improve the
station’s value enough for a sale which could repay the loanholder,
now known as Fortress Investment Group.
“We decided to change our direction to a format that is going to
generate more listeners in the next couple of years,” said Savage, who
wouldn’t say what the new format might be and didn’t know when
Davidson Media might implement it.
“(WTMP) is competing against FM stations that have a much better
signal and are owned by the likes of Clear Channel and CBS Radio,” he
added, referencing CBS’s rap-focused WLLD-FM (94.1) and Clear
Channel’s urban station WBTP-FM (95.7). “We did everything we could to
compete as basically an insolvent company.”
But Charles W. Cherry II, the former vice president and general
counsel for Tama, accused the hedge fund and its managers of
destroying in just a few years what took them a decade to build.
“They replaced us with some money-driven outsiders who have no tie to
the community,” said Cherry, whose family still owns the black-
centered, statewide Florida Courier newspaper along with the Daytona
Times and radio stations in Daytona Beach and Greenville, S.C. “If
they knew how to run a radio station, they wouldn’t need to change the
format.”
Cherry, whose younger brother Glenn served as general manager for
WTMP, said they are still appealing court decisions and pursuing
complaints with federal officials. He saw their fate as part of a
larger pattern of Wall Street financiers taking ownership of radio
stations from small, often-black-owned companies and running them with
skeleton crews to minimize expenses before selling them off.
Once known for organizing cleanup campaigns in housing projects and
sponsoring community events, WTMP in recent years relied on syndicated
shows from Joyner and Baisden with a lack of local flavor.
The station’s AM signal (along with a weaker FM broadcast at 96.1),
also was difficult to hear in many part of the Tampa Bay area.
Outgoing local sales manager Angela Brewton estimated about a dozen
full and part-time staffers will lose jobs in the change.
As some hope another radio company may pick up Joyner or Baisden and
continue the format — Cox Radio has a strong urban station in Orlando
which already airs Joyner, WCFB-FM — fans mourn the loss of WTMP’s
over half-century legacy of addressing Tampa’s black community.
“WTMP as we know it now, is gone,” said Jarvis El-Amin, co-host and
producer of Honest Opinion, a talk show discussing community issues
which aired on Saturday mornings. “Now we don’t have an urban radio
station for adults. The community loses. The politicians lose.
Everybody loses.” (via Brock Whaley, HI for DXLD)
WTMP 1150 Egypt Lake, FL --- Noted mid-morning today (Sept. 3) with
tropicale vocals and I confirm the slogan is "la Bahía". Apparently
teasing for gear-up Monday, as no commercials, a couple of long, dead
open carriers heard today. Also, long, canned legal start ID's
(mentioning the puny FM signal way, way north of Tampa first, oddly)
such as at 2337. FM signal is around 4-5 seconds ahead of AM. None of
the music segues, gaps between, as in cheap canned audio.
Maybe they flipped yesterday -- I didn't think to check -- but I did
hit their website mid-day at the office, and it was simply a "WTMP
under construction" placeholder. This appears to confirm the flip was
yesterday, and it's an LMA:
http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/media/content/new-programmer-confirms-switch-spanish-language-format-wtmp-am-now-called-la-bahia
So, I wonder who's under them a little while after post-sunset
enhancement (between those long gaps between songs) with a Braves game
(mention of Chipper Jones). I don't see any obvious format standouts,
but a flagship flipping to a game (and it might not be Braves) is not
unusual. Being that the Braves are playing Los Angeles, that means
it's likely either a GA or north FL station, and I see no likely
possibilities here. And that signal is gone by 0000Z (8 pm
local).
**************************************************************
"It's hard to decide if TV makes morons out of everyone, or if it
mirrors Americans who really are morons to begin with. " ~ Martin Mull
**************************************************************
(Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, Florida, USA 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W;
Florida Low Power Radio Stations:
http://sites.google.com/site/floridadxn/ DX LISTENING DIGEST)
1150, FLORIDA, WTMP. Egypt Lake. This long-time Urban Contemporary
format station has flipped to Spanish. Noted mid-morning September 3
with tropical vocals and the slogan "la Bahía". Apparently teasing for
gear-up Monday, as no commercials, also a couple of dead air periods
heard today. Long, canned Spanish ID's (mentioning the puny FM signal
way, way north of Tampa first, oddly). FM signal is around 4-5 seconds
ahead of AM. None of the music segues and with gaps
between. Maybe they flipped yesterday -- I didn't think to check --
but I did hit their website mid-day at the office, and it was simply a
"WTMP under construction" placeholder. This appears to confirm the
flip was yesterday, and it's an LMA:
http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/media/content/new-programmer-confirms-switch-spanish-language-format-wtmp-am-now-called-la-bahia
1150, GEORGIA, WJEM, Valdosta. 2350 September 4, 2011. Presume the
one, audible between long gaps between songs on local WTMP, with a
Braves game (mention of Chipper Jones). No ID, but they are an ESPN
affiliate, and doubt WSNW, Walhalla at 370 watts despite being a
Braves affiliate station. Gerry Bishop in the FL panhandle confirms
he's heard Braves games from WJEM previously (Terry L Krueger,
Clearwater, Florida USA, 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
WVLZ-1180 AND WKCE-1120 ON WITH HS FOOTBALL
Co-owned daytimers WVLZ-1180 Knoxville TN and WKCE-1120 Maryville TN
are again on at night with HS football games. They're actually running
ads in the newspapers plugging their weekly coverage on both stations,
listing dates and teams through early December.
1120 is Bearden Bulldogs vs. William Blount Governors; 1180 is Alcoa
Tornadoes vs. Loudon Redskins
Don't confuse WVLZ-1180 with daytimer WZQZ Trion GA; they're also on
with HS FB and often burying WVLZ here (Steve Francis, Alcoa,
Tennessee, WTFDA-AM via DXLD)
Steve, I am guessing that both stations will be continuing to run
after-hours then. Even more curious, as I happened to do an archive
search of the Daily Times (the paper serving Blount County TN and the
communities of Alcoa and Maryville) is that high schools signed
agreements with those stations to be their official voice with the
knowledge that they were licensed as daytimers.
An oddity that I discovered regarding radio coverage for TN sports is
that schools designate one (and only one) station to carry their games
ostensibly due to limited room in school pressboxes.
Needless to say, as I found out while in Alcoa/Maryville last week is
that not all stations were happy with this. WBCR (am 1470) as an
example is running little blurbs blasting school officials for their
perceived being locked out in the assignment process; apparently, they
were shocked that Alcoa High went with a licensed daytimer rather than
them when WBCR lost out to AM 1400 WGAP for Maryville games.
Kind of crazy, and I wonder if eventually 1120/1180 will be hearing
from the FCC for this rather obvious breach of their licensing
authority (Mike Pietruk, IRCA via DXLD)
Thanks for this info, Mike! I think I found that archived article by
Googling "daily times" and "radio station barred." My favorite part is
"Officials are aware the radio stations must cease operations at
night, and they're not overly concerned about it."
According to a newspaper ad day before yesterday, 1120/1180 have now
lined up SPONSORS for the night broadcasts (Steve Francis, Alcoa,
Tennessee, ibid.)
** U S A. 1190, Sept 3 at 1214 UT, ad for ``1190 The Fan`` and other
stations in group looking for a sales rep. That leads to KREB in
Bentonville AR, http://1190thefan.com/ (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. 1480, open carrier, UT Sunday Sept 4 at 1224, loops for my
groundwave semi-local in Wichita, KQAM, which is supposedly 24 hours.
1232 recheck, now modulating a gospel huxter who proclaimed it`s
almost 2010 near the end of 2009. Wonder if he`s dead by now like PPP,
DGS, or as good as dead like `Tony Alámo`, Harold Camping (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. Re 11-35: 1510+, Sept 1 at 0544, KCTE Independence MO is
*still* putting a wavering het against 1510.0 stations, for at least
the fifth night in a row, instead of zero-beating *and* turning off
the transmitter at night like it is required to do by license.
1510+, Sept 6 at 1224, sports talk with het from off-frequency KCTE
Independence MO. I need to recheck in the nightmiddle whether this
daytimer is still on the air then as they had been for a week.
1510, Sept 7 at 0522 check, no het, so daytimer KCTE Independence MO
has quit broadcasting at night; someone else had sports talk amid CCI.
Some 6.5 hours later, the wavering het on 1510.8 or so was back,
affirming that KCTE is still off-frequency, in the daytime at least
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
RE: 1510. Just another example of the poor state of AM broadcasting
nowadays. See my post about WTHQ 750 in this section.
http://www.wtfda.info/showthread.php?5089-Wthq-750
FWIW: WTHQ is running properly, lately, but it won't last. You can bet
the ranch on it. It's is back to Right Wing programming, again.
WTHQ's sister station (owned by the same duct-tape & fence-wire
outfit) WRIK-FM 98.3 Metropolis, IL (tx at Golo, KY, 5 miles south of
me) hasn't had any tower lights since early in the Summer.
A year or two ago KMAL 1470 Malden, MO was 700 cycles off frequency,
and ran this way for a week or so, before someone finally took a
screwdriver to it and got it back on frequency.
Several years ago I listened to a 1/4 kW religious station (I forget
who it was, now. I'm gettin' old) from somewhere down in MS, for
better part of a week before I finally heard an ID.
The sad truth is, the FCC is too busy, selling RF spectrum it doesn't
own, to be bothered with enforcement action. 73, (Ed NN2E, Benton KY,
Owner / Operator - Murphy's Law Test Site & Thunderstorm Proving
Grounds, WTFDA AM Forum via DXLD)
** U S A. I was listening to Spanish religion on 1540 and found it to
be coming from KXEL! At least I assume this to be the case - I heard
programming from the Ministerio Vida Victoriosa whose website mentions
broadcasts on KXEL, as does the KXEL website itself, although KXEL
make no mention that the broadcast is in Spanish.
73 (Andrew Brade, UK, Sept 2, MWCircle yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1581,
DXLD)
KXEL was running a Brother Stair programme at 0300. What time did you
hear the Spanish, Andrew? (Paul Crankshaw, ibid.)
In the half hour before 0500 [UT]. Their schedule says Bro. Stair
10.00-11.00 and Alfredo Galván 11.30-12.00 [CDT]. I heard the start
and end of the programme at 0430 and 0500 (Andrew Brade, WORLD OF
RADIO 1581, ibid.)
KXEL program schedule shows `Galvan Revivals`, 7 nights a week at that
time (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
** U S A. MINNESOTA PIRATE ON 1650 KHZ BUSTED IN JULY
http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/FieldNotices/2003/DOC-308327A1.html
Oh, and on 1620 and 1630:
http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/FieldNotices/2003/DOC-308328A1.html
And 1620 in Richmond Hill, NY
http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/FieldNotices/2003/DOC-309312A1.html
(via Terry Krueger, Sept 1, DXLD)
** U S A. Re 11-35: New transmitter site 1660 KRZI Waco --- Pretty big
improvement over Houston! (Bruce Carter, Sept 2, ABDX via DXLD)
** U S A. X-band ESPN radio --- Gente, fíjense un detalle, en el
pequeño DXcamp que hicimos en el aeropuerto de Cinco Saltos (Provincia
de Rio Negro, Argentina) tuvimos muy buena escucha de la ESPN radio en
1700 kHz; lo curioso era el horario 07:50 Hs LU, prácticamente de día
donde estábamos, la distancia era enorme, pero transitando en la
llamada ``Zona gris``? Aquí el video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mogME3omiNU
(Jose Kucher, Sept 6, condiglist yg via DXLD)
¿Cuántos saltos habrá dado la onda en 1700 Khz para llegar a Cinco
Saltos? ¿No es fina la pregunta? Admito que haya una "zona gris". Pero
yo también tengo mía: ¡Es mi materia gris! Con 3/4 litro de Ampakama
me voy lúcido a dormir. Hasta mañana! RGM (Ruben Guillermo Margenet,
ibid.)
A aprox 1500 km por salto, imagino bastantes, jaja; un provechito a tu
salud (Hic) JK (Kucher, ibid.)
They never mention call or location, just a yanqui other than usual
KVNS Brownsville; must be KBGG, Des Moines IA, at 1050 UT (gh)
** U S A. FIRE DESTROYS RADIO STATION STUDIOS
The Hutchinson News, Kansas, September 3, 2011
http://www.firefightingnews.com/article-us.cfm?articleID=100439
An early morning fire Friday destroyed the downtown Hutchinson studios
of radio stations KSKU, KXKU, KNZS and KWHK and caused smoke damage to
Sparks Music and the Wiley Building, which were on opposite sides of
the radio stations at 106 N. Main. Sparks Music and the soda fountain
at Fraese Drug Store in the Wiley building were closed, but Downtown
Development Director Jim Seitnater said other businesses in the 100
block of North Main would be opening Friday despite the inconvenience
of the block being closed to traffic and parking. Fire fighters
remained on the scene as smoke occasionally wafted from the roof, and
Hutchinson Fire Department Inspector Loyal Peevyhouse said they were
awaiting heavy equipment that would be used to begin tearing the
building down.
Peevyhouse said the fire was reported at about 2:30 a.m. The first
unit immediately called for other units to assist. Firefighters began
attacking the fire through the front and rear doors until they noticed
that the roof, which was supported by steel beams, was starting to
come down.
"Then they had to back out and go to a defensive fire," he said. "They
put up the aerial and started squirting water on the roof and spraying
hoses through the front and back doors."
The last employee of the stations had gone home between 10 and 11 p.m.
Thursday, and the stations were playing automated programming until
the fire knocked them off the air.
Cliff Shank, owner of the radio stations, said he had been told that
firefighters found the back door broken open and that the fire might
be arson.
However, Peevyhouse said the fire wasn't being classified as arson at
this point and was simply under investigation. The back door, he said,
had burned away, although the frame and hinges were intact and would
be examined to determine if the door had been open.
Shank said firefighters had been able to pull some of the computers
that held the station's music and commercial library out of the fire,
but he didn't know yet whether they had been damaged by the heat.
Shank said his business was well insured and that he plans to rebuild
on the site. In the meantime, he said, he is looking into the
possibility of setting up a temporary studio in the Wiley Building,
but it would be at least two weeks and possibly a month before the
four stations get back on the air. The stations broadcast from four
towers scattered around Reno County but that the Main Street studio
was the hub for all four and what went out on the air.
The company that owns all four stations is Ad Astra Per Aspera
Broadcasting, which pays homage to the state motto of "To the stars
through difficulty." "And we have some difficulty right now," Shank
said (via Mike Terry, UK, dxldyg via DXLD)
** U S A. RADIO D.J. IN CATSKILLS OFFERED A LIFELINE DURING THE STORM
- NYTimes
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/05/nyregion/radio-dj-in-catskills-offered-a-lifeline-during-the-storm.html
WINDHAM, N.Y. — In these days of smartphones and social media, a
small-town radio D.J. like Big Jay Fink may seem like an improbable
source of emergency information.
But as the banks gave way and the power went down across wide swaths
of the Catskill Mountains during Tropical Storm Irene, Mr. Fink served
as a lifeline for thousands of people who were cut off from just about
all forms of communication and information.
As floodwaters rose on the morning of Aug. 28, Mr. Fink interrupted
the regular Sunday programming on WRIP-FM (97.9); instead of a classic
Casey Kasem countdown, listeners found Mr. Fink — beginning what would
be a 13-hour on-air marathon. He calmly fielded calls from people
trapped by the surging waters and doled out information on makeshift
shelters.
For many of the 49,000 people spread out over the 650-odd square miles
that make up Greene County, Mr. Fink became the voice of the storm.
“The worst of it was the calls from Prattsville; people saying, ‘I am
on the roof of my trailer,’ and asking where their rescue was,” he
said.
Mr. Fink, 54, is an old-school radio guy who got his start at a
university radio station. He was supposed to be on vacation when the
storm hit; he could not afford to go anywhere, so he opted to just
hang out at the radio station, which operates out of an old bowling
alley not far from Windham’s main street.
On Saturday night, as the storm began to rain down, a friend dropped
off a cot so Mr. Fink would be near the microphone if things took a
turn for the worse. On Sunday morning, as the water kept rising, he
began breaking into the station’s programs, giving updates throughout
“Direct Connection,” a Christian radio show, and the Casey Kasem
program.
About 9 a.m., power and a number of the region’s cellphone towers were
knocked out, leaving thousands without any way of communicating.
WRIP’s backup generator kicked in, and the phone, an old-fashioned
land line, started ringing. It has not stopped since.
For days Mr. Fink, who was soon joined by his colleague Joe Loverro,
played matchmaker, soothing stranded residents, taking down numbers to
relay to rescue workers and passing on information about makeshift
shelters and closed roads. The two personalities and other WRIP
employees guided listeners through the arrival of the National Guard,
carrying emergency supplies, to towns like Prattsville, and kept
people apprised of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s trip on Wednesday to that
community, which was devastated by the storm.
People listened, first from radios powered by batteries or generators,
and later from their cars as they drove around to survey the damage,
which may top $1 billion in New York alone, Mr. Cuomo has estimated.
“I don’t know any emergency numbers, and I really would love to know
if anybody can tell me what is happening in Hensonville,” one frantic
caller, Joan, said that Sunday. “My son I know is in his house,
probably on the second floor, and the neighbors are in their house and
I don’t know any number.”
Mr. Fink’s apartment is above a garage near the banks of the Batavia
Kill, which overflowed and flooded much of downtown Windham. He said
that on Sunday night, he fed his cat and rented a room nearby on
higher ground.
Mr. Fink typically takes listeners through the day “playing the
mountaintop’s best music mix, on ‘Midday in the Mountains.’ ” And even
during the peak of the storm’s damage, Mr. Fink would play music
between listeners’ calls, giving him time to try to find out what
stranded residents could not.
He said he was careful in the music he selected. “I didn’t want sad
songs; I didn’t want happy songs,” he said. “I wanted songs about
being together.” He played tunes like Rick Springfield’s “Jesse’s
Girl”; “Hold On,” by Michael Bublé; and the Four Seasons hit
“December, 1963” (it begins with the lyrics “Oh what a night”).
This is not the first time people have recently turned to radio in
times of disaster. After Hurricane Katrina, two radio stations
temporarily combined operations, becoming the United Radio
Broadcasters of New Orleans. Nor is radio the only conduit for
information; in the Catskills, the Web site Watershed Post, which
provides news on the region, started a live blog, connecting residents
and concerned New Yorkers alike searching for information.
But there is no doubt that Mr. Fink and WRIP — named after Rip Van
Winkle, the Washington Irving character whose home was in the
Catskills — served a need. “This is just what we do,” he said. “We are
not a big operation, but we are here, and right now that is what
matters.” (via Kevin Redding, ABDX via DXLD)
** U S A. 96.5, FLORIDA, W243AK, Bradenton. 1713 September 5, 2011.
This one dominating the channel with modern and Southern black
gospel, occasional national ads such as State Farm and General Steel.
Finally, one commercial break with a promo for a local show, "... on
PRAISE 1590 and 96.5 FM." So, it's a WRXB translator and in perfect
parallel to 1590 WRXB, St. Pete Beach, both listed in the FCC dB as
owned by Polnet Communications, Ltd. I wasn't aware of this
translator, at least the audio source (though the translator has been
on active status FCC file since May, 2000). Weak on the PR-D5, when
placed in just the right spot in the room. Looks like owner Ed Edwards
lives in Sarasota. His profile (typowz included) cut-and-pasted from
the WRXB website:
ED EDWARDS IS A VETERAN BROADCASTER HAVING SPENT OVER 35 YEARS IN THE
RADIO & TELEVISION INDUSTRY IN BOTH MANAGEMENT AND "ON AIR" POSITIONS.
ED SPENT FROM 1975 TO 1987 IN THE NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY MARKET WORKING
AT VARIOUS STATIONS INCLUDING WNBC. ED MOVED TO THE TAMPA BAY AREA IN
AUGUST OF 1987 AND WAS APPOINTED OPERATIONS DIRECTOR AT 1280 AM RADIO
IN SARASOTA. ED CONTINUED TO WORK AT VARIOUS STATIONS IN THE AREA,
PRIMARILY AS EITHER GENERAL MANAGER OR DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS NORMALLY
ASSISTING NEW OWNERSHIP WITH FORMAT CHANGES. ED WAS ALSO AN ANNOUNCER
FOR SEVEN YEARS FOR MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALLS CHICAGO WHITE SOX AND THEN
SEVEN YEARS FOR THE CINCINNATI REDS WHILE ALSO DOING FOOTBALL AND
BASKETBALL PLAY BY PLAY DURING THE OFF SEASON. ED’s VOICE CAN BE
HEARD ON I.D.’s, LINERS,AND COMMERCIALS ON NUMEROUS STATIONS ACROSS
THE USA. ED CAME TO WRXB ON FEBRUARY 1 ST 2011 AS GENERAL MANAGER.
OUTSIDE OF BROADCASTING, ED IS AN ACCOMPLISHED BASEBALL COACH POSTING
A CAREER RECORD OF 442 WINS INCLUDING THE 2003 AAU FLORIDA STATE
CHAMPIONSHIP. IN ADDITION,ED IS KNOWN AS "AN EXPERT" ON THE JFK
ASSASSINATION AND SPEAKS AND BROADCASTS LIVE FROM DEALEY PLAZA DALLAS,
TEXAS ON THE ANNIVERSARY EACH NOVEMBER 22ND. AND IS CURRENTLY IN THE
PROCESS OF WRITING A BOOK ON THE SUBJECT. ED IS SINGLE AND LIVES IN
SARASOTA, FLORIDA (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, Florida USA, 27.55.83
N, 82.46.08 W, Florida Low Power Radio Stations:
http://sites.google.com/site/floridadxn/
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** U S A. IS BROADCAST TV DOOMED?
The NAB is running radio and TV ads for http://thefutureoftv.org/
(Larry Russell, MI, MARE Tipsheet 2 Sept via DXLD)
The gist of this (if you drill down to find facts, which are few and
far between in the site!) is the NAB is worried about proposals to
'repack' TV into channels 2-30 and re-allocate 31-51 to the highest
bidder in a 'spectrum auction'. I hadn't heard about that yet, and I
wonder how far along the plans are. Did the 'repacking' from 68
channels to 51 work so well that they FCC wants to try again, and see
if they can't make some more money? Stay tuned for details as they
say.
My 'first blush' take on all this? I'm of two minds. First off, the
NAB has overstated the case quite a bit. They are clearly down-playing
the significance of what this means financially to the fat cats who
run local TV stations, implying the 'greedy' phone companies are
somehow worse for the public than the 'generous and altruistic' TV
stations who provide everything for free. Yeah, right. This site
REALLY twists my lime, so to speak, in that it treats people like
simpletons and ignores the real issues.
The real problem I see is Congress 'buying into' something that has
annoyed me no end when I see it. There is a very LARGE minority of
radio and TV people who are profoundly pessimistic about broadcast
media. They tend to 'drag down' any discussion of what works in
radio/TV and frequently make statements that make you question "so WHY
are you in radio/TV in the first place?'
These folks have so strongly downplayed the significance of over-the-
air media, that it is no wonder the FCC is thinking it is OK to
auction it off to the highest bidder. The folks who use it now don't
value it so what the heck. In short, the broadcast media has done this
to themselves, and now they are squealing like the proverbial stuck
pig.
The practical problem? So long as people spend time in places that
cannot be easily wired, (and so long as there are those of us who
refuse to pay for media) there will be a place for broadcast media.
Those who don't 'get' that may make things sound dire, however, there
is hope provided you find those people and slap them silly until they
stop spreading toxic slander! You have your assignment -- now go out
there and start slapping! :) -kvz (Kenneth Vito Zichi, MI, MARE
Tipsheet 2 Sept via DXLD)
** U S A. Sadly we must pass along news of the passing of a dear
friend of the radio hobby. Those who have attended any of the Winter
SWL Festivals in the past will certainly remember Gerry Kercher. We
pass along our condolences to his family and friends. [obit]
GERALD FREDERICK KERCHER
Waterford, CT - On Sunday afternoon, Aug. 21, 2011, Gerald Frederick
Kercher slipped the surly bonds of earth, put out his hand, and
touched the face of God. He died at home in Quaker Hill as he wished.
Gerald, the third of three sons of Erwin W. and Amanda (Muck) Kercher,
was born on June 9, 1924, in Cass City, Mich. He graduated from Cass
City High School in 1942 and married his high school sweetheart,
Frances Elizabeth Koepfgen, in 1945 at the "Little Church Around the
Corner" in New York City. She died in 1993.
Gerald's interests were many and varied. From his first job after high
school as a coal passer on the Great Lakes Steamship Cygnus to
enlisting in the U.S. Army Air Corps, Gerald's love of his country was
surpassed only by the love for his family. During World War II, Gerald
flew the B26 Martin Marauder In European and North African campaigns,
as a member of the 320th Bomb Group. He was especially proud of his
service during the Berlin Air Lift when he dropped thousands of pounds
of food and medical supplies to the German people.
Following World War II, Gerald served as the base legal officer in
Munich, Germany. Over the next 20 years, the Air Force took Gerald to
Texas, Saudi Arabia, Pennsylvania, and back to Germany where he served
as an agent in the Office of Special Investigation, working with
Belgium and Luxemburg police. He completed his career at bases in
Massachusetts and New York. Just prior to his retirement from the Air
Force in 1965, Gerald flew C-123 cargo planes, ferrying personnel and
cargo to Vietnam.
He retired as a major and began a very different 20-year career as a
commodities broker in New London, working for Goodbody & Co., which
later merged with Merrill Lynch.
In his retirement, Gerald volunteered enthusiastically for
Southeastern Hospice for 18 years, stopping only in the past few
weeks. He was also a tutor for Literacy Volunteers and volunteered his
driving services for the American Red Cross and the local food pantry.
He served as a delightful toastmaster for the First Wednesday Club and
was known for his recitations and spirited singing. He was an
enthusiastic member of Shortwave Radio International [???], attending
their many conferences with special friends around the world.
He was a life long Detroit Tigers fan and died happily knowing that
his team was in first place. Devoted to his faith, Gerald was a member
of the Safe Harbor Assembly of God Church in Uncasville.
Left behind to cherish his memory are his six children and their
families, Susan and Abraham Chamie, Philip and Jet Kercher, Andrew and
Wendy Kercher, Matthew Kercher, Amanda Kercher and David Weinraub, and
Caroline and Craig Thurston. He was very proud of his 13 grandchildren
and three great-grandchildren. He joins in heaven a dear
granddaughter, Kathryn Frances Kercher (Sept CIDX Messenger via DXLD)
Gerald Kercher was once a contributor to Review of International
Broadcasting, but we had not heard from him in a number of years (gh)
** U S A. SPECIAL EVENT AMATEUR RADIO STATIONS MARK TENTH ANNIVERSARY
OF 9/11 --- H.A.D.A.R.S By Keith September 1, 2011
The ARRL reports that in remembrance of those who died in the
terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, several Amateur
Radio Special Event Stations are being planned.
The Pentagon Amateur Radio Club, K4AF, will be on the air 7 AM-9 PM
Saturday, September 10 (1100-0100 UT, Saturday, September 10 through
Sunday, September 11).
Active operating frequencies will be posted during event on the K4AF
website. This Special Event is to honor all those lost on September
11, 2001, with special remembrance of the 184 people who lost their
lives at the Pentagon and on board American Airlines Flight 77.
The Blair Amateur Radio Society, W3PN, will be operating N3U/FLT93
from September 8-15 in memoriam of United Flight 93 that crashed near
Shanksville, Pennsylvania. This year’s activity will take place during
tenth anniversary and the Memorial Dedication for the Victims of
United Flight 93.
To receive a QSL card, please send a self-addressed, stamped envelope
to Blair Amateur Radio Society, W3PN, 112 E Wopsononock Ave, Altoona,
PA 16601.
The Northeast Wireless Radio Club, N2WC, will be on the air Sunday,
September 11 from 12 noon until 6 PM EDT (1700-2300 UT [sic,
misconverted]). NWRC members will be operating in the General class
bands on Phone, CW and Digital; please check the clusters for
frequency updates. You can receive a Special Event QSL card when you
send a $2 donation to Northeast Wireless Radio Club, 213-37 39th
Avenue, Suite 175, Bayside, NY 11361.
The Kings County Repeater Association, KC2RA, will be on the air 9 AM-
5 PM EDT (1300-2100 UT) on Saturday, September 10. Look for KC2RA on
7.250 and 14.295 MHz, as well as EchoLink node 132967 (KC2LEB-R) and
the KC2RA repeater at 146.430 (CTCSS 136.5). KC2RA members will be
offering a special QSL card for the event. To receive a card, please
send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to KC2RA 9/11 Memorial Event,
PO Box 280288, Brooklyn, NY 11228-0288.
The Symbol Technologies Amateur Radio Club, W2SBL, will be on the air
September 10-11 on the following frequencies: 3.911, 7.240, 14.070 and
50.135 MHz, as well as D-STAR REF10C. STARC members will read the name
of a person killed in the attacks with every QSO. A Special Event QSL
card is available when you send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to
Symbol Technologies Amateur Radio Club, W2SBL, One Motorola Plaza, B-
13, Holtsville, NY 11742.
The dates, times and frequencies of these Special Event Stations are
listed as they were reported to the ARRL, and as such are subject to
change. This list will be updated as more Special Event Stations
notify ARRL HQ of their plans. We recommend that you bookmark this
page and check back periodically for any additions. For a listing of
all Special Event Stations, please see the ARRL Special Event Stations
web page.
It is understood that these hams were among those who died in the 9/11
attack:
Broadcast Engineers at World Trade Center 1:
Steven Jacobson N2SJ, WPIX TV
William Steckman WA2ACW, WNBC TV
Gerard "Rod" Coppola KA2KET, WNET TV
Workers in the Twin Towers:
Bob Cirri KA2OTD, Port Authority Policeman
Michael Jacobs AA1GO, Employee at WTC
Winston Grant KA2DRF, Employee at WTC
Winston A. Grant, KA2DRF [er, same as above minus the middle initial]
9/11
http://www.ab9il.net/new-york/tv-september11.html
http://www.necrat.us/nyc911.html
http://hadars.webs.com/apps/blog/?page=2
(via Mike Terry, UK, Sept 6, dxldyg via DXLD)
** VANUATU. 3945, R. Vanuatu, Port Vila. September 01, 0922-0932 slow
island music, female “listen R. Vanuatu”, male “program; weekend”.
35533, (Lúcio Otávio Bobrowiec, Embu SP Brasil, SW40 - Dipoles and
Longwire, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** VENEZUELA [non]. SPECIAL BROADCAST FROM DX PROGRAM "ANTENA DX"
TROUGH SHORTWAVE AND FM --- THERE WILL BE A SPECIAL QSL CARD TO ALL
THE CORRECT RECEPTION REPORTS
During the month of August I was presenting the DX program called
"Antena DX", which is originally produced by my collegue Víctor
Gutiérrez from studios of the Panamanian FM radio station "La Chispa
Estéreo 87.9 FM", in Tortí, and which is rebroadcast through Radio
Truth in Guatemala, as well as available on the web page "Programas
DX" on http://www.programasdx.com
Víctor asked me to produce it during the month of August and I wanted
to do it. It has been a pleasure to me to produce a radio program for
the first time. I have been shortwave listener since many years and I
have contributed as DX correspondent for HCJB Ecuador and currently I
produce a short-five-minutes radio program together with the
International DXers Friendship Club, CDXA Internacional. This short
program is about history of radio.
I think every time I listen to radio or I produce something for radio
I learn new things. Producing "Antena DX" has been a beautiful
experience as well. And of course, it was a good decision I make to
accept the invitation from Víctor to produce his radio program for
this time. Thank you as well for the contributors of the program
around the world and I also thank the listeners.
Next Sunday the 04th will be my last appearance as presenter of the
program. So, for this reason I want to send you a special QSL card as
a souvenir because of the time I have been in front of the mic
recording this.
To receive this QSL card the rules are very simple: what you just have
to do is tune in the program on La Chista Estéreo 87.9 FM, if you live
in Panamá or through Radio Truth on 4055 kHz. As you know or maybe you
may not know, Radio Truth broadcasts from the Central American
Republic of Guatemala.
There will be two broadcasts from WRMI Radio Miami International on
9955. As you can see, there are many chances to tune the program and
to receive this special QSL card as a souvenir to commemorate the last
Antena DX edition from Venezuela.
It's very important for you to know that there will be not e-QSL
cards. Reports might correspond for shortwave or FM broadcasts only.
Please don't send us reception reports through Internet. To send your
reports, please endorse your envelopes by writing the postal address
indicated below. If you want to send us International Reply Coupons,
IRC, or any contribution into American dollars it will be very
appreciated in the way to cover shipping costs. If you also want to
send us cassette recordings or MP3 CD recordings about the reception
of our broadcast in your local area we will be very happy to receive
those.
To send your letters and reception reports you can write to the
following postal address:
Antena DX
c/o Leonardo Santiago
Las Agujas, Pueblo Llano
Estado Mérida
C.P. 5124
Venezuela.
The QSL cards will be sent from the month of October when I return
from my vacation to keep my classes in the University of The Andes.
Thanks for your attention and best 73s!!
Leonardo Santiago, Venezuela
ANTENA DX SPECIAL BROADCAST SCHEDULE
• On La Chispa Estereo 87.9 FM, next Sunday the 11th at 08.15 am and
07.25 pm local time.
• Via Radio Truth the program will be broadcast next Saturday the 10th
at 0200 UT on 4055. This station broadcast from Guatemala and it is
very well reported from Europe as well as from both Japan and
Indonesia.
• Via WRMI Radio Miami International the program will be broadcast on
9955. On Monday the 06th at 1130 UT and on Friday the 08th at 0300 UT.
We wish you good reception and we hope to receive reception reports
from many countries!! (Leonardo Santiago, Sept 2, playdx yg via DXLD)
Days of month or days of week are wrong! Monday = Sept 5, Friday =
Sept 9. Sept 6 = Tuesday, Sept 8 = Thursday; you figure it out?? If
really on Monday at 1130, pre-empts WORLD OF RADIO, vs jamming. O,
here`s the Spanish version (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
• Finalmente, estaremos emitiendo vía WRMI Radio Miami Internacional
por los 9955 kHz como sigue: el próximo día lunes 06 a las 1130 UT y
el jueves 08 a las 0300 UT (esta última equivale al día miércoles 07 a
las 10.30 pm hora de Venezuela). (Santiago, op. cit.)
So he`s still mixed up about the 1130 broadcast but the 0300 means UT
Thursday, not Friday (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Glenn: Yes, there were some errors in their news releases. Here is the
broadcast schedule of the special Antena DX via WRMI:
UT Monday, September 5 at 1130
UT Thursday, September 8 at 0300
And we are adding a third transmission UT Wednesday September 7 at
1130. This special program will pre-empt World of Radio, Frecuencia al
Dia and Wavescan this week (Jeff White, WRMI, Sept 4, DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
Dear friends: There was a mistake about the second broadcast schedule
about the special transmission of the Spanish language program "Antena
DX" through WRMI Radio Miami International. THE RIGHT DATE FOR THE
SECOND TRANSMISSION OF THE PROGRAM WILL BE ON THURSDAY THE 08TH AT
0300 UT. The rest of the schedule has not problems.
I hope you enjoy the program. There will be a beautiful music section
at the end of the program. So, it doesn't matter if you don't
understand Spanish very well because you'll enjoy music anyways.
I'm so sorry for the mistake. And please share this new information
with your friends.
Thanks to Mr. Akayabashi in Japan and Mr. Gupta in India for the full
publication of the previous information. Thanks as well to all of you
who have shared this with your partners and dx friends around the
world. Again, thank you so much in advance.
PD. If you listen to the program and you decide to send us your
report, even though when the reports will be accepted through the
postal mail only, don't forget to send us your e-mail address anyways,
please, and the name of your dx club, or the electronic address of
your dx blog if you have one. Thanks! Sincerely yours, (Leonardo
Santiago, Venezuela, playdx yg via DXLD) Anyhow, publicized in advance
correctly in the dxldyg
** VIETNAM [non]. Wikileaks contain reports of US embassy Hanoi
regarding evangelical Hmong ministry broadcasts via FEBA PHL to Lao
Cai province in the border region with China.
WIRKUNG RELIGIOESER RADIOSENDER IN VIETNAM
(Botschaftsberichte Wikileaks)
Wie aus Presse, Funk und Fernsehen bekannt sein duerfte, wurden in
diesen Tage die kompletten, d. h. unredigierten, Berichte von
amerikanischen Botschaften und Konsulaten ("diplomatic cables")
bekannt, die bisher nur in bearbeiteten Auszuegen bekannt waren.
Es handelt sich um eine 1.7 GB grosse Textdatei (reiner Text) mit
insgesamt fast 34 Millionen Zeilen. Ich habe das Dokument gestern
neugierhalber heruntergeladen und nach dem Begriff "shortwave"
durchsucht.
Man erfaehrt dabei, dass die Kurzwelle in einigen Teile der Welt nach
wie vor eine grosse Rolle spielt; zu nennen sind hier u. a. Myanmar
(Burma), Nordkorea und Westafrika.
Bemerkenswert ist ein Bericht der amerikanischen Botschaft Hanoi aus
dem Mai 2006 ueber die Reise einer Botschaftsdelegation in die
noerdliche Provinz Lao Cai. Zweck der Reise war die Sammlung von
Informationen zur Religionsfreiheit.
Die amerikanischen Diplomaten erhielten von oertlichen Offiziellen
(also staatlichen Stellen, keine Kirchenangehoerigen) Auskuenfte
darueber, wie sich unter der (in Vietnam verfolgten) Minderheit der
Hmong der christliche Glaube ausbreiten konnte. Offenbar war dies das
Resultat von christlichen Sendungen aus den Philippinen (hierbei muss
es sich wohl um die FEBA handeln) Ende der 80er, Anfang der 90er
Jahre, also zu einer Zeit, als das Land noch weitaus verschlossener
war als heute. Woertlich heisst es in dem Bericht (die Dokumente sind
durchweg in Grossbuchstaben geschrieben):
Why are the H'mong Becoming Protestants? -
20. (SBU) During the descent from San Ma Sao village, the provincial
and district officials were in a much more open mood and gave Poloff a
history of Protestantism in the region. According to Cap, H'mong
villagers in the north first learned about evangelical Christianity
through shortwave radio broadcasts originating in the Philippines in
the late 1980s and early 1990s. Local officials did not notice H'mong
Protestantism until 1993, by which time it had become a widespread
phenomenon in the border region with China.
Demnach haben also die Kurzwellensendungen eine erhebliche Wirkung
entfaltet (Wolfgang Thiele-D, A-DX Sept 2 via BC-DX 3 Sept via DXLD)
Geez, the Hmong must have been so suggestible; or maybe they were
overwhelmed that anyone took an interest in their language (gh, DXLD)
** ZAMBIA. ZNBC1. 5915 Lusaka. 2011/09/01 Thursday. 1625-1630 Afro
music. Fair - poor. Jo'burg sunset 1556.
ZNBC2 (6165) and ZNBC1 (5915) Lusaka. 2011/09/02 Friday. From 0352 to
0355 found ZNBC2 on 6165 talking about local politics, then football.
Unusually good this morning.
Prompted by good reception of ZNBC2, went back down the band to check
ZNBC1 on 5915. From 0355-0406 found perfect interference-free and
fade-free Afro music with announcements in Kaonde. ID at 0401 "Zambia
National Broadcasting Corporation", followed by news ? in Kaonde.
Excellent. Targetted to Southern Africa (EiBi). Jo'burg sunrise 0420
(Bill Bingham, RSA, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
** ZANZIBAR. Hi Glenn, My long spiel about Zanzibar might lend some
support to Graham's log reported in DXLD 11-33, especially since
sunrise is now about 30 minutes earlier than when he logged it in Cape
Town at 0505 on 3rd August. FWIW, Cape Town sunrise is about 45
minutes behind Jo'burg.
Tanzania, Radio Tanzania Zanzibar, 6015, Dole. 2011/09/02 Friday.
0257-0308. Usually when I sit on this frequency around 0300 I hear
them sign on, but today there is nothing. I like to hear this station.
Although reception is seldom good, and I can't understand a word
because it is never in English, it always brings back memories of an
idyllic childhood holiday there almost a lifetime ago. Just nothing
there today. Jo'burg sunrise 0420.
Tried again next day, 2011/09/03 Saturday. *0258-0455, Yes, Zanzibar
is back! I wonder what happened to them yesterday? Anthem followed by
time pips at 0300, and ID "Zanzibar". OM with greeting in Swahili,
then Kor`an to 0307. Back to OM, he goes into a monologue mentioning
"Tanzania". At 0317 brief Indian-style music, then a second monologue
by another OM talking in an echoey room (quite audible). He mentions
"Islam" and "Zanzibar". More Indian-style music at 0331 followed by ID
"Zanzibar" and another long monologue by yet another OM; he mentioned
"Dar es Salaam". More IDs at 0344 then OMs and YLs with more
conversational presentation and pre-recorded inserts / interviews,
sounds like a current affairs programme with several mentions of
"Tanzania" and "Zanzibar". Time pips at 0400 with id "Tanzania
Zanzibar", followed by news; mainly local with lots of mentions of
"Zanzibar" and a couple of "Sudan".
Contradicting my comment yesterday, reception is very good at 0300,
deteriorating to good by 0330. According to http://www.timeanddate.com
sunrise in Zanzibar today is at 0323, so it's already daylight there.
Continued to deteriorate rapidly, just fair by 0340, will start
getting light here soon. Dawn underway here by 0350, deterioration
continues. Briefly improved to good once again at 0356, then the
decline continued. By 0410 increasing atmospheric noise and deep fades
make it almost unreadable at times. Adjacent channel QRM, presumably
CRI via Sackville, necessitates use of narrow passband. Daylight here
by 0415, sunrise at 0419, so we now have a (just) daylight path to
Zanzibar. Although Zanzibar is still there at 0430 it is almost
entirely unreadable. By 0450 it is gone, leaving only the echoes of
distant childhood memories (Bill Bingham, RSA, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
Hi Bill, Thank you for such a detailed report of Zanzibar. Always
interesting to get first hand information from a listener much closer
to them than I am. You motivated me to head out to my local beach here
in central California to try and duplicate your reception. My local
sunset was at 0234; while as you indicate Zanzibar sunrise was 0323.
Highlights are as follow for September 4 reception on 6015:
0254 Transmitter on.
*0258-0300 Usual Xylophone or marimba sounding IS.
0300 Adjacent QRM --- indistinct.
0301 YL talking.
0301-0307 Reciting from the Qur`an.
0307-0330 Monologue by OM (0315 brief break in monologue).
0330-0340 YL talking.
0340-0342 Qur`an or Islamic singing/chanting.
After 0344 mostly lost to adjacent QRM, QRN and faded down. This was
not my best reception of them, but confident it was Zanzibar. Their
format is very consistent. Thanks again Bill for all your informative
reports from South Africa! (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, USA,
Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)
6015, Radio Tanzania Zanzibar. Interesting to note that Bill Bingham
(South Africa) found them off the air on September 2. Checking from
0304 to 0400 on September 7, I also found them noticeably absent (Ron
Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
** ZIMBABWE [non]. See BOTSWANA
UNIDENTIFIED. 700, 1106 September 5, 2011. Suspect Radio la Poderosa,
Managua (the one the WRTVH consistently refuses to list), strong and
alone on the channel with female gospel monologue, mentioning nombre,
palabra, Israel etc. Into vocal 1114, female back at 1117 mentioning,
"... en la voz de la..." (suspect just a passing phrase or program
title). Rapidly faded and gone by 1120. If the one, it may still be
1100-ish sign-on as per my loggings last year (Terry L Krueger,
Clearwater, Florida USA, 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W, Abridged list of
junk: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Hammarlund HQ-180A; Aqua Guide 705
Radio Direction Finder; Sangean PR-D5; Sony ICF-7600GR; GE SuperRadio
III; RadioShack DX-399; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X in-room random wire, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. 990, Sept 5 at 1212, talk in English about the history
of Fort Osage, dominating frequency at the moment, certainly not SS
KFCD in TX. There is no 990 in OK, but the closest to Osage country is
KRMO in Cassville, SW Missouri. Supposedly has `Hot Country Music`
until 1245 weekdays, but probably a brief feature:
http://www.krmo.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=63&Itemid=66
Fort Osage is/was axually in NW Missouri near Independence where there
are no 990s (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. 1610, Sept 6 at 0346, low-level CCI but brief surge of
one signal with gospel huxter in English, not // 5935, so not
Anguilla. Canadian? This ought to be a prime DX frequency with no US
stations except TIS on it, but difficult here tnx to IBOC from KATZ-
1600 St Louis; Hallelujah! I still haven`t logged XEUACH (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. 4779.85, 0210-0218, ???, 02.09, with Spanish talk, very
weak audio, 13221 (Anker Petersen, from Skovlunde, Denmark on an AOR
AR7030PLUS with 28 metres of longwire, via Dario Monferini, playdx yg
via DXLD)
UNIDENTIFIED. 5066.34 weak carrier here around 0344 UT on 3 Sep. Is
Bunia / La Voix du Peuple still here? Have not seen any logs of this
station for a while (John Wilkins, Wheat Ridge, Colorado, Drake R-8,
100-foot RW, Cumbre DX via DXLD)
Referred him to DXLD 11-33 with four July-August logs close to same
frequency, but all in the Eurafrican evening. See also CONGO DR in
this issue (Glenn Hauser, DXLD)
UNIDENTIFIED. 6075.74, Instrumental elevator music at 0917. Didn't
hear much more than that. Splatter from 6090. (5 Sept.) 73 (Dave
Valko, NRD-535D and T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
UNIDENTIFIED. 6075,72v 16.8 2330 OID stn hördes här första gången hos
mig den 16.8 De spelade mx i LA stil med kort prat emellan. Mycket
svårt att få fram talet tydligt men om en inspelning från 27.8 säger
Henrik Klemetz: ”Kl 01.04 är det mycket troligt att hon säger ”Radio
Kawsachun Coca” mycket snabbt. Ingenting annat kan jag säkert
uppfatta, mer än att det låter som spanska. Det är fö ganska speciellt
att det är en kvinnlig hallåa denna gång”. Efter detta har vi båda
tyckt att, då en man talar, påminner det lite om PP! Men
tidsangivelserna är helt klart på spanska. Jag har ännu inte lyckats
få fram en inspelning där talet är klart hörbart och ID-bart. Tack HK!
AN
6075.72v, 16.8 2330, unID station heard this the first time at my
place on Aug 16. They played music in LA style with short talks
between. Very difficult to hear the speech clearly but in a recording
from Aug 27 Henrik Klemetz says: "At 1:04, it is very likely that she
says" Radio Kawsachun Coca "very quickly. I can’t with certainty
understand more than that it sounds like Spanish. It is a little
special that it is a female announcer this time”.
After this, we both felt that, when a man speaks, it reminds a bit of
Portuguese! But time statements are clearly in Spanish. I have not yet
succeeded in producing a recording where speech is clearly audible and
identifiable. HK, thanks for your help! AN (Arne Nilsson, Sweden, SW
Bulletin Sept 4, translated by editor Thomas Nilsson for DX LISTENING
DIGEST)
6075.726, 31.8 0218, unID. Still no luck getting a definite ID on this
on this one having very low modulated speech. The music is easier to
hear. Unfortunately the station has mostly music and very seldom any
announcements. Henrik Klemetz has listened to several recordings where
I managed to record some of the weak talk but unfortunately he
couldn’t find any ID’s in those recordings. Many thanks for your
efforts, Henrik. I had set my Perseus for recording this one also on
Sept 1 & 2, but nothing there. Today, Sept 3, my recording was set for
start already at 2345z. The station was there but rather weak. China
switched on their 6075 transmitter at 2356 for one hour broadcast.
Monitoring the unID revealed a much earlier cd than before, this night
already at 0029! Unfortunately their webstream was offline also this
day so not possible to check for parallels. TN (Thomas Nilson, Sweden,
SW Bulletin Sept 4 via DXLD)
Henrik Klemetz continues to research this one, and now seems more like
it is an unknown Brazilian (gh)
UNIDENTIFIED. 6104.74, Definite carrier here at 1003. Too weak and
heavy QRM from 6105 Asian. Thought I did hear music though. I hesitate
to suggest the Mexican Candela FM. (4 Sept.) (Dave Valko, NRD-535D and
T2FD antenna, Dunlo, PA, USA, HCDX via DXLD)
UNIDENTIFIED. 6925.4, Sept 3 at 0518 weak music on AM, some pirate, no
comparison to the signal on 6960-USB so I stayed with that, see NORTH
AMERICA (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. 9300, Sept 3 at 1232, intriguing big hum on small signal
again, the kind of thing one would expect from Cairo, but no
broadcaster listed on this frequency in HFCC, Aoki or EiBi (Glenn
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. 9568.4, Sept 1 at 1409 carrier making het with 9570.
Suspected Ethiopia longpath, as there was no het closer to its nominal
9560 which had a weak signal from something, probably KSDA, while 9570
was probably KBSWR (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. 11435.0, Sept 2 at 0604, huge S9+25 open carrier, then
variety of digital noises on and off, slight fading; far stronger than
any SWBC signal on 25m. Suspect something out of Cuba associated with
spy-number transmissions. {If RHC had forgotten to close down 11760 at
0500, bet it would have rivalled.} Yes, here`s an old log searched on
UDXF yg:
``11435.0 kHz am Cuban SK01. Huge carrier +40dB 06:26:11UTC (2010-10-
01) (allenk on StarChat#wunclub) These are the loggings from the NSA
logbot on several IRC channels. They are listed by Freq, Mode,
Comment, UTC time, nickname, QTH and IRC channel`` (Glenn Hauser, OK,
DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. Nothing heard of big broadcaster on 11500 today Sep 2.
At 1300-1400 UT slot, only very tiny peak noted on various European
SDR units as well as on Victor's unit in Colombo, thanks Victor.
11499.974 kHz, which probably seems a SOH Taiwan tiny tx unit. 73
wolfy (Wolfgang Büschel, Germany, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. 14640, unID, very poor carrier and traces of audio,
presumed 2 x 7320, 1240 UT Sept 2 (Tim Bucknall, Mobile in North
Staffordshire, Icom IC-7000 + "Modulator" CB whip, harmonics yg via
DXLD) 7320 would be Magadan/Arman/Okhotsk until 1300 (gh)
UNIDENTIFIED [non]. 15283, quite odd frequency, RFA?? 1319 5 Sept with
talks in Tibetan. There is QRM from 15280 with Firedrake and buzzing
audio. Both signals with max S7 (Zacharias Liangas, Greece, DX
LISTENING DIGEST)
Don`t you consult Aoki? RFA doesn`t vary to split frequencies, but
it`s a hallmark of V. of Tibet, currently shown in Aoki as:
15282 1301-1330 TJK * VOICE OF TIBET Tib Dushanbe-Ya 1-7
15283 1401-1430 TJK * VOICE OF TIBET Tib Dushanbe-Ya 1-7
(Glenn Hauser, ibid.)
UNIDENTIFIED. 15419-USB, Sept 6 at 1356, caught a snatch of Spanish 2-
way, I think, another intruder frequency, with BFO het from weak
broadcast on 15420 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
UNIDENTIFIED. New transmissions in Tigrigna or Amharic or Oromo:
1500-1600 on 15730 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF
1700-1800 on 15750 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF
Also test transmissions:
1500-1530 on 15790 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF, Aug. 30/31 // 15730
1530-1600 on 15710 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF, Sep. 2 // 15730
1700-1800 on 15760 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF, Sep. 2 // 15750
1730-1800 on 15770 KCH 300 kW / 170 deg to EaAF, Aug 30 only // 15750
Radio Xoriyo Ogadenia in Somali (tent.):
1530-1600 on 17590 KCH 300 kW / 160 deg to EaAF Mon/Fri, but heard
only on Friday. 73! (Ivo Ivanov, Bulgaria, Sept 3, DX LISTENING
DIGEST) see also ETHIOPIA [non]; PRIDNESTROVYE
UNIDENTIFIED. 18255, 3 x 6085, long monologue OM, sounded Spanish.
Pips at toth, very poor 1200 UT Sept 2 (Tim Bucknall, Mobile in North
Staffordshire, Icom IC-7000 + "Modulator" CB whip, harmonics yg via
DXLD) No idea (gh)
UNIDENTIFIED. 21650, 21605, 21740 & 21785 VOA Chinese best audible in
NFM mode. No idea which is the Fundamental, maybe 21650? Sign-off with
Yankee Doodle 1100 UT, carrier off 1103 Sept 2 (Tim Bucknall, Mobile
in North Staffordshire, Icom IC-7000 + "Modulator" CB whip, harmonics
yg via DXLD)
Well, skipping 21695, they are 45 kHz apart, none listed in HFCC. The
midpoint would be 21695, anything there? HFCC does have 21695 as 0900-
1100, 250 kW, 349 degrees from Tinang, PHILIPPINES (Glenn Hauser, DX
LISTENING DIGEST) unID on 21695, didn't get time to ID (Tim, ibid.)
UNIDENTIFIED. I'm hearing a harmonic/spur/fat-finger of some
broadcaster on 24910 kHz. The signal is fairly weak here, fading in
and out, but I think I'm hearing some Spanish language talking in-
between the music. I am hearing the signal right now, Sat Sep 3, 2244
UT and would be interested to know if anyone else is hearing it. --
All rights reversed (Rik Van Riel, harmonics yg via DXLD)
Rik, Nothing when checked an hour later. 24910 does not work out to be
harmonic of any likely SWBC fundamental. 24910 is now of course in a
ham band. Are you still in New Hampshire? 73, (Glenn Hauser, OK,
ibid.)
Indeed, the signal went off at the top of the hour. I am still in NH,
and I suspect it'll be some broadcast spur, but not sure of what (Rik,
ibid.)
Looked for it next day Sept 4 after 2200, but nothing (gh, DXLD)
UNIDENTIFIED. [Besides 96.5 BELIZE, and GUATEMALA, q.v.:] A few other
Spanish Central Americans, all unidentified: 87.5 (on the PR-D5, maybe
really 87.75 analog TV 6 audio), possibly Honduran, with male
seemingly Christian talk, mention of Honduras at 1413; 89.3 Mexi-tubas
vocals at 1416; 90.1 ad string into romántica and "Let It Rain On Me"
androgynous Cher-like processed dance vocal at 1507; 90.9 Mexi-tunes
at 1401. The opening was pretty much gone by 1540 (Terry L Krueger,
Clearwater, Florida USA, 27.55.83 N, 82.46.08 W, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS
++++++++++++++++++++++++
Dear Mr Hauser, Thank you so much for your work producing World of
Radio. I enclose a small check to support the program. I love the
program and listen to it multiple times during the week. Keep up the
good work!!!
I sent a signal report to WRMI verifying weak reception of your show.
They sent a nice QSL card that referred to World of Radio. This
reception was out of the ordinary for me in northern New York because
I am not able to receive their signals regularly. The only stations I
am able to receive that broadcast your program are WTWW, WBCQ, and
formerly WWCR. I use a Grundig S350DL with an indoor long wire antenna
in my office. Sincerely (Jason F. Poplaski, KB3SAR, Watertown NY,
August 18, DX LISTENING DIGEST 11-34, WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
CONVENTIONS & CONFERENCES
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
B11 HFCC/ASBU Conference, DALLAS, TEXAS, SEPT 12-16, 2011
Conference Sponsors: Continental Electronics and the National
Association of Shortwave Broadcasters
Conference Dates: Monday-Friday, Sept. 12-16, 2011
http://www.hfcc.org/B11.phtml
(via DXLD)
MEETING OF THE EUROPEAN DX COUNCIL IN BULGARIA
Radio Bulgaria, By Rossitsa Petcova, 29 August 2011
The annual meeting of the European DX council has been taking place
since 1967 when the organization was set up. Driven by their love for
radio listening and their passion for DXing and sharing new worlds,
several enthusiasts decided to embark on a more large-scale
initiative.
In the 1950s and 1960s, national DX-Clubs appeared in a few European
countries. Many people listened to domestic and foreign broadcasts on
long, medium and shortwave. At that time, broadcasting on FM, TV and
via satellite or the Internet did not exist! So the hobby of listening
to far-away radio stations (DX-ing) mainly on short waves was
thriving.
In 1965, Ellmann Ellingsen of the DX-listeners Club of Norway got the
vision to establish a cross-national DX-organisation to improve the
cooperation between DX-Clubs in Europe. At the inaugural meeting on
June 3rd-4th, 1967, DX-leaders from Denmark, Finland, Germany, the
Netherlands, Norway and Sweden met to discuss and agree upon the
foundation of the EDXC. The central venue was the private house of
Anker Petersen in Skovlunde near Copenhagen, who also attended the
meeting in Bulgaria.
Presently, members of the EDXC can become DX Clubs and organizations
but also individual DXers from Europe.
So, some of them did arrive in Bulgaria for this year’s annual meeting
that took place in the small picturesque town of Melnik at the
foothill of the Pirin Mountain, famous for its beautiful old-time
architecture and good wine cellars. You have certainly heard more
about it in our programs.
Why was Melnik chosen to become the venue of this DX forum? Has DXing
nowadays become a hobby of old-fashioned ladies and gentlemen? And how
has Bulgaria changed from the 1980s until present day?
More on this and other radio related issues from the secretary general
of the EDXcouncil, Mr. Tibor Szilagyi, in his special interview taken
during the visit of DXers to Radio Bulgaria’s foreign service in
Sofia.
We were really lucky to have such a large group of DXers and short-
wave radio listeners as our guests here, in Sofia. And we hope that
more of you will be coming here, either to Melnik, Plovdiv, the Black
sea coast, or anywhere in Bulgaria. Here we would like to thank once
again Mr. Tibor Szilagyi and all members of the EDX Council for having
chosen Bulgaria as their venue and for visiting us. We also thank
everyone else on the group - Anker Petersen from Denmark, Engineer
Harald Süss from Austria, Toshimichi Ohtake and Nobuya Kato from
Japan, Gerald Kercher and Craig Thorston from the US, George Brown
from Scotland, Dave Kenny from the UK, Alexander Beryozkin and Alexey
Kulakov from Russia, Harald Gabler from Germany, and the 29 DXers from
Finland, including the youngest in the group, Jan-Mikael Nurmela who
is only 22, Tapio Kalmi, Pekka Rasanen, Herni Ekman, Jarmo Patala and
everyone else.
We all believe that the medium of radio might seem to be an old-
fashioned hobby nowadays given the enormous competition of all types
of electronic gadgets. Nevertheless, there is nothing that could
replace the thrill and enjoyment of listening to your favorite radio
station!
Keep writing to us, keep sending us your reception reports, opinions,
and musical requests! You could write to us at english@bnr. bg, or
send letters by regular mail to: Sofia 1040, Dragan Tsankov Blvd 4,
Radio Bulgaria.
http://bnr.bg/sites/en/Lifestyle/DX/Pages/MeetingoftheEuropeanDXCouncilinBulgaria.aspx
(There is also an audio of an interview with Tibor and photo here)
(via Mike Terry, dxldyg via DXLD)
DXERS MEET AT KOLKATA
Veteran & newbies join for a DX meet at Kolkata, read the story here :
http://idxci.blogspot.com/2011/09/putting-dx-army-together-kolkata.html
(Alokesh Gupta, VU3BSE, New Delhi, Sept 4, dx_sasia yg via DXLD)
Includes several photos to go with familiar names (gh, DXLD)
NEW DOCUMENTARY FILM INCLUDES SCENE FROM SHORTWAVE LISTENERS
CONVENTION Posted: 01 Sep 2011
Movie Reviews by Dusty, 20 Aug 2011: "Resurrect Dead is not a flesh-
eating zombie flick. It’s more of a film-noir documentary that follows
a team of average citizens using their noodles to solve a mystery. The
Toynbee Tiles started appearing in the early 80's. Most people ignored
and walked over them without a thought. They appeared most densely in
the Philadelphia area, but they have been spotted all over the East
coast. If that's not enough to pique your interest, there are also
Tiles in South America. ... The mystery leads our fearless sleuths to
places where skepticism is a must.
They find themselves at a short wave radio convention where they are
following a lead. There is a scene here that is completely unrelated
to the Tiles. A presenter at the convention gives a speech and
demonstration of thought transference via short wave radio. ... The
apparatus was a foil pie plate that he wore like a hat, with an
antennae on top, or bottom depending on how you wish to view the pie
plate." (kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
-- The shortwave radio convention was the 2006 Winter SWL Fest, near
Philadelphia. The thought transfer session was tongue-in-cheek. I was
at the event, but in another room at the time, trying to coax
reception out of receivers at the Digital Radio Mondiale exhibit. See
also http://www.resurrectdead.com (Kim Andrew Elliott, ibid.)
WORLD OF HOROLOGY See also ISRAEL [and non]
+++++++++++++++++
Time [STANDARD, AND SHIFTED] ---- Southgate August 30, 2011
Time zones and standard time do not concern the average citizen but
they have considerable importance to some organisations (such as
airlines and communications providers) and some individuals (such as
radio amateurs.)
From antiquity time was determined by each community, based on the sun
reaching its zenith at noon. So over a country such as Britain, there
was a multiplicity of times. This was probably of no particular
importance until the advent of the railways.
Railway operators found scheduling of trips and timetabling was a
nightmare. Consequently each railway company set their own time. The
implementation of this was possible through the telegraph that came on
the scene at an opportune time. Ultimately London time was adopted as
he standard for Britain although it was not until 1880 that this was
enshrined in legislation.
Other countries adopted the principle of standard time, particularly
as their railway networks developed. This revealed another problem
when the railway networks extended over long distances east and west.
So the concept of time zones was developed, to cover the sun’s
apparent movement of fifteen degrees each hour. The zones were
manipulated by each country that determined what time zone should be
observed and where boundaries would be placed when a country embraced
more than one time zone.
The early circumnavigating mariners discovered that on arrival at
their port of origin that their calculation of the date was one day
adrift. This had to be taken into consideration in allocating time
zone boundaries. So, the International Date Line was created along
longitudes of low population in the central Pacific and therefore less
likely to be a problem.
As the British were the instigators of the standardization of time,
the longitude at the Royal Observatory at Greenwich was adopted as the
global time standard. Hence Greenwich Mean Time, GMT. After a century
of its adoption GMT is no longer the global standard and Universal
Time Coordinated UTC has taken its place. There is no practical
difference between GMT and UTC apart from a few nanoseconds.
Another aspect of how communities adjust their use of standard time is
Daylight Saving, or Summer Time, when Clocks are advanced an hour to
give more daylight in the evening. This has sociological influence and
some commentators allege that it reduces the expenditure of energy.
However this allegation has not been proved. How Summer Time is
implemented is something of a can of worms that will be explained in a
later article
Interesting articles on time can be found on our web site at
http://www.fistsdownunder.org//-%20New%20Folder/Standard%20Time.html
Our thanks to Fists Down Under for this item
http://www.fistsdownunder.org/
http://www.southgatearc.org/news/august2011/time.htm
(via Mike Terry, dxldyg via DXLD)
DIGITAL BROADCASTING --- IBOC see also MEXICO; BRAZIL
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
FIRST KIA VEHICLES TO OFFER HD RADIO(TM) TECHNOLOGY ARE NOW AVAILABLE
press release Sept. 6, 2011, 4:15 p.m. EDT
HD Radio(TM) Technology is offered on 2012 model year Optima, Sorento,
Sportage and Soul . . .
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/first-kia-vehicles-to-offer-hd-radiotm-technology-are-now-available-2011-09-06
(via Kevin Redding, ABDX via DXLD)
DIGITAL BROADCASTING --- DRM See also BRAZIL; CUBA; GUAM; GUIANA
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ FRENCH; INDIA; IRELAND; POLAND; RUSSIA
MSway receivers interview
http://drmna.bcdx.org/wp/?p=856#more-856
(via Benn Kobb, Aug 31, DXLD)
Re: [drmna] New DRMNA post: MSway Receiver Interview
Thanks for the link. The consumer version appears to be as useless as
all that have come before it -- there is no provision to let the user
tune manually to a frequency -- which is ESSENTIAL in the unreliable
world of shortwave.
This company has apparently NOT learned anything from the failures of
the recent past Morphy-Richards, the incredibly horrid UniWave (which
lasted about a month or two on the market) that I unfortunately own,
etc. If you have any contact with this company, please tell them to
put "manual tune in 5 kHz increments on shortwave" and "manual tune in
9/10 kHz increments on AM" into the radio's firmware! The manual tune
must also be able to go "up-and down" (Byung Jay, male, Redford MI,
Aug 31, drmna yg via DXLD)
Fraunhofer Launches MultimediaPlayer to Deliver Unprecedented Digital
Radio Offerings --- Press Release 30.08.2011
http://www.iis.fraunhofer.de/en/pr/presse/2011/august/multimedia.jsp
(via Alokesh Gupta dxldyg and gh, DXLD)
DIGITAL BROADCASTING --- DAB See AUSTRALIA; U K
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
POWERLINE COMMUNICATIONS
++++++++++++++++++++++++
SO WHEN YOUR NEIGHBOR'S XAVB2602 INTERFERES WITH YOUR SHORTWAVE
RECEPTION, TURN ON YOUR VACUUM CLEANER AND HAIR DRYER.
Posted: 01 Sep 2011
Netgear press release, 31 Aug 2011: "Netgear, Inc., a global
networking company that delivers innovative products to consumers,
businesses and service providers, today introduced the Powerline AV+
200 Nano Dual-port Set (XAVB2602)... The Powerline Nano Dual-port Set
features a tiny adapter that plugs into any electrical outlet and
provides two Ethernet ports for connecting Internet-enabled devices
such as TVs, PCs, Blu-ray(TM) players and video game consoles to home
networks. Powerline networking, which makes connections through a
home's existing electric wiring, is ideal for reaching rooms beyond
the range of WiFi signals, without the cost and complication of
installing Ethernet cables. ...
Interference from devices that emit electrical noise, such as vacuum
cleaners and hair dryers, may adversely affect performance. Powerline
devices may interfere with devices such as lighting systems that have
a dimmer switch, short wave radios, or other powerline devices that do
not follow the HomePlug Powerline Alliance standard."
(kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)
BPL TAKES TO THE SEAS
Broadband by Powerline (BPL) networking technology (aka PLT) has a
reputation for causing widespread interference to radio reception. Now
there are plans to install them at sea. London-based company Gentay
Ltd has announced Broadband by Powerline (BPL) networking technology
devices for use on vessels. Further details at
http://www.gentay.co.uk/
(Southgate September 4, 2011 via Mike Terry, dxldyg via DXLD)
RADIO EQUIPMENT FORUM
+++++++++++++++++++++
RE: POWER LINE NOISE, BULBS
I've been converting house lights to CFLs and LEDs. For low light
applications, the LED bulbs [Lights of America or whatever at walmart]
work well. For CFLs I've been using name brands like Phillips rather
than 'bargain brands'. My experience with the CFLs is that they
radiate RFI about 4 to 6 feet then go quiet. The only place where this
caused trouble was a fixture 3 feet from my Zenith ZTO H500. I
replaced that CFL with an LED and all was well. The other CFLs some 10
or so feet away cause no RFI to this vintage tube tradio at all.
Now, I haven't tried CFLs in table lamps at home, but they sure cause
grief in hotel rooms. Which has me wondering if the ground wire used
in ceiling fixtures etc. assists.
Or, maybe hotels just use cheapo CFLs and the premium priced ones I
insist on [sounds like a 1950s ad for tubes :)] are way better, aka
use quality capacitors to zap out RFI rather than no capacitors or
poor quality ones that fizzel out fast.
I was treated much like Bob by Maritime Electric (ME). From the books
on RFI I have read, ME could save themselves a small fortune by
cooperating in the way Bruce W. experienced. By contrast, ME treated
me like a small child: ME knew better, had investigated and determined
there to be no interference in my neighbourhood. End of subject.
"Today's RFI is tomorrow's power outage" is my motto. I've got so that
I can now predict ME power outages in our neighbourhood. When I hear
new buzzing, fizzling sounds on my noble army of DX receivers, an
outage usually follows within a couple days.
I hope the two grocery stores that recently lost a fortune of food
here in Stratford [and ended up closing for the better part of a
business day] after ME had some old equipment blow up will put some
good old fashioned legal heat on ME. Outages in winter storms are
understandable, but most of ME's outages are in good weather and, it
seems, due to old equipment they are too cheap to replace.
In the old days of AM radio and over the air TV, RFI complaints were
followed up to some extent. AM radio is extinct in PEI, and 99.9% of
the population is either on cable, fibre or a large pizza sized dish.
DXers and Hams are the only reporters left. Show us some respect, ME
(Phil Rafuse, VY2PR, Stratford PE Canada, ABDX via DXLD)
FCC AFFIRMS DENIAL OF CB DXING PETITION
http://www.eham.net/articles/2342
(via Terry Krueger, FL, DXLD)
A LOT OF PERSEUS SDRS FOR SALE
Has anyone else noticed the very large number of Perseus SDRs for sale
on eBay of late? I'm always curious on the why's and wherefore's of
this phenomenon. Have people tired of the Perseus? Have they moved on
to other SDRs?
By coincidence, I noticed a very professional user manual (in English)
for the WinRadio Excalibur Pro which was recently introduced. I don't
have an Excalibur, nor have any plans to purchase one anytime soon,
but perhaps having some of these niceties would benefit the Perseus
user.
Seems to me that looking here, there, and everywhere for information
on some of the finer points of Perseus use is problematic, and if
anything, may scare people away from purchasing the Perseus, or push
them to move onto a device that has the proper documentation for the
beginner to intermediate user. My guess that the softening of Perseus
SDR prices on the used market is directly attributable to the very
attractive introductory price of the Excalibur. No plans, yet, on my
part to part with either of my two Perseii, however! (/Walt Salmaniw,
Victoria, BC (Copied from perseus_SDR@yahoogroups.com via SW Bulletin
Sept 4 via DXLD)
Hi Walt, Excalibur and other competition might be a factor. However I
think the main reason is RF SMOG pollution in most cities. This
pollution is a direct result of not enforcing the EMC compatibility
laws.
Every day I buy some new gadget I need to go on a RFI noise hunt in
the house. What shocks me is that leading international brands, that
have numerous compliance and other EMC approval ticks on them are the
worst performers. Their EMC compliance labels are totally fraudulent
and well above most standards.
If you want evidence, just tune most of the online Perseus receivers.
Only a handful have an acceptable noise floors, and most have
horrendous noise floors that make them unusable. Except for very short
skip conditions like that on 40 or 80 meters you cant hear much. Some
of the big broadcasters can punch through this noise not the weak
signals.
So with all this noise you can never have weak signal reception. Why
would you bother spending money on something just to listen to very
bad noise?
The days of low noise reception even in residential areas even with
under ground power lines is impossible because of the hash from things
like Plasma TV's. Policy makers know that they destroying the
shortwave spectrum because they assume that engineering filters and
EMC compliance is hard and expensive. All that they have done is fall
victim to the lobbying by big business who are just as happy polluting
the environment as they are at polluting the RF spectrum and
everything else that they touch.
They also at the same time creating a unbalanced playing field for
those who must obey these laws in their daily business activities. The
big winners are the Chinese companies who place fake compliance
stickers on all their products. We in the West are a bunch of idiots
when it comes to things like fair trade with place like China and
Asia.
There is a solution to this problem with good engineering practice and
standards. However we need politicians that will first enforce the
existing laws and then tighten them up. Then can we blame the Chinese
only? No we have people who sell receivers who also supply power
supply jammers in the same box. When you jam yourself with a crap
power supply, can you blame the Chinese when you yourself have the
same stupidity and foresight? (/John, ibid.)
It may be simply statistics. With thousands of Perseus sold, if 1% of
the users changes his mind, you have tens of radios on the market. The
remaining 99% is not changing of place... /73 - (Marco IK1ODO, ibid.)
Hello John, Your statement regarding improper EMC measures on consumer
products stands. However, I believe that many problems are due to a
failing antenna installation. With proper measures, like using a
separate radio ground for the antenna with no connection to the mains
earth, things are not as bad as it seems.
I also found that when using an E-field probe, you can benefit from
the shielding that many houses provide for the E-field. In my case
this shielding is 32 dB at a frequency of 400 kHz. As a result local
noise in the E-field will be contained within the house. The antenna
is mounted only 6 meter from the house. The shield of the coax is
connected to an earth stake, which prevents the noise from within the
house to travel to the antenna.
Over the years, I have installed all types of energy saving lamps and
computer gadgets and so far the only issue encountered is a minor
problem with the switching power supply of my Samsung NC10. You are
welcome to visit my PERSEUS on-line (/Roelof Bakker, pa0rdt
Middelburg, Netherlands, ibid.)
I had some big noise problems near 3.9 MHz, and after some
investigation I finally found the cause of this noise. It was a
faulty USB cable, the one connected to the Perseus. After I check with
a ohm meter I discover it had not a good shielding or ground. I bought
home a HQ type of USB cable with double shielding, gold plated
connectors and ferrite cores on both ends. The drop in background
noise was big, specially in the 3.9 MHz region, about 14db drop in
noise. Overall it is now less noise on most frequency's.
Also I ground all antennas to an earth stake near the masts and a
second stake near the radio. I have also put multiple snap together
type of ferrite choke cores on all coax cables and rotator cable
entering the house. So now the noise situation is much better than
when I first bought the Perseus. It's not just a very good radio but
also an analysis tool. It may be worthwhile to check out these USB
cables. Just because the cable looks good from the outside, it doesn't
mean it has to be good inside. /73, (Peter, ibid.)
REVIEW OF THE ALINCO DX-R8T TABLETOP SHORTWAVE RECEIVER
Last year, when I saw the announcement that a new tabletop radio ---
the Alinco DX-R8T --- was about to hit the market, I almost fell out
of my chair. A new tabletop on the market? Could it be true?
Over the past few years, many long-time manufacturers have dropped out
of the shortwave tabletop market, while newer, smaller manufacturers
have been popping up in the SDR (Software Defined Radio) market.
SDRs are great–a lot of performance for the price–but to listen to the
radio, you have to turn on your computer, launch a program, and
typically, do things to isolate any noise your computer may generate.
A tabletop, on the other hand, simply requires that you turn it on:
instantly, it’s there, awaiting tuning. Obviously, I was eager to try
out the DX-R8T. Fortunately, the good folks at GRE America (the
US distributor for Alinco) kindly loaned me one of their receivers to
review for SWLing.com. . .
http://swling.com/blog/2011/09/alinco-dx-r8t-review/
To visit “The SWLing Post”, please go to http://swling.com/blog/
Unfortunately the author of the article is not mentioned (Don Moman,
Technical Talks, Sept CIDX Messenger via DXLD)
The CCrane "CCGozo"
Saw this on the Herculodge http://herculodge.typepad.com/herculodge/
blog this morning:
New Radio Alert: C.C. GOZO Scheduled for October 1 Sale
Thanks, See picture and info:
http://www.ccrane.com/radios/am-fm-radios/ccgozo.aspx
Anybody know anything about the radio other than what's on the
website?? 73 & Good DX'ing, (Stephen H. Ponder, N5WBI, Houston, Texas,
USA - EL29kn, Sept 6, NRC-AM via DXLD) Says now expected Oct 21, but
price will go up for orders after Oct 1. It`s AM/FM only (gh, DXLD)
FCC ISSUES DRAFT PEA
The FCC has released a draft document concerning the effects of
broadcast towers on migratory birds. The doc is entitled, "Draft
Programmatic Environmental Assessment of the Antenna Structure
Registration Program," or "Draft PEA" for short. It is 148 pages in
length. Comments are due October 3, 2011.
The following article by Doug Lung gives an overview of the document
and provides a link to the 148 page masterpiece. Slowly, we are all
drowning in Washington verbiage.
http://tvtechnology.com/article/123988
FCC NEWS
o A general freeze is impacting TV Channel 51:
http://www.commlawcenter.com/2011/08/by-scott-r-flick-the.html
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-11-1428A1.doc
o Deborah McAdams on the pending loss of TV Channel 51 --
"It's clear at this point that the wireless industry will stop
at nothing to eliminate broadcasting."
http://www.televisionbroadcast.com/article/123834
o More info on the upcoming November 9 nationwide EAS test:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-11-1444A1.doc
o FCC Chairman Genachowski announces elimination of 83
outdated rules:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-309224A1.doc
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-11-1432A1.doc
o While eliminating the Fairness Doctrine from the FCC rules (re the
above story), the Commission also eliminated the "Final RF Link" rule
to the delight of many:
http://tinyurl.com/FinalLinkIsHistory
o Digital Low Power Television rules are now in effect:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-11-1446A1.doc
o Comment deadline extended in LPFM/FM Translator rule making due to
Hurricane Irene. Comments due 9/6/2011. Reply Comments due 9/20/2011:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-11-1467A1.doc
o Devices on display this month at the FCC's Technology Experience
Center include a "cell tower in a suitcase" designed to allow first
responders and disaster recovery personnel to connect to cell phones
by connecting to satellites for voice and data:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-309379A1.doc
FCC ENFORCEMENT WATCH
o Willie Walton has been cited for operating a pirate broadcast
station on 1610 kHz in Santa Clarita, CA. The FCC noted both field
strength and antenna violations in its Notice of Unlicensed Operation:
http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/FieldNotices/2003/DOC-309212A1.html
o Esteven J. Gutierrez has tentatively been fined $25,000 for
operating on a frequency licensed to the Las Vegas, New Mexico, Police
Department (159.150 MHz) without authorization, and other matters.
This case report reads like a good crime novel. Congratulations to the
San Diego FCC field office for a job well done:
http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/2011/DA-11-1475A1.html
o Radio World's Paul McLane in an editorial on pirate broadcasting:
http://radioworld.com/article/no-rules-no-community/24241
NEWS HELICOPTERS MAY EVENTUALLY BE AUGMENTED OR REPLACED BY REMOTE-
CONTROLLED DRONES
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) are making their way into the
commercial sector. Consider the following miniature quad-copters and
hex-copters. These are anything but toys.
Quad-copters and hex-copters use gyro stabilization (to keep the
aircraft level), yaw-axis stabilization (to keep the 'copter from
spinning in the horizontal plane), a high-resolution camera mounted in
an image stabilization pod, computer control, GPS navigation, secure
RF links and a robust power source.
It's great to see engineers compressing so much advanced technology
into very small and lightweight aircraft that will make their way into
the civilian sector.
http://tinyurl.com/VideoQuadcopter
http://tinyurl.com/VideoHexcptr
http://www.aeryon.com/
http://tinyurl.com/RoboCopterProgress
o Paul Sakrison points out that there is a Website for posting
copper/precious metals thefts:
http://www.scraptheftalert.com/
HEATHKIT TO SELL KITS AGAIN
Heathkit is reentering the kit business with consumer products.
According to their Website, "We will be releasing Garage Parking
Assistant kit (GPA-100) in late September and soon after the Wireless
Swimming Pool Monitor kit will be available."
The Garage Parking Assistant kit lets you build your own system that
uses ultrasonic sound waves to locate your car as it enters the
garage. LED lights mounted on the wall indicate when the car is in the
perfect spot for parking. http://www.heathkit.com/
(all: CGC Communicator Sept 5 via Kevin Redding, ABDX via DXLD)
THE RETURN OF HEATHKIT
http://www.arrl.org/news/surfin-got-heathkits
Surfin’: Got Heathkits? TAGS: amateur radio, amateur radio operators,
dummy load, great news, heathkit, radio kits, Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU
blog 09/02/2011 By Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU Contributing Editor
This week, Surfin’ celebrates Heathkit’s reentry into the kit
business. This story was buried by all the coverage of the East Coast
earthquake and hurricane last week, so in case you missed it, Heathkit
is back in the business of producing kits. Here are a few pertinent
quotes from the news article that appeared here last weekend.
“A notice on the Heathkit website announces that the venerable kit
manufacturer -- well-known to all Amateur Radio operators of a certain
age -- will be reentering the kit business in late August.”
Heathkit “is actively looking for kit suggestions” and their website
has great news in that regard. “Based on your input, we are looking at
developing Amateur Radio kits. Our goal is to have kits available by
the end of year.”
It is hard to believe that almost 20 years have passed since the
Heathkit exited the kit business. I cut my teeth building Heathkits
and it was a sad day when they pulled the plug.
I had absolutely zero soldering skills when I built my first Heathkit,
the HR-10B ham receiver, yet I managed to build the receiver by
following their excellent step-by-step instructions. It popped a fuse
when I powered it up the first time, but nothing smoked. Cold solder
joints were the culprit and some skilled soldering quickly brought the
receiver to life.
I had better luck out of the box with my second kit, the DX-60B ham
transmitter, which worked the first time I powered it. And with that
success, there was no stopping me. Soon a collection of Heathkit ham
radio equipment soon filled my ham shack shelves and a series of
Heathkit AM-FM receivers were the centerpieces of my HiFi component
system.
These were complicated kits, but the kit instructions were so good
that even a dummy load like me could build them successfully. So I
look forward to the new Heathkit radio kits. I would love to build
something again that worked. Until next time, keep on surfin’!
Editor’s note: Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU, built Aurora monster kits before
he built Heathkits. To contact Stan, send e-mail or add comments to
the WA1LOU blog (via R Smith, DXLD)
Has the company still been in business meanwhile making something
else? Hard to imagine non-kits with that name (gh, DXLD)
IRCs HARD TO GET, POST OFFICE MAY GO UNDER
Item of interest to US-based DXer's and QSL hounds
Dear All, I saw this in the New York Times, courtesy of rotten.com,
and I have to say it has me completely shocked. It seems the US Post
Office is essentially bankrupt, and if it defaults on a payment this
month (as expected), it may have to close for the winter!
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/05/business/in-internet-age-postal-service-struggles-to-stay-solvent-and-relevant.html?_r=1
And after all the advertisements on TV stating that they were solely
supported by the sale of stamps, without any funding from the federal
government. The Postmaster General and Congress are in an emergency
meeting tomorrow to decide what to do about the situation. Since
Homeland Security is involved with this somehow, I expect any solution
to incorporate a right to rifle our mail without warrants and at will.
This may really be a push for email QSLs and eQSL.cc services!
Another interesting experience I had the other day was attempting to
purchase IRCs. No one in the Lehigh County, Pennsylvania had them
except the Main Post Office. They are now at $2.10 each, and they only
had 19 of them. Initially the guy tried to sell me IRCs that had been
redeemed, as he did not know what they were, until corrected by an
employee with more tenure. They wound up not being able to sell those
19 to me at all, because they could not get the sales code to work in
their computers! I finally wound up buying them online from
shop.usps.com and they should arrive tomorrow.
So this is what we've come to! Time to privatize, like the Deutsche
Post and the Austrian Mail. Service and customer satisfaction soared
after they privatized. Our postal employees are mostly grumpy and
unhelpful/unfriendly to boot, at least around here. If they actually
had to compete for business and earn a living, it might change their
whole attitude.
Tomorrow's emergency session should prove interesting! 73 (Al Muick,
Whitehall, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania USA, Sept 5, HCDX via DXLD)
I don't know what your source of information is, Albert. Maybe
statistics from the mentioned companies themselves. The German post
was privatized in 1994. Although the old system was a reason for jokes
as long as it existed, I would be happy to get it back.
You will hardly find well trained (well paid) employees outside of the
few main post office stations, in all these small agencies which are
now part of bakeries or flower shops.
Expanded opening hours? Forget it, a shop may be opened, while the
post agency in it stays closed because their contract does not require
(and the payment does not allow) a better customer service. A second
counter opened because of demand? Better avoid these places before
Easter or Xmas. IRCs are unknown there, too.
It is still better than no post office at all, agreed. But don't
expect more from privatization.
vy 73, (Willi Passmann, Germany, http://www.radio-portal.org/sdr.html
SDR-Special http://www.4shared.com/dir/5567845/166a39bd/sharing.html
Perseus Databases - Third Party Software Guide & more, HCDX via DXLD)
As you can see, we must define ``radio equipment`` very broadly,
including accessories like IRCs! (gh, DXLD)
PROPAGATION
+++++++++++
SOLAR-ACTIVITY FORECAST FOR THE PERIOD SEP 2 - 8, 2011
Activity level: mostly very low to low
Radio flux (10.7 cm): a fluctuation in the range 115-90 f.u.
Flares: weak (4-12/day), middle (0-1/period)
Relative sunspot number: in the range 80-110
Astronomical Institute, Solar Dept., Ondrejov, Czech Republic
e-mail: sunwatch(at) asu.cas.cz
(RWC Prague)
____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _
Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period Sep 2 to Sep 8.
quiet: Sep 2 to Sep 8
quiet to unsettled: Sep 4
unsettled: Sep 3
active: 0
minor storm: 0
major storm: 0
severe storm: 0
Geomagnetic activity summary:
geomagnetic field was quiet from Aug 26 to Aug 31.
RWC Prague, Geophysical Institute Prague, Geomagnetic Dept,
Czech Republic
e-mail: geom(at)ig.cas. cz
____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _
Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period of one solar rotation
Geomagnetic field during the following solar rotation should be:
quiet: Sep 7, 9, 13 - 14, 16 - 17, 21, 27 - 28
mostly quiet: Sep 5 - 6, 8, 15, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26
quiet to unsettled: Sep 2, 4, 10 - 12, 19, 23, 25
quiet to active: Sep 19
quiet to minor storm: -
quiet to major storm: Sep 3
mostly unsettled: -
unsettled to active: -
unsettled to minor storm: -
active to minor storm: -
active to major storm: -
minor to major storm: -
Survey: quiet: Aug 30 - 31
mostly quiet: Aug 25, 27 - 28
quiet to unsettled: Aug 26, 29
quiet to active: Aug 23 - 24
quiet to minor storm: -
quiet to major storm: -
mostly unsettled: -
unsettled to active: -
unsettled to minor storm: -
active to minor storm: -
active to major storm: -
minor to major storm: -
Notices:
High probability of changes in solar wind which may caused
changes in magnetosphere and ionosphere is expected about
Sep 3, (8 - 10,) 11 (- 12), 18 - 19, 24.
Days in brackets refer to a lower probability of possible
activity enhancements depending on previous development
on the Sun.
F. K. Janda (OK1HH), Czech Propagation Interested Group e-mail:
ok1hh(at)rsys.cz (via Dario Monferini, Sept 1, playdx yg via DXLD)
SOLAR-ACTIVITY FORECAST FOR THE PERIOD SEP 9 - 15, 2011
Activity level: mostly low to moderate
Radio flux (10.7 cm): a fluctuation in the range 95-120 f.u.
Flares: weak (3-10/day), middle (1-3/period), large (0-2/period)
Relative sunspot number: in the range 80-100
Astronomical Institute, Solar Dept., Ondrejov, Czech Republic
e-mail: sunwatch(at)asu.cas.cz (RWC Prague)
Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period Sep 9 to Sep 15, 2011
quiet: Sep 14 and 15
quiet to unsettled: Sep 13
unsettled: Sep 12
active: Sep 11
minor storm: Sep 9 and 10
major storm: 0
severe storm: 0
Geomagnetic activity summary:
geomagnetic field was quiet on Sep 1, 2, 5, 6 and 7,
unsettled on Sep 3 and 4.
RWC Prague, Geophysical Institute Prague, Geomagnetic Dept,
Czech Republic e-mail: geom(at)ig.cas.cz
Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period of one solar rotation
Geomagnetic field during the following solar rotation should be:
quiet: Sep 15 - 18, 27 - 28
mostly quiet: Sep 13 - 14, 26, 29
quiet to unsettled: Sep 19, 24 - 25
quiet to active: Sep 11 - 12, Oct 4 - 5
quiet to minor storm: Sep 9, 20
quiet to major storm: -
mostly unsettled: -
unsettled to active: Sep 21 - 23, 30, Oct 1 - 3
unsettled to minor storm: Sep 10
active to minor storm: -
active to major storm: -
minor to major storm: -
Survey: quiet: Aug 31, Sep 1
mostly quiet: Sep 6
quiet to unsettled: Sep 2, 4 - 5, 7
quiet to active: -
quiet to minor storm: -
quiet to major storm: -
mostly unsettled: Sep 3
unsettled to active: -
unsettled to minor storm: -
active to minor storm: -
active to major storm: -
minor to major storm: -
Notices:
High probability of changes in solar wind which may caused
changes in magnetosphere and ionosphere is expected about
Sep 9 - 12, 18 - 19, 24, 29, Oct 1.
Days in brackets refer to a lower probability of possible
activity enhancements depending on previous development
on the Sun.
F. K. Janda (OK1HH), Czech Propagation Interested Group
e-mail: ok1hh(at)rsys.cz (via DXLD)
NVIS PROPAGATION PREDIXIONS FOR MIAMI, ANYWAY
Utah State University has a Space Weather Center web site, where
they have been posting frequency availability related to
communications with the National Hurricane Center in Miami. You can
see current and projected NVIS (Near Vertical Incidence Skywave)
coverage across the Eastern Seaboard, as well as worldwide
propagation maps for 75, 40 and 20 meters centered on Miami.
Take a look at
http://spaceweather.usu.edu/htm/emergency-hf-communication-hurricane-irene
(QST de W1AW, Propagation Forecast Bulletin 35 ARLP035, From Tad Cook,
K7RA, Seattle, WA September 2, 2011, To all radio amateurs via Dave
Raycroft, ODXA yg via DXLD
WHEN IS MAXIMUM D-LAYER ABSORPTION?
... so that absolutely NO skywave is possible on the AM BCB??
For example, let's say a signal on 1700 kHz is strong enough (as the
skywave reaches the lower limit of the D-layer for its first hop) to
spontaneously inflict severe enough RF burns to require immediate
advanced medical intervention for survival. At approximately what time
of the day, year, solar cycle would it be absolutely impossible to
detect any trace of that QRSS CW, PSK5 or other efficient-mode signal,
no matter WHAT sophisticated radio + antenna setup you're using in an
area at least 12,000 miles from the nearest power grid or thunderstorm
activity?? Or if it never absorbs that much, how close does it get and
when?
I've sometimes noticed traces of mid morning/afternoon skywave (at
least 3 hours after sunrise / 3 hours before sunset) using my portable
radio and loop antenna even in March/April and September/October or
thereabouts. I've especially noticed this with 1670 KHPY fading in and
out, sometimes even within a couple hours of noon and within a couple
months of the summer solstice.? Considering that I'd guess a
sophisticated receiver+antenna setup is probably at least 100-120 dB
more sensitive than my PL-606 and Select-A-Tenna, I wonder if they can
get skywave all day even in summer (even if it's extremely weak)?
(Stephen Airy, Sept 5, IRCA mailing list via DXLD)
Anywhere around the summer solstice at midday (1 pm Daylight time).
But because sunrise and sunset are not equidistant from noon, and the
differences in length of day are minimal at that time of year, one
would be safe suggesting a couple of hours around midday anytime
between June 15 and June 26 (Russ Edmunds, 15 mi NNW of Philadelphia,
ibid.)
SUMMARY: X-Ray Event exceeded X1 (R3)
Space Weather Message Code: SUMX01
Serial Number: 71
Issue Time: 2011 Sep 06 2247 UTC
SUMMARY: X-ray Event exceeded X1
Begin Time: 2011 Sep 06 2212 UTC
Maximum Time: 2011 Sep 06 2220 UTC
End Time: 2011 Sep 06 2224 UTC
X-ray Class: X2.1
Optical Class: 2b
Location: N14W18
NOAA Scale: R3 - Strong
NOAA Space Weather Scale descriptions can be found at
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/NOAAscales
(SWPC 2247 UT Sept 6 via DXLD)
SUMMARY: X-Ray Event exceeded X1 (R3)
Space Weather Message Code: SUMX01
Serial Number: 72
Issue Time: 2011 Sep 07 2254 UTC
SUMMARY: X-ray Event exceeded X1
Begin Time: 2011 Sep 07 2232 UTC
Maximum Time: 2011 Sep 07 2238 UTC
End Time: 2011 Sep 07 2244 UTC
X-ray Class: X1.8
Optical Class: 3b
Location: N14W28
NOAA Scale: R3 - Strong
NOAA Space Weather Scale descriptions can be found at
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/NOAAscales
(SWPC 2244 UT Sept 7 via DXLD)
Geomagnetic field activity began the week at generally quiet to
unsettled levels with isolated active and minor storm periods at high
latitudes due to a negative polarity coronal hole high speed stream
(CH HSS). Activity decreased to mostly quiet levels for 30 August - 02
September. Activity increased to quiet to unsettled levels with
isolated active periods at high latitudes for 03 - 04 September. An
isolated major storm period occurred at high latitudes during 03/0900
- 1200 UTC. Solar wind data indicated a solar sector boundary crossing
on 02 September at about 1000 UTC, and a co-rotating interaction
region on 03 September at about 0100 UTC followed by a negative
polarity CH HSS.
FORECAST OF SOLAR AND GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY 7 SEPTEMBER-3 OCTOBER 2011
Solar activity is expected to be low with M-class activity likely and
a slight chance for X-class activity through 11 September when Region
1283 rotates off the disk. A decrease to very low to low levels is
expected from 12 - 17 September. An increase to low to moderate levels
is expected as old Regions 1286 and 1283 return and transit the disk
from 18 September through the remainder of the forecast period.
A slight chance for proton events is expected at geosynchronous orbit
until 12 September.
The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is
expected to be at high levels 07 - 08 September, followed by normal to
moderate levels for 09 - 12 September. High levels are expected 13 -
14 September, followed by another decrease to normal to moderate
levels for 15 - 28 September. High levels resume 29 - 30 September.
Normal to moderate levels are expected 01 - 03 October.
Geomagnetic field activity is expected to be at mostly quiet levels
through 09 September. Activity is expected to increase to unsettled to
active levels 10 - 13 September with the arrival of a coronal mass
ejection coupled with a CH HSS. Mostly quiet levels will prevail from
14 - 29 September. An increase to unsettled is expected 30 September -
01 October due to another recurrent CH HSS. Quiet levels will
predominate for 02 - 03 October.
:Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt
:Issued: 2011 Sep 06 2004 UTC
# Prepared by the US Dept. of Commerce, NOAA, Space Weather Prediction
Center
# Product description and SWPC contact on the Web
# http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/wwire.html
#
# 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table
# Issued 2011-09-06
#
# UTC Radio Flux Planetary Largest
# Date 10.7 cm A Index Kp Index
2011 Sep 07 115 5 2
2011 Sep 08 110 5 2
2011 Sep 09 105 5 2
2011 Sep 10 100 18 4
2011 Sep 11 100 15 3
2011 Sep 12 100 10 3
2011 Sep 13 100 8 3
2011 Sep 14 100 5 2
2011 Sep 15 100 5 2
2011 Sep 16 103 5 2
2011 Sep 17 103 5 2
2011 Sep 18 105 7 2
2011 Sep 19 105 7 2
2011 Sep 20 105 5 2
2011 Sep 21 105 5 2
2011 Sep 22 105 5 2
2011 Sep 23 103 5 2
2011 Sep 24 100 7 2
2011 Sep 25 100 7 2
2011 Sep 26 100 5 2
2011 Sep 27 105 5 2
2011 Sep 28 110 5 2
2011 Sep 29 110 5 2
2011 Sep 30 110 10 3
2011 Oct 01 110 8 3
2011 Oct 02 110 5 2
2011 Oct 03 110 5 2
(SWPC via WORLD OF RADIO 1581, DXLD)
TIPS FOR RATIONAL LIVING
++++++++++++++++++++++++
Happy Labor Day! --- On Labor Day - To the August Body assembled:
Labor Day is much more than a three day weekend. Its more than the
family gathering at one of the members house for steaks, burgers,
dogs, and cold ones. Its more than the football game on the television
and radio. Its a celebration of the common American workers, and the
unions that created the holiday in New York in 1886. Our great great
grandparents, great grandparents and grandparents have given us much
and on Labor Day we salute them for what they have done for us and
what working America does for us today.
Thank you to all the workers and unionists like American Federation of
Television and Radio Artists, American Radio Association,
Communication Workers of America, International Federation of
Professional and Technical Engineers, Transportation Communications
International Union and the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers who put their lives on the line to give us things like lunch
breaks, 8 hour days, vacation time, sick days, unemployment insurance,
workmens compensation, retirement plans, good pay, health insurance,
job safety programs, and more.
Many were jailed and some even killed to give this legacy to us. We
salute them for making our lives better than they had. God bless all
the working men and women of this nation, they are what makes this
country as magnificent as it is. Its not the government or the
corporations that make us great, it is the working men and women of
this nation. Happy Labor Day! May we continue to be strong workers and
leaders of the nation as our great grandparents were. Labor Vincit
Omnia! 73 (Kevin Redding, Crump, TN, Sept 5, ABDX via DXLD)
Well said; except it`s Labor Omnia Vincit, as every Okie should know
(gh, Enid, DXLD) ###