DX LISTENING DIGEST 12-30, July 25, 2012 Incorporating REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING edited by Glenn Hauser, http://www.worldofradio.com Items from DXLD may be reproduced and re-reproduced only if full credit be maintained at all stages and we be provided exchange copies. DXLD may not be reposted in its entirety without permission. Materials taken from Arctic or originating from Olle Alm and not having a commercial copyright are exempt from all restrictions of noncommercial, noncopyrighted reusage except for full credits For restrixions and searchable 2012 contents archive see http://www.worldofradio.com/dxldmid.html NOTE: If you are a regular reader of DXLD, and a source of DX news but have not been sending it directly to us, please consider yourself obligated to do so. Thanks, Glenn WORLD OF RADIO 1627 HEADLINES: *DX and stations news about: Australia, Bahamas, Bermuda, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia and non, Germany, Indonesia, Iran, Kashmir, Korea North, Mexico, Myanmar, Nigeria, Oklahoma, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Rwanda, Solomon Islands, Somaliland, Syria, Taiwan non, Ukraine, USA SHORTWAVE AIRINGS OF WORLD OF RADIO 1627, July 26-August 1, 2012 Thu 0330 WRMI 9955 [confirmed on webcast] Thu 2100 WTWW 9479 [confirmed] Fri 0329v WWRB 5050 Sat 0130v WBCQ 5110v-CUSB Area 51 Sat 0630 HLR 7265 Hamburger Lokal Radio [new regular time] 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 0500 WRMI 9955 Mon 1130 WRMI 9955 Tue 0930 HLR 5980 Hamburger Lokal Radio Thu 0330 WRMI 9955 [or maybe 1628 if ready in time] 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://www.wrn.org/listeners/#world-of-radio WORLD OF RADIO PODCASTS VIA WRN: http://www.wrn.org/listeners/customize-panel/addToPlaylist/98/09:00:00UTC/English OUR ONDEMAND AUDIO: http://www.worldofradio.com/audiomid.html or http://wor.worldofradio.org DAY-BY-DAY ARCHIVE OF GLENN HAUSER`S LOG REPORTS: Unedited, uncondensed, unchanged from original version, many of them too complex, minutely researched, multi-frequency, opinionated, inconsequential, off-topic, or lengthy for some log editors to manage; and also ahead of their availability in these weekly issues: http://www.hard-core-dx.com/index.php?topic=Hauser 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/ ** ALASKA. It took years to finally ID KBRW [Barrow] for me living on the Northern Oregon Coast. KNBR SF is a powerhouse here running 50 kW ND 24/7. It is easier to log stations to the East on 680, that North. Plus CHFA is in the way. I knew I had logged KBRW in the past, but I could never get an ID from them. The format matched, but at ID time, too much KNBR, until a few years ago during a very good Northern opening that gave KBRW a slight edge in signal. I caught their weather forecast, IDs, and even IDs for their translators. But it wasn't easy phasing down KNBR enough. KBRW is a good verifier too. I have their bumper sticker on the back of my van. Living in AK for 12-1/2 years (55-67), AK has always been an interest to me. I only need a few stations to have them all, so I keep trying from Fall to Spring KTKN-930, KBBI-890, KENI-650 and KFQD-750 are the easiest here. If I could run a beverage to the NW here, I would get KBRW I am sure as I would have enough signal at times to over power KNBR, but using a EWE, I don't have enough signal generally. But KBRW was the last station I needed from Nome North. I still need Unalakleet 930 though. 73, (Patrick Martin, Seaside OR, IRCA via DXLD) At Grayland one evening I was able to phase down KNBR 680 and was receiving NPR programming. Listened about 20 minutes and no KBRW ID and it was getting late (11:00 PM) as I was getting up at 4:00 AM to DX TP's. Left the recorder running with the NPR program over KNBR's sports talk. Checked the recording the next day in hopes of a KBRW ID and found KNBR with a rerun of SF Giants baseball on top of the channel. The signals changed and the phasing left KNBR on top of the channel. I found a live stream of KBRW, but could not get it to work this evening. Best regards, (Dennis Vroom, Kalama, WA, ibid.) Hi, Dennis. KBRW is a regular from my DX cottage on Haida Gwaii. Still, it can be a tough catch even with KNBR up there. The best time to catch an ID is often a few minutes before the TOH during NPR breaks. They'll often ID, and as Patrick said, give the local weather. When conditions are right, they can be a real powerhouse too, but that's rare. I still recall fondly New Year's eve programming announcing that the planned fireworks were off, since the pyrotechnics guy was unavailable. By the way, Unalakleet 930 is even a bigger catch for me, with Ketchikan being only 75 or so km from me directly to the north. They often have long periods of dead air overnight, and this is when I've been able to hear the 2nd Alaskan. 73 (Walt Salmaniw, ibid.) ** ANGOLA. 4949.75, 2009-2020, Rádio Nacional de Angola, Mulenvos, 15/07, Portuguese, OM/YL talks, pop music - weak under local noise, best in LSB (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) Visible on Perseus screen on 4949.753 kHz at 1915 UT July 22. Remote receivers in Germany, Italy and Austria. 73 wb df5sx (Wolfgang Büschel, ibid.) ** ANGUILLA. 1610, Caribbean Beacon/University Network, The Valley. 0724 July 22, 2012. Fair-poor on peaks with the lovely Pastor Melissa Scott, oldie Rock 'N Roll fill, male canned “To make your reservations for this Sunday's service, call 1-800...” parallel 6090 (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 11775, July 20 at 1109, humbuzz here while 11760 RHC was also upmessed, but unlike it, Dead Gene Scott soon resurrected (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ANTARCTICA. AFAN McMurdo 6012 kHz transmitter site This is one former SW transmitter site I'd completely forgotten about. AFAN McMurdo 6012 kHz, 1 kW into Conical Monopole GE Coordinates: -77.846168 166.711629 (roughly) http://mappery.com/map-of/McMurdo-and-Scott-Base-Area-Recreation-Route-Map http://www.coolantarctica.com/Bases/McMurdo/McMurdo0084.html This was one station that I unfortunately never actually heard, from the 80's era. Some interesting info from the NZRDXL about the station on the internet. This one was around before LRA36. 1974 in fact. Paul Ormandy of the NZRDXL wrote this: http://radiodx.com/nzrdxl/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=334&Itemid=43 The first logging date by Kiwi DXer Dene Lynneberg was given, but I'm not sure when it was LAST logged. I recall seeing several QSLs from them in the early 80's; seams doubtful that broadcasts extended beyond the 80's (at least not beyond 1991). I know transmissions were sporadic on SW from most accounts. If I recall correctly I think programming was a lot of pop songs; I very vaguely recall a DX friend of mine from Sydney in 1983 either picking up the station or playing me a recording whilst I was visiting his home. It was an eagerly sort after station to log & to QSL. Oh, and the transmitter site is called or located on "Transmitter Hill". Hope the above was of interest. Regards (Ian Baxter, NSW, Jully 21, shortwavesites yg via DXLD) ** ARGENTINA. Reviewing my very few Perseus recordings from the last week-end solar storm, I had the great surprise to hear LS9, Radio Continental 590 kHz from Buenos Aires with quite decent audio: http://www.quebecdx.com/argentina_590.mp3 After a couple of mentions of "Continental" and their website address, the full ID came at 1:03 "...Está escuchando Radio Continental AM 590 en todo el país..." I'm very pleased with this new one as it is my first Argentinean on MW :-) (Sylvain Naud, Portneuf, QC, Perseus & 350ft unterminated baby Beverage NE-SW, July 18, WTFDA-AM via DXLD) ** ARGENTINA. 6060, 2222-2252, Radiodifusión Argentina al Exterior, Buenos Aires, 19/07, Spanish, YL public talk with some mentions of Buenos Aires and applause, OM talk, etc. - poor with QRM from Sichuan PBS, heterodyne and local noise, best in LSB, // http://radionacional.com.ar/vivo/1-am-870.html with some delay 15345.30, 2125-2137, Radiodifusión Argentina al Exterior, Buenos Aires, 19/07, German, OM talks with frequency announcement, Argentine songs, 3 time pips at 2130 - almost good with fading and local noise (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) ** ARMENIA. Armenia doesn’t observe summer time in 2012 (WRTH Domestic Update 11 July via DXLD) ** AUSTRALIA. Radio Symban - Current Status --- Radio Symban, 2368.5 kHz, has been off SW for a while now. However, the good news is that it should return in around a week or thereabouts (Ian Baxter, NSW, July 25, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hi Ian, Indeed I was not hearing any hint of them today (July 25) when checking about 1115. Today had less QRN than normal, so thought I should be hearing them if they were broadcasting. Thanks for the update! (Ron Howard, San Francisco, ibid.) ** AUSTRALIA. 4835, ABC VL8A Alice Springs, 1207, July 21. Two announcers with live sports coverage of the Port Adelaide Power vs Melbourne Demons match up; fair-good; no possibility of hearing AIR Gangtok (Sikkim) underneath (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** AUSTRALIA. 9580, July 24 at 1259, RA very good with promo for `Download This Show` about guilt-free online shopping if it benefit some charity. No time given, so is it download-only, not on the air? I have to hunt thru each day`s RA Pacific program schedule until I find it: Sat 0030, Mon 1330. It`s really from ABC Radio National where it is scheduled (in local times I assume), Sun 9:30 pm, Thu 2:30 pm, not bothering to present the different RA times (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) [non]. UAE, 9490.044, Radio Australia's Burmese language relay via Al Dhabbaya-UAE relay site heard on S=8-9 signal strength at 2320 UT, political talk by female and male. RA stn ID at 2321 UT. Followed by English-Burmese language lessons from 2322 UT onwards. Featured "to phone a hotel desk, ... reserve a hotel room by phone, ... good morning, ... good afternoon,, ... good night ..." (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 20 via DXLD) ** AUSTRALIA. 15340, 1514-1530'08*, HCJB, Kunurrura, 15/07, English, Christianityworks program from Sydney, final song and HCJB announcement - almost good with slight fading and local noise (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) ** AZERBAIJAN. (Nagorny Karabakh), 9677.7, Ädalätin Säsi Radiosu, Stepanakert, *0600-0628*, Jul 14, Azerbaijani talk with short musical breaks, distorted audio, 35442, open carrier until 0645 s/off (Alexander Beryozkin, St. Petersburg, Russia, DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) ** BAHAMAS. After 35 days of no E-Skip at all in the usually-capable month of July, Es came back with a bang in Northern Virginia on July 24. [including] New logs: 98.1 Z??? Nassau, Bahamas, 938 miles, 10:29 a.m. [EDT = 1429 UT] Does anybody on the list know the call letters for the 98.1 classical- formatted station in Nassau, Bahamas? (i.e. ZNJ-FM)? I can't seem to find it anywhere online after logging it this morning, and I figured someone out there might know what it is (David Pierce, Woodbridge, VA, http://fmradiodx.wordpress.com/ WTFDA via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** BAHRAIN. 9745-USB, 0020-0032, Radio Bahrain, Abu Hayan, 12/07, Arabic, non stop traditional OM singing - fair and better with local noise and slight fading (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) ** BANGLADESH. 4750, 1704-1712'18*, Radio Bangladesh, Shavar with prolonged schedule, 15/07, Bengali, OM news - poor-fair with local noise (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) pre-Ramadan even ** BERMUDA. 7/24 FM Es to top of dial from Bermuda! 7/24 Es -strong steady signals at 883 miles. [EDT = UT -4] 0840 89.1-ZBM 94.9-ZFB 0846 *Magic 102.7 0850 *Hott 107.5 with RDS Hott 107 *=new logs (Fred Nordquist, Moncks Corner, SC, 33.21756N 79.95798W, KJ4BUG, Grid M03AF, WTFDA via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** BERMUDA. The transmitters on 1230 and 1340 kHz are reported inactive (WRTH Domestic Update 11 July via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA. CQ, CQ, CQ; Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano. Todas las horas son UT. Desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: 3310.00, R. Mosoj Chaski, Cochabamba, 12/07 1040-1110, 33333, ads en quechua, mxf huayno, ads en español y quechua, ID “Por Radio Mosoj Chaski”. NOTA: a partir de las 1055 la señal se va desvaneciendo, hasta que se pierde 4699.30, R. San Miguel, Riberalta, 17/07 2250-2320, 33333, hablan sobre al Arquidiócesis de Potosí, ID “Por radio San Miguel” mx religiosa. 4716.70, R. Yatun Ayllu, Yura, San Antonio de Potosí, 12/07 2310-2340, 33333, mxf en español, ID “Por radio Yatun Ayllu”, mxf (zalla). NOTA: A las 2300 la señal baja a 22222, luego mucha QRN. La recepción la he efectuado del 27/06 al 22/07 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una grabadora Alesis Palm Track, una antena de hilo largo de 15 metros y una antena loop Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Perú, July Chasqui DX via DXLD) mxf = música folklórica 4699.40, Radio San Miguel, Riberalta strong at 0920 on 18 July. 4716.622, R Yatun Ayllu, Yura, Yura, 0920 noted on 18 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BOLIVIA. 5580.35, 2305-2320 17.07, R San José, San José de Chiquitos, Spanish fast talk and shouting, instrumental rhythmic music 25232. Best 73, (Anker Petersen, in Skovlunde, Denmark, on my AOR AR7030PLUS with 28 metres of longwire, via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA. 5952.43, Radio Pío XII, Siglo Veinte. 0000 July 20, 2012. Nice signal with not only Radio República via Costa Rica off, but no Cuba multi-shadow jamming for some reason. Kiddie and male ID, flutes 6134.83, Radio Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz. 0951 July 22, 2012. Clear and good in passing with Andean vocals (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BOLIVIA. 6154.94, R. Fides La Paz was heard again on July 14 when AIR GOS 6155 kHz was off the air for two days on July 14 and 15. In addition to AIR on this channel from nominal 0015 (altho carrier is usually on from 0000) UT, R Exterior España wipes this channel from 2300 to 0000 UT. On July 14, R. Fides was tuned from 0119 UT using Perseus site in SE England with decent S-3 signal and with moderate noise and adjacent channel QRM. Programming was instrumental music (not typical Andean) and a man annouoncer, and continued to 0201.5 UT when program ended. From 0158 to 0201.5 UT there was a man announcer mixed with instrumental music, presumably with closing announcements, although audio was too muffled for good audibility. Carrier typically stays on for several minutes after program ends. On July 16, AIR was again back on 6155 kHz with GOS news in English at 0000 UT and R Fides was buried (Bruce W. Churchill, CA, DXplorer July 16 via BC-DX via DXLD) Presumed Fides just beginning to show its face at 0030 UT on 6154.9 kHz. But yes, with all, summer static is a pain (Don Jensen, WI, DXplorer, July 18, ibid.) ** BRAZIL. 3375.1, Brasil, Rádio Municipal São Gabriel da Cachoeira, 0000 to 0030; 1000 to 1015 19 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, and XM-Cedar Key - South Florida, NRD 525D - R8A - E5, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL?? 4765.02, R. Rural?? Definite talk by M in Portuguese at 0941, but much too weak to stay with it. Did come back at 0946 and M was still talking followed by canned announcement by deep-voiced M, then filler music. Wasn't there when I cruised through the band earlier at 0910. (18 July) Conditions were just abysmal this morning. All signals were much poorer. 31mb signals were very weak, and virtually nothing noted above. S1 solar radiation storms, and R1 radio blackouts. (18 July) BRAZIL?? 4765, R. Rural?? Looks like this ZY signs on at 0900. Wasn't there before but was on at 0910 check. Much poorer today. Something on 4775 as well, probably not Tarma as it signs on at 1000. (19 July) ZYs and LAs on the whole were a lot weaker today. On the other hand, Pacific/Asia were better. (19 July) (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD- 535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) ** BRAZIL. CQ, CQ, CQ; Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano. Todas las horas son UT. Desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: 4765.00, BRASIL, R. Rural, Santarém, Pará, 17/07 2325-0005, 33333, escucho con dificultad, entiendo Radio….. Pará. Luego tocan mx en forma continua, no logro escuchar ID, busco en internet y encuentro en listado de estaciones de Brasil a ZYI534 R. Rural, Santarém, Pará (podría ser, sin confirmar) TAMBIEN: 19/07 2245-0014, 33333, ads (se les escucha mejor en LSB) Guaraná, la bebida para todos, mx varias en forma continua y no logro ID, terminan trasmitiendo un partido de fútbol TAMBIEN: 20/07 0935-1034, 44444, mx programa Integración, el despertador, ads, ID “Radio Rural, nos pueden encontrar en http//www.radioruraldesantarem.com.br Al fin logro el ID (escuchar la grabación adjunta) [no recording attached, tho this all-text report added up to 25 MB in .docx format!] La recepción la he efectuado del 27/06 al 22/07 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una grabadora Alesis Palm Track, una antena de hilo largo de 15 metros y una antena loop Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Perú, July Chasqui DX via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) R. Rural has been off 4765 since Dec 2009 (Anker Petersen, ed., DSWCI DX Window July 25 via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) 4765, UnID - Brasil, Rádio Rural, Santarém, PA reactivated? 0930 to 1010 om portugués rapidly spoken, no ID, long chat my same om. 18 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 2345 to 0030, not certain Brasil or Tajikistan, 18/19 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, and MAR-Vero Beach, South Florida, Sony 7600GR- NRD 525, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 0940 to 1010 portugués om, 19 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, and XM-Cedar Key - South Florida, NRD 525D - R8A - E5, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. 4845.00, BRASIL, R. Cultura, Manaus, Amazonas, 3/07 2220- 2310 33333 mx romántica ID “Por Radio Cultura…” La recepción la he efectuado del 27/06 al 22/07 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una grabadora Alesis Palm Track, una antena de hilo largo de 15 metros y una antena loop Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Perú, July Chasqui DX via DXLD) ** BRAZIL. 4877.6, 2259-2310, 10/7, R.Dif.ª de Roraima, Boa Vista RR. Portuguese, songs. Dreadful modulation, drifting frequency, 35432 CGS 4894.95, 2254-2305, 09/7, R. Novo Tempo, Cp.º Grande MS. Portuguese, chatter, songs, ID+fqs ann, V do Brasil. Hum in carrier. 34332 CGS 6105.0, 2128- 14/7, R. Filadélfia, Foz do Iguaçu PR. Portuguese, talks. Adjacent QRM, 23341 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. 4877.56, Brasil, Rdif Roraima, Boa Vista RR, 0934 Brasilian tenor vocal, still distorted but strong signal 18 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, and XM-Cedar Key - South Florida, NRD 525D - R8A - E5, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. 4885.02, Rádio Difusora Acreana, Rio Branco. 0924 July 22, 2012. Presumed. Vocal ending, into Braso-chica announcer, preaching actually it seems. Very good with the slight CODAR swishing present. 4914.97, Rádio Difusora de Macapá, Macapá, Amapá. 0934 July 22, 2012. Presumed, with male and female preaching. Clear, modulation a little low, very slight CODAR swishing under. Borders French Guiana. 5940, Voz Missionária, Camboriú, Santa Catarina. 0942 July 22, 2012. Creaky vocals with accordion, 0944 Braso-Portuguese male ID and frequencies, back to vocals with accordion. Brief inspirational talk by man in Spanish! (not Portuguese) till 0959. Back to Portuguese, but English male gospel song 1001 (“... I give praise to Him my offering... in His Holy presence...” lyrics). Clear, good and parallel even better 9665.03. 6059.88, Super Rádio Deus é Amor, Curitiba, Paraná. 0729 July 22, 2012. Ranchera-ish kiddie gospel choir, back to the Braso-Portuguese preacher dude. Very good. No other parallel transmitters making it in (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. 4895, R. Novo Tempo Campo Grande 0052-0106 July 17 Portuguese; M announcer with ballads & talk; brief, canned "Novo Tempo" at 0058; ads at 0102; inspirational type music with talk over at 0104; poor in ECCS-USB (Scott R. Barbour Jr. Intervale, NH, NRD- 545, MLB-1, 200' Beverages, 60m dipole, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. 4894.93, R. Novo Tempo, Ad block at 0348 tune-in. Studio M announcer on at 0349 with couple mentions of Novo Tempo. Seemingly Portuguese religious music 0350. M announcer returned at 0358 with mention of Brasília, and ending with Novo Tempo. Canned announcements, then M returned at 0402. Fair strength. There was another signal on 4894.95 but went off at 0357:58. Kurseong?? CODAR QRM too. (16 July) 4935.24, R. Capixaba, 0400 complete canned ID announcement by M. Then canned ID/promo, program intro, then music. Fair good signal (16 July) (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD-535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) ** BRAZIL. 4915, Brasil, Rádio Difusora, Macapá, AP, 0913 om with shouted Macapá ID at tune in, 18 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Que maravilha!!! A Rádio Daqui 4915 "quase sempre" desliga seu transmissor a 00:00hs. [local? = 0300 UT] Ontem pude ouvir mais uma vez, a Rádio Difusora de Macapá (onde minha filha nasceu) com uma bela programação de músicas romanticas. Sinal 33333 (Cássio Santos - Goiânia-Goiás, Receptores: JRC NRD-535 (LE) e DEGEN DE 1103, Antenas: Long Wire (JRC) e Telescópica (Degen), July 23, radioescutas yg via DXLD) ** BRAZIL. 6059.89, Super R. Deus é Amor. Full canned ID by M 0701 with frequencies, website URL, and ending with simple English ID "This is Super Radio Deus é Amor". Excellent signal and // weaker 6120.03. (20 July) (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD-535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) 6059.89v, 2108-2120, Super Rádio Deus de [sic] Amor, Curitiba, 15/07, Portuguese, OM sermon - poor-fair till 2109'41, then poor due to one more carrier near 6060 and local noise, // http://app01.truetech.com.br:8070/pr_superradioctba approx. with 23 second delay 6010, 0033-0047, Rádio Inconfidência, Belo Horizonte, 15/07, Portuguese, OM talk, pop and rock songs - weak-poor with local or DRM- like noise, best in LSB to avoid BHR in USB 6180, 0002-0017, Rádio Nacional da Amazônia, Brasília, 15/07, Portuguese, OM dialogues with listeners, Brazilian song - almost good with CRI in English in the background, // http://lixty.net/#/radio/28159/ with 9 second delay 6080.03, 2318-2328, Rádio Marumby, Curitiba, 14/07, Portuguese, YL/OM dialogues - poor-fair with local noise, best in LSB with 4 kHz bandwidth, // http://www.radioevangelismo.com/radionline.htm with 12 second delay (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) ** BRAZIL [and non]. 6160.9, 2114- Brasil?, 17/7, R. Rio Mar (presumed), Manaus AM. Portuguese, Unreadable talks, UnID languange, Adjacent QRM, 14431 6160.0, 2117-2133, 17/7, CKZN, St. John's NL. English, talks, music. Adjacent QRM, 24431 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) I don`t know about RRM, but CKZN is on 6160.88, while CKZU stays on 6160, which you would certainly not be getting just after noon in Vancouver (gh, DXLD) ** BRAZIL. Re: R N A novos equipos --- Após alguns dias de muito ruido atmosférico, consegui escutar a Nacional da Amazônia 11780 Khz. Realmente a qualidade do som melhorou, ficou mais "encorpado" de graves e agudos, entretanto portadora ainda baixa. Já em 49 metros de dia, NADA! (Edison Bocorny jr., Novo Hamburgo- RS, July 20, radioescutas yg via DXLD) Caros, RNA chegando bem de dia aqui por Manaus apenas em 11780 kHz. Realmente melhorou um pouco. Já nos 49 metros, nada, nem de dia, nem de noite. 73 (Arthur Antonio Raimundo, Manaus AM Brasil, 03º05'41"S, 60º01'57"W, FI96XV, ibid.) 11780, July 24 at 0502, RNA is overmodulated, distorted, producing rough sidebands, and // 6180 is not much better at 0510. RNA was recently reported to have installed ``new equipment to improve the sound quality``. I`m afraid it it`s quite the contrary. Listeners inside Brazil keep complaining they can`t hear one frequency or the other or at least not well. This is, after all, intended for the sparsely populated Amazon region, where one or the other should propagate well depending on the time of day, and they carry on well USward, 6180 only at night and 11780 best at night, into the dayedges (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Olá Colegas, Aqui em Goiânia o sinal em 6180 melhorou bastante, muito forte, em 11780 quase não chega. Quanto ao aúdio, a locução (voz) tanto do locutor quanto do ouvinte (via telefone) excepcional, mas... o audio "musical", tem uma distorção "horrivel". As músicas são tocadas com um audio "distorcido e tremido". Abraço a todos, (Cássio Santos - Goiânia-Goiás, July 23, radioescutas yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) Em Capão da Canoa, litoral norte do RS, em 6180 Khz a RNA às 15 horas local com SINPO 25443. Entretanto como o colega de Goiás citou, quando veiculam músicas, o áudio fica "terrível" completamente distorcido, o mesmo acontece em 11780 Khz, mas em menor escala. Isto provavelmente se deve a mudança para o novo estúdio, onde a equalização do canal de música da mesa de som esteja com ganho em db saturado (Edison Bocorny Jr., WORLD OF RADIO 1627, ibid.) ** BULGARIA. 11-JUL-2012 AUTHORIS.TXT REFERENCE TABLE 11-JUL-2012: Replace RBU by SPC Space Line OOD (BUL) If there's still more on HF in Bulgaria instead of RBU, with brokered radio programs by Spaceline? May well be Kostinbrod site near Sofia. Would be funny, even if IRRS Milano back here would return at the end. And other relay broadcast outlets from Gavar, Armenia too? zoom in (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 14 via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** BURMA [non]. ARMENIA [to Myanmar target], 11595, Democratic Voice of Burma from Gavar Armenia relay site, logged at 2330-0030 UT. S=7 signal traced on remote SDR unit in Brisbane Queensland AUS at 2340 UT July 20, news read after 2330 UT (wb, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 20 via DXLD) ** CANADA. 6070, CFRX Toronto (Mississauga transmitter) ON; 2153- 2202+, 17-July; Roundtable English discussion of urban problems; 2201 ID as 10-10 CFRB Toronto into news/weather/Time Saver Traffic -- new record high today of 35. SIO=353 on peak, but very peaky till suddenly better at 2159+. //1010 CFRB, about same quality. 6070 barely audible about 3 hours earlier (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CANADA [and non]. Noted some strange VERY ODD frequency broadcasts this morning, maybe due of hot temperatures, some TX oscillators wandered away ... ? BRAZIL/CANADA/GERMANY To be a mess on this channel, three peaks noted on 6070v at 0415 UT July 23. Strongest most powerful probably CFRX Toronto-CAN on 6069.955 kHz. Another the German low power hobby station Radio 6150 Ingolstadt Rohrbach on even 6070 kHz channel, and 3rd adjacent channel station on 6070.033 kHz, latter most probably Brazilian Radio Capital, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Super Radio Deus é Amor program in Portuguese language. ... and 880 Hertz heterodyne whistle tone annoying on v6160 kHz channel, 6160.861 kHz English talk heard at 0422 UT, most likely CKZN St. John`s, New Foundland? The other domestic Canadian CKZU Vancouver noted at 0535 UT July 23 on similar odd 6159.981 kHz. [being 19 Hz off frequency is not at all similar to 861 Hz, but tnx for making it exactly 880 Hz difference, A-note het I hear --- gh] On the contrary CBC Radio Nord Quebec program in excellent (non accented) U.K. English heard on very even 9625.000 kHz S=9+10dB level at 0455 UT. Same signal level from same Sackville-CAN relay Voice of Vietnam program in Vietnamese on 9555.000 kHz, scheduled daily at 0430-0528 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) 6159.99, CKZU Promo then ID by M as "This is CBC Radio ??.com and 690 AM in Vancouver. Canada news is next" at 0658, promo for "The Wild Side", then CBC news by W till 0704. Of course QRM from CKZN above. (20 July) (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD-535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) 6160, CKZU CBC Radio One, Vancouver. 0718 July 22, 2012. Threshold, English female talking about something. Still squeaking through thanks to CKZN St. John's, Newfoundland remaining on 6160.88 (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CANADA. CBC-SRC TVO-TFO ANALOG TRANSLATORS SHUTDOWN AUGUST 1 http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/archive/2012/2012-384.htm 14 TVO Transmitters are following suit: * On July 31, 2012 TVO will cease transmission at its 14 medium/high power sites, and then we will begin to decommission those sites. After July 31, 2012 over-the-air viewers in the following communities can receive TVO by subscribing to a local television service provider: Bancroft channel 42 Hawkesbury channel 48 Huntsville channel 13 Kenora channel 44 Kingston channel 38 North Bay channel 6 Owen Sound channel 12 Parry Sound channel 42 Pembroke channel 29 Penetanguishene channel 51 Peterborough channel 18 Sault Ste. Marie channel 20 Sudbury channel 19 Timmins channel 7 http://about.tvo.org/who-we-are/digital-over-air-transition (Fred Waterer, ODXA yg via DXLD) I am losing TVO at my QTH. Granted, I have Bell Expressvu but the [someone else?] watches it. The TV I personally watch most is off air. This whole switch to digital has nothing to do with picture quality. It is a conspiracy on behalf of cable, cellular, and satellite providers to increase their subscriber base and sell more bandwidth (Mark Coady, ibid.) ** CANADA. CBC/RADIO-CANADA IS DECOMMISSIONING ITS OVER-THE-AIR ANALOGUE TELEVISION TRANSMISSION NETWORK ON JULY 31, 2012. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2012-384 PDF version Route reference: Part 1 application posted on 18 May 2012 Ottawa, 17 July 2012 http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/archive/2012/2012-384.htm Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Across Canada Application 2012-0509-7 Revocation of licences for the rebroadcasting stations CBIT Sydney and CBKST Saskatoon and licence amendment to remove analog transmitters for 23 English- and French-language television stations Effective 1 August 2012, the Commission revokes the broadcasting licences for CBIT Sydney and CBKST Saskatoon and their transmitters. The Commission also approves the request to amend the licences for 23 English- and French-language television stations operated by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in order that reference to all analog transmitters be deleted. These amendments are effective 1 August 2012. The CBC plans to cease operation of all these transmitters on 31 July 2012. [ more ] Very long list of all stations proposed appended to following story. DAILY NEWS Jul 17, 2012 8:35 AM - 0 comments CACTUS Asks for Consultation Before Shutting Down CBC Transmission Sites http://www.broadcastermagazine.com/news/cactus-asks-for-consultation-before-shutting-down-cbc-transmission-sites/1001545443/ 2012-07-17 More than 2000 individual Canadians, community organizations, MPs and municipalities have written to the CRTC to ask that they be consulted about what happens to CBC transmission sites in their communities. In response to federal cuts, the CBC and Radio-Canada announced in April that they plan to switch off more than 623 analog transmitters on July 31, 2012. Canadians outside major cities and provincial and territorial capitals will lose free access to the CBC and Radio-Canada over the air using bunny ears or rooftop antennae. Getting the CBC and Radio-Canada`s signals to all Canadians living in communities of at least 500 people was a major policy goal in the 1970s to link the country coast to coast. This transmission infrastructure is worth millions and has already been paid for by Canadian taxpayers. Rather than being scrapped, it could be maintained by communities themselves. The transmitters and towers can be used not just to continue free TV service, but also to set up local wireless Internet or mobile service, or a community TV or radio service. The CRTC has begun a public consultation on the CBC`s plan. CACTUS urged town and band councils, community colleges, community media groups and concerned citizens to ask the CRTC and CBC before the June 18th dead line to make the transmission equipment available for local use. Of the more than 2200 individuals and groups that responded, 1549 live in or near large urban centres where CBC service will continue. They empathized with their rural countrymates and urged that CBC infrastructure be offered to communities slated to lose service. Of the 619 respondents from communities that are slated for service loss, the table that follows shows where they live and the location of the CBC transmitter that serves them. Of the 623 analog transmission sites that the CBC proposes to shut down, communities intervened regarding 216 of them. They asked that the infrastructure be offered to communities to maintain, that they be upgraded to digital, or that CBC TV service be multiplexed with an existing digital transmitter that is operational in the community. Despite this overwhelming willingness of Canadians to work with the CBC to keep their TV signals free, the CBC has stated that it is not planning to consult affected communities and wants ``fair market value`` for its equipment, even if communities are willing to maintain it. In one instance (Penticton), a school board and local ISP representative was told that he could obtain the CBC's otherwise useless analog transmitter for over $80,000! In the weeks ahead, CACTUS will keep track of the progress being made in each community. If and when roadblocks arise, we will flag them for the affected government agencies. Just because the remaining transmitters have not been specifically requested by communities does not mean they don't want them. The CBC conducted no outreach to affected communities when the CRTC consultation was open for public comment. The particular Canadians and communities that participated heard about the proposed shutdown through CACTUS, the press, or partner organizations whose representation across the country is uneven. We note in particular the low response rate in Quebec where we and our predominantly anglophone partner organizations have few members, and Newfoundland, where broadband Internet penetration is the lowest in the country (our campaign was conducted primarily via the Internet). Public awareness in Newfoundland is of particular concern, since more than a third of the transmission sites slated for shutdown by the CBC are in Newfoundland. Nonetheless, the high response rate among Canadians who are slated to lose service, Canadians for whom service will continue, and also 84 Canadians who are already without free over-the-air-access to CBC TV (i.e. they currently fall between service-area contours) vouches for the importance of the issue of fair and equitable access to the national broadcaster by all Canadians. This strong response suggests that a thorough campaign of outreach by the CBC in affected areas using its television service would likely result in requests that the CBC consult with communities about their options in most of the 623 service areas slated to be decommissioned. We use as a benchmark the two-year Heritage Lighthouse Program in which the federal government advertised the availability of heritage lighthouses for community maintenance for two years before finally shutting down only those that communities could not or did not wish to maintain. What is clear is that with over 2000 letters to the CRTC, shutting down the CBC's entire analog TV distribution network should not have been filed as a "Part 1 application" for expedited consideration. It should be examined as a part of the CBC's full licence renewal in November of 2012. We encourage all individuals concerned about continuing CBC access in their communities to contact us regarding next steps. Transmitter Location Community or Interested Group Solution Sought Stage in Process Alberta and Saskatchewan First Nations Technical Services all 57 sites with towers has contacted CBC Alert Bay BC residents of Galiano Island analog transmitter Bamfield BC Bamfield Community ISP analog transmitter lease arranged with 3rd party tower owner; awaiting reply from CBC Banff AB resident of Banff analog transmitter Barrie, ON residents of Owen Sound, Perkinsfield, Desboro, Hanover and Barrie digital upgrade Bella Coola, BC residents of Bella Coola analog transmitter Bonnington Falls BC residents of South Slocan analog transmitter and tower Burns Lake (CBCY-TV-1) BC (shown on CBC contour diagrams on current web site but absent from 2012-0509-7 application?) resident of Burns Lake whatever's there British Columbia BC Broadband Ass. 12 CBC-owned towers Calgary, AB Fédération des communautés francophones et acadiennes (FCFA) and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex Radio-Canada Campbell River, BC residents of Campbell River, Quathiaski Cove, and Manson's Landing analog transmitter Campbellton, NB residents of Campbellton analog transmitter and tower Canmore AB residents of Canmore analog transmitter Castlegar, BC residents of Castlegar Inonoaklin Valleys analog transmitter and tower Charlottetown, PEI Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne (FCFA) and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex Radio-Canada Cheticamp NS residents of Cheticamp and Margaree Forks analog transmitter and tower Coronation AB resident of Coronation analog transmitter Cranbrook BC residents of Cranbrook, Jaffray and Kimberley analog transmitter Crawford Bay BC residents of Kaslo and Ainsworth analog transmitter Crescent Valley BC residents of Crescent Valley analog transmitter Creston, BC residents of Creston, BC analog transmitter Dauphin MB City of Dauphin analog transmitter and tower Digby NS Residents of Annopolis Royal analog transmitters and tower Elliot Lake ON Residents of Elliot Lake analog transmitters and tower Flin Flon MB residents of Flin Flon analog transmitter Fort Smith, NT resident of Fort Smith analog transmitter and tower Foymount ON resident of Foymount analog transmitter Fredericton, NB Residents and the City of Fredericton and Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne (FCFA), Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex Radio-Canada Gaspe, QC resident of Gaspe analog transmitter and tower Golden, BC resident of Golden analog transmitter Goose Bay LAB resident of North West River analog transmitter Grande Prairie, AB Municipal District of Spirit River and residents of Demmitt and Grande Prairie analog transmitter and tower Grand Forks BC residents of Grand Forks analog transmitter Greenwood BC residents of Greenwood, Anaconda, Christina Lake analog transmitter Greenwater Lake SK residents of Archerwill, Porcupine Plains and Wadena analog transmitter and tower Hagensborg, BC residents of Hagensborg analog transmitter Halifax, NS Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne (FCFA) and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex Radio-Canada Harrison Hot Springs BC residents of Harrison Hot Springs analog transmitter Hay River, NWT Hay River Community TV and residents of Hay River analog transmitter in negotiations with CBC High Prairie, AB Municipal District of Smoky River analog transmitter and tower Huntsville ON residents of Bala, Milford Bay, Shelburne, Bracebridge, Emsdale, Severn Bridge and Huntsville analog transmitter and tower Invermere BC resident of Invermere analog transmitter Inverness NS residents of Margaree Forks and Orangedale analog transmitter and tower Jasper BC resident of Jasper analog transmitter Jonquiere QC resident of La Baie multiplex CBC English Kamloops BC residents of Bridge Lake and Kamloops analog transmitter Kearns ON residents of Kirkland Lake and New Liskeard analog transmitter Kelowna BC residents of Coldstream, Kelowna, Lumby, Westbank and Oyama analog transmitter Kenora, ON residents of Keewatin and Kenora analog transmitter and tower Kitchener, ON residents of New Britain, Brownsburg, Elora, Kitchener, Cambridge, Waterloo, Bloomingdale, Stratford, Burgessville, Drumbo analog transmitter and tower Lac du Bonnet MB resident of Victoria Beach analog transmitter and tower Lake Louise AB resident of Lake Louise analog transmitter Le Pas MB residents of Le Pas analog transmitter Lethbridge AB City and residents of Lethbridge, Coaldale, Vauxhall and Champion Municipal Library digital upgrade Little Current ON Residents of Gore Bay, Kagawong, Mindemoya analog transmitter and tower London ON City of London, residents of St. Thomas, Ilderton Kilworth, Sparta, St. Mary's, Delhi, Denfield and London digital upgrade Mabou NS resident of Mabou analog transmitter and tower Madeira BC Sunshine Coast CAP site analog transmitter Maniwaki, QC Indigenous Culture and Media Innovations analog transmitter and tower has contacted CBC; no reply Marathon, ON resident of Terrace Bay analog transmitter Margaree NS residents of Margaree Forks analog transmitter and tower Matane QC resident of Matane analog transmitter and tower Meadow Lake, SK Makwa (First Nations) analog transmitter and tower Middle River NS residents of Baddeck analog transmitter and tower Moncton NB City and residents of Moncton, Shediac River, Markhamville, Indian Mountain and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex English CBC Moose Jaw SK residents of Caronport and Tugaske analog transmitter and tower Mulgrave NS residents of Antigonish, Canso, Dover, Linwood, Port Hawkesbury analog transmitter Murdochville, QC CAP (CACI) site of Mont-Louis and Gros-Morne analog transmitter Nelson, BC residents of Nelson and Inonoaklin Valley analog transmitter Newcastle NB residents of Glenwood and Miramichi analog transmitter and tower New Denver BC resident of Silverton analog transmitter New Glasgow NS Municipality and residents of New Glasgow analog transmitter and tower has left voicemail and e-mail messages for CBC; no reply received New Richmond QC residents of New Richmond analog transmitter and tower Nipigon ON (CBLK-TV); provided on CBC web site, but not listed in 2012-0509-7 resident of Nipigon whatever's available Normandale ON resident of Port Dover analog transmitter and tower North Bay ON residents of North Bay and Sundridge analog transmitter Nova Scotia Province of NS Broadband Project Office any of 26 CBC- owned towers in NS Parry Sound ON resident of Parry Sound analog transmitter Osoyoos BC resident of Oliver analog transmitter Peace River, AB residents of Peace River analog transmitter and tower Pemberton, BC residents of Pemberton and Base Technology Ltd. (community-based ISP) analog transmitter Pembroke, ON residents of Cobden, Deep River and Pembroke analog transmitter and tower Penticton, BC residents of Penticton, Peachland, Summerland and the Penticton School District and Community ISP analog transmitter CBC wants $80,000 Peterborough ON resident of Lindsay analog transmitter Ponteix SK resident of Val Marie analog transmitter and tower Port Alberni BC? residents of Comox, Qualicum Beach and Port Alberni analog transmitter and tower Port Hardy, BC resident of Sointula analog transmitter Prince Albert, SK residents of Shellbrook, Prince Albert, Cudworth, Melfort analog transmitter Prince George, BC residents of Prince George analog transmitter and tower Princeton, BC resident of Princeton analog transmitter Quebec, QC Residents of Quebec, Courcelette and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex English service Red Deer AB residents of Red Deer, Lacombe and Sylvan Lake analog transmitter and tower Revelstoke BC residents of Revelstoke analog transmitter Rock Creek BC resident of Rock Creek analog transmitter and tower Rosemary AB resident of Rosebud analog transmitter and tower Rossland BC resident of Rossland analog transmitter Saint-Augustin QC resident of Saguenay analog transmitter Saint John City of Saint John and residents of Rothesay, Markhamville, Bayside digital upgrade Salmon Arm BC residents of Coldstream, Salmon Arm, Lumby and Tappen analog transmitter Sarnia, ON residents of Inwood, Camlachie, Sarnia analog transmitter and tower Saskatoon, SK residents of Saskatoon Hanley digital upgrade Sault Ste. Marie ON Residents of Sault Ste. Marie, the SSM Innovation Centre and Municipality of St. Joseph analog transmitter Sayward BC Residents of Sayward analog transmitter Sechelt BC Sunshine Coast CAP site and residents analog transmitter Sheet Harbour NS resident of Moser Bay analog transmitter and tower Shelburne NS resident of Shelburne analog transmitter and tower Sherbrooke QC residents of Sherbrooke, Hatley, North Hatley, Magog, Sawyerville and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex English service Slocan BC residents of Slocan analog transmitter Smithers (CBCY-TV-5) BC (shown on CBC contour diagrams on current web site but absent from 2012-0509-7 application?) residents of Smithers whatever's there Sooke BC residents of Sooke analog transmitter Squamish BC residents of Squamish and Base Technology Ltd. (community- based ISP) analog transmitter Stanraer SK resident of Duperow analog transmitter St. John`s NL Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne (FCFA) and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex Radio-Canada Sudbury ON residents of Sudbury, Hanmer, Noelville and Worthington analog transmitter Swift Current SK residents of Swift Current analog transmitter and tower Sydney NS residents of Sydney and Margaree Forks analog transmitter and tower Terrace BC residents of Terrace and Kitimat analog transmitter and tower Thompson MB resident of Thompson analog transmitter Timmins ON residents of Kirkland Lake and South Porcupine analog transmitter Tofino BC resident of Tofino analog transmitter Truro NS residents of Truro and Brookfield analog transmitter and tower Valemount BC Valemount Entertainment Society analog transmitter in negotiations with CBC Vernon BC residents of Coldstream, Vernon and Oyama analog transmitter Warmley SK residents of Maryfield and Windthorst analog transmitter and tower Whistler BC Base Technology Ltd. (community-based ISP) analog transmitter Whitecourt AB resident of Edson analog transmitter Whitehorse YT residents of Carcross and Whitehorse analog transmitter Whycocomagh NS resident of Orangedale analog transmitter Wiarton ON residents of Feversham, Wiarton, Lion's Head, Meaford, Markdale and Owen Sound analog transmitter and tower Windsor, ON Residents of Windsor and surrounding areas, Joe Comartin, MP and Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne (FCFA) and Commissioner of Official Languages multiplex Radio-Canada Wingham ON residents of Clifford, Goderich, Gorrie, Harriston, and Markdale analog transmitter Winlaw BC residents of Winlaw, BC analog transmitter Wynyard SK residents of Wadena and Wynyard analog transmitter Yarmouth NS resident of Yarmouth analog transmitter and tower Yorkton SK resident of Springside analog transmitter and tower All 7 transmission sites (7 transmitters, 3 towers) in Yukon Yukon territorial government wants service to continue Community rebroadcasting is already a reality for more than 100 Canadian communities. Valemont, BC (population: 1400), rebroadcasts six TV channels (including a local community channel) and three radio channels. Residents pay $40 per household per year for the service (via Dan Say, alt.tv.networks.cbc via Dan Say, July 17, via Mike Cooper, DXLD) The small community of Logan Lake, BC has a community-owned set of 7 ATSC digital TV translators with 24 programs in the _clear_ for their community. Wow; now this is what the CRTC should be encouraging for Canadian towns. Pretty sad that a town of 2,000 can convert to digital, but the monster CBC can't. http://www.lltvs.com/pdf/LLTVS_Handout_May31.pdf (William R Hepburn (VEM3ONT22), Grimsby ON CAN 43 10 59.5 -79 33 34.3, WTFDA via DXLD) CBC/SRC Shutdown --- I notice the following regional CBC/SRC stations are missing from the current Bell TV satellite list: = CBC CBET Windsor CBAT Fredericton CBCT Charlottetown =SRC CKRN Rouyn CFTM Tr-Rivières CKRS Saguenay CJBR Rimouski I wonder what the rural folks in a non-cable area will think when they ask what happened to their tax-funded CBC/SRC and are told to put up a satellite dish? What will they say when they find out that there is NO WAY to continue to watch their local CBC news? Will be interesting. wrh (William R Hepburn (VEM3ONT22), Grimsby ON CAN 43 10 59.5 -79 33 34.3 july 20 WTFDA via DXLD) On Bell TV, news from CBAT and CBCT are carried on ch 196 and 197 (5- 6:30 weekdays, one channel carrying CBAT and the other CBCT; the channel carrying CBCT's news also picks up CBAT's New Brunswick First). (Tim Ripley, ibid.) That sounds good; but I guess it's in glorious SD wrh (Hepburn, ibid.) ** CANADA. Re 12-29: UT July 19: ``0142 on 5, Jeopardy with CBC bug LR. Trebek is Canadian; grafix and set look a little different than usual, tho I am not a regular viewer; could there be a separate Canadian version? Dollars are not specified as Canadian, which is neither here nor there.`` (gh) "Jeopardy" is the same daily version as US, and in the Vancouver market at least, is programmed at the same time as KOMO/ABC in Seattle. That means local cable/IPTV companies have to carry the CBC's feed on both channels so Mother Corp's commercials get foisted on the viewer regardless of channel tuned. TD (Theo Donnelly, ptsw yg via DXLD) ** CANADA. Before all the DTV tropo TVDX from Iowa and neighboring states is quite finished, Es fires up July 21, UT and the antenna is already conveniently NNE: 1605 on 2, some video starts to show 1747 on 2, some more video as MUF edges up again 1755 on 2, tentative Global bug LR, maybe one of the pair in Ontario rather than Manitoba this time, as per 1817 log 1808 on 2, 3, 4, CCI 1817 on 2, video het of 440 Hz = A above middle C on my keyboard. A giveaway for the always off-frequency CKCO-2 in Wiarton Ontario, as discussed a biyear ago in DXLD 10-28, measured by Bill Hepburn then: ``55.240.66v CKCO-2 Wiarton, ON``, i.e. 660 Hz off of exact channel 2-minus-offset stations, such as the other CTV station, CHBX in Sault Ste Marie; it had varied down to as little as 300 Hz off Nothing more including break for lunch and nap, until: 2048 on 2, signs of Es video again with antenna still north; nothing develops. Amid TVDX Es opening from Mexico, also getting stuff in English from north, UT July 25: 0043 on 2, ads in English with antenna north 0050 on 2, sitcom with black characters, -/+ offset CCI 0100 on 2, some game show or competition; maybe // briefly on 6 (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CANADA. Radio Free Saint John --- Seven staff from K100 (CIOK FM), CFBC 930 AM and BIG JOHN FM (CJYC FM) are on strike and now broadcasting on the web. CTV Atlantic --- Published Monday, Jul. 23, 2012 6:43PM ADT Monday marks day 29 for Maritime Broadcasting System employees striking in Saint John. Seven on air, promotions and front desk staff are on the picket line and say they've yet to hear from their head office about a resolution. According to staff from K-100, Big John FM and CFBC, a union was certified over a year ago. For the past 11 months they've been trying to negotiate a contract with no success. Article continues at: http://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/saint-john-radio-strike-on-day-29-1.890160 STRIKING RADIO STAFF WORKERS IN NEW BRUNSWICK ARE STARTING THEIR OWN ONLINE SHOW SAINT JOHN, N.B. - Striking radio station workers in Saint John, N.B., are starting their own, online radio station. Gary Stackhouse, president of the bargaining unit, says the station is already up and running but it will officially launch Wednesday at http://radiofreesaintjohn.fm The seven union members have been on strike for over a month and Stackhouse says they've had no contact with the Halifax-based MBS Radio since June 19. The workers walked off the job in June after almost 10 months trying to negotiate their first contract with MBS Radio. Replacement workers are keeping the three private radio stations on air, but Stackhouse says the strikers miss being on air. He says the shows will bring strike updates, but that won't be the focus since the station's really all about the workers' love of radio. The Canadian Press (via Wade Smith, NB, July 23, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** CHAD [non]. ZAMBIA, 6165.000 exact signal from Zambia by NBC, hear at 0408 UT, S=6, something very tiny signal up to here northwards to Europe, but still good reception in the southern winter. Bongo beautiful music, but certainly not of RNT N'Djamena from Chad, they send irregularly since the last coup officer. LITHUANIA, 6165 nothing heard from RNT N'Djamena radio, when NHK Radio Japan Russian service was leaving at 0500 UT, coming from Lithuania Sitkunai txer site (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) ** CHILE. 6130, NHK-R. Japan, Santiago 0924-0930* July 16 Portuguese; announcer with talk; Japanese vocal music; bit of music & pulled the plug at 0930 with no discernible s/off announcement noted; fair-good (Scott R. Barbour Jr. Intervale, NH, NRD-545, MLB-1, 200' Beverages, 60m dipole, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CHINA. Hi Glenn, I only listened early this morning July 20, but Firedrake was JBA at 1154 on both 14700 with het and 15870 (Steve Handler, IL, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Firedrake July 20 circa 1230: 12230, very poor at 1226 15435, very poor at 1229, het on hi side; none in 13s, 14s, 16s, 17s 15560, very poor at 1241, het on hi side [and non]. Firedrake July 22, before 1200: 14700 at 1158, JBA; none in the 11s, 12s, 13s, 15s, 16s, 17s Circa 1230: 11500, poor at 1230 12670, fair at 1231 14700, good at 1233 15555, fair at 1234 16100, fair at 1235; none in the 17s Before 1400: 13920, very good at 1357; none in the 12s 14700, very poor at 1356 15605, good at 1355; no WEWN 15615 audible, off? WWCR 15825 very poor 16100, very good at 1356 16920, very good at 1356; none in the 17s Firedrake July 23, before 0500: 15900, very poor at 0451, flutter. No others audible 12-18 MHz After 1200: 15435, poor at 1218 Before 1400: 14870, fair at 1336; none in the 13s, 12s 15485, fair-good at 1335 15560, fair at 1335; none in the 16s, 17s Firedrake July 24, circa 1230: 11785, at 1233 I think FD may be in the jamming mix of CNR1 vs VOA Chinese via Thailand, but others too weak to make a //; maybe not 12320, poor at 1227 with flutter 15435, very poor at 1229 with flutter 15900, very poor at 1230 with flutter 16100, JBA at 1230 Firedrake July 25 circa 1230: 12980, very good at 1227; none lower 16100, JBA at 1234 After 1300: 15570, fair at 1313 Circa 1330: 12230, good at 1335; none in the 11s, 10s 12980, good at 1335 13920, good at 1335; none in the 14s, 16s, 17s 15495, very poor at 1332 15560, poor at 1332, het on lo side, ex-15570 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CHINA [and non]. 17495, July 25 at 0600, good signal in Chinese, M&W conversing animatedly, no CCI, // but not synch with 17855 plus CCI. So it`s R. Free Asia, 17495 via Tinian, 17855 via Saipan, plus CNR1 jamming on the latter (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CHINA. Report from Tony Magon in Beijing --- Hi Glenn, I am presently in Beijing on holiday for a week and a further week in Guangzhou. I have done an MW bandscan. The change I notice is that on 900 kHz instead of Olympic Radio, it now is called China News Radio - All in Mandarin with the exception of English ID around the hour and maybe the half hour. Time signal is not the traditional Chinese one. This station uses 6 time pips similar to the old BBC. I don`t have much spare time at all here in Beijing. We are on a tour. Starting from the hotel at 7.30 am and back at about 8 pm each night until Saturday. We then fly to Guangzhou on Sunday afternoon and will have a bit more spare time. Regards (Tony Magon, July 24, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hi Glenn, Going on a bus tour today to Tianjin. The Pacific Asian Log shows two frequencies for Tianjin News - on 909 and 1512. So will try and check it out. Regards (Tony Magon, China, July 25, ibid.) Report on Tianjin MW scan --- Hi Glenn, I can confirm the frequency 909 kHz is the one used by Tianjin. I am not sure if it is a news station. I have recorded it and will get someone to translate it for me shortly. 1512 is not used. The PAL listing was not sure whether it was 909 or 1512 kHz. Regards (Tony Magon, later July 25, ibid.) ** CHINA. 4940, Voice of the Strait, Fuzhou. 1019 July 22, 2012. Fair- poor, traditional Chinese flute solos, male announcer. Parallel much better 6115 (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Or 4830?: ** CHINA. V of Strait Amoy program is heard again also on 4830 kHz between 1300-1500 in parallel with 6115 kHz. Xinjiang PBS Kazakh program has moved from their out-of-band frequency 4330 kHz to 4850 kHz (WRTH Domestic Update 11 July via DXLD) ** COLOMBIA. 14950.74, Salem Stereo, Rioblanco, heard at 2224-2310, Jul 10, as recorded at https://www.box.com/shared/711bf3d922d68fdcf0ce with Spanish songs, several anns. Best reception around 2300, at 2301 longer male and female Spanish ann, followed again by music. On Jul 11, I received the following (non data "non") reply as a result of my reception report. I just sent a Spanish explanation of our hobby with an example QSL text. Hope that will help to get a proper QSL of Salem Stereo. ”Rioblanco Tolima Colombia, 11 de Julio de 2012. Señor: Max van Arnhem. Atento saludo en el Nombre del Señor Jesucristo. Por medio del presente le informamos que hemos recibido su reporte de sintonía calendado hoy 11 de Julio de 2012. Agradecemos su amable atención y le deseamos muchas bendiciones del señor, además le informamos que puede sintonizarnos por medio del Internet en: http://www.salemstereo.com Atentamente: LUIS EMILIO TORRES GARZÓN, Director de SALEM STEREO (Max van Arnhem, Hoenderloo, The Netherlands, DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) We also received a similar very nice e-mail in Spanish from the same Director, who attached station logo/promo piece and a photo of himself at the microphone, after 9 days. Roughly translated: "God bless you John C. Herkimer . . . I greet you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and wish you many blessings of God. I want to thank you for the friendly harmony of our Salem stereo station, our desire is that the blessing of the Lord arrives to its life dare for short wave. I hope that we continue to be heard. You will receive a hug from the Republic of Colombia of his friend: LUIS EMILIO TORRES GARZÓN Director of Salem Stereo 14,950 SW at 19 mts." Thanks Henrik Klemetz for ID, background info on this station and email address (John Herkimer and Don Jensen in DXplorer, via DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) 14950.7, 2212-2310, 12/7, Salem Estéreo-R. Unida, Rioblanco. Castilian, songs, religious propaganda, folk music. Improving, 25432 CGS 14950.7, 1440-, 13/7, Salem Estéreo-R. Unida. Cast, songs, talks. Also audible same day at 1015, 15341 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) But as we reported, not heard since 14/7 while they are awaiting a fix of their equipment. I have seen nor heard any other reports of a Radio Unida ID; did Carlos axually hear them say that? (Glenn Hauser, DXLD) 14950+, (PIRATE), Salem Stereo. 2355 July 18, 2012 check, nada. Same non-logs the past few days for that matter. Guess all transmitter things fell apart once again, or the patrolling military in the area got wind and decided to pay a visit to the pirata, lest they support the FARC. So much for that brilliant way-too-high frequency choice and activation. Ditto non-log July 19 check at 2130 (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD- 535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 14950.75v, with propagation rather recovered from the storms, still no sign of Salem Stereo, July 20 at 0127, 0317, 1240. Did they get busted, just another breakdown, or QSY? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Muy estimado Sr Pastor Torres: Aunque no le he escrito hasta ahora, me cuento entre los primeros a sintonizar su emisora Salem Stereo en onda corta, 14950.7 kHz más o menos, a partir del 21 de junio, casi todas las noches mientras se quedaba en el aire, pero nada más desde la mañana del 14 de julio. ¿Podemos esperar reanudarse? Fue un verdadero placer escuchar su musica, y saber que emanaba desde una región tan lejos y con tan poca potencia. Me encuentro en Enid, estado de Oklahoma, Estados Unidos. Saludos y buena suerte, (Guillermo Glenn Hauser to Pastor Torres, via DXLD) 14950.75v, another check for Salem Stereo, July 22 around 0220: no signal. Then I get a reply to my inquiry about why we had not heard them for a week, `No se oye más en Oklahoma``: ``Dios te bendiga, Sr. Guillermo Glenn Hauser, Me da mucha alegría saludarle y saber que nos han escuchado, le informo que en estos días hemos tenido problemas con nuestros equipos de trasmisión en onda corta 14950 KHz, pero Dios mediante en unos diez días volvemos al aire para nos escue [? sic]. Le deseo muchas bendiciones del Señor y ya le estaremos informando cuando volvamos al aire. La Paz de Cristo, Atte: LUIS EMILIOTORRES GARZÓN, Pastor y Director de Salem Stereo`` Says they have problems with the SW equipment but hope to be back on the air in ten days or so (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** COLOMBIA. SOBRE MOVIMIENTOS EN EL DIAL DE BOGOTÁ Desde hace varias semanas se han venido presentando interesantes cambios en el dial de Bogotá, con el retorno del Grupo Santodomingo a la radio a través del alquiler/compra? (algo que no está claro) de la frecuencia 96.9 MHz de Melodía Stereo. Por el momento presentan música del tipo adulto contemporáneo sin anuncios ni identificaciones; así la señal de Melodía Stereo se está escuchando por los 730 kHz y desaparece Melodía AM como formato. En este interés de los grupos económicos por hacerse a medios de comunicación la otra señal que estaría siendo negociada es la 92.9 MHz que por el momento opera Todelar con la emisora La Z, y detrás de ella estaría el interés de Luis Carlos Sarmiento luego de su compra de la casa editorial El Tiempo. Dentro de estos ires y venires, el Grupo Prisa vendió la frecuencia 850 kHz por donde se emitía en paralelo con FM la emisora La W, y fue a dar a las manos de William Vinasco que al momento está retransmitiendo la señal de su emisora Candela 101.9 MHz; tal vez en un futuro arrendada para algún movimiento religioso, lo que no se explica es que teniendo otras frecuencias sin operación actualmente, como son 1010, 1160 y 1580 kHz, Vinasco "compre" una nueva frecuencia en el AM de Bogotá. Ahora hay un rumor no confirmado y es que el nombre y marca Caracol, nunca ha dejado de ser de propiedad del Grupo Santodomingo, por lo que el grupo Prisa pagaba por su utilización; así este pasaría a ser utilizado en la frecuencia 96.9 MHz por lo cual el grupo Prisa no podría utilizarlo, así que no se sabe qué podría pasar con todas la estaciones que actualmente operan con el nombre de Caracol; desaparecía así la cadena Caracol?? (Rafael Rodríguez R., Colombia, July 19, lista condig yg via DXLD) It`s hard to imagine a Colombia without snail-radio! (gh, DXLD) ** CONGO DR. 5066.3, 1815-1903*, 10/7, R. Télé Candip, Bunia. Vernacular/French, talks+phone-ins, African music, ID+fq ann 1902, drum beat at s/off, 35432 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** COSTA RICA. 9630, 5965 and 3350, July 19 at 0522 are all funxioning from REE relay at 0522 July 19, instead of mistaken 9765 as employed 24 hours earlier. 17725-18215, July 20 At 1953, the total range of spiky spurfield from REE 17850 transmitter, worst 17855-18000 or so. Fundamental also distorted forcing modulation to ooze out around the edges. Probably same unit which behaves likewise periodically from 9630 at night. Why are there not any: 1, reports from other DXers/SWLs? Just ignore when it happen? 2, awareness and fixness on the part of REE 3, complaints from `professional` monitors, e.g. ITU 4, complaints from countless other stations affected Could it be that absolutely no one cares --- but me? 17740-18200, July 21 at 1856, for third day, REE Cariari relay is again splattering all over the 16m band and beyond, while 17850 fundamental is distorted. 17850, July 22 at 1836 and still at 2203, REE relay with VG signal minus spurs all over the band as often the case last few days. I`m sure they`ll be back again before long (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CUBA. Though I am of course aware of this -- simply because of my vantage point of monitoring the western half of Cuba daytime -- I felt it was now time to make a coordinated national network sweep today to confirm who relays Noticiero Nacional de Radio, which always airs daily at 1300-1330 local [17 UT summer, 18 UT winter] (very, very extremely and rarely extends to one hour, as in only heard doing this a couple of times in all my years of monitoring). Simply put, Rebelde is the only national network that carries NNdR (and I guess/presume it originates from Rebelde's studios). Radio Enciclopedia, Radio Musical Nacional, Radio Progreso and Radio Reloj do not relay NNdR. However, many -- dare I say most -- provincial and local/community stations do relay NNdR (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CUBA. 5883, (SPY) V02a. 0738 July 22, 2012. Five-digit female, “Final, final, final” 0742. very good (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC- R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CUBA [and non]. 6835, July 19 at 0444, buzzpulsing stray jamblob a la cubana, at the rate of 2 per second. Another anomaly from RHC: July 19 at 0519, English frequency 6010 is absent, but found instead with VG signal on 6140 // 6125, 6060, 6050. RHC has used 6140 before but not in the current season, so is it a mistake or a change, finally getting off Colombia`s 6010? (Not to mention Mexico`s 6010 whence XEOI has been missing for weeks/months.) At 0521, only a weak signal left on 6010, can`t tell if it`s HJDH, and the other HJDH on 5910 was only a bit better with music. Is 6140 reflected on the Union-Jack page of RHC? http://www.radiohc.cu/ing/of-interest/frequencies.html Of course not! What will happen subsequently? 9810, July 19 at 0525, undermodulated Cuban music is still running past nominal 0500*, not found on any other pre-0500 channels such as 5040. 6010, July 20 at *0509 RHC English is back where it is supposed to be instead of 6140 last night, but it`s fitful, carrier cutting off and on the air several times, and when on, modulation cutting off and on, IADs unlike the // 6050, 6060, 6125. Think it may have been doing this too before 0509 when I was not paying close attention. 11760, July 20 at 1109, now this frequency is ailing, audio breakups - -- wiggle that patchcord! 11860 is better. 11760 still breaking up at 1226 check (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Radio Habana Cuba Switching Trouble --- I tuned Radio Habana Cuba on 6050 kHz at 0100 GMT to listen to their "English Hour." I actually tuned in about a minute before 0100 and thus heard the program from the beginning of the hour. Click. RHC was beaming in Spanish. Click. Silence. Click. More transmission in Spanish, not English. This went on for about two minutes, back and forth. Then at 0102 GMT they finally got it right and the "English Hour" suddenly appeared as it was supposed to -- in English! They got right to the news summary. It was a clumsy effort, but rather interesting. I will continue listening to RHC thru the full hour (Grayson Watson; Dallas, TX; using a Sangean 909x portable with an Apex Radio 700DTA antenna, UT July 21, Cumbre DX via DXLD) Par 11760, July 21 at 1128, modulation on this RHC transmitter is still breaking up; I`m afraid it`s something worse than a bad patchcord; while 11690 and 11860 are OK. The POS 9540 RHC transmitter is also out of whack again today, July 21 at 1132, this time putting an FMy spurblob circa 9525, with extremely distorted modulation matchable to 9550. Tough luck for Indonesia 9526, in addition to its self-inflicted problems. Anyway cleared 9540 for something in Chinese at 1148, i.e. CRI Beijing site during this hour. Commies not vs Commies! (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGESTE) Is anyone else able to hear Radio Habana Cuba right now (1153 GMT) in Spanish on 10150 kHz? (Steve Handler, IL, July 22, NASWA yg via DXLD) I was busy on 9540 and 9550 as below, with the computer off, but 10150 is a leapfrog mixing product of 9550 over 9850 another 300 kHz higher. 9540, July 22 at 1151, RHC transmitter is back in whack today, after blobby strays to 9525 yesterday and 9503 previously. I expect it`s not the last time. Now over CRI on 9540 and an echo apart from // 9550 from the other RHC site. 12000, July 25 at 0557, lite pulse jamming against nothing, long after VOA Spanish is finished at 0100. 9514, July 25 at 1221, the RHC 9540 transmitter is out of whack again, extremely distorted FMy blob, modulation barely // an echo apart to 9550, and nothing on 9540. However, at 1340 it`s centered closer to 9515, but no specific carrier to pinpoint. 9550 is now off, but matched an echo apart to 13780, and at 1342 I noticed that weak 9540 fundamental is also on, and in synch with the 9515 spur which is much louder but very distorted. Could not detect a matching spur circa 9565 aside the bigsig from the 9570 CRI relay (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CUBA. I got home late last night & decided to listen to my Coby portable (with a 12 ft wire antenna) at around 2:30AM central (0727 UT) near Fort Worth, TX (on a 2nd floor patio). I caught a numbers station with YL reading strings of numbers in Spanish at 6050 khz; lots of noise and interference from what I presume was a US religious broadcaster. I ran inside to grab my digital recorder and made 3 recordings of about a minute each (a link to one of them is posted below). At 0742 UT, the YL said "final" or "finale" several times, and then it was off the air. I very rarely receive numbers stations anymore, so I was pretty excited. https://www.box.com/s/d5fabdf98bad41e405a1 (Bill Blair/Alvarez, July 22, cumbredx via DXLD) 6050 happens to be a Radio Habana Cuba frequency earlier in the night, and there might have been a SNAFU putting numbers on it, but like your other Coby logs, I suspect this frequency is way off. The schedules and frequencies of numbers stations have been extensively studied and published by ENIGMA, and they tend to be outside the broadcast bands, or at the edges. 73, (Glenn Hauser, ibid.) Altho it would just be a guess, 5898 is a very active numbers frequency, right next to 5890 Brother Scare via WWCR (gh, ibid.) Or at other times, other side of WWCR BS, 5883 as in log above ** CUBA [non]. I listened to Radio República (with several station IDs) on 9490 kHz from 0020 thru 0100 GMT. Curiously, two different frequency services with whom I checked identified two different transmitter sites: one said via Sackville (Canada); the other said via Bonaire (in the Netherland Antilles). Radio República broadcasts anti- Castro, anti-Cuban government programs, and interestingly tonight the announced second hour (0100-0200) got totally blocked at 0100 by an unscheduled, booming broadcast on the same 9490 kHz frequency by Radio Habana Cuba! This kind of frequency interference is, I understand, practiced by RHC frequently against Radio República's broadcasts. Please note that only one frequency service indicated a continuing broadcast by R. Republica from 0100-0200 -- which, if accurate, was the hour blocked by RHC. The struggle goes on (Grayson Watson in Dallas, TX using a Sangean 909x with an Apex Radio 700DTA antenna, Cumbre DX via DXLD) Grayson, Both sources you checked are wrong. Who said it is Bonaire? The correct site (since July 1) is French Guiana for Radio Republica, 9490. Before that it was Sackville on a more limited schedule. May I suggest you consult recent issues of DX Listening Digest for lots of info on such things, via http://www.worldofradio.com/dxldmid.html I just checked at 0150 and heard nothing but R. Republica, and not // RHC 11760. On the contrary, RHC is never used to jam opposition stations, instead noise jamming. This would be extremely unusual. If it was ``totally blocked`` after 0100, does that mean you heard only one station in Spanish? I suggest it was still Radio República, which in fact does broadcast nightly from 0000 to 0157. They even play the Cuban national anthem like RHC does, at least at 0000 sign-on, maybe again at 0100. 73, (Glenn Hauser, OK, ibid.) Glenn: "Short-wave.info" listed R. Republica on 9490 only from 0100- 0157 via Bonaire. I also checked with "Shortwaveschedule.com" and it had 2 entries for R.R. listed between Radio Australia and Iran, on 9490: 0000-0200 via Sackville, and R. Republica on 9490 at 2300-2400 via Sackville. Also, I listened for several minutes on 9490 past 0100 with the revolutionary musical theme played and RHC I.D. Perhaps I didn't listen long enough to discover that this was a programmatic device of RR. But it was a long enough time that I was convinced it was RHC. Certainly I should have thought to check your data for the truth of this situation. Sorry if I made a mistake. But it is still curious to me (Grayson Watson, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Yet another case of people relying on short-wave.info, GIGO site. The 23-02 schedule which should have indicated Sat/Sun-Sun/Mon only, via Sackville was correct until June 25, not since (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CUBA. Cuba on FM --- At 1115 [am EDT] had a talk program with a woman in Spanish on 104.7 that had low modulation. Eventually it came up clear enough to lock on RDS with a PS of MAYABEQU and PI of F000. Seems like Cuba to me. Also for almost an hour I've been watching 102.5 with almost non-stop Salsa music. I may have recorded some kind of ID but The Bone always gets in the way. I hope this turns out to be Cuba. 11:45 am (Mike Bugaj, Enfield, CT, July 24, WTFDA via DXLD) A relatively new station. CMBU 10 kW Radio Mayabeque, Mayabeque, Guines http://www.radioguines.icrt.cu/ (Jim Thomas, wdx0fbu, Springfield, Missouri, ibid.) Think It's Finally Over. Noticed it at 9 am, seems everything is out of FM at 12:45. Three hours and 45 minutes of FM Es; who would have thought on July 24th. US, strong Bahamas on 104.7 and Cuba, plus a Caribbean accented female on 107.5, mostly under Miami, that I could never ID. I wonder who that was. And I never turned the TV on at all. (Mike Bugaj, Enfield, CT, ibid.) See also BERMUDA ** CYPRUS. All three Zyyi Cyprus outlets of CYBC Limassol in Greek, excellent service with fine audio heard tonight, 2210-2245 UT on Fri/Sat/Sun only. 5925 / 7220 / 9760 kHz, all 250/300 kW of power. NOT on 6135 kHz as AOKI list suggests (wb, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 20, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CYPRUS/AUSTRIA [and non]. 9500v, Two Iranian BUBBLE jammer found my attention at 0330 UT, one continuously at 9499.912 (covers 9497-9502 kHz), the second switched off at 9500.064 kHz at 0343 UT which leave the channel and replaced to 9565v kHz. All this against BBC Persian program broadcast 9500 kHz at 0230-0330 UT Woofferton-UK, also against AWR and Persian 9505 kHz with 300 kW Moosbrunn powerhouse at 100 degrees in azimuth. 9505 AWR Persian from Moosbrunn-AUT is 0330-0430 UT on air. 9565v, BBC Persian then from Zyyi site in Cyprus, S=9+10 dB here in Germany at 0230-0430 UT, lately always BUBBLE jamming disturbed. The two jammer signals sitting now at 9564.211 kHz and 9565,125. In contrast, the \\ frequency 11855 kHz also from Cyprus is NOT disturbed (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) ** DENMARK. Another offshore station is going to celebrate its 50 years jubilee on Jul 31. That is Danish R Mercur which was broadcasting on FM from a ship in the Sound between Copenhagen and Malmoe. R Mercur Revival will be on the air from a temporary transmitter operating on 99.4 MHz from Copenhagen. Transmitter and aerial will be installed on top of the SAS Radisson Hotel building this week and will give good coverage off Copenhagen and surrounding areas, including Dragør. See you on July 31! Before that can be expected test transmissions incl. streaming audio on their website: http://www.scandinavianoffshoreradio.com/ (Erik Koie, Jul 11, DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) ** ECUADOR. 4781.5, Radio Oriental, Napo *1100 sign on 19 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, and XM-Cedar Key - South Florida, NRD 525D - R8A - E5, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Re (re)activations, is it possible R Oriental 4781.6v is back OTA? I've had something this night, July 24th between 2330 and 00 (s/off) with Andean music, in my location in Western Liguria. Stations from Bolivia and Peru were there too. [shortly later] About 4781.6v, sorry: didn't realize Wilkner and Nilson have just reported it. 73 (Andy Lawendel, Italy, July 25, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ECUADOR. CQ, CQ, CQ; Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano. Todas las horas son UT. Desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: 4814.96, R. Buen Pastor, Loja, 22/07 1050-1145, 33333, mxf, San Juanito, ads Cooperativa Saco, la cooperativa del pueblo, mx con temas religiosos, ID “Radio Buen Pastor 92.9, se hace presente….” Dan avisos y pésame por fallecimientos de habitantes, mxf pasillos con temas religiosos. ID “Muchas gracias amigos por saber que ustedes están en sintonía de Radio Buen Pastor”. NOTA: Los escucho mejor en LSB, pues por momentos la señal llega a 22222 La recepción la he efectuado del 27/06 al 22/07 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una grabadora Alesis Palm Track, una antena de hilo largo de 15 metros y una antena loop Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Perú, July Chasqui DX via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) mxf = música folklórica ** ECUADOR [non]. HCJB new via Wertachtal 11920 2245-0115 UT (ex Calera de Tango Santiago Chile), from Aug 1st "Mitte Juni mussten wir unseren Hoerern in Suedamerika mitteilen, dass die Sendungen ueber die Sendestelle in Chile zum 31. Juli eingestellt werden muessen. Die Anlagen in Chile sind alt, und so kam es in den letzten Wochen immer wieder zu technischen Ausfaellen, so dass ein geregelter Sendebetrieb nicht mehr aufrecht erhalten werden kann. Als alternativen Sendestandort haben das HCJB-Buero in Brasilien und wir uns fuer Wertachtal in Deutschland entschieden, nachdem Testsendungen in den ersten Julitagen sehr erfolgreich verliefen. Was uns Sorge bereitet sind die hoeheren Kosten. Aber wir wollen es im Glauben wagen und in der Erwartung, dass die notwendigen Mittel fuer diese Sendungen gespendet werden. Der HCJB Mit-begruender und langjaehrige Leiter Dr. Clarence W. Jones sagte: "Wenn Gott ein Unternehmen in Auftrag gibt, dann sorgt er auch immer fuer die noetigen Geber". Aus Kostengruenden werden wir die Sendezeit fuer Suedamerika von einer auf eine halbe Stunde reduzieren. Die Programme werden zur gleichen Uhrzeit, doch auf einer anderen Frequenz gesendet, die auch einen besseren Empfang verspricht. Hier nun die Daten, gueltig ab dem 1. August: Zeit Brasilia und Buenos Aires: 20:00 Uhr, Zeit Asuncion: 19:00 Uhr Frequenz: 11920 kHz im 25 Meter-Band. Eine Viertelstunde zuvor wird auf der Frequenz das Programm in der Kulina-Indianersprache gesendet. Nach der deutschsprachigen halben Stunde kommt auf der gleichen Frequenz das portugiesische Programm von Radio HCJB-Brasilien." (Horst Rosiak-EQA, via hjb) Soll heissen: 11920 kHz wird ausschliesslich eingesetzt. 11925 kHz Radio Bandeirantes sollte eigentlich nicht stoeren (Walter Eibl-D, A- DX July 19) Google automatic translation: 11920, Wertachtal 2245-0045 UT: Kulina 2245-2300, German 2300-2330, and probably Portuguese 2330-0115 [sic] UT, from August 1st. (wb) "in mid-June we had our listeners in South America say that the programs must be broadcast over the place in Chile is set for July 31. Installations in Calera de Tango Santiago Chile are old, and so it happened again and again in recent weeks to technical outages, so that a regulated transmission mode can no longer be maintained. As an alternative transmitter site, the HCJB-office in Brazil and we have opted for Wertachtal in Germany after testing programs in the first days of July, proceeded very successfully. What worries us are preparing to higher costs. But we want to take it in faith and in the expectation that the necessary funds for these items are donated. The HCJB longtime manager and co-founder, Dr. Clarence W. Jones, said: "When God gives a company in order, then it makes even more necessary for the donor." Due to cost, we will reduce the transmission time for South America of a half an hour. The programs are at the same time, sent it on a different frequency, which promises even better reception. Here are the dates, valid from 1 August: Brasilia and Buenos Aires Time: 20:00 clock, Asuncion time: 19:00 clock. frequency: 11920 kHz in the 25 meter band. Fifteen minutes before being sent on the frequency of the program in the Kulina Indian language. After the German half- hour comes on the same frequency, the Portuguese Radio HCJB-Brazil. " (Horst Rosiak-EQA, via hcjb Quito Ecuador) Does mean: 11920 kHz is used exclusively. 11925 kHz Radio Bandeirantes should disturb not really (Walter Eibl-D, A-DX July 19)(via Wolfgang Büschel, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** EGYPT. 9315, R. Cairo is still here, July 20 at 0127 with music during presumed Spanish service, sufficient modulation at the moment; but 9305 Arabic is absent. Nothing on 9720 which supposedly replaced 9315. At 0317, 9305 is back on with extremely distorted Arabic and much stronger than 9315 in music when I would have expected news in English. As of July 20 I notice that there is now a version 2 dated July 13 of the July WRTH Update --- not sure what changed from version 1, as I think the entries in red were already there, but has not updated the Egypt info, which claimed that English to NAm at 0200-0330 had already moved from 9315 to 9720 (along with Spanish at 0045-0200). Also shows 6270 replaced on two earlier English outsendings effective July 18: 2115-2245 on 11890, 2300-0030 on 9965 --- has anyone confirmed those? Me, not yet checked. 9965, July 20 at 2358, very poor unID signal, maybe R. Cairo. They were supposedly just moving the 2300-2430 English to E North America here from 6270, which was hardly appropriate for the summer, tho HFCC shows 9965 effective from Abis ever since 25 March! Nothing audible in the noise on 6270, but inconclusive long before sunset. 9965 is also supposed to continue in Arabic at 0030-0430, and at 0128 check there is still something there, can`t tell if just a carrier, or typical Cairo under/non-modulation. 9315 is also supposed to be replaced by 9720 for Spanish at 0045-0200 and English at 0200-0330. At 0128 there is still a carrier on 9315, altho the Arabic channel 9305 is again absent despite scheduling. Nothing on 9720. Another check at 0257: 9305 garbage signal is now on as is 9315, and 9965 has achieved some awful modulation, can`t discern language, but timesignal at 0300 is 18 seconds late. 11890, July 21 at 2155, checking whether R. Cairo has moved English here from 6270 as alleged, 2115-2245 to Europe. There is a very poor, undermodulated signal here, intonation could be English. Too early to hear 6270 if it were still on. Nothing else scheduled here, so maybe it is really Cairo. HFCC entry now shows both 11890 and 6270 for this broadcast since 25 March, obviously not true. Altho HFCC has columns for specific start and stop dates, too many registrants just put start/end of season including imaginary wooden ones. I`ve yet to see any reports of 11890 from Europe where it should be easy to confirm this. Other frequencies checked July 22 at 0220: 9305 General Arabic service is nothing but a huge buzz, no program modulation at all, and extends gradually out to 9275 and 9327 (probably further up if not for 9330 WBCQ). 9315 is confirmed still in English with 0222 ID for North American service, undermodulated, much weaker than 9305 and suffering from its spurbuzz! 9720 nothing. 9965 in Arabic with music interspersed, extremely distorted modulation but no spurs. At 0400, 9305 is still buzzing but a little weaker, 9315 is off and 9965 continues as before. 9305, July 20 at 0504, R. Cairo is still buzz-only, further weakening well into dayside there. Aoki shows the General Service in Arabic, 'El-Bernameg Al-Aam' at 1900-0700, 250 kW, 315 degrees from Abis toward Europe and North America. Is it all-buzz, all-the-time now? Well, at least most of the time, and if not, with extremely distorted modulation. The incompetence of the Egyptian engineers(?) and moreso whoever is ``managing`` these monstrosities knows no bounds (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) More chex for R. Cairo`s English broadcasts on new frequencies, ex 6270s: 11890, July 22 at 2200, good strength but just-barely-modulated, a sure sign of R. Cairo as now scheduled at 2115-2245 to Europe. 9965, July 22 at 2321, YL pause in news for ID as North American service of R. Cairo; but quite distorted as usual on this frequency which is followed by Arabic after 0030. Already confirmed the third English sesquihour from 0200 is still on 9315, not 9720 as in WRTH July update. 9305, July 23 at 0455, R. Cairo recovered from superbuzz-only last night, to undermodulated Arabic, distortion and crackle, and no spurs audible on the sides (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Dear Glenn, I have noted Radio Cairo in English on new 11890 kHz beginning at 2115 UT on July 21st. Distorted sound. Last night I discovered Radio Cairo in German at 1900 on 11560 kHz and in French at 2000-2115 also on 11560 kHz. It is almost impossible to understand anything despite a fairly strong signal. Kind regards (Christer Brunström, Halmstad, Sweden, July 23, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9305, July 24 at 0507, how is R. Cairo general service doing tonight? Humbuzz over some bits of presumably Arabic modulation, totally unreadable but an improvement over nothing but wideband buzz (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** EQUATORIAL GUINEA. 5005.0, 1848-1916, 10/7, RNGE, Bata. Vernacular, songs, talks, no audio around 1900, African songs, 45433 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ERITREA. 7174.990, almost always exactly settled on the minus 10 Hertz frequency: Voice of Broad Masses 2nd program in Arabic and Amharic from Eritrea at 0415 UT July 17, S=6 thin morning. Long gone when the ETH neighbors jammed, this is probably the Ethiopians discovered these 3 radio jamming stations of white digital noise signals from 20 kHz bandwidth are too expensive. 7204.983 at 0420 UT, the proximity with the program brother also from Eritrea, Voice of Broad Masses 1st program in Tigrinya, at 0510 UT on slightly lower permanently 7204.976 kHz, the transmitters are walking frequency, when connected to the varying local main powers (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) ** ERITREA [and non]. Noted this morning 15 kHz up from usual 7175v kHz, now on 7189.991 kHz, HOA music today at 0426 UT July 23. Omdurman Sudan in Arabic on usual even 7200 kHz (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) ** ERITREA [non]. Re: DXLD 12-29 Voice of Asena > Voice of Asena is the correct name, whatever it means, Hi Glenn! This is the explanation from an e-mail of the station back in 2009: > By the way 'Asena' in our local language is a sigh of happiness. If someone is happy about something - says 'Asena!' 73, (Patrick Robic, Austria, July 20, DX LISTENING DIGEST_ ** ETHIOPIA. 9705, 1605-1631, Radio Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, 15/07, English, weekly musical program with piano and saxophone music, local song, YL ID, OM news - good with local noise, // 9558.47 poor and tentatively 7234.54v weak 7234.45v, 1825-1840, Radio Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, 12/07, vernacular, OM talks, local pop songs - poor-fair with splashes from IRN (7240) and audio delay during some minutes, // 9705 fair and better with QRM from NIGER (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) 7234.297 ... x.308 kHz, 10-20 Hertz always wandering: Voice of Peace & Democracy in Tigre language in Addis Ababa-Gedja ETH, 0423 UT on July 17th (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) Wandered steady in 7234.360 .... to 7234.405 frequency range. Around 0430 UT July 23. Program is Voice of Peace and Democracy from Gedja- ETH, S=7 fair signal, HoA music at 0431 UT. 6110.039, Radio Fana in Amharic from Addis Ababa Gedja site at 0419 UT July 23 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) ERITREA/ETHIOPIA, radio war. Strange enough and still a puzzle is the WHITE NOISE jamming (or is that an unid DRM broadcaster?) on 9705 kHz (9698 to 9711 kHz range) heard with S=8 signal at 0445 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) ** ETHIOPIA [and non]. Re last report: ``UNIDENTIFIED. 15170-15175- 15180, July 21 at 1852 past 1900, unknown DRM signal here, very strong and much stronger than 15115-15120-15125 Voice of Nigeria. Could find nothing in DRM schedules or fora about this. In fact, only one analog transmission earlier in the day from India is scheduled on 15175. But I could also hear a weak AM carrier under the noise on 15175. A tree in the forest, falling with no notification to the few DRM enthusiasts who might want to listen (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)`` Sei-ichi Hasegawa, Japan replies: ``Dear Glenn, This signal is not DRM. It is the jamming of the DRM type from Ethiopia for Badr Radio. de Hiroshi`` Oh yes, the AM underneath was a clue; I should have searched DXLD archive on 15175, to find this in 12-22; so the Badr frequency and the jamming will jump around, and only on Fri-Sat-Sun:. ``ETHIOPIA [non]. RUSSIA, QSL Badr Broadcasting Network via Samara- RUSSIA 15165 kHz. Badr Broadcasting Network 15165 kHz bestaetigte meinen Empfangsbericht innerhalb von 25 Tagen mit unterschriebener und abgestempelter PPC. Adresse: Badr Ethiopia, 4701 Sangamore Road, Suite #125 South, Bethesda MD 20816, USA. Eine e-mail brachte keine Antwort. Die Stationen sendet 1830-1900 UT im Bereich von 15165 kHz. Auf der Webseite http://www.badrradio.com werden inzwischen die Frequenzen 15150 / 15155 / 15165 / 15170 / 15175 / 15180 kHz genannt, wohl um aethiopischen Jammern zu entgehen. (Patrick Robic, Austria, A-DX May 18 via BC-DX May 30 via DXLD) New TDP station - Badr Radio/Badr Broadcasting Network in Amharic, 1830-1900 15165 SAM 250 kW 188 deg Fri-Sun to EaAF, eff April 20 (DX MIX News, Ivo Ivanov-BUL, via wwdxc BC-DX TopNews May 1, ibid.)`` But still, 15175 is missing from all the current frequency schedule references. Except re-looking at Aoki, not a main entry but: ``15165 Badr Radio 1830-1900 1....67 Amharic 250 188 Samara RUS 05015E 5317N BBN TDP a12 15150-15175`` The DRM promoters should be ashamed of availablizing their technology for jamming! What I heard sounded just like DRM noise, but I suppose would not have decoded to anything intelligible/legible. Could the Ethiopians at least tag it ``Gotcha, Badr!``? {at least in Chinese}. 15165-15170-15175, Sunday July 22 at 1835, weak DRM jammer audible and also weaker AM carrier on 15170, no doubt as explained in previous report, Ethiopia vs Badr Broadcasting Network, which is Islamic evangelism, but how political is it? Enough to jam. Today it`s 5 kHz lower, so the Ethies have no problem in tracking it to whatever different frequencies on Fri-Sat-Sun. There was no DRM around at first check 1832, and no movement at 1845 halfway into the show, so this evasion is not effective. It might be if BBN, via TDP via Samara, RUSSIA, were prepared to jump around during each broadcast, altho that is also a good way to lose listeners even if the frequency is momentarily away from the DRjaM. Today this was quite weaker than Nigeria DRM on 15115-15125, unlike yesterday. Wolfgang Büschel also found it centered on 15170 today: ``Tonight 'seen WHITE NOISE signal' from Gedja Ethiopia on 15163-15177 kHz wide range. S=9+10dB in central Europe.`` The TDP schedule at http://www.airtime.be/schedule.html shows only 15165 for Badr Radio. Ironic that TDP, a big promoter of DRM, is victimized by it (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** EUROPE. 4016.0, 2142-, Pirate, 17/7, Laser Hot Hits, UK?, IRELAND? English, pops, 35432 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** FINLAND. 6170 / 1584 MW, R Hami. On shortwave it was a real flop this time. Not at all on air on 6170 kHz. Obviously a major technical problem. Some explanations have been given afterwards - amateurs seem not to be professionals. Also MW 1584 kHz was off air, or part time on air with only few watts to a 7.5 m vertical antenna. Perhaps it could be heard on their summer camp site. I did not visit it. Their FM transmission was OK all the time, as the web stream. But very strange was the phenomenon of disinformation. No correct info was given during the supposed operation. And I have got no answer at all to the e-mail I sent to them (Juha Solasaari, Mäntsälä, Finland, DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) ** FINLAND. Finnish DX Association's 50th Annual Summer Meeting will be held at Vuosaari, Helsinki, Finland Aug 3-5, 2012. More info at: http://dxkesis50.blogspot.fi/ Scandinavian Weekend Radio will have special broadcast during 50th FDXA Summer Meeting on Aug 3-4, 2012. Schedule at: http://www.swradio.net/schedule.htm (Alokesh Gupta, New Delhi, India, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** FRANCE. The Web site for RFI's English service indicates the shortwave broadcasts to Africa have now been discontinued. English on shortwave to Africa? Submitted by John Figliozzi (not verified) on Wed, 2012-02-01 21:45. I have not been able to hear these in North America recently on shortwave and now I look at this page and see that the former frequencies are no longer listed. Have you discontinued shortwave in English to Africa entirely? Or is this a temporary situation? * reply shortwave discontinued Submitted by rfi (not verified) on Fri, 2012-05-25 15:13. Our shortwave broadcasts have been discontinued, yes. (via Mike Cooper, FRANCE, Jul 20, DX LISTENING DIGEST) I guess the point of this non-news is how long it took RFI to answer (gh, DXLD) ** GEORGIA. [Abkhazia], 9535, Apsua Radio Abkhazia from Sukhumi heard once again on their shortwave outlet, 0755 UT July 20, mostly Russian modern pop music songs and South American trumpet orchestra rumba music, but lady announcer in vernacular like - probably - Abkhazian language (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 20 via DXLD) ** GERMANY. 3955, 2255-2310 20.07, R 700, Kall-Krekel, non-stop German songs on this new frequency, 45444. Best 73, (Anker Petersen, in Skovlunde, Denmark, on my AOR AR7030PLUS with 28 metres of longwire, via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD) [and non]. CROATIA/GERMANY, Three channels used in 75 mb this morning 0340-0355 UT July 23. 3955, Radio 700 from Kall-Eifel in western Germany, S=7-9 much fluttery signal, did broadcast modern German Schlager pop music at this hour. Station ID at 0350 UT. Much stronger Croatian Radio on 3984.810 kHz, modern Croatian lady pop singer heard. 3995.002, HCJB Weenermoor broadcaster with S=6-7 signal on air too (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) ** GERMANY. Hello Glenn, Although it is not yet finalized, Hamburger Lokalradio's schedule on 7265 kHz via Göhren is taking shape. Over the next weekends, the station will be on the air Saturdays between 0500 and 1100 UT. As part of the line-up, the latest "World of Radio" is always aired at 0630 UT; "New Letters on the Air" is at 0600. As always, reception reports are welcomed to further evaluate the SW propagation on this frequency. E-mail address: redaktion @ hamburger- lokalradio.de Best regards, (Thomas Völkner, Germany, July 20, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) HH Lokalradio, MV Baltic Radio and Radio Gloria this weekend Saturday, 21st of July 0500 to 1100 UT, Hamburger Lokalradio on 7265 Sunday, 22nd of July 0900 to 1000 UT, Radio Gloria on 6140 (100 KW via Issoudun) 0900 to 1000 UT, Radio Gloria on 6005 ( 1 KW via Kall) 1500 to 1700 UT, Radio Gloria on 7265 ( 1 KW via Gohren) Important Information: MV Baltic Radio we be testing over this weekend on 9480 on the following time slots: After 1100 UT on Saturday and on Sunday up to 1500. Good Listening 73s (Tom Taylor, July 20, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** GERMANY. Radio 6150 needs you - Radio 6150 te necesita! Radio 6150 We need YOU!!! Don’t be worried, we do not have your money in mind… :-) As we told you before, we want to start our new station on 6070 kHz in August with definitely higher power. Then reception, at least in Europe, should be good, even with normal receivers. We are on plan to establish a service 24/7, esp. during night time filled up with old recordings from the offshore area, but of course with a lot of own, new program, too. Because we do not have the money to hire a staff for this, we are looking for some friends of independent radio, who would like to spend some time working for our station; e.g. we have in mind concerning the following tasks in German, and/or English, Dutch….: –Producing your own program, —concerning: music, reports, or…?? –Producing a DX-program on a regular basis —and / or delivery of the news to the one, who does the show –do you have old recordings of Offshore / Pirate Radio, you can supply us with? Or present it in your own show? –analysis of reception reports; writing QSLs via eMail to the listeners –help maintaining the homepage, esp. translation of German texts to English, or German / English to Dutch, and maybe other languages spoken in our reception area; Spanish? Russian? …??? –Producing jingles in any language of our listeners –acquisition of commercials for our program –acquisition of interested parties in buying time on our transmitter for their own program (we would be glad, if it would pay at least the energy costs…) –or do you have ideas of your own, what you would like to do for our station? Then please get in contact with us! http://www.radio6150.de SOURCE: http://www.achimbrueckner.de/freeradio/php/wordpress/?p=25373 Imagen courtesy Gallery TANASHI http://fromtanashi.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoid=153748786 (via Yimber Gaviria, DXLD) Last link is a Europirate QSL album, next Radio 6150 needs programs Running a radio station is a lot of work. Radio 6150 amongst others is looking for programs they can air on 6070 kHz. contact them with ideas at qsl @ radio6150.de 73 (Harald Kuhl, Germany, July 23, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD) -------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: An unsere Freunde und Hörer / To all our friends and listeners *For English text please scroll down!* [up] *Wir brauchen DICH!!!* Keine Sorge, es folgt kein Spendenaufruf... :-) Wie ihr wisst, wollen wir im August unsere neue Station auf 6070 kHz mit deutlich gesteigerter Leistung eröffnen. Wir sollten dann zumindest in Europa, auch mit normalen Radios, gut zu hören sein. Es ist ein 24/7 Betrieb geplant, der zwar zeitweilig auch mit alten Offshore-Recordings gefüllt werden soll, aber natürlich auch mit vielen aktuellen Programmen. Da wir bei unserem Goodwill-Projekt natürlich nicht einfach mal ein Dutzend Beamte zu Tarifen des öffentlichen Dienstes einstellen können, suchen wir also Mitarbeiter, die gerne an einem unabhängigen Radioprojekt mitarbeiten wollen, und zwar z.B. mit folgenden Aufgabenbereichen, und zwar auf Deutsch und/oder Englisch, Niederländisch...: --Zulieferung eigener Programme; ---Sektor: Musik, Reportage, oder: ?? --Erstellung eines regelmäßigen DX-Programms ---und/oder Anlieferung der News hierfür an den, der es erstellt --hast Du alte Aufnahmen von Offshore / Piraten Sendern, die Du uns zur Ausstrahlung überlassen kannst? Oder die Du im Rahmen eines eigenen Programms präsentierst? --Betreuung / Auswertung von Empfangsberichten, Versand von QSLs per eMail --Unterstützung bei der Betreuung der Homepage; hier insbesondere die Übersetzung von deutschen Texten in Englisch / Niederländisch oder auch andere Sprachen aus dem Sendegebiet: Spanisch? Russisch? ...? --Erstellung von Jingles in einer Sprache des Sendegebietes --Akquirierung von Werbespots für unser Programm --Akquirierung von Interessenten für den Verkauf von Sendezeit (es wäre schön, wenn wir zumindest die laufenden Stromkosten für den Sender so finanzieren könnten) --Oder hast Du eine eigene Idee, wie Du mitarbeiten könntest? Dann lass es uns bitte wissen! http://www.radio6150.de (via Harald Kuhl, Germany, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD) ** GERMANY [non]. 17810, July 20 at 1243, weird SFX and music, French announcement, // much weaker 17820, i.e. DW via RWANDA and Woofferton UK, respectively. 17810 the SSOB by far, hardly even any Cuba on 16m (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** GOA. INDIA, 15209.982 as always AIR Panaji from Goa is not exactly on the frequency. Arabic at 0430-0530 UT, S=6 fair heard in Europe. Today lacked the sweet Indian music, just endless talks on politics (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) ** GUAM. 5765-USB, American Forces Network, Barrigada. 1032 July 22, 2012. Fair, some network feed coverage on Colorado shootings, not parallel Saddlebunch Keys which was airing something classical music (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** INDIA. 4850, AIR Kohima (presumed), 1233-1304*, July 22. In vernacular with religious program along with religious songs; heavy pulsating OTH radar, which even when not pulsating had an open carrier on causing QRM; Kohima not heard daily (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** INDIA. 7550, All India Radio, Bengaluru. 2118 July 19, 2012. Clear but weak with Hindi-tunes, English female announcer. Parallel fair 9445 and slightly better 11670. No other potential parallel channels located/heard (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** INDIA. KUDOS TO AIR VBS --- CELEBRATING RAJESH KHANNA ON ALL INDIA RADIO While it was business as usual on all the other money-making FM stations, good old Vividh Bharathi had scrapped their regular programmes and also their regular ads.... More at : http://tinyurl.com/d7ln9z6 (Alokesh Gupta, New Delhi, dx_india yg via DXLD) Viz.: CELEBRATING RAJESH KHANNA ON ALL INDIA RADIO Last updated on: July 19, 2012 13:45 IST A Ganesh Nadar, who saw the Rajesh Khanna hysteria up close in the 1970s, was delighted to find his popular songs play on Vividh Bharathi, All India [ Images ] Radio, when the Superstar passed away. Yesterday evening, a friend was kind enough to give me a lift home. As traffic in Mumbai [ Images ] is slow we wanted to listen to music to pass the time. We tried all the new flashy private radio stations on FM but they were all playing the usual mix of the latest music and advertisements. In sheer frustration I said, "Try Vividh Bharathi, I am sure they will not let us down." I was right. While it was business as usual on all the other money-making FM stations, good old Vividh Bharathi had scrapped their regular programmes and also their regular ads. They were paying a tribute to Rajesh Khanna [ Images ]. The original Superstar, who had just passed away. The one for whom the word was coined. Vividh Bharathi had done their research very well. May be they had prepared it beforehand, I don't know, but they did a great job. They played his best songs and also told us interesting tit-bits like Kishore Kumar [ Images ] sang 91 songs for him, R D Burman scored the music for 40 of the films in which he acted, and Anand Bakshi [ Images ] wrote most of his songs. And none of this was interrupted by advertising jungles. That was the best part of it. Vividh Bharathi understood that a tribute should be paid uninterrupted by any commercial activity which would have been jarring and also in poor taste. No other station did the same. Then this morning as I was travelling down Linking Road I saw banners put up by the Maharashtra [ Images ] Navnirman Sena mourning the death of Rajesh Khanna. Nice to know they thought him a Mumbaikar. I listened to Vividh Bharathi again on my way to work. And I cried as I listened to 'Zindagi ko bahut pyaar humne kiya, maut say bhi mohabbat nibhayenge hum,' courtesy our national radio station. National television and radio are ingrained in the psyche of many of us who grew up knowing nothing else. I can never forget the music they played when Doordarshan started at 6 pm every evening, nor the tone of the announcer on AIR when he said, "This is All India Radio giving you the news." The tone suggested that this was THE NEWS and you better believe every word of it as I am announcing it. I have watched every TV channel except Doordarshan when the country suddenly had a choice. I listened to every radio station except AIR when that choice too became available. But when it mattered most, when it concerned the beloved Superstar of my childhood, it was Vividh Bharathi that did not let me down where all the rest failed. I salute you Vividh Bharathi, you are a true Bharathi and you are truly vivid (Rediff.com via DXLD) ** INDIA. ALL INDIA RADIO TURNS 85 TODAY --- Decades before satellite television and FM radios began capturing the imagination of audience, at least two generations grew up listening to the All India Radio (AIR). Today, the country’s humble radio broadcaster turns 85. Although the first broadcast in India had started through the Radio Club of Bombay in 1923, it was only on July 23, 1927 that the Indian Broadcasting Company Ltd was set up as a collaborative venture by the Government of India, which later evolved as AIR. More at : http://newindianexpress.com/states/tamil_nadu/article574349.ece (via Alokesh Gupta, New Delhi, July 23, dx_india yg via DXLD) ** INDIA. AIR HAS EXTENSIVE PLANS FOR LONDON OLYMPICS 2102 REPORTAGE http://www.radioandmusic.com/content/editorial/news/air-has-extensive-plans-london-olympics-2102-reportage (via Alokesh Gupta, July 19, dx_india yg via DXLD) ** INDIA. RADIO GIVES VOICE TO INDIA’S TRANSGENDER COMMUNITY Stigmatized by society and disowned by relatives, the majority of India’s transgender community is forced to live as second-class citizens with restricted access to education, jobs and health care. Determined to combat this discrimination and alienation, the community is now creating its own media to amplify its voice. More at : http://www.globalpressinstitute.org/global-news/asia/india/radio-gives-voice-india%E2%80%99s-transgender-community (via Alokesh Gupta, New Delhi, dx_india yg via DXLD) ** INDIA. In Jun 2012, Indian DXer E.P. Brijesh started his own webradio project "South Asia Radio". Besides music programmes, featuring various Indian music styles, there are re-broadcasts of DX programmes, e.g. "AWR Wavescan". "South Asia Radio" can be heard daily from 1400-1900, URL: http://dxhobby.caster.fm/ Reception reports for the webradio live stream are welcomed and will be verified by detailled QSL cards. E-mail address: dxing @ in.com (Thomas Voelkner, Leipzig, Germany, DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) ** INDIA [non]. Please listen to the 4th edition of Indian DX Report on AWR Wavescan on SUNDAY, 29th July 2012, produced in Assam, India. We'll be issuing QSLs for correct reception report sent for this edition of IDXR. We have three designs of QSLs designed by our good friend Partha Sarathi Goswami of Siliguri India based on the photographs of Assam state of India. And here is our QSL policy for your kind information: For sending a printed paper QSL by post we request our listeners in India to send 1 IRC or Mint Indian stamps worth Rs. 25/- (for each QSL) as return postage and all listeners in abroad are requested to send 2 IRCs or 2 US Dollers along with the reception report for a paper QSL by post. Reception reports without IRCs or Mint Stamps sent via postal mail or email will be awarded eQSLs. Send your comments, suggestions & reception reports to: THE "INDIAN DX REPORT" C/o. Prithwiraj Purkayastha PUB BONGALPUKHURI JORHAT 785001 ASSAM, INDIA. Or email your reports to Please visit the Facebook page of Indian DX Report http://www.facebook.com/indiandxreport 73s, (Prithwiraj Purkayastha, Jorhat, Assam, India, July 23, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** INDONESIA. 4749.95, RRI Makassar on July 23 reactivated for Ramadan; last heard October 2011; decent reception (poor-fair with QRN); too early for China or Bangladesh QRM; just as heard when they were last on, they are off frequency, so folks should be able to easily differentiate them. Highlights: 0930-0944; Qur’an (solo reciting). 0944-1000: Sounded like series of ads. 1002-1006: Qur’an (communal reciting, not often heard). 1006: Drums; Qur’an (solo reciting). 1015: Sounded like a Radio Republik Indonesia Makassar ID; followed by R-R-I jingle. 1017-1022: pop and Islamic songs. https://www.box.com/s/7a26d3c38f595ee24891 contains an edited MP3 audio file (Ron Howard, San Francisco at Ocean Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 4749.95, RRI Makassar. July 24 with good signal strength, but summertime QRN. CNR1 (4750.0) QRM started about 1055 and built up from there. Highlights: 0944-1000: Series of ads. 1003-1007: Qur’an (communal reciting). 1007: Drums; Qur’an (solo reciting). 1015: Children singing and EZL songs. 1027: ID: “Radio Republik Indonesia”. 1035-1044: Series of ads. 1044: EZL songs. https://www.box.com/s/e5880ccaf394e9f39aae contains an edited 5 minute MP3 audio file with ID and mostly ads (Ron Howard, San Francisco at Ocean Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Measured 4749.950 kHz exact at 1030-1045 UT July 25. vy73 wolfgang (Wolfgang Büschel, via Ron Howard, ibid.) Thanks Wolfy! Good to know the exact frequency. Today had less than normal QRN, so reception was better. MP3 audio https://www.box.com/s/045c45e7cf76423ca4d4 with nice ID at 01:15. Thanks again! (Ron Howard, San Francisco, California, USA, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 4750, (Sulawesi), RRI Makassar, 1218 July 25, Bahasa Indonesia, man with speech, frequent mentions of Indonesia, occasional male commentator. Good (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening from my car with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** INDONESIA. 9526-, July 24 at 1305, usual very weak carrier from VOI hetting something on 9530, no reception possible, but since I am ready to turn on the computer and it`s Tuesday, I bring up VOI stream at: http://en.voi.co.id/streaming/voi-streaming-a.php Played OK with few hiccups, but no `Exotic Indonesia` connexion to RRI Banjarmasin this week, just the usual string of regular features from Jakarta, including an ID with the three imaginary frequencies, 11785, 15150 and 9525, by the clueless announcer (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** INTERNATIONAL INTERNET [and non]. Why SW will still be needed to serve Africa for some time longer: NORWAY HAS MORE BROADBAND CAPACITY THAN ALL OF AFRICA. See http://gigaom.com/2012/07/18/norway-has-more-bandwidth-than-all-of-africa-other-broadband-gaps/ (Richard Cuff / Allentown, PA USA, NASWA yg via DXLD) ** INTERNATIONAL VACUUM. In view of recent changes due mainly to the Partial Closure of Transmissions from Canada and the almost total Closure of Transmissions from the Netherlands, the resultant changes to the World Radio Network are (Hopefully) shown here, linked from the World Radio Network Site. http://www.wrn.org/listeners/assets/PDFs/WRN_ENGLISH_EUROPE_A12.pdf (Ken Fletcher, P-Code CH43, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD) + separate skeds for NAm, restworld ** IRAN. 9650, V. of Islamic Republic of Iran – Sirjan (Presumed), 0044, in Turkish. YL, OM over indigenous flute, Iranian vocal, soft spoken OM, instrumental, YL, Qur'an like chant, OM talk (explanation?), further chanting, OM, group chanting, OM, - YL, 0100 OM (possible ID), Qur'an chant until 0110+. Fair. 7/21/12 (Mark Taylor, Madison WI, WinRadio g313e, Grundig G1 & G5, Satellit 800; EWE, Flextenna, NASWA Flashsheet via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) This one is very strange and intriguing. Seems unlikely IRIB would broadcast in Turkish at the middle of the night in Turkey. The WRTH May A-12 PDF update does not include 9650 as an Iranian frequency at all, nor any IRIB transmission at 0030-0130, nor does the WRTH 2012. And there is no Iran entry in the July update. Aoki and Eibi do show 0030-0130 on 9650 as Turkish, but HFCC shows it as ``Turki-ES``, the same nomenclature for known Turkish broadcasts at other times. 9650 0030 0130 29S,39N SIR 500 310 0 211 1234567 200712 200812 D TURKI-ES IRN IRB IRB 21272 7A105 The CIRAF zones for this in HFCC are a clue: 39N = Turkey, and 29S applies to the Caucasus east of Turkey and north of Iran, including Azerbaijan. The IRIB Turkish website http://turkish.irib.ir/home/frekanslarimiz which is almost a year old, headed 6 Aug 2011, does not show any time which could be construed at 0030-0130 UT, nor any frequency as 9650. I do notice there is a language linked on the IRIB Worldservice website called Aran, which is not in the WRTH schedule. It should be there even if it`s close enough to be only on MW. It appears to be Turkic and have something to do with Azerbaijan, but I can`t find a time or frequency schedule for it. Could this be it? 0030-0130 would be 5:30-6:30 am in Azerbaijan at UT+5 DST, a somewhat more waking hour than back in Turkey at UT +3. I checked 9650 just after 0100 UT July 25 and there was only a very weak signal. Aha, I didn`t notice at first the effective dates in HFCC for the 0030-0130 broadcast, 20 July to 20 August. Therefore it is a special transmission for Ramadan (Glenn Hauser, ibid.) ** IRAN. 9650, July 25 at 0103, very poor signal from something, checking after report from Mark Taylor WI, in NASWA Flashsheet of VIRI here in Turkish at 0030-0130, as now scheduled in the middle of the night there, for observant Turx gorging on an early breakfast, and wanting to listen to Tehran, where they are holier, before fasting all day. Sunrise in Ankara is currently 0241 UT, so a 0130-0230 UT timing would have been more effective. This led me to find these Ramadan-only IRIB specials in HFCC dated 20 July to 20 August only, some of them self-conflicting: 1930-2330 5940 & 6010 Azeri from Kamalabad 2130-0130 7325 & 7360 Arabic from Sirjan, 270 degrees 2230-0100 7405 Tajik from Kamalabad 2330-0030 6010 Azeri from Sirjan [conflicts with Kurdish below] 6010 Sorani Kurdish from Sirjan [conflicts with Azeri above] 2330-0030 6005 & 6080 Sorani Kurdish from Kamalabad 2330-0330 6005 Azeri from Kamalabad [first hour conflicts S Kurdish] 0030-0130 9650 Turkish from Sirjan, 310 degrees, good for NAm. In case there are more on slightly different dates, did not search further. BTW, as I was checking the IRIB website http://worldservice.irib.ir/ I found linx to new/unknown languages Aran and Taleshi, both apparently Turkic and for Azerbaijan, not in WRTH schedules; that close, could be on MW only (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** JAPAN. 9595, Radio Nikkei-1, Tokyo. 0809 July 22, 2012. Cool Jap retro-rock -- 60's Lounge Lizard, Torch and Phil Spector-ish influenced – uninterrupted. SoundHound app on the iPhone IDed one particularly nice track as “on Matsuwa (original cover...)” [youthful female album cover image], or is that the song title? Much of it came back in kanji and I'm Google-denied on finding anything listed as “Matsuwa”; oh well. Better listening in LSB due to the persistent low het high side that's been here forever. Female announcer with just a few words finally at 0854, back to vocals. Quick Kenyan coffee refill in store before top- of-hour. Male announcer 0859, single, long time sounder 0900, ID, back to vocals. Parallel much weaker 6055 but 3925 not making it, yet at least. Recheck 1007, “Love Me Tonight” by Tom Jones with 6055 better signal now, but still no 3925 audible (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC- R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** JAPAN [non]. 5960, July 19 at 0447, NHK Warudo Radio Japan again favors us with classical music on its Japanese service, Moonlight Sonata on piano via Sackville. 11850, July 20 at 2053, poor signal in French with a squealing transmitter (I think), never any ID caught until partial timesignal, 3 pips or so at 2100, then open carrier to 2100:52*. HFCC shows it`s NHK via MADAGASCAR, 2030-2100, 250 kW, 305 degrees (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** KASHMIR. RAMADAN SPECIAL extended broadcast. Subject: [A-DX] Log: Ramadan-DX: AIR Srinagar, Kaschmir, Indien, 4950 kHz, 2145 UT, SIO 353 Pünktlich zum Beginn des Ramadan beginnt auch AIR Srinagar mit seiner alljährlichen Sondersendung zum Ramadan. Der Sender aus dem Kaschmir Tal ist seit dem Sendebeginn um 2145 UT auf 4950 mit guten Signal in Salzburg zu hören. 73, Christoph Ratzer, Austria, http://remotedx.wordpress.com July 20, A-DX via Wolfgang Büschel, DXLD) viz.: Thanks to a tip of Christoph Ratzer Austria OE2CRM: INDIA, 4949.987, AIR, Kashmir, Srinagar observed from 2200 UT July 20 with S=8-9 signal here in Germany. Extended Hindi / Kashmiri service noted on Ramadan (Wolfgang Büschel, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) The Ramzan fasting season starts today. Like in previous years. look out for special broadcasts from Radio Kashmir, Srinagar as follows from tonight. Around 2145-2245, 4950 1116. Yours sincerely, (Jose Jacob, VU2JOS, UT July 21, dx_india yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) Is this the only `Indian` SW station affected by Ramzan? Remember, there are as many Moslems in India as in Pakistan (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) 4950.00, *2143-2150 21.07, R Kashmir, Srinagar, AIR IS, 2145 Kashmiri, ann Ramadan early programme with string music in background, 2146 man and woman discussing and shouting, 35333. Best 73, (Anker Petersen, in Skovlunde, Denmark, on my AOR AR7030PLUS with 28 metres of longwire, via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** KOREA NORTH. 2850, July 20 at 1115, poor signal at S9+12, in usual hi noise level, but pleased as I could be to instantly recognize the KCBS extremely emotional put-on style in Korean, 1118 choral music. Hardly heard this at all last winter, so nice to get in the summer. Also signs of something with het on 3480. I even checked for Japan lower on MW 828, 774, 747, but that was too optimistic as yet. Sunrise here today was 1129 UT (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 3250, Voice of Korea, 1200 July 25, interval signal, sign-on in Japanese, announcements, national anthem. Fair, also see 4404.85 below. 3320, Pyongyang B.S., 1206 July 25, Korean, man with impassioned speech, // 6398, not parallel to 3250. Poor. 4404.85, Voice of Korea, 1226 July 25, Japanese, music, female announcer, discovered parallel to 3250, listed as 4405 in reference sources with numerous languages including Japanese 1200-1250. Poor (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening from my car with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** KOREA NORTH [and non]. 6070, July 22 at 1142, VOK Japanese service with characteristic choral music, making a ripple SAH under still stronger CFRX; so VOK is back almost-on-frequency after making an audible het from closer to 6071 for a few weeks (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** KOREA NORTH [non]. 5985.0, Shiokaze/Sea Breeze via Yamata, July 17 at 1348 in stilted Chinese (scheduled 1330 to 1400); 1407 in Korean (scheduled from 1400 to 1430); fair; best in LSB due to Myanmar on 5985.83. Friday, July 20 from 1333 to 1339 in English with “Today’s News Flash” then into “Today’s News on North Korean Issues”; ID: “This is Shiokaze Sea Breeze from Tokyo, Japan”; fair with light jamming (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** KOREA NORTH [non]. 6003, KOREA SOUTH (CLANDESTINE) Voice of Hope. 1042 July 22, 2012. Fair with Korean female opera vocals (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) So no jamming? ** KURDISTAN. 3930, Voice of Kurdistan, Sulaimaniya, Iraq, *0158, May 02, not mentioned since at that time and on any frequency. Checked in July in times 0100-0300 in range 3200-7000 kHz, but not found anywhere 3970v, Voice of Iranian Kurdistan, via Salah Al-Din, Iraq, *0225, in Jul, on 3965-3975 and 4867-4881 (Rumen Pankov, Sofia, Bulgaria, DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) ** KUWAIT. 15540, July 22 at 1833 check, fair signal with western pop music, no English news as normally appears at 1830-1835, or never on Sunday? 15540, fair signal July 23 at 2049, R. Kuwait interrupts the pop music to ask for reception reports to the Frequency Department, but could not copy postal address. Someone might tell them they have not been on 11990 for years, and this frequency is in English, not Arabic as they keep registering it? Back to a bit more music before 2050-2053 News In Brief. Reverse of usual situation, song at 2053 is easier to understand, ``I Wanna Be a Billionaire So Frickin` [sic] bad``. Well, at least the Emir is, no doubt. As always, whatever music is playing gets interrupted at 2058 for sign-off announcements. It never times out right, which requires planning, back-timing (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** LAOS. Re: LAO National Radio came up with a printed QSL; no return postage is required. Communicate with the email ID provided in the WRTH National Radio Section :)> Attached please find LNR QSL received today; report sent on 14 February 2012 via post with 1 USD and prepared card (not used) and later followed up via email. It's their new QSL design which I mentioned in last mail, my one slightly damaged by water as we are going through heavy monsoon here. This is my 67th Country verified :) (Partha Sarathi Goswami, Siliguri, W.B., India, July 19, DX LISTENING DIGEST) QSL attachment in the dxldyg ** MADAGASCAR. 5010, R. Madagascara, 0348 lively Afro Hi-life music, 0359 M and W announcers, 0400 brief music bridge, then same W with presumed news with remote report by M. Fair signal but the QRN was tough. Nice to see this is still on. (16 July) (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD-535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) ** MALAYSIA. 11665, 1912-1934, RTM Sarawak FM, Kajang, 14/07, Malaysian, YL/OM talks, western pop and rock music such as Still Loving You, etc. - poor with local noise and QRM from 11660 (BBC *1930), // 9835 weak-poor 7295, 1536-1550, RTM Traxx FM, Kajang, 11/07, English, OM/YL short talks with commercial and ID jingles, western pop songs - fair-almost good with local noise, best in AM SYNC with 6 kHz bandwidth 9835, 1434-1512, RTM Sarawak FM, Kajang, 11/07, Malaysian, Quran OM singing, OM (mostly)/YL talks, etc. - fair with local noise and splashes from both sides, best in AM SYNC with 4 kHz bandwidth (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) 11665, on extended schedule in Ramadan? Probably RTM Wai FM program in Malaysian traced at 2346 UT July 20, modern Arab female singer performance heard (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 20 via DXLD) ** MALI. 5995.0, 2215-2228 10/7, R. Mali, Kati. French, phone-in program. Modulation at 100%, 55433 CGS 9635.0, 1252-1326, 13/7, R. Mali, Kati. French news. Low modulation level, 25433 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 5995.002, Tiny signal of low-modulated ORTM Radio Mali Bamako program, fluttery signal played WAf music at 2235 UT July 20 (Wolfgang Büschel, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MAURITANIA. 7245, R. Mauritanie. End of long talk by M, brief local guitar music, then M with "Huna Nouakchott" ID at 0754:35, then Arabic music with Mauritanian guitar and group vocals by children, then another full ID at 0800, and into news starting and ending with headlines to 0812, then into next program with intro by M and W. Still getting a little music by 0920, but fading quickly. Something happened at 0937:50 as all signals dropped down suddenly. (20 July) 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD-535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) 7245, Sunday July 22 at 0508, IGIM is on with Arabish talk, in an increasingly rare early appearance; fluttery, unusual too for this path (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 7245, Radio Mauritanie, Nouakchott. 0634 July 22, 2012. Nonstop talk by man in Arabic, very good. Seemed all political, definitely not the expected Ramadan fanfare (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF- 7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MEXICO. 630, July 19 at 0458, Mexican NA is playing in a version not often heard, band rather than orchestral or choral; 0502 segué to another anthem, of a state? Only lyrix I could copy were ``entre tierra y montaña``, and suspect it`s the usual dominating signal here, XEFB in Monterrey, but I don`t find a match to those words in the Canto a Nuevo León, nor a sportive one for Monterrey itself. Of course, was fading out by 0505 for tentative XEFB ID. 630, July 20 at 0504 UT I listen again to the unfamiliar state or city song following the NA, and then definite ID this time for XEFB, Monterrey NL, US stations more or less nullable. Turned back on at 1122, now nothing but Spanish talk, probably same, with nothing from Denver or St Louis (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MEXICO. Sunrise log July 20, UT: 710, at 1124, very good signal in Low German, preacher about the Bibel with accent sounding more Englisch than Spanisch and as he is upwrapping, self-imposed QRhyMn; 1126 gives address of Die Bibel Sag, in Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua. And immediate segué to jingle, ``con la música que te gusta, XEDP, La Ranchera de Cuauhtémoc``. Not yet! Then starts hard-sell adstring. KGNC might as well not exist. 710, July 21 at 1106, XEDP, Ciudad Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua goes from multi-verse choral NA to ``Soy Soldado``, super-patriotic militaristic pledge of allegiance, spoken by a male rather than sung; 1109 segué to state song with Chihuahua mentioned several times, tenor with choir and band. 1110.5 a male prays briefly to Jesus, then a female sings to be pardoned. Finally sign on with their new(?) FM getting top billing, XHDP 89.7 10 kW, y XEDP 710, 5 kW, La Ranchera, street address, another station of Grupo BM Radio, finally usual jingle ID as XEDP, 1113 live DJ mentions 89.7 only, 1120 time as 5:20, 1125 song ``El Borracho`` (The Drunkard). Since I heard a Low German gospel-huxter yesterday at this time, I was trying to catch when that started, but not at all on this Sabbath by 1128. A super signal and very steady, hardly any fades. I would have rated it 50 kW, not just 5; finally started to fade around 1137, a few minutes after LSR here. WRTH and Cantú give it 7 kW, big deal. Cantú also shows 89.7 with the real callsign XHEDP, so some previous holder of XHDP must have objected to such an usurpation. Since many letters of the Spanish alfabet end in the syllable -e, including ache, the intrusive E in the middle of the official callsign can easily be swallowed, unheard. I bet that`s why SCT picked it for this purpose. The jingles produced long ago still just say XEDP (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MEXICO. Whenever you see a Mexican station listed in FCC records as "XENVA," that's not a real station. "NVA" is short for "Nueva," or "new," and those "XENVA" listings are placeholder records to tell US- based stations that there's a Mexican allotment (but not a real station!) on that channel that has to be protected by treaty (Scott Fybush, NY, WTFDA-AM via DXLD) This was in reply to someone who cited such listings. Like so many trivia(?), this has been explained before in DXLD, but people just won`t read and absorb everything provided here. I suppose the one who edits it has the best chance, but whose memory is hardly eidetic (gh, DXLD) ** MEXICO [and non]. 6185, Radio Educación, México DF. 0011 July 19, 2012. Old Torch music (French?), 0016 female ID. Fair. Would be better if Brazil wasn't spewing Braso-Portuguese garbage programming on 6180. July 19, 2118: seemingly feeder news, maybe the national thing, poor on slow fade-up (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MEXICO. Re 12-29: Significant changes to Mexican DTV policy > - MEXICO WILL NOT AUTHORIZE DTV STATIONS ON LOW-VHF. Mexican DTV will be on channels 7-51. Someone more fluent in Spanish than myself has pointed out that this is NOT the case. Low-band VHF is *discouraged* (as are channels 38-51) but not *prohibited*. Here's an interesting little tidbit: I can't find XHPN-3 [Piedras Negras, Coahuila] on the list of stations required to convert. They *may* be allowed to remain analog indefinitely. -- (Doug Smith W9WI, Pleasant View, TN EM66, WTFDA via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** MEXICO. A bit of sporadic E analog TV DX July 22, UT: 2035 on 4, Fórmula Uno racing coverage the dominant signal, also with CCI here and weaker stuff on 2, 3 and 5. Racing was wrapping up at 2100. 2046 on 4, Galavisión promos, not sure if same station as above, anyway both unIDed 2059 on 2, net 7 bug UR during movie or drama. XHTAU Tampico is always the prime suspect when southward All faded by around 2110, and outside later saw the antenna was still pointed NNE toward Canada from yesterday`s DX, rather than SSW, oops. (The rotor control is out of sight and I have to be sure to feel which way the notch is pointing.) Sporadic E analog TV DX July 24, UT: 1512 on 2, some video fades in with antenna south; 6m Es maps would imply Canada, but not from the NNE. It is too often the case that 6m Es displays don`t do justice to Mexican openings There was a huge Es opening into FM and even weather band over the eastern US, into Cuba, Caribbean, but probably not extending this far, I hope as I was not remonitoring until: 2303 on 2, turned on to find Info-7 in progress amid CCI; probably Tampico 2303 on 4, net-4 f bug in LR during apparent news, also algo on 5 2351 on 2, something fades back in briefly UT July 25: 0014 on 2, fade-in video, P&G ads in Spanish with Olympic connexion [see CANADA for a while] 0314 on 2, Spanish from south revives, CCI 0314 on 4, novela, Azteca-13 bug UR, again 0331 0314 on 5, fútbol 0344 on 5, ``Televisa Veracruz`` audio promo mention, while video CCI, i.e. XHAJ, Las Lajas 0345 on 6, promo with full screen DANIEL, and later LALO; unknown bug UR 0348 on 6, music with loud live DJ, audience; now a better look at the UR bug: it`s the Multimedios star, with PLUS below and to the right of it. So it`s XHTAO in Tampico or XHLGG in León, per Oglethorpe. From backdrop, show name includes NOCHES, and FUTBOL. 0458 on 3, full-screen ID with the Grupo Pacífico italic 3 in an oval, and XHQ-TV, XHQ-DT = Culiacán, Sinaloa. Es still incoming as it`s almost local midnight CDT but not really, = 2230 LMT 0505 on 2, from southwest, set with large ND, seems about sports, so maybe means Noticiero Deportivo; network or local? 0520 and 0555 final check still bits of video DX on 2. During the evening I also tried FM from time to time but nothing. Sporadic-E analog TVDX July 25, UT: 1602 on 3, ads in Spanish; CCI on 2 1623 on 2, net-7 bug UR, news show? 1627 on 4, hoy bug in LL, i.e. net-2 morning show 1629 on 3, from WSW with typical zero-CCI, Hola in LR, then YLs exclaim ``Hola, Mexicali``, so XHBC. CCI is from XHTJB, Tijuana 1639 on 5, talk show, net-13 bug UR, from WSW, i.e. XHAQ Mexicali 1639 on 6, video shows; 1641 it`s animation from net-5 = XETV Tijuana 1732 on 3, rotate antenna back toward S whence signals now dominate, net-5 with Bugs Bunny; something else on 5 1748 on 2, during gobierno federal PSA, with `swishy` video CCI from malfunxioning transmitter? Lucky catch of small white letters supered local ID, upper-left as XH###-TV / AGUASCALIENTES. W9WI.com shows it`s XHAGU-TV, 45.84 kW on the XEQ-9 network, i.e. Galavisión 1753 on 2, YLs discussing Michael Jackson, bug in upper right looks like a large but lower-case a with something else overlain. Have seen this before but not identified. Maybe a show bug rather than an ID bug? BTW, checking out Danny Oglethorpe`s KNOWN MULTIPLE TRANSMITTER STATIONS (5/17/2011) http://tvdxtips.com/multitransmitter.html this shows a recent log of mine, XEZ-3 with C. Culiacan text ID seen, is a separate transmitter from another XEZ-3 in nearby Zamorano, Querétaro. Altho both IDs may be seen at times, I still have my doubts that there are two separate transmitters, as the mountaintop one should also serve Qro, with the same net-5 which would otherwise interfere with each other (unless terrain blockage??). Bits of Es analog video continued to be seen off and on occasionally the rest of the afternoon when I was busy producing WORLD OF RADIO, into the evening, mostly ch 2 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MYANMAR. 7110, Thazin Radio, 1430, July 19. Usual theme music; could make out most of the normal intro: “Good evening dear listeners. You are tuned to Thazin Radio, Pyin Oo Lwin and thank you very much. We are broadcasting the third English transmission on the air again. Radiating on 639 kilohertz and 7 point 11 megahertz.” EZL music followed by: “Good evening our dear listeners. May I present for you some sweet melodies for tonight”; Everly Brothers with “Walk Right Back”, etc.; nice to still hear this even in summertime; 1440 to 1450 segment that seemed to be talking about Myanmar architecture; poor (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** NETHERLANDS [non]. 9895, July 20 at 1059, RNW IS via BONAIRE, with somebuzz on the audio, but cleared up when `La Matinal` started at 1100. Maybe the IS is played directly from a defective unit on Bonaire itself (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) RNW QSL: Received my full data paper QSL with "Goodbye and thanks" on the front by priority airmail (and Euro 0.92 postage) direct from Hilversum. Mailed 17 July and received today, 25 July. Class act until the end! (Walt Salmaniw, Victoria, BC, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** NEWFOUNDLAND. 6160.9, CKZN with African-accented woman talking about single parent families in Africa. This apparently is the ‘new’ Radio Netherlands. CBC 1 ID at :59 and a programme promo into CBC News at ToH. Main item was re landslide in British Colombia, and another network ID at :04, into DW Radio “Inside Europe” with items re Spanish miner protest. Are they having transmitter issues? VERY off frequency, but stable! 34+443+ 0654-0706 14/Jul (Ken Zichi, Port Hope MI, MARE Tipsheet 20 July via DXLD) Of course they are (gh) 6160.88, July 19 at 0445, CKZN is still off-frequency making 880+ Hz het with CKZU. It`s a few beats above hi-A-natural on my keyboard. CKZN was also being reported on 6160.9 from mid-August to early Sept 2009, in DXLDs 9-062, 9-064, 9-065, 9-067, so is this a backup transmitter, or the main transmitter up to its old trix? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 6160.9, CANADA. CKZN - St. John's, 0225, 7.21.12, in English. Male talk into indistinct music, more DJ chat. Poor with periodic English word audible. Also heard 0119, 7/20/12 however too weak to identify anything except vague talk and music. Thanks to Glenn Hauser tip for the ID (Mark Taylor, Madison, WI, WinRadio G313, Flextenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) See also CANADA; BRAZIL ** NEW ZEALAND [and non]. 7435, July 20 at 1122, AM signal in Chinese must be CRI, 500 kW, 59 degrees from Beijing site; has heavy QRDRM from RNZI 7435-7440-7445, far too close for comfort to either, overlapping schedules during this hour (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** NIGER. 9705.0, 2210-2224, 10/7, La Voix du Sahel, Goudel. Vernacular, local songs, 45433 CGS 9705.0, 1211-1435, 11/7, LV du Sahel. French, news, tribal songs & music at 1430, 25432 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** NIGERIA. 6089.843 kHz from approx 0500 UT, more than likely heard FRCN Radio Nigeria Kaduna, and a tiny signal of Dr. Gene Scott on 6090 kHz in the background. Heard on 2250 UT July 19 on exact 6089.832 kHz (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) 6089.847, Likely the powerful signal from West Africa in our European morning hour: Radio Nigeria Kaduna in Hausa hetting University Radio of Caribbean Beacon, Anguilla island on even 6090 kHz at 0417 UT July 23 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) ** NIGERIA. 7275, FRCN, Abuja. 0626 July 22, 2012. Presumed the one, west African highlife vocal, Hausa or similar sounding man 0633, female 0626. Modulation rather low. Maybe on for Ramadan, if not always here (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 0626 is right when TUNISIA turns 7275 off, uncovering Abuja (gh) ** NIGERIA. 9689.90, Voice of Nigeria, Ikorodu. *0759 July 22, 2012. Big, over-modulated carrier up and into talking drums interval signal till 0801, a couple of false starts with man and woman in Hausa talk, percussion fill music (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF- 7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Following log at same time, indicating two transmitters in use (gh) Hi Glenn, some news for VON, transmission already reported by some German DXers a few days ago: Voice of Nigeria, new English transmission 0800-0900 15120, AM, likely Ikorudu, instead of Hausa on 9690 kHz. Today, Sunday 22nd, ID at 0815: Voice of Nigeria Lagos, a slight hum, low audio for the studio announcer, stronger for the taped audio. Announced correct frequency at 0858 and change to 9690, right in the beginning of the news summary. Signal not as strong I would expect for a transmission to Europe. 73 (Thorsten Hallmann, Münster, Germany, July 22, http://www.africalist.de.ms WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Just hearing Voice of Nigeria out of hours on 15120 at 0825 UT. Terrible hum on the modulation but a great signal. http://www.voiceofnigeria.org/freq.htm (Gary Drew, South Herts., July 24, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) [and non]. 15120, July 25 at 0559, poor signals, mix of V. of Nigeria ID with CRI fill music and 0600 CRI theme and ID. The two about equal level this time (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** NORWAY [non]. / SWEDEN, 5895, R Northern Star, Straume, Norway, via R Nord Revival transmitter in Sala, Sweden (10 kW) sent me an e-QSL after six days. Svenn Martinsen reports that their programme on Jul 06 has been reported by 60 DX-ers in 18 countries: New Zealand, Japan, Russia, The Czech Republic, Austria, Italy, Greece, Romania, Egypt, England, Spain, France, Belgium, Germany, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland (Anker Petersen, Denmark, DSWCI DX Window July 25 via DXLD) ** OKLAHOMA. 930, July 22 at 1220 UT, WKY, OKC with hard-sell super- hype ``La Indomable`` promos and ads, music; no English. Used to default to that foreign language for a pubaffs show on Sunday mornings only at 1200-1230, but could be just a summer break/vacation. The ads within it had continued to be in Spanish, weird. And I continue to be amused that this oh-so Spanish station banishing its long Okie legacy has calls made up mostly of letters lacking in Spanish. But at least they didn`t abolish the calls; someday it may revert to English (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) see also LANGUAGE LESSONS ** OKLAHOMA. 1300, KAKC [Tulsa] has had their IBOC turned off for the past two weeks; I hope this is permanent but not likely. KAKC has teased me with no IBOC for a few weeks at a time in the past and has brought it back each time (Bruce Winkelman, Tulsa, OK, July 21, NRC-AM via DXLD) ** OKLAHOMA. 3449.9/CW, OK, Hifer 35443+ 0739 14/July -- first time heard in a dog’s age! (Ken Zichi, Port Hope MI, MARE Tipsheet 20 July via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) 3450-, July 22 at 1145, ``OK`` HIFER beacon, clear and strong enough vs the noise level; weaker but still audible at 1312, but not at 1352. Tnx to tip from Kenneth Vito Zichi, Michigan. This one is allegedly quite near me somewhere in northern OK. Nor have I heard it in a long time, but my local noise level on 2-5+ MHz is too high. It`s one of those secret beacons sending nothing but the ID `OK` over and over. I wonder if the late Kirk Allen, Ponca City, had anything to do with it. More on HIFERs here: http://www.hfunderground.com/wiki/HiFER http://www.hfunderground.com/wiki/High_Frequency_Beacon The latter has a frequency list showing OK last reported January 5, 2012. But the log forum http://www.hfunderground.com/board/index.php/topic,5913.0.html shows it back by May 25. Someone thinks it may be in Arkansas, and measured 3449.83. There are many more of these listed, mostly in the western US, in the 4056-4102 range, worth sweeping with BFO (Glenn Hauser, Enid, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Thanks to Glenn Hauser's item, I've been hearing the Hifer beacon "OK" on 3449.9 here in Tulsa all afternoon between 1700-2230Z 22 JUL 12. Occasional fades but easy copy at the noise level. Must not be too far from Tulsa with only milliwatts out during summer daytime conditions. (Bruce Winkelman, Tulsa, OK 36 03 50N 96 01 34W, TenTec Jupiter xcvr, 75 meter inv vee, center at 36 feet, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** OKLAHOMA. Ch A-19, July 20 at 1359 UT, KUOT-CA OKC is barely strong enough to lock in horizontal hold during animated Cornerstone Network ID. But not strong enough to see a local ID super, if any. I always check this when stronger Estrella TV KOCY-LP 48 signal is up, apparently the only two analog TV stations left in OKC (Glenn Hauser, Enid, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** PAKISTAN. 17830, July 20 at 0502, uncertain language with distorted modulation and flutter. Only thing listed is R. Pakistan in Urdu, 05- 07, 250 kW, 252 degrees from API-6, Islamabad. Not what I would expect to hear in the nightmiddle on 16m (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 6040, Port Moresby was recorded here from 1100 to 1300 UT on July 15 with good results. Also recorded from 0800 to 1000 and from 1057 to 1215 UT on July 13. Signals were a steady S-3+ at these dates and times with decent readability by using USB. At this QTH, 6040 kHz starts to become S-2 around 0800 UT, improving to S-3 after 0815 UT and then significantly drops off after 1300 UT. Generally programming was man and woman announcers with continuing election coverage. There were also frequent remote reports from the "field" (Bruce W. Churchill, CA, DXplorer July 16 via BC-DX via DXLD) PNG election result figures. 6039.971, PNG heard in English on Brisbane SDR remote unit, S=8-9 signal at 2014 to 2026 UT July 16, continuous PNG election result figures read (Wolfgang Buschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 16 via DXLD) And last night also heard in Brisbane Australia remote unit: 6039.971 PNG with endless reading of the election results in English, S=8- 9 in Queensland around 2020 UT, July 16th (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 16/17/20, BC-DX 20 July via DXLD) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 3205, Radio West Sepik?? 1142-1147 July 19 good signal with woman interviewing man in English. No ID heard at TOH. News in English at 1303 UT. Best regards, (Dennis Vroom. Kalama, WA, JRC NRD 545 & R8B, Southwest Ewe & Sky Wire loop 753', High Performance Active Whip, Local Sunrise 1240 UT, Solar Indices SF=110 A=5 K=1, IRCA via DXLD) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 3345 PNG (Papua Territory), NBC Northern, 1201 July 19, Tok Pisin, man with a promo of some kind, mention “service” and gave phone number; 1202 another announcement with echo effect and music background; 1203 woman whose audio level was weaker than everything else, followed by man with NBC news in English, parallel other PNGs; 1209:30 news ended and playing instrumental version of “My Heart Will Go On”; then a mix of speaking by woman and man and music; 1228 woman speaking to man on phone, continued past 1230. Poor. (Sellers-BC) 6040 PNG, NBC Port Moresby, 1141 July 19, English, election coverage continues, //3205, 3260, 3315, 3325, not // 3345 and 3365 was only a carrier, nothing on 3385 or 3905. 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) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA [and non]. 3325, NBC Bougainville, July 19, running well past their normal sign off time of 1300; heard from 1315 to 1325 and still there at 1344; in Tok Pisin with election coverage and providing the vote count; mixing with equal strength with RRI. 3345, NBC Northern, the Voice of Oro. July 19 found them with decent audio most of the time today, unlike yesterday’s absence of audio; mostly in Tok Pisin except for the 1204 NBC National News in English; tuned out at 1311 and Ian Baxter (Australia) noted they were gone by 1320 [July 20 I heard 1318*]; QRN and mostly poor; a few segments where the audio was not as strong as other segments, just as Harold Sellers also noted in British Columbia, who was listening at the same time today. July 20 randomly from 1204 to suddenly off at a few seconds before 1319. https://www.box.com/s/7f990a21c7afc064a31e with MP3 audio of ID: “You are listening to N-B-C Northern, the Voice of Oro” followed by what I think was a song about the election. 3385, NBC East New Britain, July 20 randomly from 1204 to suddenly off at 1248*. NBC National News in English followed by NBC East New Britain Provincial News in Tok Pisin with extensive election news, vote counting and about the National Mask Festival being held in Rabaul (East New Britain Province) now. MP3 audio at https://www.box.com/s/21ba5e86ba974f3a7abe with “N-B-C East New Britain Provincial News” and at 01:31 “National Mask Festival”. 3905, NBC New Ireland off the air July 19 and 20 checking subsequently from 1149. 3915, Radio Fly, 1349-1402, July 19. Pop hit songs (“Rhythm Of My Heart” by Rod Stewart, etc.); 1356 series of IDs with SW and FM frequencies which started and ended with Irish music; young girl: “I listen to Radio Fly on . . .”; poor. 7324.95, Wantok Radio Light. Surprised to still be able to hear this fairly clear during the 1400 to 1430 window; 1418 on July 19 with Christian songs; 1421 just a brief ID for “Wantok Radio Light, your inspirational station” and more songs; weaker station underneath them (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) A follow-up to David Ricquish's recent posts on 6040 kHz, but mostly a confirmation of his posts (from another source). "NBC have put the Radio Central 10 kW NEC on 6040 kHz (ex-Alotau frequency) for the election period." It is located at the usual Port Moresby MW/SW site. The signal is usually weak here in Australia & even reported weak in Port Moresby today. My reception of the 10 kW NBC Northern txer on 3345 kHz is MUCH stronger. Log 6040 kHz whilst you can, it won't be around for long. Regards (Ian Baxter, NSW, July 20, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Since 6040 is barely audible here if at all, I am not surprised it is 10, not 100 kW (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) NBC 4890 kHz Future Plan - Rare good news --- My thanks to one of our very busy members for forwarding this info today. In 2013 the NBC of PNG in Port Moresby will be looking for a new 25 kW SW TXer to replace the aging & dilapidated 100 kW transmitter that operated NBC National Radio on 4890 & 9675 kHz. I'm pleased to hear that news. If all goes to plan I'm guessing NBC Port Moresby could possibly return to SW in late 2013/2014?? From my recollection of events the 100 kW txer operated at 50 kW for a good number of years & the power output reduced to 25kW in the last years of regular usage. So it would appear that their management are happy with the coverage offered by a 25 kW SW txer. If any of our members think they can assist the NBC in their quest for an attractively priced 25 kW SW txer please drop me a line (Ian Baxter, July 20, shortwavesties yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA [non]. Hello Glenn, Some fresh info. This evening I checked 6040. At 1900z the carrier on 6039.97 was visible, tentatively NBC Papua, unfortunately like always no audio. At 1951z another weak carrier switches on at exactly 6040 kHz. At 1959 an ID is heard as “This is Voice of America, Washington DC + ??Pinheira?? At 2000z a program in French starts. When checked again at 2135z the signal was gone. The carrier on 6039.97 was visible all the time. This is certainly the unID by Galassi in SWB 1750. The same type of music as in his recording was heard before the program started. 73 (Thomas Nilsson, Sweden, July 22, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Yes, let`s take a look at what is already scheduled on 6040 per latest HFCC July 20, during the PNG nightish: 2000-2100, VOA French, Hausa via São Tomé except no 2030 Hausa Sundays 2055-2300, CRI Chinese via Beijing 2150-1700, CNR Huhhot in Mongolian 0415-1115, AIR Jeypore (maybe not active?) 1400-1500, CRI Chinese via Xian Aoki shows AIR Jeypore only until 0945 and VOA Hausa also not Saturday; and a 24-hour Brazilian (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hello again, Yes, it fits. Yesterday CRI switched on the transmitter at 2055z with a strong signal. I am a little puzzled with the very weak signal from VOA. The signal level was just above the noise level. Never heard any Braz. station here during recent years. But R ICDI might be a possible catch when they are on. 73 (Thomas Nilsson, Sweden, ibid.) Altho there was briefly talk about ICDI, CENTRAL AFRICA REPUBLIC being on 6040, since then I think they claim to be on 6030 again (gh, DXLD) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 3260, NBC Madang on July 22 was the strongest by far of the PNG stations heard today, even better than 6040. 1150 – Voting count given in Tok Pisin; // 3204.96, 3315, 3325, 3365 and 6040. Noted these off the air: 3275, 3305, 3385 and 3905. Found 3345 on, but not //. 1309 - Noted // 3204.96, 3315, 3345, 3365 and 6040 with election coverage in English; 1317 furniture ad; 3325 covered by RRI; by 1322 found 3345 no longer // (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 6040, NBC Port Moresby with NBC National Radio programming. 0901, July 24. Bird call; “Good night. This is N-B-C National News” till 0909 (July 23 late with the news; started at 0906); ads for BSP (Bank of South Pacific), free event at Port Moresby Sports Centre, Yellow Pages and PSA by teenagers about condom use; 0911 ID: “N-B-C National Radio, the Voice of Papua New Guinea”; program with recorded reports and live phone conversation about the elections; 0940 tuned out. Heavy summertime QRN. Edited MP3 audio file at https://www.box.com/s/70a119cc3a8b635b2492 (Ron Howard, San Francisco at Ocean Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. UNID, 3345.04, Fair carrier here found at 0910. Thought I heard some extremely weak audio at 0940 recheck. R. Northern back on?? (18 July). ZYs and LAs on the whole were a lot weaker today. On the other hand, Pacific/Asia were better. (19 July) 3345.04, R. Northern, Was indeed the one here yesterday. Found today with Pop-like music at 0959, lowered for about 20 seconds, then suddenly good audio strength in song. 1000:45 M announcer with ad including phone number given, and another song for 2 min. 1003 weak audio with W briefly then Pop song. M announcer at 1013-1024 recheck. Sounded like he was giving numbers, mention of Province. Election results?? Fading badly by 1025. (19 July) 3385, R. East New Britain, 1004 W with NBC National R. English news, mentions of election. Deadair at 1008. // 6040, 3260, 3325 and 3365. While NBC was having deadair at 1009, RENB started music but then stopped it as the news feed began with W announcer continuing at 1010!! Was back in own program at 1015. NBC ID at 1021. Nice to hear this and Northern again. No sign on 3905 New Ireland or 3275 Southern Highlands. (19 July) (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD-535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA?? 6040, NBC?? Heard M with phone in report at 0729, and finally brief comment by studio M announcer at 0734. If NBC, would be before their sunset. Music at 0747. (20 July) (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, NRD-535D and Perseus SDR, T2FD, July 20, HCDX via DXLD) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 3260, NBC Madang, 1148 July 25, English, election coverage, parallel 3315, 3325, 3365, 6040. Good. (Sellers-BC) 3345, NBC Northern, 1149 July 25, Tok Pisin, woman interviewing a politician. Fair. (Sellers-BC) 3205, NBC Sandaun, 1154 July 25, Tok Pisin, woman giving election results. Fair (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening from my car with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** PERU. [Re 12-29, OAW9A on 4810, Chazuta] Wayne, Tnx for the news. I`d heard about the station but didn`t know you were involved in setting it up. Please keep us posted on when carrier goes on the air with or without modulation. Is there a name/slogan for the station other than the callsign? (Glenn to Wayne Borthwick, July 18, via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Glenn, No slogan or name yet, they are working on it. Carrier on at about 12 noon local today for about 20 minutes. Will be putting audio on this afternoon. No link to studio yet so time on will be just for testing (Wayne Borthwick, VA7GF, Perú, July 20, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Glenn, As you may have already heard they chose Radio Logos as a name here in Chazuta. Been on the air most days in test mode in early morning and evening local. Will be leaving this Friday for home (Wayne VA7GF Borthwick, home British Columbia, 1424 UT July 24, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Yes, we just got this a few minutes earlier from Rafael Rodríguez, Colombia: (gh) Hola Santiago, aquí te envió el audio de la captación que hice en los 4810; eran las 0257 UT, con esto cerró la emisión. Antes logré escuchar una mujer que decía algo como que transmitian desde el centro del Amazonas, algo así, gracias por la información Williams López Apartado Postal: 763 Barquisimeto, Estado Lara Venezuela (23 July to Santiago San Gil, Venezuela, via Rafael Rodríguez, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) At 0257 UT, apparently made UT July 23, with a 6:32 clip in heavy noise level, man singing a hymn to El Señor. At 3:44 in, I believe it`s the familiar Peruvian NA, vocal, tenor? No talk or ID. Forwarded as an attachment to the dxldyg (gh, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) Amigo Rafael, El colega Williams captó esto pero no sabemos de donde es esta emisión. Santiago 73 (San Gil to Rodríguez, via DXLD) Hola Santiago, Cordial saludo, la señal que ha escuchado el colega Williams corresponde a las emisiones de prueba de una nueva emisora desde el Perú; más info: ``PERU. I was hunting thru the HCJB websites for any information about their temporary tests via Guiana French instead of Germany instead of Chile, to no avail, but came upon something far more interesting. A prayer request for June 28 --- just missed it --- mentioned that a new 1 kW shortwave transmitter made by HCJB in Indiana is to be installed in Chazuta, Perú. Rafael Rodríguez in Colombia noted my mention of this; he already knows about it as he`s in contact with Ray Raising [sic] of HCJB who was about to depart for Perú along with three engineers to prepare for it to go on the air by August 8. He also has the details from an official document about licensing the station which will be OAW-9A, on 4810 kHz, from the Iglesia Evangélica Central de Chazuta. We don`t yet know what it will be named. Chazuta is a small town near the much larger city of Tarapoto in north central Perú. Rafael says HCJB originally wanted to set up a SW station in Colombia to serve the Amazon region, but permission could not be obtained. More details of the license grant in forthcoming DX Listening Digest 12-27 which will be at http://www.w4uvh.net/dxld1227.txt (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1624, DX LISTENING DIGEST)`` Según indicaciones, debería estar ya al aire de forma definitiva en los primeros días de Agosto (Rafael Rodríguez R. to Santiago San Gil, via DXLD) 4810 kHz en emisiones de prueba --- Hola Colegas, Ya se encuentra en emisiones de prueba la nueva estación peruana operando a través de los 4810 kHz desde Chazuta; ayer fue captada por el colega venezolano Williams López en Barquisimeto con su cierre hacia las 0257 UT. Hoy luego de las 2330 la estoy escuchando por los 4809.9 con predicación en lengua vernacular y algunos himnos. La señal por momentos es interferida por una señal en USB de al parecer militares o algo similar. Buscando más información a la ya divulgada por el colega Glenn Hauser, encuentro que la Iglesia Central Evangélica de Chazuta quien es la base del este proyecto ayudada por la HCJB, viene trabajando desde hace varios meses con la radio e incluso encuentro que el posible o tentativo nombre de la emisora que sería "El habla de mi pueblo" según http://faienap.blogspot.com/ En esta misma página menciona que el objetivo es llegar en todas las lenguas nativas de la Amazonia. Al momento 0030 continua con predicación en vernacular (Rafael Rodríguez R., Bogotá D.C. - COLOMBIA, 0034 UT July 25, condiglist yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) Here`s that illustrated blog entry, from: 22 marzo, 2011 Proyecto: Radio Cristiana “EL HABLA DE MI PUEBLO” Con el fin de alcanzar con la Palabra de Dios en su propia lengua a los pueblos nativos de la Amazonía Peruana, nace en el corazón nativo esta necesidad de contar con una radio Emisora y así utilizar para comunicar el mensaje Salvador de Jesucristo y mantenernos comunicados entre los pueblos nativos de la Amazonía. Nuestro fin supremo es "cumplir con la gran comisión” de Jesucristo, de “ir por todo el mundo y predicar su Evangelio.” Los medios geográficos nos impiden viajar en la selva peruana, no hay medios como carretera y los costos por vía fluvial son bien altos. Por eso es necesario y urgente este medio de comunicación. No hay una Radio Cristiana con este fin en toda la Amazonía, y es una necesidad urgente para nosotros, ya que tenemos mucha gente que no lee pero sí puede escuchar la Palabra de Dios en su propia lengua. En este terreno en Chazuta se construirá la Radioemisora Por eso, la Iglesia Evangélica Central de Chazuta elaboró un proyecto para iniciar la radio “EL HABLA DE MI PUEBLO”. El plan es, ofrecer programas en diferentes lenguas de la Amazonía. Los idiomas en las cuales se piensa difundir la Palabra de Dios son: Achuar, Candoshi, Shawi, Aguaruna, Huambisa, Quechua de San Martín, Quechua de Pastaza, Quechua del Napo (y dependiendo de la potencia hacerlo en otras lenguas como: Shipibo, Huitoto, Bora, Ticuna, etc.). Rafael Ahuanari y Jairo Sangama en Radio Maranatha Rogamos sus oraciones por este proyecto que es un mandato de nuestro Dios "y será predicado este Evangelio en todo el mundo y entonces vendrá el fin” y "toda lengua confiese que Jesucristo es el Señor, para Gloria del Padre.” Es nuestra oración que se una a esta causa digna de todo buen Cristiano. Si desea saber más de proyecto y/o desea apoyarnos para la realización de proyecto, por favor contáctese con el Pastor Jairo Sangama (Correo electrónico: agiazo@hotmail.com), que forma parte del Consejo Directivo de la FAIENAP (via DXLD) I may have caught their sign-on this morning (24 July) at 1114 on 4810 during an unattended recording. A carrier came on, then a woman started talking in what sounded like Spanish. She was followed by what might have been the Peruvian NA, but I'm not 100% certain. It was extremely weak with CODAR interference, and therefore very tentative. I've posted a recording at http://home.comcast.net/~bportzer/4810_7-24-12-1114.mp3 (Bruce in Seattle Portzer, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) Can`t hear much but CODAR. 1114 would be rather late, and a close call as Tarapoto sunrise is 1118 UT (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 4809.9, Radio Logos. Chazuta, Perú. 2330-0310 julio 24 --- En emisiones de prueba la nueva estación peruana en banda tropical desde el distrito de Chazuta, con programación en vernacular hasta las 0200, luego música folclórica instrumental; para luego de las 0240 las primeras palabras en español "...primera de Juan, capítulo 1..." para luego lectura en vernacular, así también el capitulo 2 y 3. A las 0258 completa identificación por locutora en español: "...Radio Logos naciendo en el corazón de la selva amazónica OAW9A, saliendo en prueba al aire en la frecuencia 4.81 MHz desde el distrito de Chazuta, ciudad de la amistad, provincia y región de San Martín para el Perú y el mundo. Transmitiendo para usted el mensaje de la palabra de Dios, Radio Logos invita a las personas que deseen hacer sus comunicados al Jirón Arica 3ra cuadra sin número, Iglesia Evangeliza Central de Chazuta..." [Audio ID Radio Logos 4810 kHz as an attachment to the dxldyg via DXLD] Escuchada gracias a la información del colega venezolano Williams Lopez desde Barquisimeto, llegando con una muy buena señal; más información por el colega Glenn Hauser en http://www.w4uvh.net/dxld1227.txt En un correo anterior había informado como nombre tentativo que seria "El habla de mi pueblo" pero al parecer por la ayuda recibida de HCJB y Ray Rising quien ayudó también en la Radio Logos de Bolivia, optaron por este nombre, así no seria raro escuchar en sus emisiones la cadena Alas (Rafael Rodríguez R., Bogotá D.C. - COLOMBIA, 0348 UT July 25, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 4810, new R Logos was heard here at 0100z July 24 and also tonight the same time. I think I have a weak ID July 24 but not sure yet. 73 (Thomas Nilsson, Sweden, July 25, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 4810 tentative Peru, om & yl en español with music 0900 to 0916, best in lsb to avoid hash on 4810. 0917 Peru om (Bob Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, July 25, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, Cumbre DX via DXLD) ** PERU. 3329.5, Perú, Ondas del Huallaga, Huánuco noted with om, 1020 to 1025. Transmitter drift noted earlier logs seems to have ceased; 19 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** PERU. CQ, CQ, CQ; Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano. Todas las horas son UT. Desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: 3360.00, R. JPJ, Lima, 3/07 2125-2210, 33333, ads Médico naturista Jacobo Reyes San Martín de Porres, Jr. Los Olivos 602; programa especial del Médico naturista Reyes; mxf romántica latinoamericana, ID ”Radio JPJ, la única radio para el Perú y Mundo” NOTA: la escucho con dificultad y por momentos la señal se distorsiona y está 5 kHz debajo de su frecuencia autorizada. Sobre la frecuencia ya se lo he comunicado telefónicamente al propietario doctor Jesús Parra. [frequency jumps 5 kHz down; he has notified the owner] 4826.55, R. Sicuani, Sicuani, 2/07 0202-0215, 44444, mxf en español ID “7 de la noche con 10 minutos en Radio Sicuani”, ads Talleres San José, lo mejor en mecánica, programa Yetanqui, mxf y ads 4986.40, R. Voz Cristiana, (ex Radio Manantial) Huancayo, 27/06 1340- 1410, 22222; 28/06 1130-1140, 11111 --- en esos dos días imposible escucharlos y lograr su ID TAMBIEN: 4/07 1210-1310, 33333, mxf huayno en español con temas religiosos, los escucho que dificultad, ID “Alabanzas desde su Radio…….” No logro entender el nombre TAMBIEN: 6/07 2315-0030, 44444, mxf huaynos en español y quechua con motivo cristianos, ads, después de tocar continuamente mxf escucho su ID “Cuando te pregunten que radio escuchas, responde Radio Voz Cristiana” reviso en Internet y es la misma dirección de Radio Manantial, llamo por al teléfono 063-201011 y me comunico con la señorita Liz Tari, quien me confirma que el nombre de la radio ahora es Radio Voz Cristiana, ex Radio Manantial que es el mismo QTH y aproximadamente hace dos meses han cambiado el nombre de la estación; también le informo sobre los problemas de recepción que tenía días atrás y el hobby del DX, enviándome luego saludos por la radio, agradeciendo los comentarios sobre el informe de su señal. http//www.radiovozcristianaperu.com/ 5024.90, R, Quillabamba, Cusco, 4/07 1135-1205, 44444, programa El noticiero El Informativo” news, ID “6 de la mañana y 42 minutos en Radio Quillabamba” después pasan el programa Perú Andino en quechua y español. 5120.00, R. Ondas del Sur Oriente, Quillabamba, 2/07 0220-0235, 44444, mxf huayno en español, ID “A través de Radio del Sur Oriente”; luego a las 0230 dieron su s/off, escuchar grabación [no recording attached or linked] La recepción la he efectuado del 27/06 al 22/07 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una grabadora Alesis Palm Track, una antena de hilo largo de 15 metros y una antena loop Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Perú, July Chasqui DX via DXLD) NOTE: this report edited by gh to correct errors in spelling, axentuation and punxuation. mxf = música folklórica ** PERU. 4986.42, 2335-2345 17.07, R Voz Cristiana, Huancán (ex R Manantial), Spanish talk, no ID heard, best in USB to avoid heterodyne from R Brasil Central 4985, 24222 (Thanks Thomas Nilsson for information!). Best 73, (Anker Petersen, in Skovlunde, Denmark, on my AOR AR7030PLUS with 28 metres of longwire, via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD) ** RUSSIA. Sankt-Petersburg: Today (July 16, 2012) is the last day of broadcasting Radio Orpheus in 1125 kHz in St. Petersburg: http://spb.rtrn.ru/news.asp?view=17189 (Mikhail Timofeev, Saint-Petersburg / “open_dx” via RusDX July 22 via DXLD) Viz., in usual imperfect machine translation, I hope: Dear radio listeners! We pay your attention, that today, 16 July,. at 22.00 stop broadcasting programs of Radio Orpheus in the range of average waves at a frequency of 1125 kHz. In accordance with the decision of the radio broadcasting programme of Radio Orpheus in the territory of St. Petersburg and the adjacent part of the Leningrad region will be continued in the range of ultrashort waves at a frequency of 71,66 MHz, from 06.00 o'clock in the morning on Tuesday, on July, 17. Grid of broadcasting: from 06.00 a.m. to 24.00 of the night, every day. (02.00-20.00 UTC) (A branch of RTRS «Saint- Petersburg Radiotsenter» via RusDX July 22 via DXLD) ** RUSSIA. INDIVIDUAL BROADCASTING Individual broadcasters went on the air --- Since July 1, in Russia on medium wave (the range of 200 meters) began the Individual (Amateur) radio broadcasting. Radio stations are on the air with improvised (tender) of the radio transmitters meet the professional quality of the broadcast signal. Was made a special design of the transmitter ensuring the high quality of the signal and suitable for replication in lay terms. The station on the air are almost all on the same frequency - one by one. The broadcasting is performed on the basis of the Resolution of Roskomnadzor No 632-12-0001 from 01.07.2012. The frequency and the city: 1575 kHz: Tyumen and region; 1584 kHz: Moscow and Moscow region, Bryansk and region, Biysk, Altai region, Kovrov, Vladimir region, Serov, Sverdlovsk region, Lipetsk, region, Talovaya and Voronezh with the region, Ekaterinburg and the region, Vologda region, Pestravka of the Samara region, Chernogorsk of the Republic of Khakassia; 1593 kHz: Saint-Petersburg and region. At the present time in Moscow and the Moscow region of the eight radio stations Individual (Amateur) radio broadcasting are only three: “Zeleny glazh” ("Green eyes") - the transmitter and the Studio are situated in the middle between metro station Serpukhov, Tula. Work after 21:00 Moscow time (17.00 UTC) until midnight, and sometimes later. The program mainly music: non-stop. "Radio MTUCI" (Moscow technical University of communication and Informatics) transmitter and the Studio is located in Stud-town of MTUCI, in the building of the Department of RPdU (not far from the metro station Aviamotornaya. Mostly working day, the working hours. "Expromt" - programme of the Humanitarian Institute of television and radio (broadcast from the Studio and transmitter MTUCI). In the summer of station "Ekspromt" and "MTUCI" work on the air regularly. In process of readiness of Studio equipment, radio transmitters and antenna systems (probably in September), gradually make all 25 of the radio stations. All the details on the project website (Sergey Komarov, (www.dxing.ru) via RusDX July 22 via DXLD) Green eyes: Information (consider, that it is the first schedule): On Monday, 23 July, with 17 hours Moscow Time (13.00 UTC) of radio MTUCI will turn on the frequency 1584 kHz, AM, musical selection, to gather in the broadcast audience of listeners, by chance twiddling the knobs of radios (I know that these are very few in the broadcasting standards, but there is, after all!). And from 19 hours to start already thematic transmission, dedicated to the Individual radio broadcasting, as a phenomenon in the radio and television broadcasting, its current status and plans for the future. In the Studio are invited: Vladimir T. Polyakov (RA3AAE), Paul Khlyupin ("Comet"), you may come editor-in-chief of the magazine "Radio" Vladimir K. Chudnov, will be there Razin - head of the educational laboratory of the Department of RPdU, under whose leadership and whose hands are constructed both MTUCI radio stations (and short-wave-Amateur RU3C, and broadcasting). The ethereal remote I sit. If anyone of You wants to also join our company, please call the Department (495) 957 7968 up to 19 hours Moscow Time (this phone is located in the project to the engineering thought, and very far from the Studio - in the air after him not to go, but with the engineers of the Department of speak) or my cell phone: 8_916 521 2580. Agree - will arrive. Direct live phone in the Studio we have not done yet, but You can write to us the SMS to the number, which will be announced in the air. http://www.radioscanner.ru/forum/topic45298-11.html#msg914204 (Victor Rutkowski, Ekaterinburg / “open_dx” via RusDX July 22 via DXLD)) At the present time in Moscow and the Moscow region of the eight radio stations Individual (Amateur) radio broadcasting are only three: - "Green eye" transmitter and the Studio are situated in the middle between metro station Serpukhov, Tula. Doesn't work every day, but quite often, after 21:00 to 22:00 Moscow Time (1700-1800 UT) to midnight, and sometimes later. The program mainly music: non-stop. - "Radio MTUCI" (Moscow technical University of communication and Informatics) transmitter and the Studio is located in Stud-town of MTUCI, in the building of the Department of RPdU (not far from the metro station Aviamotrnaya [sic]. Mostly working day, the working hours. - "Expromt" radio program of the Humanitarian Institute of television and radio (broadcast from the Studio and transmitter MTUCI). In the summer of station "Ekspromt" and "MTUCI" work on the air regularly (students on vacation). In process of readiness of Studio equipment, radio transmitters and antenna systems (probably in September), gradually make all 25 of the radio stations in 17 Russian cities. http://tubes.radiostation.ru/arb/index.php?cur=15&fm=35&act=msg&topic=6639#22715 (Victor Rutkowski, Ekaterinburg / “open_dx” via RusDX July 22 via DXLD) Several of the place names refused to transliterate from Cyrillic, so I had to do it (gh, DXLD) ** RUSSIA. [Re 12-29]: Radio Moscow World Service: Moscow Nights recording --- This is a very popular Russian folk song, which also has some beautiful lyrics. Of course, they're more beautiful in the original Russian. I remember that the song cropped up in my Russian class at university. If you want to hear the song with Russian lyrics in its traditional arrangement, that's also available on YouTube at You can find more about the song at The first few bars of the tune have, of course, been the interval signal of the Mayak programme for decades. A fairly good translation of the lyrics is: . Even whispers aren't heard in the garden, . Everything has died down till morning. . If you only knew how dear to me . Are these Moscow nights. . The river moves, unmoving, . All in silver moonlight. . A song is heard, yet unheard, . In these silent nights. . Why do you, dear, look askance, . With your head lowered so? . It is hard to express, and hard to hold back, . Everything that my heart holds. . But the dawn's becoming ever brighter. . So please, just be good. . Don't you, too, forget . These summer, Moscow nights. There was also, of course, a jazz version by Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen which reached number two in the Billboard Hot 100 in 1961 (Andy Sennitt, ibid.) ** RWANDA. 6055, 2035-2054, Radio Rwanda, Kigali, 15/07, Vernacular, Gitaramo program with OM/YL talks and singing ("Gitaramo - a cultural tradition of sharing stories, song and dance while sitting around a warm fire") - good with slight fading, // http://www.orinfor.gov.rw/radio/listenradio.php with 24 second delay (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ** SOLOMON ISLANDS. 5019.877, SIBC, Honiara, Radio Happy Isles in English heard at 0930-1000 UT July 15, heard on remote Brisbane Queensland SDR rx unit at S=9+15dB level, at 0940 UT July 15. Noted Fidji'ian music 0930-1000 UT. Time announcement given 10 UT (additional 11 hrs locally) 21 LT / 9 p.m. (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 15 via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) Wonder if this survived July 24 earthquake near Honiara? (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SOMALILAND. NEW 100 KW TRANSMITTER FOR R HARGEISA from Somaliland Sun website: Somaliland: 100 kW Radio Transmitter under Installation Thursday, 05 July 2012 17:13 By: Yusuf M Hasan HARGEISA (Somalilandsun) - The much anticipated nationwide radio transmission will be availed within 40 days. This was revealed by the Director General at the ministry of information and national guidance Mr. Abdirashid Jibril Yusuf during an interview with the Somalilandsun at his offices where he also divulged the Chinese company that sold the transmitter to the ministry has already dispatched 2 engineers who have already commenced work. DG Abdirashid Jibril also informed that another 13 Chinese engineers are on the way thus finalized the construction of a tower and installation of the 100 kw transmitter that will finally avail Radio Hargeisa nationwide coverage capabilities, Said he, "Within a period of 40 days radio Hargeisa will be heard not only nationwide but in the entire Horn of Africa region as well" The new transmitter that arrived a month ago has been placed under tight security at the ministry of information compound in Hargeisa pending the arrival of the Chinese engineers. The Chinese engineers were part of the purchase deal that stipulated that the PDF Company from china will oversee installation works to the satisfaction of the Somaliland government represented by the ministry of information and national guidance. According to the Technical director of the information ministry Mr. Ahmed Suleiman who is closely working with the Chinese engineers since he collected from Berbera international airport in the early morning of last Wednesday, the entire work that includes tower construction and transmitter commissioning will take a maximum forty days. The technical director also informed that the Chinese engineers have commended the condition of the transmitter that has been placed in a specially constructed room since its arrival a month ago. On the hand Radio Hargeisa employees highly applauded the ongoing final phase of having transmissions nationwide. According to Sound engineer Hasan Jama Abi the new enhanced transmission capabilities will enable Somalilanders to stay informed, entertained and educated through the various programs offered by Radio Hargeisa. The nationwide transmission are highly anticipated by Somalilanders all over the country since the current Radio Hargeisa transmitter has a capacity to cover only a distance of 40 sq km radius; thus only Hargeisa residents and those in its peri-urban areas receive programs from the national radio station. http://somalilandsun.com/index.php/politics/government/1042-somaliland-100kw-radio-transmitter-under-installation Although no mention of shortwave above, "entire Horn of Africa region" coverage suggests this could be a reactivation of shortwave from this self-declared autonomous state in north west Somalia? (Alan Pennington, Caversham, UK, July 21, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Wishful; seems to me MW would be better for covering the entire country, groundwave plus skywave with little skip zone (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) If it does not turn out to be mediumwave, which with 100 kW could basically do the same when considering skywave service at night. And mentions of a "tower" rather suggest MW than SW. What became of the shortwave transmitter installed not before early 2008, back then reported as a 25 kW Elcor? It was last heard in 2010 it seems at a glance. Did it last just two years before finally breaking down? See also http://www.mydarc.de/dj6si/hargeisa/hargeisa.htm According to WRTH 2012, BBC World Service is carried on 89.0, so it would be their transmitter. And the Marconi appears to be 693 kHz, provided my understanding is correct that Marconi transmitters with B 60** type numbers are for mediumwave. Could not find a reference right now for straight out telling the (maximum possible) power from the B 6038 designator (Kai Ludwig, Germany, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Looks like Don must have read the above Sun report tho he doesn`t reference it directly, and he knows or assumes? it is SW: (gh) The awaited new SW transmitter for Radio Hargeisa is hoped to be at least testing before Aug. 10. Various sources within and without Somaliland indicate that 15 Chinese technicians are currently installing the new 100 kW Radio Hargeisa SW transmitter. This is in Somaliland, once British Somaliland, but now an “unrecognized” breakaway area from nominal and mostly non-functioning Somalia. The rump Somaliland government does seem to be functioning, and while not recognized by world governments, there are, indeed, significant trading partners, including China and Turkey. Sources within Somaliland claim it is a Chinese-made unit from the PDF Co. That is at least partly erroneous. P.D.F. Co. Ltd. of Guangdong, China, is not an electronics manufacturer, but rather, a broker and export firm and is overseeing the installation. In fact, it is difficult to find any data on Chinese SW transmitter manufacturers, though surely there have been, and probably still are, such makers. But, Chinese firms are known to have brokered and installed some high powered SW transmitters made by RIZ, the Croatian electronics manufacturer (e.g., in Myanmar) so while the transmitter, indeed, may be Chinese in make, it could instead be the economical, solid state RIZ OR-100 K-03/A SW transmitter made in Croatia, which has received decent reviews as relatively cheap and reliable, particularly in low-tech Third World areas. The transmitter, antenna, etc. entered Somaliland by air sometime in June and and were stored at the guarded Ministry of Information compound in Hargeisa. Two Chinese techs arrived about the same time, with 13 more arriving very early in July. Of course, in practice, the estimated 40 day maximum installation time could be delayed beyond the scheduled completion Aug. 10. It would be surprising if that deadline is actually met. But the time frame, in reality, should be reasonably short. What we don’t yet know is what frequency will be used for tests or eventual regular service. We should be on the alert though for a big new signal testing soon (Don Jensen, WI, NASWA yg via DXLD) Apparently just a further interpretation of the Somaliland Sun report. So I think it still remains to be seen if this transmitter is for SW or MW. BBEF posted on its website http://www.bbef-tech.com/en/ (now also in English) photo reports about projects abroad in which they apparently installed own equipment. Thus I would also not jump to a conclusion that the rig delivered to Hargeisa is a RIZ. Btw, the OR-100 K-03/A has a solid state modulator but is described*) as frequency-agile, thus has a classic tube PA. Complete solid-state transmitters are fixed frequency affairs, retuning them is rather a modification and can not be done in routine daily operations. I'm only aware of some modest power transmitters in Africa that use such a design, as it is now standard for MW/LW. *) http://www.riz.hr/en/transmitters/short-wave/transmitter-100kw.html (Kai Ludwig, Germany, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Radio Hargeisa --- My posting earlier this week concerning the forthcoming installation of a 100 kW transmitter, tentatively scheduled to be on the air by about Aug. 10, clearly will not meet that optimistic schedule. It is still uncertain if it will be a SW or MW unit. I hope to have that answer soon. Sale of the new Radio Hargeisa transmitter was negotiated by a Chinese export firm, PDF Co. Ltd, of Guangong, China, and it is responsible for the installation. Some have supposed it would be, like other SW installations in Africa, a Chinese-made transmitter manufactured by Beijing BBEF Electronics Group Co. Ltd. (prior to 2000, known as the Beijing Broadcast Equipment Factory) This may well be so, although the BBEF website lists its overseas projects in places like Ethiopia, Cuba, North Korea, etc., and says nothing about supplying transmitter equipment for installation in Somaliland. I have merely suggested it MIGHT instead, be a Croatian- made RIZ transmitter, since there is a track record of another Chinese electronics broker in Hong Kong installing a RIZ SW transmitter for the government of Myanmar. A Chinese installation team does not automatically mean the transmitter installed in Somaliland is of Chinese manufacture. Maybe so, but maybe no. That remains to be seen. The Chinese technicians were to have arrived in Hargeisa in very early July, to begin installation. Two techs have been doing preliminary work in Hargeisa since late June. The remaining 13 in the installation team were to have followed in very early July. With that arrival, it was expected --- perhaps optimistically --- to be test-ready in 40 days, roughly Aug. 10, as I noted previously. In fact, the installation team did not arrive in Hargeisa until yesterday, July 23, presumably putting them at least three weeks behind schedule. Further details as they become available. For DXers, the most critical one would be, SW or MW? (Don Jensen, WI, July 24, NASWA yg via DXLD) This Somali language news item from November 2011 mentions BBEF http://ogaalnews.net/?p=12059 I guess around that time it was decided which company will get the contract. There is also mentioned BROTHERS, I wonder what is that. Broadcast Technology something..? Maybe misspelled abbreviation. I tried to locate the tender for this project by googling but no luck. Somaliland National Tender Board was taking part. If someone could find that particular tender, I believe there's mentioned whether SW or MW. Interesting, 73, (Jari Savolainen, Kuusankoski, Finland, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Glenn Hauser says: Tuesday, July 24, 2012 12:38 AM Is this to be on mediumwave, or shortwave? Frequency? (gh comment on the SomSun story) ** SOUTH AFRICA. 9650, 1649-1654'40*, Radio Sonder Grense, Meyerton, 15/07, Afrikaans, OM/YL talks - weak-poor with local noise and splashes from 9655 (IRN) (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) ** SOUTH CAROLINA [non]. 13570, July 23 at 1207, Brother Scare via WINB catches my ear as he is admitting to having sinned in the past year in some personal relationship, Devil made him do it, but no further juicy details in next few minutes. How is he? Says he is dying, like all of us (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SPAIN [non]. 11880, Friday July 20 at 1237, REE Costa Rica relay has resumed being a SS station, Basque missing another half-hour opportunity for weekday worldwide exposure including Chinese relay; 1238 starts a segment discussing Italian culture (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See also COSTA RICA ** SRI LANKA. Broadcasts in Hindi from SLBC, Sri Lanka at 1330-1530 6005, 7190 & 11905 is not heard lately. Thanking you, Yours sincerely, Jose Jacob, VU2JOS, National Institute of Amateur Radio, Hyderabad, India, http://www.niar.org July 18, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SRI LANKA [non]. Voice of the Tigers on 12140 kHz: c/on at 1529 UT, VT [Voice of Tigers] Music start at 1530 and open carrier after 1533 on July 21 (S. Hasegawa, Japan, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Saturdays only; beware of confusion with Sri Lankan/SLBC jammer as happened on 12250, 12225 (gh, DXLD) ** SUDAN. 7200.0, 1913-1925, 12/7, SRTC, Al-Aitahab. Arabic, talks. Weak modulation. Adjacent QRM de THAILAND in English on 7205, 44443 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SUDAN [non]. MADAGASCAR/UAE/VATICAN STATE, 15400.008 kHz, the channel of the Dabanga radio program in Arabic for Sudan, at 0444 and 0447 UT IDs, even militant incitement cries of the crowd heard in between, and HoA music. S=9+15dB nice signal from the Madagascar relay. \\ same program at 0429-0557 UT on 11650 kHz, signal from the strong Vatican SMG relay, as well as odd 15549.955 kHz, very tiny signal, the latter is only S=4-5 from Al Dhabbaya UAE (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) Al Dhabbaya UAE relay on odd 15549.956 kHz, Radio Tamazuj til 0429 UT, followed by Radio Dabanga 0429-0557 UT. Also Dabanga radio program in Arabic for Sudan via MDG relay heard at 0510 UT on 15400.009 kHz (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) ** SUDAN SOUTH [non]. 17745, Sudan Radio Service via Woofferton, 1501, July 19. In vernacular with the news about “S-P-L-A” (Sudan People' Liberation Army), “General Philip Aguer”, etc.; sound bits in English; strong signal with good reception. MP3 audio at https://www.box.com/s/29a695f956c158e742de (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SUDAN SOUTH [non]. 15725, July 23 I am lying by from 0501 for V. of South Sudan Revolutionary Radio to come on. There`s the weak carrier at *0503:30, sign-on music of chanting & drumming barely audible from 0504:25. Would somebody please triangulate the source of this, if there is no other way to find out? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SYRIA. Hello DXers, Keeping an ear on Syria, I noticed today 19/7 that 936 kHz started broadcasting the English section of Radio Damascus from around 2000 UT. The strongest other working frequencies picked up here in Cairo are 567, 783 and [sic]. Checking the rest of the list, according to the web site of the overseas section of Radio Damascus, they are off short wave till 23/7. All the best (Tarek Zeidan, Cairo, Egypt, 2131 UT July 19, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Thanks Tarek. Your observations are always valuable. Today, the Radio Damascus website - http://www.radio-damascus.net/ - says: "!!! Newsflash !!! Sunday, 22nd of July 2012. Dear Radio Damascus listeners. The transmissions of the foreign languages programs of Radio Damascus on the short wave frequency of 9330 Khz (31 meter band) will be interrupted till 28th of July. The short-wave broadcast will resume starting 29th of July 2012. Transmission on the satellites will go on as usual." I assume this is for scheduled maintenance (which 9330 certainly needs!), though Tarek's note below said that last week they were promising to be back on SW on 23 July. Three Syrian radio channels (Voice of the People, the General programme and Voice of Youth) are all on Hotbird 13 east (12015H). The website says the Radio Damascus external service is on the Voice of the People channel, so I'll check out the Hotbird feed after 1600 GMT today. The website offers a podcast of the daily English broadcast. The last one currently available is that for last Saturday (21 July). This consistently had the ID of "Damascus Radio" rather than "Radio Damascus" and gave satellite details (wrongly - giving the Hotbird frequency as 12054 rather than 12015) but nothing about SW or MW. (Chris Greenway, England, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, ibid.) What's the reason for this service break? Main power failure, firing grenades at the TX building, feeder line, antenna hardware gear ? vy73 wb (Wolfgang Büschel, ibid.) Important Radio Damascus news Sunday, 22nd of July 2012 http://www.radio-damascus.net/ Dear Radio Damascus listeners, The transmissions of the foreign languages programs of Radio Damascus on the short-wave frequency of 9330 kHz (31 meter band) will be interrupted till 28th of July. The short-wave broadcast will resume starting 29th of July 2012. Transmission on the satellites will go on as usual. Thanks (via Kris Janssen, Belgium? July 22, DX LISTENING DIGEST) The above website is sponsored by: http://syrian-friendship-association.org/index.html Probably = Kris Janssen, who is a longtime booster of Syria and Radio Damascus (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) I did get a piece of news via some sources of the free Syrian Army stating that, they were pretty close to the Radio and TV bldg in Damascus and the authorities evacuated the bldg. I can't confirm that of course, but checking the MW frequencies on daily basis and they are still on (specially the general program ones), SW you know the story, satellite, I checked the Nile Sat and I can see the 3 main networks are working OK. Furthermore, 702 which is carrying Radio Alquds is working normally; thought they might change the network, but still the same. Also relaying Idhaat alNour (voice of Hezb Allah), is having QRM from KSA but maybe after sunset Cairo time I can confirm if it's still on or not; last I checked it in early June. All the best from Cairo, Egypt (Tarek Zeidan, 1629 UT July 23, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Thanks Tarek. Very interesting as always to hear from you. As you will know, Nilesat stopped carrying the Syrian "private" Addounia (Al- Dunya) TV last week, but it shifted to Atlantic Bird at the same orbital slot (so it appears to viewers to be still on Nilesat). The Syrian government claimed yesterday that Western intelligence agencies were planning to hijack the frequencies of Syrian satellite channels to air false news about a coup, the fall of the regime, etc. (Chris Greenway, UK, ibid.) Was that the same guy who also blabbered about chemical weapons, as if he wanted to invite a NATO invasion? From a technical point of view there appear to be, when glancing over frequency lists, some SCPC signals directly uplinked from Damascus on Arabsat 5A. But anything else is uplinked within other muxes, mostly if not always from Amman to where the programming may well be fed via terrestrial video/audio circuits. Thus "hijacking the frequencies" is not possible. The more interesting question is how Jordan Media City, the uplink provider, will act in regard to RTV Syria further on (Kai Ludwig, Germany, ibid.) At least last week, R. Al-Nour was there. 73, (Mauno Ritola, Finland, July 23, ibid.) R. Al-Nour is still there tonight (Mauno, 1935 UT July 23, ibid.) "There is also another theory: Facilities damaged by fighting. I looked around a bit but did not find anything that could either support or deny this." --> the facilities are not damaged, management just don't want to put their workers at risk because of the general security situation... "... some of the workers in this station could not make it, because of the situation in some areas" "I did get a piece of news via some sources of the free Syrian Army stating that , they were pretty close to the Radio and TV bldg in Damascus and the authorities evacuated the bldg" --> absolute nonsense: the RTV Syria building at Ummayad square is safe and well (Kris Janssen, 1941 UT July 23, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Please cite your sources! (Glenn Hauser, ibid.) Hi Glenn, I was even today on the phone with a friend working for RTV Syria (Radio Damascus) in the RTV centre at Ummayad square. Best, (Kris Janssen, July 24, ibid.) I see no reason for doubts that it are sources within RTV Syria. Considering the shortwave operations, it would be a plausible explanation. It is another story that there is little point anyway in turning on a transmitter that hardly yields any usable distribution of program audio. Considering the building (it is marked on Google Maps; Ummayad square is nothing but easy to find, it's the large roundabout): The claims about it being evacuated are not plausible as long as all TV and radio programming goes out as scheduled. To a good extent this can be checked also from Europe with a Hotbird dish. I just can't do it myself, having no suitable place for installing one (Kai Ludwig, ibid.) I've checked through recordings from last night (23 July). The Radio Damascus services were broadcast on Hotbird as scheduled, i.e. 1600 Turkish, 1700 Russian, 1800 German, 1900 French, 2000 English, 2100 English, 2200 Spanish (back to Arabic at 2300). The 2000 and 2100 English broadcasts are presented as two separate transmissions. At the start of the 2100 English, they said they were on 12085 (for Europe and North America) and 9330 (for "Australia, New Zealand and Japan"). At the start of the 2000 English they only gave satellite and internet details, i.e. not mentioning 936 that Tarek Zeidan heard this transmission on recently (Chris Greenway, July 24, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hello DXers, Checking the MW frequencies of Syria today I noticed that 666 around 1845 UT was playing non stop patriotic songs for Syria; it was a different network (I guess R2) as it was different than the stream on 783 and 564. 936 still nothing around 2000 UT for the last few days. All the best from Cairo (Tarek Zeidan, 2038 UT July 24, ibid.) With their transmitters being so poor, it must be very many years since I heard the Radio Damascus interval signal. I don't know if what they use now is the same one. Here's a recording from satellite of it just before today's 1600 Turkish transmission, along with the national anthem, opening announcement and the news tune (Chris Greenway, UK, July 25, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST, with audio attachment) Certainly a distinctive IS, instrument? The NA on this clip is very overmodulated and distorted. That way originally on bird? (gh, DXLD) Hello DXers, Today 25/7 at 2004, 936 kHz was carrying the General Program of Radio Damascus. Also 747 kHz was audible carrying GP as well. 783 is the strongest here in Cairo, followed by 567. All the best from Cairo (Tarek Zeidan, ibid.) ** TAIWAN. Radio Taiwan International Saved from the SW axe. --- Today RTI host Natalie Tso revealed that the end of RTI's SW broadcasts almost occurred three years ago. It was only the large number of listeners letters received by RTI that actually saved their SW service. So guys, keep listening & keep sending those emails or writing those letters. Regards (Ian Baxter, NSW, July 24, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) [non]. 7570, July 19 at 0441, RTI via WYFR does it again, wrong language instead of Spanish, voice-overing an interview from Chinese to English, a writer who has 90,000 followers on WeiBo(?); whose fault is this? Playout directly from Taipei, or Okeechobee? Meanwhile 5950 was in correct Chinese, and at 0518 check in correct English. 7570, July 20 at 0452, once again tonight RTI via WYFR is in wrong language, English instead of Spanish; 5950 correctly in Chinese. 7570, July 21 at 0439 check, the 0400 hour of RTI via WYFR for the third night is in the wrong language, English instead of Spanish. Do they have any Spanish listeners who care and might inform them? Late last year, such language mixups went on for weeks and weeks. 7570, July 23 at 0457, RTI via WYFR concluding English hour which is supposed to be in Spanish, announcing the complete English transmission schedule, guess what, not including this one, just to NAm: ``02-03 5950 9680, 03-04 & 05-06 5950``. I missed checking this on UT July 22, but likely yet another instance in the current errorstring (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** TAJIKISTAN. 15760.082 - actually quite rare, Voice of Russia on an odd frequency signal, but in recent years one of the channels at Orzu Dushanbe differs somewhat, 500 kW unit shows on this channel. VOR in English at 0400 UT and 05-06 UT Kurdish to come here in Europe with a regular S=5-6 signal. Europe target is not the main lobe of the signal (Wolfgang Büschel, LOG of July 17, 0330-0500 UT, Geomagnetic Solar Storm is over, BCDX July 20 via DXLD) ** TIBET [non]. 7505, TAJIKISTAN (CLANDESTINE) Radio Free Asia, Dushanbe-Orzu. 2243 July 18, 2012. Very good in Tibetan (per the difficult-to-find actual schedule/frequencies page on their [IBB's] shoddy website). Parallel 9815 (caveat: listed as Kuwait, per short- wave.info, as well as all other sites quoted here), with 9880 unheard (if via Saipan, no wonder not heard at this time, from this location), very ChiCom-ish 5 + 1 time sounders 2300. At 2300, 9805 up, listed as via via Abu Dhabi and fair; 9875 (listed as via Dushanbe-Orzu) very good. And, after 2315, 9900 (listed as via Kuwait), fair at best. Not real DX, but an easy way to hear a lot of Third/Fourth World dumps in parallel and within minutes (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF- 7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** UGANDA. 4750.0, 1839-1900*, 13/7, Dunamis BC, Mukono. English (presumed), western songs, jingle+African songs 1859. Abruptly off, 25321 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** UKRAINE. The National Radio Company of Ukraine has a new website. http://radioukr.com.ua NRCU website bookmarks are now redirected to the new website. Unfortunately there are no podcasts of Radio Ukraine International programmes on the audio on demand page just Ukrainian songs. The live streaming url mms://89.187.1.165/NRCU4 still works as does the new one http://pp.wi.com.ua/NRCU4?WMContentBitrate=200000&MSWMExt=.asf (Harry Brooks, North East England, UK, July 23, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U K [and non]. The last editions of "The World Today" on BBCWS are going out UT Friday morning July 20. Max Pearson had a recorded farewell for the show at 0320, plus comments from the live hosts. They are taking listener comments on the show's Facebook page. Despite the on-air goodbyes, the BBCWS online schedule still shows TWT airing this weekend. Maybe considered separately due to the slightly different format on Sat/Sun? Of course long-time SWL's will recall that "The World Today" was also the name of a daily 20 minute single-topic current affairs show that ran for several decades, prior to the current incarnation. Good signal from BBCWS into Houston between 0300 and 0335 on 9410 via Woofferton, perhaps the best frequency at any time for reception here (Steve Luce, Houston, Texas, July 20, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) I believe the original `World Today` was a quarter hour (gh, DXLD) The following logs are all made on a newly restored British military radio, the Wireless Set no. 18 mk III, dating from around World War II. This particular example is designed to transmit / receive on 3 to 5 MHz. And nearly 70 years later it still has its original valves. South Africa. BBC WS relay. 3255 Meyerton. July 20, 2012. Friday. 0535-0548. "Network Africa". Talking about Senegal and the AU, on to farewells to "Network Africa" which is to be replaced by the more global "Newsday" from Monday 23 July. Maybe Auntie Beeb has finally recognised the error of streaming, although it can not possibly admit it. Good. Received on WS18 mk III. Jo'burg sunrise 0453. BBC WS relay. 3255 Meyerton. July 20, 2012. Friday. 0554-0703*. Talking about US military drones, mentioned Barak and Michelle Obama. Time pips at 0600 and ID "BBC, welcome to the last Network Africa", into "The World Today" talking about Turkey and Syria. Then on to a review of past Network Africa headlines and other stuff. Transmission cut at 0703 in mid sentence; the BBC too has no sense of occasion. Good. Rapid SAH at 0556, during the usual 0600 transmitter change- over. Received on WS18 mk III. Jo'burg sunrise 0453. BBC WS relay. 3255 Meyerton. July 20, 2012. Friday. 1355-1420. "World Football". Time pips and ID at 1400, into "World Briefing". Fair. Received on WS18 mk III. Jo'burg sunset 1536 (Bill Bingham, RSA, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) BBCWS: First day for "Newsday" --- Monday July 23 is the first day for the new BBCWS "Newsday." Listened at 0300 on 9410 Woofferton; program is more upbeat and chatty than the old "World Today" with heavy emphasis on social media and listener interaction. Hosts were on location at a market near the Olympic sites. All Olympic themed stories first semihour except for a Syria feature. Second semihour not carried on 9410 at 0330. Quickly downtuned to 6145 Meyerton which was still carrying Newsday; yes, this replaces Network Africa. Also running for the full hour on 6195 Skelton; 5875 Ascension barely there, unlistenable. Meyerton and Skelton frequencies below usual strength here in Houston, but Woofferton solid. We probably won't get a real feel for the new Newsday until the Olympics are over and more routine story subjects fill the time (Steve Luce, Houston, Texas, dxldydg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) You're probably right that a "real feel" will be better experienced after the Olympics, but I have to say that my initial impression (and I stress "initial") is that the tone of this program suffers from one of the same problems that seemed to plague much of the BBC's Jubilee coverage -- namely, that an effort to seem breezy and friendly produces mostly banality. I truly hope that "Newsday" does not end up contributing to the gnawing impression that the BBCWS is "dumbing down" its content. But, as you suggest, it perhaps would be best to give it all more time to settle out. There's nothing wrong with making a program that is designed to be pleasing to the ear and more upbeat in presentation. Content, however, should remain king (John Figliozzi, Halfmoon, NY, ibid.) I missed the inaugural broadcast of Newsday. I used to catch The World Today as I drove home from work most evenings, streaming to the car radio using my smartphone and one of those mini FM transmitters. It was a good, solid news program and I enjoyed listening to it. As for Newsday … If the listener responses on the BBC blog announcing this show's arrival are any indication, no one is happy. On the one hand, there are listeners such as ourselves, people from the U.S. and Canada who rely on the BBC to be a purveyor of GLOBAL news, not just news slanted toward one part of the world. On the other, with the disappearance of morning programs specifically targeted to Africa, those audiences are faced with a reduction of African coverage. I will reserve judgment until I listen in for myself … will try to keep an open mind (Ricky Leong, Calgary, ibid.) > an effort to seem breezy and friendly produces mostly banality That sounds *very* familiar to me. It is something one has to note in Germany not only on news but even on some of the culture programs, and it results from the circumstance that it's obviously a forced effort, a "we observe the stylebook". I'm not a regular BBC WS listener, but perhaps nevertheless, or even especially due to this circumstance, of interest are the impressions I recently got when driving into Berlin, on a news magazine (did not care for the title) at 1000 UT: To me it sounded like bragging with a network of three thousand correspondents the BBC has at every dustbin around the world. Three sentences from X, three sentences from Y, three sentences from Z, chop, chop, chop! All this perfectly timed, and the perfect execution of this hasty succession appeared to be what they cared most for. And all this in a quite unimpressing technical quality. Either the acoustics of the studio in which the presenter sat are rather bad, or they ruin it with heavy mic processing, sucking up the reverb. And the feed chain to the 94.8 transmitter in Berlin-Wannsee is rather dubious, involving a cascade of data reduction it seems, presumably related to the fancy server system they now use at their FM outlets, in this case especially to play out the up to two minutes of advertisements per hour they planned already in 2010 but told only the Berlin regulatory body, not their own supervisors. I was not enthusiastic (Kai Ludwig, ibid.) Less fluff and more substance for day two of Newsday UT Tuesday July 24, so a positive sign. Good hour of news and features at 0300. A correction to my post from yesterday: At 0330 6195 is // to 9410, not 6145. Africa beams carry the full hour of Newsday, while the two Southwest Asia beams have alternate programming at 0330 (Steve Luce, Houston, Texas, ibid.) BBCWS: "World Today" program disappears On Mondays-Fridays it will be "Newsday", oriented to an African audience as the primary target (the largest English speaking audience listening at the time the program airs). On the weekends the program is now simply called "Weekend" -- it had been "World Today Weekend" for a while, then just "World Today" before that. American audiences aren't thrilled - see http://www.democraticunderground.com/1002986619 Here's a blog item from the World Service about the change...and a fair amount of reaction, mixed in tone. http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2012/07/introducing_world_service_radi.html RC (Richard Cuff, PA, July 24, internetradio via DXLD) Yeah, but. Listening the first two nights (er.. mornings), I was worried from hearing all the trite, happy talk from the hosts in the inaugural broadcast. But the second helping turned out to be much more in the vein of "The World Today" with more "hard news" and serious reporting than what I heard the first night. Focusing on Africa (no pun intended) is not a bad thing; we could all stand to learn and know more about events on that continent on a regular basis. And while there is greater emphasis there in "Newsday" than there was in "The World Today", the rest of the globe hasn't exactly gone wanting thus far. Syria, Aurora (Colorado) and the Euro debt crisis all got ample time last night. I would argue that the jury is still out. Most people are resistent to change. I recall that there were similar complaints when "The World Today" debuted, too, in 1998 (John Figliozzi, Halfmoon, NY, ibid.) FYI the program won't be available on-demand, it appears, through the Olympics. ON-DEMAND WEB ACCESS TO BBCWS PROGRAMMING ELIMINATED DURING OLYMPICS The websites for World Briefing, Newsday, and Newshour all contain a message stating the programs won't be available on-demand during the Olympics. However, the programming appears to be available for live streaming. As of now there is no special notation on the podcast links regarding Olympics-caused interruptions, even for Newshour. I could see this being the case for Global News since that program is stitched together from the other news programs (Richard Cuff / Allentown, PA, ibid.) Considering the vise grip that Olympic corporate has over the use of its content, symbols et al, this is hardly surprising -- even if one regrets the disruptive effect it has on other, far more important matters. In watching and hearing the reports from London, I very much think that New York City officials at this point are breathing a sigh of relief that they lost the bid. (Not that they felt that way initially!)(John Figliozzi, ibid.) I know in previous Olympic years when the CBC had the rights they hardly streamed any live radio [not even non-Olympic stuff] and online streaming on programs like The National disappeared. SF (Sandy Finlayson, PA, ibid.) In Olympics past live BBCWS streaming (in addition to any on-demand streaming) was blocked (Richard Cuff, ibid.) And it looks as if Sportsworld is being pulled from online coverage. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p002w5vq SF (Sandy Finlayson, ibid.) ** U K. BBC 5 Live Olympics Extra online streaming is UK only. During the Olympics and Paralympics, due to rights issues, BBC local radio Listen Live streams will be UK only and BBC nations radio streams will be blanked when carrying rights protected Olympics content. Full statement: http://iplayerhelp.external.bbc.co.uk/help/playing_radio_progs/radioonline_olympics (Mike Barrraclough, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD) IIRC, during previous Olympix, when not even in London, BBC would close down BBCWS streams ``due to rights issues`` during all news programmes just because part of them might mention the big O! I sure hope the games don`t disrupt the Prom Concerts, but BBC is just wacky enough to let them do so. It has been taking them several hours to get the on-demand linx up after each concert (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. AMERICANS DESERVE TO KNOW WHAT THE U.S. GOVERNMENT IS BROADCASTING --- Another callout against the Smith-Mundt act. Starting to see these more often: http://blog.heritage.org/2012/07/18/americans-deserve-to-know-what-the-u-s-government-is-broadcasting/ (Richard Cuff, PA, NASWA yg via DXLD) ** U S A [and non]. 15590, July 19 at 1202, open carrier until VOA Spanish pops on in progress during frequency announcement amid opening newscast in the ineptly-named ``Estudio 45`` (I would have picked 42 which altho not prime, has more character). Weaker 13750 had already started on time, weaker than VatiSack on 13730. 9885, the third VOA Spanish frequency, was still on with open carrier at 1304-1305*. 15730, July 23 at 1359 tuned in to open carrier for a few sex, off before 1400 arrived. Must have been VOA Somali via MADAGASCAR, 250 kW due north at 13-14 as in HFCC. 13802 & 13698 approx., July 25 at 1228, 1230, very light but definite modulation spur spikes matching VOA Spanish 13750 Greenville (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 25910/FM, WQGY434, Fort Worth TX (Dallas transmitter); studio relay for 820 WBAP; 1514, 18-July; News-Talk 8-20 AM & 96.7 FM WBAP; Bank of Texas ad. Good peaks & much better than // 25910, which has been the case lately. (Frodge-MI) 25950/FM, KOA Denver CO studio relay; 1517, 18-July; "8-50 KOA"; Call- in show at 713-8585; Rockies On-Deck show promo. Good peaks (Frodge) 26110/FM, KOVR-TV Sacramento CA studio relay; 1443-1514+, 18-July; Tune in to comedy show; beginning about 1458, Ken & Maryanne with lengthy coverage of a water main break, backing up traffic on hwy 99; Sacramento set a record low high temperature of 74 yesterday; spot for "CBS 13". Fair peaks with dropouts -- some lengthy. First time heard after many, many checks (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) KOVR is amplified version of original log in DXLD 12-29. Strictly speaking, Stockton (gh) ** U S A. WORLD OF RADIO 1626 monitoring: confirmed with huge signal on WTWW 9479, Thursday July 19 at 2059:40 with the usual interruption during the billboard for hourtop ID. And confirmed on WWRB 5050, UT Friday July 20 at 0330:30 after a respectful 43-second pause following the preceding preacher, altho punxuated with some hums. Next: UT Saturday 0130v on Area 51 via WBCQ 5110v-CUSB. Thomas Völkner confirms the new HLR airing: ``Hello Glenn, Although it is not yet finalized, Hamburger Lokalradio's schedule on 7265 kHz via Göhren is taking shape. Over the next weekends, the station will be on the air Saturdays between 0500 and 1100 UT. As part of the line-up, the latest "World of Radio" is always aired at 0630; "New Letters on the Air" is at 0600. As always, reception reports are welcomed to further evaluate the SW propagation on this frequency. E-mail address: redaktion @ hamburger-lokalradio.de Best regards, Thomas`` WORLD OF RADIO 1627, On WRMI 9955: Saturday 0800, 1500, 1730, Sunday 0800, 1530, 1730, Monday 0500, 1130. On WTWW 5755: UT Sunday 0400 On SiriusXM channel 120: Saturday & Sunday 1730, Sunday 0830 UT. Full schedule including many more webcasts: http://www.worldofradio.com/radioskd.html WORLD OF RADIO 1626 monitoring: confirmed on Area 51 via WBCQ 5110v- CUSB, UT Saturday July 21 from 0130:40. Further airings: Sat 1730, Sun 0800, 1530, 1730, Mon 0500, 1130 on WRMI 9955. UT Sun 0400 on WTWW 5755 Tuesday 0930 on HLR 5980 Also on WRN via SiriusXM 120: Sat & Sun 1730, Sun 0830. WORLD OF RADIO 1626 monitoring: confirmed starting 0359:40 UT Sunday July 22 on very good signal from WTWW 5755, but with usual interruption for legal ID at hourtop. Other repeats, on WRMI 9955 are: Sun 0800, 1530, 1730, Mon 0500, 1130 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. Programming Changes --- We are making some programming changes that will affect the locations (and in one case, the times) your programs will be heard. We are moving all of our Public Affairs, Informational, and Religious programming from “Breezy Radio” http://www.breezyradio.org to “The Classical Channel” http://www.theclassicalchannel.com We feel, after doing much research, that the programming fit will be much better on our classically formatted station than the standards & jazz station. With just one exception all of your programs will be heard on the same time and days as in the past, just on a different stream. The one exception is TUC Radio. Maria’s program will now be heard at 8:30 AM [ET] on Saturday Mornings, rather than 7:30 AM. I believe this is a much better time slot in terms of potential listeners. For the next two weekends (7/21-22 and 7/28-29) all programs will run on both stations as a transition period. Beginning on August 4-5 the programs will run exclusively on The Classical Channel (Rene’ Tetro, General Manager, West Point Internet Radio, West Point, PA, USA, July 20, DX LISTENING DIGEST) So WORLD OF RADIO Saturdays at 1200 [winter: 1300] UT, will be on http://www.theclassicalchannel.com --- good quality music elsewhen (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 12104.96, 0340-0403, WTWW, Lebanon, 11/07, Portuguese, OM religious talk with music in the background, OM English ID at 0402 - fair and better with local noise, best in LSB, // http://wtww.us/pages/listen-live/tx3.php 73! (Mikhail Timofeyev, North-East part of the St. Petersburg city, Russia, Drake R8A, long wire (30 m), HCDX via DXLD) 12105, July 19 at 1303, WTWW-3 still absent after trying Russian in this period a few days ago. As for July 18`s absence, recheck after 1800 found it back on in Arabic. 12105, July 22 at 0500, WTWW-3 in Portuguese cuts off the air abruptly at 0500:15*, no ID and no sign-off announcement. I have never caught this service with a sign-on or off, and the IDs appear at odd times during programming, rarely at hourtop. 12105, July 23 at 2046 check, WTWW-3 is off, while neighbor 12160 WWCR is inbooming. Next check 0458 July 24, just before usual cutoff at 0500, no 12105 either, so off all day? 1500 has been the nominal sign- on time lately, I think, but still missing at 1501 July 24, while WWCR is again audible on 12160. Whatever happen with WTWW-3 and WTWW-2 transmitters, WTWW-1 is almost always on, 9479/5755; at 1502 SFAW was referencing something from 2001y, as a lot of their 24/7 stuff is archival following death more than a year ago of Pastor Pete Peters. 12105, July 24 at 1905 and 2257, WTWW-3 is still missing today (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 13845, July 24 at 1909, WWCR-3 is missing, while 1 & 2 are inbooming on 15825, 12160 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 6875, WWCR Nashville TN (presumed); 2132, 18-July; Spanish religious program Biblia Abierta. S20. The usual lists show English at this time (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow- tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) This transmitter is normally in Spanish 21-22 UT Mon-Fri (gh, DXLD) ** U S A. 7489.9, WBCQ, Monticello ME; 2125-2131+, 18-July The Lost Radio Episodes with `Amos & Andy` from 16-July 1941; NBC ID/chimed into Glenn Miller tune; BoH WBCQ spots. SIO=454- (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 7506.5ish, WRNO [New Orleans LA] heard thanks to a tip off from Uncle Harold with Maranatha Radio (San Diego) with Pastor Ray, Bible bumping and busking for bucks by browbeating brethren to pay a half buck a day to bolster the broadcast budget. Jesus Hip Hop music (ODD stuff!) at BoH to their ID at:36 as "7505 WRNO" into Pastor Jones from a Crossroads Church somewhere in California as well, also bumping the Bible. "Good" to see them back? What happened to New Orleans Jazz programming? :o 554+54 (modulation was rather muddy). 0228-0338 18/Jul (Ken Zichi, Port Hope MI, MARE Tipsheet 20 July via DXLD) I've checked several times 0200-0400+ and have only found an OC on about 7506.4, but have yet to catch any huxterage (Harold Frodge, ed., MI, ibid.) 7506.4. WRNO New Orleans LA (presumed); OCs noted at 2012 & 2123 (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) Daytime tests assuming the times are correctly in UT. No date but other logs in the same report ranged from July 13 to 19 (gh) 7506.4, LOUISIANA, WRNO, New Orleans. 2340 July 18, 2012. Presumed, but virtually no audio, maybe 10-percent modulation at best (the low modulation reported by so many others before me). Something preacher I think, but who knows, who cares. July 19, 2133: audible carrier-only, presuming it's them. Why are so many of the remaining shortwave stations running such shoddy modulations and/or off-channel operations? Better they all die, and open the frequencies for what's left of any exotic DX potential (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 7506.4, July 20 at 0127, WRNO modulation sounds OK at the moment with gospel huxter, but at 0317 the music is quite distorted (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) This is the latest schedule for WRNO Worldwide. All times in Central Time US [UT -5 even tho called ``CST`` below which is UT -6 --- gh] WAVE SHOW MONDAY–FRIDAY 12:00–4:00 PM CST CANCELLED GOOD NEWS WORLD SUNDAY–SATURDAY 8:00–8:30 PM CST DR. ROBERT MAWIRE MARANATHA RADIO SUNDAY–SATURDAY 9:00–9:30 PM CST RAY BENTLEY TRUTH THAT CHANGES LIVES SUNDAY–SATURDAY 10:00–10:30 PM CST JP JONES HOUR OF DECISION SUNDAY 8:30–9:00 PM CST BILLY GRAHAM Please note that The Wave Show is what they have been running over the Internet. Now that they are running on SW, the Wave Show has been cancelled. This is what is listed on WRNOradio web site (Richard Lewis, Forest, MS, July 20, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hi Richard, In fact have heard Pastor JP Jones on WRNO (7506.4) on July 16 (Monday UT) from tune in at 0211 to 0257, with stories about his past; announced that his Crossline Community Church has Sunday services at 23331 Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hills, CA 92653. https://www.box.com/s/817633538b4dbecd1673 contains edited MP3 audio file (Ron Howard, Monterey, CA, ibid.) Is WRNO Shortwave/Worldwide all religion? (Lou Gawab, Boston, dxldyg via DX LISTENNING DIGEST) Pathetic, isn't it? (John Figliozzi, NY, ibid.) Sure is pathetic; all we need is another bible thumbing [sic] broadcaster (Bill Matthews, OH, ibid.) Hi Terry, Back in June 2010, Larry Thom (former Chief Engineer WRNO) wrote to me: "The frequency is actually off a little due to a defective oscillator, and the replacements turned out to be too large to fit in the driver area of the transmitter. We are working to get new ones but so far they have not arrived." So still not fixed in 2012! Unfortunately I believe Larry is no longer with the current WRNO, as his email address has been inactive for a long time now. When he was Cheif Engineer he always provided detailed information about what was happening with the WRNO operation. I miss him! (Ron Howard, Monterey, CA, ibid.) 7506.4, July 22 at 0359 checking WRNO: rock music runs a bit past 0400, and it`s quite distorted. No one would listen to that voluntarily. Kyle somebody starts a sign-off announcement for ``Contemporary Hit Radio, WRNO`` claiming to be on 7505, from transmitter at New Orleans, Louisiana, but is cut off the air before he can finish. Signal anyway very strong. 7506.4, July 25 at 0103, WRNO big signal but undermodulated and somewhat distorted gospel huxter (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 7555, July 19 at 0517, WEWN is AWOL again from its overnight Spanish frequency. 7555, July 20 at 0511, WEWN R. Católica Mundial is back on tonight with usual midnight lunacy, unlike last night (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 13570, July 20 at 1158, WINB is already on, somehuxter citing Galatians, cut off at 1159 for dead air, and WINB canned ID from the United States of Americuh, cut back on now with Brother Scare himself. Supposedly signs on weekdays at 1200, so really how much earlier now? Online program schedule still shows *8 AM with TOM, and now redated July 15 instead of July 22 last time we looked. 9265, July 22 at 1150, WINB is on here with YL gospel huxter, fair signal. Next check at 1232, another one on 13570. WINB never gets its act together in portraying its own schedule accurately on website, failing to show the Sunday-only early broadcast before 1200 is on 9265 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 11715, KJES Vado NM (presumed); 1448, 16-July; English robo- kids. SIO=3+53, fady & only a few 0.01 kHz above 11715 (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 11715.0, July 22 at 1359, KJES, OM in English quoting Bible or something, 1400 no ID but switch to YL hymnsinging; sufficient signal but undermodulated, and right on frequency, a first! Its appearances are increasingly rare; check 11715 at 13-16, 15385 at 18-20, 7555 at 0100-0230. 11715.0, July 25 at 1337, KJES fair signal with undermodulated singing, remaining on-frequency! Transmission is still very irregular (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 9367.722 at 0455 UT July 23, and later on at 0540 UT noted on lower 9367.713 kHz, WTJC Morehead City, English service, young boys/men`s sermon chorus heard. 2300 Hertz frequency deviation is a lot in FCC rule standards (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) July 24 at 0506, WTJC is hymning [not a word redlined by MS Word spellcheck, and I don`t recall adding it] way off frequency with fair signal at best. Seldom anything to het from 9370, I had not noticed it was further off 9370- than usual until Wolfgang Büschel measured it on ``9367.722 at 0455 UT July 23, and later on at 0540 UT noted on lower 9367.713 kHz``. At 1225 I check it out on my approximate het-vs-keyboard method. With YB-400 BFO set on 9368.0 I get a C-sharp above middle C; on 9367.0 I get a hi F-natural, i.e. 277 and 699 Hz, so splitting the difference that would put WTJC on 9367.71, close enough. This is way outside the legal FCC tolerance of .0015% which at 9370 would give them a far-too- generous range of only plus/minus 140.55 Hz. It`s always something at WTJC --- at least no spurs at the moment, but also undermodulated (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9367.76 - WTJC - noted off frequency at 0038 with presumed Chinese program. Monologue by om into hymns in Chinese and continuous music thru 0054 including operatic and choral music. Definite religious in nature & style. ID in English at 0100. Very good signal strength with only slight atmospheric noise leftover from late afternoon thunderstorms (Stephen Wood, Harwich MA, Persus SDR with 25 x 50 superloop antenna, UT July 25, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 11775, WHRI, 2246, in English. Male preacher with conventional evangelical teaching – expecting Gene or Melissa Scott. Returned at 0757 with end of a prayer, fill music, spot by World Vision, ID, contemporary Christian music. Good. 7/21/12 (Mark Taylor, Madison WI, WinRadio g313e, Grundig G1 & G5, Satellit 800; EWE, Flextenna, NASWA Flashsheet via DXLD) WHRI has 11775 registered Saturdays only at 22-24 toward Europe in English, and 7/21 was Saturday. Is the 0757 time correct, or part of that same transmission? The Scotts via Anguilla nominally operate 11775 only at 10-22 UT, but sometimes 11775 stays on afterwards or even all-night instead of 6090 by mistake, or QSY device stuck (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 550, July 20 at 1133 UT, tune-in to water trick magic ad (turn a bottle upside down and it doesn`t spill!), Los Angeles 21 address (with a hard-G), same super-hokey announcer resumes narrating Chandu (sp?) The Magician, set in India. 1145 announces there will be a time change for the show Thursday February 3, to the evenings, 8 pm PST, 9 pm MST, ID as the Mutual-Don Lee Broadcasting System. It`s really an ep of `When Radio Was` outroed as from January 27, 1949, to be continued next week. This is no doubt our local KFRM Salina KS, a departure from its farmy format (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 770, July 22 at 1221, weak but steady signal from ``The Talk Monster, KKOB``, Albuquerque NM, ads, medical infomercial. What happened to `Perspective` from ABC News, which used to air at 6-7 am MT Sundays? Website makes it very hard to find program schedule, not on the main menu but just above it inside an ad block: http://www.770kkob.com/common/more.php?m=10&mode=schedule&r=1 Undated, still shows ABC`s `Perspective`. Does the show still exist? It used to be a must-listen for me when it presented long-form reports, just talking, à la BBC`s `From Our Own Correspondent` which has also been downsized. Then ABC dumbed down `Perspective` with tabloid stuff and worked in retreads of TV features. Yes, it`s still easily accessible with podcast archive and topic list for each at http://abcnewsradioonline.com/perspective/ As for KKOB reception, July official sunrise and switch to non- direxional is 1200 UT; August 1230. Winter is on the way! (Glenn Hauser, 100+ degree OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. KCEG [780 Colorado] vs. WBBM --- Here in Columbia, MO, KCEG was holding its own against WBBM around midnight. They were pretty good about IDing every 10 minutes or so. Anybody know what power they're running at night? 73, (Tim Kridel, KC0KEK, July 22, ABDX via DXLD) Night power is supposed to be 720 watts, but who knows? I'm surprised you can hear them that far east, especially under WBBM. They are an easy catch in the Denver area during the day, but WBBM has wiped them out each time I have tried at night. The last I heard, they are still powering the transmitter site by generator, so I would think they are dropping power at night. The goofy thing about them is that they were originally licensed to Fountain, but they applied for and received a grant for a change of city of license to Pueblo before they signed on a few months ago, yet they always ID as Fountain. It's not only goofy, it's illegal. Hard to figure how they can't even get that right when they requested the change. The station is being operated from another station's facilities in Pueblo. If anyone is interested, I can get a few photos on my next trip to Pueblo. They have a 6 tower array that is irregular. It didn't used to be lighted at all at night, but in recent months there has been one flashing red beacon. 73, (Kit, W5KAT, CO, ibid.) This was the first time I¹ve heard them. Maybe it was a lucky fluke due to conditions or day power being left on or both. I¹ll try again tonight. Yes, some photos would be great. Thanks (Tim Kridel, ibid.) Kit, where do you see a COL change to Pueblo? All the license records I can find for KCEG show Fountain. There's no way 780 could be granted a COL change to Pueblo as a full-timer, since it doesn't put an interference-free signal over at least 80% of Pueblo at night. s (Scott Fybush, ibid.) I concur with Scott; I'm looking through what shows up for KCEG on the FCC's AM query (which is right 99% of the time), and I'm not finding anything in regards to a COL change. As of 7/22/2012, it's licensed to Fountain. 73, (Rick Dau, South Omaha, Nebraska, ibid.) Somewhere there`s probably a source claiming, right or wrong, that Pueblo is the CoL, and everyone has picked up that story and run with it. For example, I use the AM Search iPhone/iPad app, and it lists Pueblo. Wikipedia also says Pueblo: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/780_AM So the question is, where did they all get Pueblo from? I didn¹t hear it mentioned in the IDs. Bob Wien has posted a few times. e.g., http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ABDX/message/56351 that it¹s Pueblo. Maybe he knows about a CoL (Tim Kridel, ibid.) The COL grant was published in the FCC Daily Digest last spring shortly before KCEG came on. The FCC license also showed Pueblo as the city of license after that. I don't know when they changed it back to Fountain, but I never saw any notification that the licensee applied to change it back, nor did I see any grant. Something is fishy here. I remarked to Bob Wien (on this list) that it was strange to hear them IDing as Fountain after the COL change to Pueblo had been granted. I don't know if he ever looked them on on the FCC site at the time, but maybe he will remember it. 73, (Kit, W5KAT, ibid.) Scott, If you have access to records on the Radio-Info site, check it for a couple of months ago. I think that site also showed them with a CP for Pueblo. At any rate, the official license on the FCC DB definitely showed them with the application and grant. The last several times I looked them up on the FCC site, it was Pueblo, and there was no longer any mention of Fountain. By the way, sister station KJME 890 remained licensed to Fountain. I never saw any applications to change that one. 73, (Kit W5KAT, ibid.) Here's the current FCC record, which is "Fountain": http://transition.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/amq?list=0&facid=135885 There were indeed some "Pueblo" applications filed in 2001 and again in 2007-08, and even a CP granted as "Pueblo" in 2001, but KCEG has never been licensed as anything other than Fountain. (You can see the full list of apps, CPs and licenses by going to FCCInfo.com and choosing the "include archive records" box under the callsign field, which brings up this: http://fccinfo.com/CMDProFacLookup.php?sCurrentService=AM&calls=KCEG&ArchiveRecords=Y&tabSearchType=Call+Sign+Search (Scott Fybush, ibid.) I just looked back at my e-mail correspondence with Bob. As of April 15, they were on with IDs as Fountain, but the FCC DB showed them as Pueblo at that time. Take a look at ABDX message 56254 on April 20 where Bob posted that he was hearing them ID as Fountain, but he notes that they are a Pueblo license. He probably looked them up at that time. I don't know why the COL change info is missing from the records now. If the Daily Digest is searchable, it should be on there. I don't normally save any of those, but sometimes I do if there is something worth noting in my area. I can take a look to see. 73, (Kit, W5KAT, ibid.) I am pretty certain it was some combination of FCC and permittee error - when KCEG finally came on the air (one of those "BMML-" applications on the list, which means an application to be licensed based on a moment-of-methods exhibit rather than a directional proof), someone at the Media Bureau may have updated CDBS based on the wrong CP. The full set of records (follow that "include archived records" link!) includes a "superseded" entry on one of the BMML apps. Whatever may or may not have appeared in CDBS, it's pretty clear to me that the station is supposed to be licensed to Fountain and is ID'ing correctly at this time. s (Scott Fybush, ibid.) It wouldn't be the first time the FCC has messed up like that. It obviously is licensed to Fountain now, but if you had looked up their license in April or May, you would have seen Pueblo on it. If you look at BLSTA - 20120123ACT, dated Jan. 23, 2012, it lists the COL as Pueblo. 73, (Kit W5KAT, ibid.) A Resumption of Operations form was filed by KCEG on April 23, 2012, which was about the time Bob Wien first starting hearing it again. It was filed by the licensee and the COL is listed as Pueblo. That document is available online. Although most of the records showing on the FCC site do not reflect it now, KCEG, whether in error or fact, was licensed to Pueblo for at least a short period earlier this year when it returned to the air, but I never heard a Pueblo ID. 73, (Kit, W5KAT, ibid.) WBBM is dominating tonight, but KCEG occasionally pushes atop at times. Unfortunately so far all of those times have been when KCEG is playing music instead of IDing, so I haven't been able to record an ID yet. Will keep trying for a bit longer (Tim Kridel, 0445 UT July 23, ibid.) They have been IDing a number of times during the hour when I have listened, so you shouldn't be stuck waiting for just the TOH. I may run out to the car in a bit and see if I can hear them. 73, (Kit, 0518 UT July 23, ibid.) They just IDed as Fountain (Kridel, 0532 UT July 23, ibid.) I just heard it in the car. This was the first I have been able to hear them at night. Barely any WBBM audible at all. I also checked 890 for KJME. Someone was playing music, but I was getting a lot of the usual splatter from KRVN 880 since they are so strong here. 73, (Kit, 0536 UT July 23, ibid.) What's your QTH? (Tim Kridel, ibid.) Between Boulder and Denver. I shouldn't be too far off of their main lobe. (Kit, ibid.) I Have only heard KCEG once, that was back in early April when I was near downtown Littleton; it had a lot of static. I heard them in the early afternoon. Littleton Downtown is about 15 minites southwest of me. I haven't heard them again since (Paul Armani, CO, ibid.) ** U S A. WQOM possibly WAS silent, but it is now at its permanent transmitter site and with 50 kW days and 2500 watts night. [1060, Natick MA near Boston, Holy Family Communications --- FCC, gh] WDCD (the New York state entry) [1540 Albany] is "on hiatus". It is owned by a religious broadcaster and was not generating sufficient income from donations to keep it afloat. It is a full-time 50 kW signal which burned into southern New England and Montreal during the 1960's as WPTR, a heavy rocker. It will resume operations once they have figured a way to make a profitable format on an AM signal. (How the mighty have fallen!) Each of the silent entries has a story behind it; a way to get the inside scoop is to read Scott Fybush's "NorthEast Radio watch" http://www.fybush.com and to join the National Radio Club and receive their 30x/year "DX News" publication. Updates and silent operations are tracked there far more accurately than at the FCC. http://www.nrcdxas.org (Rick Lucas, Rochester, NY, July 22, mwmasts yg via DXLD) The FCC Silent AM stations page is here, minus frequencies: AM silent stations, silent over 2 months AS OF : 7/2/2012 http://transition.fcc.gov/mb/audio/newsite/docs/silentAM.html Minus frequencies! But everyone should check it periodically for any familiar neighborhood stations which may or may not be off. There are a lot more silent FMs, many of them translators: http://transition.fcc.gov/mb/audio/newsite/docs/silentFM.html While we`re at it, the silent TV page should be: http://transition.fcc.gov/mb/audio/newsite/docs/silentTV.html but it`s 404; hmm, what`s the visual equivalent of silent, invisible? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 1170, FLORIDA, WKFL, Bushnell. 1100 July 21, 2012. Male canned ID right at tune in, “WKFL, Bushnell, FL” into network news. Poor. “Kickin' Country” slogan per their website wklf1170am.com, and still listed as daytime-only DA1 at 1 kW per FCC. 2011 NRC AM Log had this as silent 7/2011 though believe it's been back on for awhile now, and had an application for D4 10000/CH 5300 which I suppose they blew Florida Low Power Radio Stations: https://sites.google.com/site/floridadxn/florida-low-power-radio-stations (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 1680, July 20 at 1151 UT, ad for a bankruptcy lawyer in West Monroe, then ``the all-new NewsRadio 1680 AM``, rejoin national show `America`s Morning News` about the Aurora theatre massacre --- first I had heard about it. Faded at 1158, but amazingly fade back in for ID at 1159, ``KRJO, Monroe-West Monroe, Monroe`s Information Station`` from Louisiana. So no Old School music format any more (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. PACIFICA ORDERS AUSTERITY CUTS AFTER GRIM AUDITORS’ REPORT As debt mounts, stations to lay off staff, slash spending Published in Current, July 9, 2012 By Elizabeth Jensen Arlene Engelhardt, Pacifica exec. dir. [caption] Responding to a June 15 auditors’ report expressing “substantial doubt” that the Pacifica Foundation has the financial wherewithal “to continue as a going concern,” Executive Director Arlene Engelhardt recently notified the five Pacifica radio stations to prepare for deep cuts in their budgets and staffing. The audit, which examined the foundation’s finances for fiscal year 2011, was the second consecutive report questioning Pacifica’s financial viability. Although Engelhardt disputed the auditors’ warnings — “We can always take to the air and raise money,” she said — she directed the stations to make cuts of at least $1 million from their collective budgets. The reductions were to be made immediately, but at Current’s deadline, decisions being made at local stations could not be confirmed. . . http://www.current.org/funding/funding1213pacifica.html (via King Daevid MacKenzie, Facebook via Clara Listensprechen, DXLD) ** U S A. The Fight Is Just Beginning: We Need Your Help Dear Glenn, Earlier this week, we asked you to call your member of Congress about a dangerous bill that would severely cut funding for public broadcasting to be voted on by the House Labor, Health and Human Services, Education Appropriations Subcommittee. And we thank you for speaking up for public broadcasting. Unfortunately, this bill passed out of subcommittee on Tuesday, July 18, by an 8-6 vote. This is a serious blow to public radio and television stations across the country and the 170 million Americans who rely on us every month. But this is just the beginning. We faced this fight last year, and thanks to you, we restored funding for public broadcasting. We can do it again this year, but we will need your help. What’s Next? The bill now heads to the full House Appropriations Committee, which could meet as early as next week. In the lead up to the vote, we will need your help again, in asking your members of Congress to support local public television and radio stations across this country. What can you do today? Please ask your friends, family and neighbors to join the campaign to save federal funding for public broadcasting. They can sign up at 170MillionAmericans.org and ‘like’ us on Facebook. This is going to be a fight that lasts all year long and we will need as many supporters as possible to prevail in the end. THANK YOU for all that you are doing! Stacey Karp and Lisa Radzak 170 Million Americans for Public Broadcasting 170 Million Americans for Public Broadcasting is a collaboration of public radio and television stations, national organizations, producers and our viewers and listeners throughout the country in favor of a strong public media in the United States. This project receives no government funding. 170 Million Americans for Public Broadcasting 480 Cedar Street St. Paul, MN 55101, USA ©2011 All rights reserved (July 20, via DXLD) Rubio on Public Radio --- Potential VP candidate raps taxpayer-funded broadcasting. Here we go again. I wonder how his Cuban ex-pat supporters feel about Radio Martí? http://news.yahoo.com/while-npr-sen-rubio-questions-usefulness-npr-154934066--abc-news-politics.html (Joe Buch, internetradio via DXLD) ** U S A. Florida Digital Translator logged by E-Skip on Channel 4!!! While I was DXing FM from Florida at 2040 EDT tonight, My Insignia Box Locked onto the following Digital TV Translator!! !!! 4 WTSP (Translator) North Inverness, FLORIDA July/19/12 2040 EDT EE VG This is a Low Power Translator for the Channel 10 Station which is located in St. Petersburg, FLORIDA. It is listed on Doug Smith's site and in the FCC Records as a 300 WATT Translator!! I received no programming but the PSIP Locked on and I got a Photo of the PSIP Info!! 300 Watts at 155 Feet AGL. This is my Best Digital TV DX to Date!!!! NEW STN 300 Watts CBS ROSS, ONT. This was received on a Sharp 21 Inch Digital TV with Insignia Set Top Box. Antenna is a Crappy VHF/UHF Combo Antenna mounted on a Tri-Pod in my Backyard at 12 Feet AGL!! Right Place...Right Time I guess....... . 73 (Robert S. Ross, VE3JFC, VA3SW, London, Ontario CANADA, GRID- EN92JW, ODXA yg via DXLD) This is a strange case; if it`s a translator, why does it have the same ``main station`` callsign as channel 10 in TSP? Instead of W04##? FCC has different coordinates but says nothing about Inverness, and shows this as ``WTSP FL ST. PETERSBURG USA (Digital) Licensee: PACIFIC AND SOUTHERN COMPANY, INC. Service Designation: LD Digital Television Translator station Transmit Channel: 4 66 - 72 MHz Licensed Virtual Channel: 10 (viewer sees this channel number)`` (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGST) 300 W on ch 4 is all you need under the right Es conditions. Bill Hepburn logged K04RA-D Clarksville AR last winter. For the locals though, I'm sure reception can be dodgy (Fritze H. Prentice, Jr., KC5KBV, Star City AR EM43aw, twitter.com/fritzehp ibid.) Hi Rob, keep an eye on Ch 5 next opening from Florida, WRUF-DT (10-1) at 300 watts from Gainesville decoded here last summer (Jeff, Springfield MA, ibid.) ** U S A. At 1219 UT July 21 I discovered NPR `Weekend Edition Saturday` at unusual places on the FM dial, notably 90.9 with ID as Iowa Public Radio, i.e. KUNI Cedar Falls, 514 miles, but soon turned my attention to TV the rest of the morning for big tropo opening from as far as Austin MN, mostly DTV on UHF, but a few analogs too, to be compiled later (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Viz.: Large tropo TV and FM DX opening from as far away as Minnesota, morning of Saturday July 21, all times UT. First noted on FM portable DX-398 with whip, NPR `Weekend Edition Saturday` on 90.1 totally overriding KCSC OKC, i.e. R. Kansas. This is always the #2 station on 90.1 here, but obviously tropo from the north is way up now. Also gospel music could override 91.7 KOSU with antenna in certain positions. 1219 break in NPR on 90.9 brought Iowa Public Radio ID, i.e. KUNI Cedar Falls. Another unID NPR On 91.5 not synchronized, probably KANU Lawrence KS. And on 89.5, maybe only KWGS Tulsa. 93.1 had RDS of ``MY 93.1 / AT40 WITH / RYAN SEACREST``. That slogan goes with KHMY Hutchinson KS. My local 93.1 translator probably off, but could have been overridden. After a quick breakfast of strawberries and home-grown hazelnuts, I then turned attention to TVDX. With antenna NNE-ward, first stepped thru all the TV channels manually on the Zenith converter at 1240-1249 UT. There was at least a `bad` signal on most of them. Some channels with no signal at all were the OKC ones, which normally achieve some level of signal, even decoding with antenna way off from true direxion of SSE. This was probably not due to lack of strength, but to co-channel QRM from other DX stations. 4, bad, only one around is WHBF Rock Island IL; see 36 definite log 5, bad, no doubt WOI Ames IA; see 23 8, KPTS Wichita 9, bad 10, KAKE Wichita 11, KTWU Topeka 12, bad 14, bad 16, bad 17, bad 18, KCPT-1 Kansas City 19, bad 20, KETV-DT Omaha, very good, held up for hours 21, bad 22, bad 23, KCWI, Ames IA, very good 26, bad 28, bad 30, bad 34, WDAF-DT Kansas City 35, bad 36, KWQC-TV, 6-1, NBC, Davenport IA 38, bad 41, bad 42, bad 43, bad 45, KSNW-DT, 3-1 Wichita [other Wichitans ignored] 46, bad 47, bad 48, bad 49, bad After this, rest of log has been reorganized from time to RF channel order first, as there are multiple entries for many stations. P = still photographs made. In many cases I did not have the time to check subchannels, as I wanted to be sure to ID and photo the main channel 4 at 1259, peaks NNE rather than N, but never enough to decode, presumed WHBF Rock Island IL; gone by 1354 while 5 and 9 still in 5 at 1354, bad signal but DTV presumed WOI-TV Ames IA, NNE rather than N; still there at 1509 when 23 Ames was definite 9 at 1322, KCRG-DT, 9-1, Cedar Rapids IA P; 1327 on 9-1 P a promo for 9-2 programming, but I didn`t get to see 9-2 itself 11 at 1329, KTWU ID with translators shown, Topeka KS, P 12 at 1503, NET-HD, 12-1; 1504 P with program guide and P at 1505. I.e. KUON-TV Lincoln NE. Pleased with this as it had to surpass Wichita/Hutchinson almost same direxion 14 at 1404, KAAS-DT, 17-1, P. Must really be 40 kW KOCW Hoisington KS, relaying KSAS 26 Wichita thru KAAS-TV Salina which is on RF 17! Note that a different KAAS-LP in the same Fox/Wichita group is on 31 in Garden City 16 at 1256, KDSM-DT, 17-1, Des Moines IA; at 1332 P KDSM-DT 17-1 PSIP shows but no signal now 18 at 1340, KCPT-3, 19-3, P, Create subchannel with program guide display, Kansas City MO 20 at 1249, KETV, 7-1, local `Newscenter 7`, Omaha NE; at 1448, 7-2 is MeTV with B&W music video 22 at 1256, WOWT, 6-1 Omaha; 1334 ID P 23 at 1335, KCWI, 23-1, PSIP ID P but no signal now; 1341 P KCWI 23-1 with program guide, Ames IA; still at 1509, 1510 P with program guides; still a bad signal bar at 1625 25 at 1359, KTIN-HD, 21-1 P. I had noticed that Mountainlake tropo map showed big red blob extending all the way from IL to SE Arizona!! I don`t believe there is really any tropo west of here, but had turned antenna toward WSW just in case, and caught this which I had not seen with antenna NNE. Fort Dodge IA, P. Also at 1439 P KTIN-HD, 21-1; 21-2 is KTINSD1, 21-3 is KTINSD2; IPTV bug in LR 28 at 1427, KSIN-TV, 27-1, Iowa Public TV, P, Sioux City 34 at 1313, WDAF-SD PSIP ID on 4-2, Kansas City MO; 1336 P WDAF DT PSIP on 4-1 36 circa 1246, see initial scan above, definite KWQC-TV, 6-1, Davenport IA, but next log on 36 was something else: [WOC-TV somehow morphed into KWQC over the years: ignore the tail on the Q?] 36 at 1419, KAAL-DT, 6-1, about animals in Namibia, P, Austin MN, 620 kW at 565 miles per city-to-city calculator; best catch of the opening by distance 38 at 1513, KXVO, 15-1, Omaha NE, P; 15-2 is more interesting with Azteca America, which we do not get around here on air or cable; lots of network promos P; still in at 1551 41 at 1425, KTIV-HD, 4-1, P, NBC Kids, Sioux City IA; at 1437 checked 4-2 and it`s KTIV-CW 43 at 1621, no signal but also shows 43-1 with a `bad` signal bar now 48 at 1603, no signal but dim PSIP shows 48-1, i.e. same channel; ideas what that might have been? Can`t tell from W9WI.com which does not show virtual channels, a major drawback. There are no full-power DTVs on 48 in KS, MO, IA, NE or MN! Not WXOW Lacrosse WI, = virtual 19 By 1625 most remaining DTV DX signals are `bad` so I quit chasing them. Note that by local mean time, i.e. correlating with the Sun, 1625 UT = only 0953, so about time to burn off; local Enid temp at 1621: 98.6 F --- besides, Es has started up on channel 2 at 1605, conveniently also from north; see CANADA, did not amount to much. Separate NTSC, analog log: 17 at 1407, discussion among women from NNE, presumed KETM-LP Emporia KS, ``Fox 6`` listed, 22.3 kW; have had this one before 28 at 1259, weak signal from NNE, presumed the only one around, KWKD- LP, 8.8 kW, Daystar in Wichita KS; normally invisible here; at 1407 video had locked in during a magic demonstration? Shell game or something on a table 30 at 1408, video no horizontal lock until rotated NNW; video appears to have some kind of QRM or breakup, relayed CCI? but not digital tiling; `Jack Hanna`s Wild Countdown` as also on KAKE-21, with the 30 analog video slightly ahead of digital 21. Presumed KGBD-LP, Great Bend KS, 8.4 kW KAKE relayer 38 at 1409, weak video same as 30, i.e. K38GH Russell KS, 7.2 kW relay of KGBD of KAKE. Best photos of some of my DTV DX from MN, IA, NE and KS July 21, 2012 are now at http://www.worldofradio.com/tvdxfoto.html I have a LOT more in my collexion going back some 50 years, but when will I ever have time to process them? (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Glenn, Glad to see you getting in on this opening. WCIA-48 Champaign, IL still in at 10:30 [1530 UT]. Most stations however have been from the north with Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa the strongest and most numerous. Around 10 I saw K30AE-D from Alva, OK which repeats KETA-13 from OKC. The PSIP says OETA but fortunately only one channel 30 in the Oklahoma network. Very strong signals from the Wichita market as well as Omaha. KOOD-16 from Bunker Hill, KS is in no matter what direction I point the antennas. Even came in on the VHF antenna at around 150 miles. KHAS-5 from Hastings, NE decoded as well this morning along with WHBF-4. I've concentrated on the east and north and haven't tried too much in your direction. The only other Oklahoma stations ID'd this morning was KDOR-17 from Bartlesville (Dave Pomeroy, Topeka, Kansas, DX LISTENING DIGEST) No significant enhancement of Oklahoma signals here, which helped a lot (gh, Enid, DXLD) Glenn, I checked the Mountain Lake real-time APRS mapsite and you are right in the middle of the action. I'm making do with E's from Canada, at least one of the ch2 stations is a analog Radio-Canada relayer in its final days. The tropo blob does extend into NW Arkansas. I am seeing DTV pest KSPR 19 (33-1 ABC, 33-2 The CW) Springfield MO decoding and pilots but no decoding (yet) for KAFT 9, KNWA 50, and KFSM 18. – (Fritze H. Prentice, Jr, KC5KBV, Star City AR EM43aw, twitter.com/fritzehp ibid.) ** URUGUAY. Emisora Chaná, Tacuarembó, the unofficial SW transmitter relaying a local FM community station in Department of Tacuarembó, Uruguay (central part of the country) and which was monitored in the Southern South America region, during the last two years around 5.9 MHz (very variable) is currently inactive, due to power costs. Anyways, they stated their broadcasts would resume in the future. New data to report is their postal addr: Barragué 395, Barrio La Palma, Tacuarembó. E-mail: emisorachanatacuarembo @ hotmail.com (Horacio Nigro, Uruguay, via telephone contact with the stn, Jul 24, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** VATICAN [and non]. Ciudad del Vaticano: La Radio del Papa llega al mundo --- Jueves 19 Jul 2012 Radio Vaticana --- Ciudad de Vaticano (AICA): El responsable de Programas en Lengua Española de Radio Vaticana, padre Guillermo Ortiz, aclaró en declaraciones a AICA que “la emisora del Papa” continuará transmitiendo a todo el mundo. La aclaración se refiere a recientes informaciones que daban cuenta de que sólo iba a hacerlo a través de Internet. El jesuita argentino precisó que el pasado 1º de julio la “Radio del Papa” dejó de transmitir en Onda Corta y Onda Media en la mayor parte de Europa y América”, pero destacó que seguirá “haciéndolo vía satélite” a través de cientos de emisoras que retransmiten la programación y en un área bastante amplia que implica Cuba, República Dominicana, Puerto Rico y el sur de los Estados Unidos en Onda Corta, en su frecuencia de 9610 kHz. Los modos precisos para sintonizar la emisora pueden verse en la página web del Papa: http://www.radiovaticana.va/spa/index.asp Para mayor información latam @ vatiradio.va FUENTE: http://www.aica.org/post.php?id=2495 (Via @yimbergaviria, DXLD) This story claims that VR quit broadcasting on SW and MW in most of Europe and America on July 1, yet will continue on SW 9610 kHz for Caribbean and southern USA. Well, that Bonaire relay at 0030-0250 on 9610 DOES cover ``most of America``, and furthermore the Sackville relay was NOT cut off 9610 after that or 13730 in the mornings on July 1 as repeatedly announced prior to then, but allegedly is going to be cut off after July 31 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Listened to strong, solid signal in English from Vatican Radio on 9610 kHz, off and on from 0250-0319 GMT. It beamed with great clarity via Sackville (Canada). Will someone remind me: when will these Vatican Radio SW broadcasts via Sackville end? I will greatly miss this great station's very intelligent English broadcasts! They should "repent" of their decision not to broadcast in English any more (Grayson Watson, Dallas, TX using a Sangean 909x with an Apex Radio 700DTA antenna, Cumbre DX via DXLD) 12050, July 20 at 2101, WEWN relaying Vatican Radio in Spanish alleging that the Pope`s travels are newsworthy; very good signal, much stronger than // 13830. Those who are anticipating Vatican-withdrawal after the Sackville relays in English cease July 31, might turn to WEWN. Besides this in Spanish, the current English schedule grid at http://www.ewtn.com/radio/download/Shortwave_Grid.pdf shows three segments with Vatican in the title, but not the same: Sunday 1730-1800 on 15610, `Vatican Radio Weekend`, Saturday 1330-1400 on 15615, and UT Sunday 0130-0200 on 11520, `Vatican Insider`. 13730, July 23 at 1212, VR wrapping up English quarter-hour via CANADA, no mention that this transmission will allegedly be canceled after July 31, unlike most of June when they kept saying English to Americas would be dropped July 1, which it wasn`t. Who knows what will really happen? They don`t (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9610, CANADA, Vatican Radio via Sackville, 0242-0322 Jul 22. French program closing at 0249 with IS. Into English program with Spanish from 0320. Good signal until July 31 when Sackville is listed as closing (Rich D'Angelo, Wyomissing PA, 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) This is via BONAIRE until 0250 when a quick transition to Sackville is made, as I explained in a recent log. If VR cares about continuing to be heard in English in North America, they will let Bonaire take over 9610 after July 31 Sackville relay starting at 0250 allegedly stops (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** VENEZUELA. RADIO NACIONAL DE VENEZUELA CUMPLE 76 AÑOS, MÁS PRESENTE QUE NUNCA 21 Julio 2012 El Sistema Radio Nacional de Venezuela arriba a su 76 aniversario al servicio del pueblo venezolano, destacando por la veracidad, oportuna y efectiva información a los usuarios. Para conmemorar los 76 años, la directiva, los trabajadores de RNV organizaron una variada programación cultural y recreativa que inicia este domingo 22 de julio con una bicicletada que saldrá a las 6:30 de la mañana desde Los Simbolos hasta Los Próceres. Luego a las 9 de la mañana habrá un encuentro deportivo en el Laguito del Circulo Militar. . . FUENTE: http://www.rnv.gov.ve/noticias/?act=ST&f=29&t=189817 (Via @yimbergaviria, DXLD) ** VIETNAM. 9839.872, Ladies singer folk music heard at 2316 UT July 20, Voice of Vietnam Hanoi Son Tay site outlet. Scheduled Indonesian foreign service at 2300-2330 UT. 11719.647, Some odd frequency signal of Hanoi domestic? home service {probably 24 hr service? According to older ABU list} from Son Tay site at 2345 UT July 20th. Not mentioned in Japanese AOKI list yet. (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews July 20, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Dear Wolfy, Please consider the following. Per DXLD 12-19: Vietnam on 11720, when I last heard them, was not off frequency. Have checked numerous times subsequently, also about 1300 to 1400, to try to hear them again, but without success. So the reactivation, at least for that time period, was short lived. VIETNAM. 11720, VOV-1, 1338-1401, May 2. Thanks to the tip from Sei- ichi Hasegawa (Japan), heard this reactivated frequency, after being off for almost one year; in Vietnamese; signed on shortly after 1331. At 1359 IS, pips and NA (“March to the Front”); // 5975, 7210, 7435 and 9635; fair. Nice to have another frequency to hear them on! MP3 audio at http://www.box.com/s/c493bfcc18940d4b14be Not on the air May 3, so perhaps still an irregular schedule? (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) But I have heard CNR1 off frequency, along with spurs. Per DXLD 12-26: CHINA. 11686 // 11702 // 11718 // 11726 // 11734, CNR1, 1128-1140, June 25. In Chinese; // 6125. Last May when I heard CNR1 on 11717.98 (DXLD 12-20) I should have been more curious, otherwise I might have found these other frequencies. Spurs? What is the primary frequency? (Ron Howard, San Francisco at Ocean Beach, CA, Etón E1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Also per Aoki (July 20, 2012): 11720 CNR 1 2330-0600 1234567 Chinese 100 kW So is CNR1 a possibility? (Ron Howard, Monterey, Calif., USA, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Dear Ron, you may CORRECT on this matter, and it's possible I heard CNR1 instead. Was poor signal last night. Still a puzzle to further check again. see screenshot of station site #723 somewhat veiled / hidden: six curtains visible at 217 degrees azimuth, aimed domestic sce across mainland China towards Kunming, Yunnan, Thailand a.s.o., change to 9710 kHz later the day. two curtains in 165 degrees azimuth, aimed domestic service across mainland China towards Henan, Quanzhou across Taiwan. Change to 7365 kHz in summer schedule, later the day. Noted CNR1 Shijiazhuang also odd on 11759.983 kHz at 0900 UT. Not many Chinese shortwave sites do send an odd waves these days. 73 wolfy (Wolfgang Büschel, ibid.) see CNR1 schedule on NDXC website 2330-1100 UT http://www1.s2.starcat.ne.jp/ndxc/ 11720 723 2330-1100(=9710) found this too: 11717.98 CNR1, Shijiazhuang, 1245, May 08, poor, but clearly \\ 6125 First time I have noted this (Ron Howard, dxld May 8, 2012, ibid.) ** VIETNAM [non]. Vietnamese clandestine: Que Me (?) Radio Que Me [homeland] Radio is run by the "Action for Democracy in Vietnam" organisation, and this is the very last entry in the latest WRTH update - listed as from Palau on 9930 kHz at 1200-1230 UT on Fridays only. Observed today with good reception via Global Tuners HK receiver, initially with 18 seconds of Indonesian/Malay audio, which was interrupted by the start of the programme proper in Vietnamese at 1200. Opening announcement included this frequency and their website address (queme.net); however the identifications I think I heard didn't sound anything like 'Que Me Radio', can anyone confirm this ID? Most of the programme consisted of someone addressing an indoor public meeting, bookended by a Buddhist temple gong. The broadcast went off air at 1230 UT. You can hear a recording of the first 2-3 minutes of this at http://www.intervalsignals.net/vtn-clandestine_200712.mp3 (I've left the Indonesian/Malay bit on for now) (David Kernick, UK, July 20, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** WESTERN SAHARA [non]. 702.0, 2121-, 02/7, CLANDESTINE, Polisario Front, Rabouni, ALGERIA. Arabic, talks, traditional songs. Also here 3~8/7, 10/7. 44443 CG [sometimes 700, sometimes 702 – WRTH] 1550.0, 1912-, 09/7, CLA, Polisario Front, Rabouni, ALGERIA. Arabic, talks, music, 55444 (Carlos Gonçalves, Portugal, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ZANZIBAR. TANZANIA: 11735, Radio Tanzania Zanzibar (tentative); 1954-2005+, 19-July; Afro-Arabish droning vocal to 1959; Brief comments in unknown language (lists show Swahili) -- mentioned Dar es Salaam, to Koran? chant 2001-2004, into M commentary. SIO=2+52+ (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) 11735, Radio Tanzania-Zanzibar. 2031-2055* July 21, 2012. Clear, fair and improving with Swahili female announcer, local vocals. Abruptly off. Emailed Gerry Bishop, Ft. Walton Beach, FL, who was also able to hear it, albeit not quite as well. Probably because I'm a few inches closer to the African continent than he (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC- R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ZIMBABWE [non]. MADAGASCAR: 9870, Zimbabwe Community Radio (tentative); 0423-0438+, 15-July; M in unknown language mixing in occasional English words such as "electoral commission" and numbers in English. Bumper at 0437 and mentions of Zimbabwe. SIO=2+43 in LSB, needed to minimize roar QRM -- jammer? (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9870, July 20 at 0453, fair signal in African language, presumed V. of the People in Shona or Ndebele, as scheduled from the 50 kW MADAGASCAR transmitter at 04-05, 265 degrees. Some noise on the hi side may have been jamming (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ZIMBABWE [non]. REPORT: VOA "PIRATE RADIO STATION" STUDIO 7, TO ZIMBABWE, FACES LARGE BUDGET CUT. Posted: 25 Jul 2012 Sunday News (Harare), 14 July 2012, Lawson Mabhena: "Voice of America (VOA)’s pirate radio station project in Zimbabwe, Studio 7, is facing financial difficulties after a major donor cut its funding, a situation that is set to deal a major blow to the campaign of mass deception and propaganda directed at the country and its leadership. Studio 7 started broadcasting illegally in Zimbabwe in 2003 after the US launched an anti-Zimbabwe campaign as a response to the land reform programme which began in the year 2000. It has been running stories that seek to portray Zimbabwe as a failed State. According to a communiqué written to all the pirate station’s correspondents, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) — a US government agency that provides relief aid to developing countries in order to promote that country’s version of democracy — 'drastically' cut funding to Studio 7, forcing the station to reduce assignments and payments to all correspondents. Last year the US passed a bill cutting the US$1,35 billion USAID operations budget to around US$900 million. ... Studio 7 correspondents, who spoke to us on condition of anonymity, said panic had gripped the pirate radio station as there was fear that even the workforce would be cut. ... There are three pirate radio stations broadcasting into Zimbabwe. The Voice of America operates Studio 7 that broadcasts from Washington DC daily. The other two stations are Voice of the People and Short Wave Radio Africa." [Please! It`s clandestine, not pirate. And what about Zimbabwe Community Radio, as logged above? gh] Nehanda Radio, 15 July 2012: "The news if true will be a source of worry for information-starved Zimbabweans who rely on foreign based stations like VOA Studio 7, SW Radio Africa and Radio VOP because of repressive media legislation." (kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD) UNIDENTIFIED. 1070, USA. 1100 July 22, 2012. ID mentioning 101.3 and 104 point something, lost in co-channel with other domestics and the Cuban. I don't find anyone on the NRC AM Log that matches the FM simulcast(s), or Google searching for that matter. Sad I am (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater, FL, Abridged pile of antiquated junk used here: JRC NRD-535; ICOM IC-R75; Sony ICF-7600GR; Sangean PR-D5; Aqua Guide 705 RDF Marine Radio; GE Superadio Tres; 1 X roof dipole; 1 X room random wire, DX LISTENING DIGEST) FWIW, probably not much way off in FL, KLIO 1070 Wichita KS, True Oldies is commonly owned with KFDI 101.3 Wichita, altho not normally simulcast. KFDI Radio Ranch format used to be on 1070 (Glenn Hauser, ibid.) UNIDENTIFIED. 5019.9, Strong carrier at 2340 to 2350 with Havana down in power. 18 July (Robert Wilkner, Pompano Beach, South Florida, NRD 535D -746Pro - Drake R8, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Solomon Islands same offset, but cannot be at this hour; ute? (gh) UNIDENTIFIED. Hi all, Unidentified Pirate heard here in Montreal at 2000 UT in AM mode on 6900 kHz; lots of music, just above the noise floor. But seems to be getting better so if anyone wants to have a try at it! (Gilles Letourneau, Montreal Canada, 2017 UT July 21, http://www.youtube.com/tecmtl dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) UNIDENTIFIED. 9331, approx., July 25 at 0610, big carrier is overriding and hetting WBCQ 9330; occasional warbling. Suspect a Cuban spy transmitter (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) UNIDENTIFIED. 9565, JAMMER, 1113-1120. Unid pulsing jammer, about 186 pulses per minute with a signal that is about 8 kHz wide. Target unknown. I did a search of frequencies between 5 and 22 MHz and could not find another frequency on which this jammer was operating. 7/15/12 (Steve Handler, Buffalo Grove, IL, Icom 7200, Tecsun PL-660 and Sony ICF-7600GR all with wire antennas, NASWA Flashsheet via DXLD) This is a typical Cuban jammer. The reason it is here is that R. Martí is on 9565 at 17-24, and the Cubans leave `residual` jamming pulses running on such frequencies far beyond the `necessary` hours. As I have explained in reports, same thing can be heard on just about every other listed R. Martí frequency when not really in use, sometimes even when not really in season, like 15330 currently (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) UNIDENTIFIED. 13640, July 21 just as I tune in at 1903, an open carrier goes off*. Only thing scheduled is AIR 500 kW, 300 degrees from Bengaluru in Arabic until 1945, then French to 2030 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) UNIDENTIFIED. 15170-15175-15180, July 21 at 1852 past 1900, unknown DRM signal here, very strong and much stronger than 15115-15120-15125 Voice of Nigeria. Could find nothing in DRM schedules or fora about this. In fact, only one analog transmission earlier in the day from India is scheduled on 15175. But I could also hear a weak AM carrier under the noise on 15175. A tree in the forest, falling with no notification to the few DRM enthusiasts who might want to listen (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See ETHIOPIA [and non] UNIDENTIFIED. 15430, July 23 at 1401, open carrier off at 1401:15*. HFCC, Aoki and EiBi have nothing scheduled here between 12 and 15 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Ron Howard found a reference to 15430 in DXLD 11-38, when on Sept 15 at 1350, Wolfgang Büschel heard a buzzy Firedrake jammer against V. of Tibet which had outwitted them, really on 15537. That likely explains it: if I had tuned in two minutes earlier probably would have heard Firedrake (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) UNIDENTIFIED. Het on RNZI 15720 --- I've noticed the het has re- appeared against RNZI in our mid-evenings PDT, as was noticed a year or so back. Last night (at 0405 UT Mon 23 July), the signal was strong enough to make out what appears to be a numbers station on 15721. I couldn't decide on the language, but it seemed like German which would be weird: lots of "nulls" for presumed zero. Jim Mora's "Afternoons" from RNZ National doesn't have much in the way of dead air to decipher more. Audio stopped at ~0412 -- stayed on the frequency till just after 0415, tuned away momentarily and the carrier/het had disappeared at 0416. TD Burnaby, BC (Theo Donnelly, July 23, ptswyg via DXLD) See DXLD 12-10, 12-16, 12-18. 15721 was Russian numbers when we heard it. I think they also use ``null`` for zero. 73, (Glenn Hauser, ibid.) Thanks, Glenn. You've jogged my memory from hearing it before as well. Forgot to monitor our Mon evening; will try to remember tonight. TD (Donnelly, ibid.) UNIDENTIFIED LOCATION. 15750, US mission prayer, like Brother Stair TOM heard on 0520 UT July 23, not strong about S=8 signal in Germany. "your end is near", "establishing your heart", "go away devil",... a.s.o. UNID site mentioned by Bulgarian DX Mix recently, scheduled 05- 06 UT / Sats -07 UT. Very exact frequency x.000 kHz, lately performed from Yerevan Gavar relay site in Armenia (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC- DX TopNews July 23, dxldyg via DXLD) See BULGARIA UNIDENTIFIED [non]. Spanish 102.5. Maybe somebody can ID this for me: http://forums.wtfda.org/showthread.php?7380-Unid-102-5-07-24-12-Spanish&p=23704#post23704 http://tinyurl.com/bvck7wg Thanks for any help (Mike Bugaj, Enfield, CT, July 24, WTFDA via DXLD) Mike, That (non-)ID at 1:40 into the clip is for http://salsamixradio.com/ -- which doesn't appear to be an actual broadcast station. Maybe an on- air relay of it? (Jay Novello, Wake Forest NC, ibid.) I don't think it's Cuba. I hear a "Salsa, Radio Punto ???" near the end, plus I believe there's also an ad in there. WPIK is SS but should be "Radio Ritmo Fabulosa" which I didn't hear. Could be a pirate (Russ Edmunds, WB2BJH, 15 mi NW of Philadelphia, ibid.) Probably a Miami pirate? I've heard several pirates from Miami/Ft Lauderdale in E Skip (Jeff Lehmann - N1ZZN, Hanson, MA FN42NB, Sangean HDT-1X, Yamaha T-85, Perseus FM+, APS-13, ibid.) Hi Mike: On the Spanish station, there's an ad in there where they say they'll give you the best exchange rate of the day, and then give a phone number, 305-66-30-99. (There must be another number, but I couldn't hear it.) Area code 305 is southern Florida. There was a mention of "Radio Punto...." and what sounded like another slogan with "Salsa...." I'm afraid those things don't look Cubanish, but maybe it'll be a new one for you (Rich McVicar, ibid.) Hi Mike, This is WPIK in Summerland Key, FL with Salsa Music. At 01:01 there is a (305) number. At 01:41 there is also "salsamixradio.com". Salsa Mix Radio's stream is // to http://radioritmolafabulosa.com/ (Jon, St Catharines Ont., WTFDA Forums via DXLD) UNIDENTIFIED. UHF 461.95 MHz, UNIDs; 1 PM EDT, 13-July; Definitely two separate ones here; portable toilet & landscape services. "We're gonna need the roller and the whacker." (I'm going out on a limb here and I'm betting that comment didn't have anything to do with portable toilets.) The toilet service had a delivery in Midland, but didn't give an address. Bummer (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Icom R3 + duckie, logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS ++++++++++++++++++++++++ None this week, no contributions either to P O Box 1684, Enid OK 73702 or not necessarily in US Funds via PayPal to woradio @ yahoo.com (gh) PUBLICATIONS ++++++++++++ QSL.window - Julho 2012 [this is a new reference site, illustrating a few QSLs but mainly a large listing by country of QSL addresses, e and p-mail; not only SWBC but lots of utilities, and all-band. Altho called pdf, it appears to be blurry jpg, not copiable. No language barrier in the info --- gh] Caros amigos, Como resultado de uma atividade iniciada em 2010 entre Fabricio Silva (Tubarão SC) e Rudolf Grimm (São Bernardo SP), e tendo a boa colaboração do Rubens Pedroso (Bandeirantes PR), estamos disponibilizando a lista ‘QSL.window’ a todos quantos tem ou que desejam ter em seus objetivos o recebimento / incremento de confirmações de emissoras de rádio. Uma compilação de endereços atualizados baseada nas respostas obtidas das próprias estações de rádio ao lhes serem enviados os informes de recepção (estações ondas médias, curtas, FM e utilitárias, brasileiras e do exterior). Não se trata de uma lista com uma grande quantidade de endereços / e- mails migrados da Internet ou de publicações conhecidas, mas sim, a mesma reflete o resultado da própria atividade de cada um de nós num bom tempo de levantamento de informações obtidas nas respostas de cada uma das estações reportadas. As imagens destas confirmações em sua grande maioria foram divulgadas nos blogs de cada um de nós como parte do objetivo desta atividade. O arquivo está disponibilizado em Acrobat Reader (.pdf) para leitura em tela, impressão local, e também para download, plenamente gratuito, livre e aberto a todos que desejarem utilizar os seus dados. O desejo é que todos façam um bom uso destas informações. Pretende-se editar novas edições sequencialmente (incremento na própria lista atual), à medida que novas informações forem sendo recebidas das emissoras de rádio. Aceita-se neste projeto a participação de outros radioescutas do Brasil e do exterior, para as próximas edições. Para tanto, deve ser feito contato com: grimm.r@uol. com.br(R. Grimm) e também com honolavel@yahoo. co.uk(F. Silva). QSL.window (link): https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B2iEncNE25rNVGM2ZHlmMkhSeUU/edit 73, (Rudolf Grimm / Fabricio Silva, + Rubens Pedroso, radioescutas yg via DXLD) LANGUAGE LESSONS ++++++++++++++++ SPANISH UNDERSTOOD Re OKLAHOMA: WKY 930 === BTW, why is ``La Indomable`` feminine? Adjectivally, it could just as easily be El Indomable, and WKY`s super-hype style is anything but feminine. As in many station names or slogans in Spanish, there is a missing `understood` word. In this case it may be ``La [emisora] Indomable`` or [estación], either of which mandates feminine adjective which has become a noun. Similar things happen in South America where a station name comes from a río (masculine), ``La Voz del [algo]``, even tho the name of the river may end in -a. Or it could be a cerro [masculine mountain peak] reference that is omitted. Cf. Grand Tetons – in Spanish, ``breast`` (seno) is masculine. Go figure (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) CONVENTIONS & CONFERENCES +++++++++++++++++++++++++ FINNISH DX ASSOCIATION'S 50TH ANNUAL SUMMER MEETING will be held at Vuosaari, Helsinki, Finland Aug 3-5, 2012. More info at: http://dxkesis50.blogspot.fi/ Scandinavian Weekend Radio will have special broadcast during 50th FDXA Summer Meeting on Aug 3-4, 2012. Schedule at: http://www.swradio.net/schedule.htm (Alokesh Gupta, New Delhi, India, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) DX-PEDITIONS ++++++++++++ 2012 CAPE PERPETUA (OREGON) CLIFF DXPEDITION VIDEO Hello All, For those interested in the latest wacky idea to track down exotic South Pacific DX on Ultralight radios, a brief video of the 400' high Cape Perpetua ocean cliff site on Highway 101 in Oregon has been uploaded to YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZzBfstOXA4 Included in the video are the two fanatical DXpeditioners pushing their luck this past week on the cliff (Norm Clark of Monmouth, Oregon and yours truly), the 8" Medium Wave DXpedition FSL antenna on its 5' PVC base, the new-design 7.5" MW loopstick Tecsun PL-380 Ultralight, and scenery from the sheer ocean cliff site. The Spartan road side conditions are on full display in this video, showing the lack of AC power, running water, weather protection or adequate lighting. Despite all these challenges the Medium Wave and Longwave DXpedition results proved to be successful beyond all expectations, and a perfect cure for DXing boredom for decades to come! 73 and Good DX, (Gary DeBock (now back in Puyallup, WA, USA), IRCA via DXLD) DIGITAL BROADCASTING --- IBOC +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1300 KAKC IBOC off 1300 KAKC [Tulsa OK] has had their IBOC turned off for the past two weeks; I hope this is permanent but not likely. KAKC has teased me with no IBOC for a few weeks at a time in the past and has brought it back each time (Bruce Winkelman, Tulsa, OK, July 21, ABDX via DXLD) KPOF 910 has also had theirs off recently, which is very unusual. I have been trying to listen for the new KJME 890 Fountain, which I would not normally be able to hear because of the hash from 910. 890 has been quiet every time I have checked during the day. I doubt that I could hear them at night because of WLS. CC doesn't seem to have a "clear" policy about using it. KOA is hit and miss with it, but it has been gone from KHOW and KKZN for quite a while. Hard to figure why they use it on some stations, but not others that have used it in the past. 73, (Kit, W5KAT, CO, ibid.) It's my understanding that the use of HD on Clear Channel's AMs is now at the discretion of local management, unlike CBS and Crawford. s (Scott Fybush, NY, ibid.) Consistent monitoring of KFAB-1110 over the past week reveals that they've also had theirs off the entire time. Maybe some of the comments we made to CE Greg Gade during the tour of KFAB last October (NRC convention) are finally having some impact? One can only hope. 73, (Rick Dau, trapped in South Omaha, NE, ibid.) Let`s hope it stays off KFAB as it hampers my DX on 1100 which is a great channel aimed west from here with WTAM nulled down. KOA IBOC is a BIG nuisance to me trying to dig out western DX on 840 and 860. 73 KAZ Barrington IL (Neil Kazaross, ibid.) I wish WBZ 1030 would get the hint. They still insist on blasting it at night and doing a gorgeous job on 1020 KDKA and knocking out 1040 as well. There is no need of this shut it OFF (starship20012001, ibid.) Seems like since WBZ and KDKA are so-owned, they would come up with a better plan so they wouldn't interfere with each other. I just don't understand the mentality of any group owner feeling they need it on one or more signals within a market, yet not needing it on all of them if they really like it that much and think there is some advantage to using it. Why isn't it all or nothing if they really believe in it; or not? 73, (Kit, W5KAT, ibid.) I think they'd be running IBOC on KDKA if they could, consequences to WBZ (or WINS) be damned. The only reason IBOC isn't running on 1020 is that the KDKA antenna is problematic, and has been since it was erected in the early 1990s. It simply cannot pass the broadband IBOC signal, and not for lack of trying. There's been talk of replacing it, or at least converting the present segmented ("Franklin-type") design to a standard series-fed design, but nothing has come of it yet. s (Scott Fybush, NY, ibid.) I wish they would turn it off - it was kind of nice to hear them in South Texas. That HD stuff is bound to be hurting their building penetration in Boston, since their previously fantastic nighttime signal is gutting completely (Bruce Carter, TX, ibid.) WTKT 1460 used to alternately turn their IBOC on and off every few weeks. Now, it has been off for about a year. I wonder if another station made a case for the IBOC interfering with it. It could be the 1440 in York Pennsylvania. The program director of WTKT/WHP has had health problems but when he gets back to full steam I'll write to him and ask. WHP 580 is the only station using IBOC in the Harrisburg Pennsylvania area and it's only during the day. Modifying the night antenna system for IBOC didn't seem worth the cost to Clear Channel. Thanks Bruce for your contributions to the DX Audio Service. Appreciate it (Tom Dimeo, NRC-AM via DXLD) Re: Is the trend away from IBOC starting to spread, perhaps? I Have an HD radio in my truck and as of last week i can't seem to get KQMT-FM's HD Signal, it also will no longer allow me to tag songs for I-Tunes, and i can't seem to get KQMT-FM HD2 anymore either. There website says there HD streams are still up, but i can't seem to get it. KQMT's tower is located at Lookout Mtn in Golden, CO down the mountain from the Denver TV stations` "Super Tower" antenna site. (The super tower stations are NBC-KUSA, CBS-KCNC, ABC-KMGH, & MY NETWORK TV-KTVD) (Paul Armani, CO, July 23, ABDX via DXLD) On FM the damage / disruption to analog is not as bad as on AM. I have still pulled in tropo over local FM IBOC. In the case of your local FM HD out it may be down but will come back up when an outsourced / or contractor makes rounds during the week to fix it. Now back to AM IBOC: unlike FM IBOC, AM IBOC trashes both first adjacent channels and can slash into the second adjacent as well. AM IBOC is worse at night when the IBOC hash can travel hundreds of miles from the transmitter site as hash, YET cannot be decoded except in VERY RARE cases. In most cases the IBOC signal becomes unusable after it skips, leaving hash to jam analog for hundreds of miles. Even in the daytime groundwave coverage area, the AM HD signal does not cover anywhere near the analog coverage. AM HD / IBOC is a downgrade / hindrance to the band, yet they insist on using it, so one or two listeners parked under the tower can enjoy while thousands get jammed out hundreds of miles away (starship20012001, ibid.) Remember that IBOC is done with a computer and the software is not super stable and has been known to crash and need a complete re install among other things (Powell E Way III, ibid.) DIGITAL BROADCASTING --- DRM See also BRAZIL; ERITREA/ETHIOPIA; NEW ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ZEALAND; UNIDENTIFIED 15170/15175 DR111 DRM RECEIVER This week`s Media Network Plus: Victor Goonetilleke will be joining us for a review of the DR111 DRM receiver. I sent him one and the results are in (Keith Perron on Facebook via Mike Terry, July 19, dxldyg via DXLD) He tells more about the experience with receiver manufacturers - Keith Perron 19 July 2012 QUOTE Here is something weird. As you may know I have two DR111 DRM receivers. I also got an extra one which was sent to Victor in Sri Lanka so he can try it out. Last week we had a few exchanges of emails. But then when I sent two recordings of the same frequency at the same time, that shows the DR111 is poor on regular shortwave reception compared to a Tecsun S2000 and Tecsun PL660, guess what, not a peep from them. The email was sent to the same people proving there is a problem with the receiver. And nothing. Not a sound. Is this the kind of company DRM alines itself with? The DR111 has a major problem, but it seems NewStar who is making them doesn't care or doesn't know how to address it. Oh wait, I have an idea. Bring in an expert who knows something about international broadcasting. UNQUOTE In reply to above I wrote = "They have removed many things from their website recently, in past they were highlighting that they developed UniWave DRM receivers firmware - no need to to say the French standalone DRM receiver was also a failure, and never got into mass production!!!" NEXT HE UPDATES TODAY: Keith Perron 19 July 2012 QUOTE This is an update on the post I put 10 hours ago. If you read it, I was saying that the DR111 has very poor performance on regular shortwave and DRM is even worse. I sent the company two clips of the same frequency 17750 at the same time 0233 UT of Radio Australia. I didn't hear anything back for days until I got this short reply in my email this morning: "Don't do a review of the DR111. Only do a review of the FM and AM performance. If your radio station does any negative press about the performance of the DR111 we will never sell to your station again." I find this so funny. UNQUOTE (via Partha Sarathi Goswami, Siliguri, W.B., India, ibid.) PCJ Radio's Media Network Plus video edition of the DR111 Hello Everyone, Just to let you know we just concluded another edition of Media Network Plus video receiver reviews. This edition reviews the DR111. You can find it at http://www.pcjmedia.com On this week`s edition of the weekly radio edition of Media Network Plus we are giving a more in-depth review. Our guest is Victor Goonetilleke in Sri Lanka who works as a professional monitor for a number of international broadcasters including the VOA to hear his findings after he tested the radio for a week. Media Network Plus is heard weekly on the World Radio Network, SirusXM, SkyDigital, shortwave and through over 30 radio stations in 26 countries including ABC Radio in Australia. Regards, (Keith Perron, PCJ Radio International, July 18, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Keith did a review of Newstar DR111 standalone DRM receiver for Media Network Plus and posted on http://www.pcjradio.com also available via http://vimeo.com/46014667 (Partha, dxldyg via DXLD) Victor Goonetilleke in Facebook PCJ Media & PCJ Radio Group http://www.facebook.com/groups/48638249355/ adds to it - My observations: very similar. Tuning around is very bad and and you have to stop on a frequency and wait 2 seconds for the audio to come thru, as if the processor is VERY slow. The punch in, at least closest to it, is a disaster where you have to change each digit by up or down buttons. E.g. you are tuned to 15235. To change to 7190 you have to 0 the 1, then change 5, 2, 3, 5 and then go to normal position to get the audio. In all it takes about a minute to do that. If you use the tuning knob, first you push it in to get to tuning position, select slow, its darn slow other than to fine tune, push fast tuning; if you tune too fast, it will move a MHz and you have no control over it, good for finger exercises, and you have to come back and finally when you come to your frequency, you see it on the display but no audio, for which you have to push the tuning/volume knob back to get the audio. It is a great radio not for listening pleasure, but to build patience! DRM: my strongest signal here whether on a DRM receiver or analog S- metre is BBC 5845 from Nakon Thailand. On the whip antenna the DR111 had say 70% with drop out 30%. With a long wire, (not very long overloading), I get 100% with an occasional palpitation!! All in all, as a Stand-alone DRM receiver, or to be fair by the receiver, even if it is a poorly shaped plastic box, I can't have even full reception with an external antenna of the AIR, BBC, Vatican transmissions beamed to me. I don't know whether the problem is with DRM itself or the DR111. DRM is great when it comes in but to deliver that signal to a $100 or less receiver is DRM`s main hurdle. However, even if the DR111 is a failure, it IS great that a manufacturer even thought of coming out with a DRM standalone. For $35 I say go for it because you can experience DRM albeit with dropouts and it has a fairly good MP3 playing input for a USB stick and FM is quite OK to have in your bathroom or pantry not to miss the news or have a little music while you chop the onions. FINAL decision? Still a long way to go, don't waste $135. My price tag is $25. PS: immaculate white for the cabinet is a poor choice too (Goonetilleke, via Partha, dxldyg via DXLD) DID ETON/GRUNDIG DROP THE BALL ON DRM? It is a well known fact that pre-production publicity for the Eton/Grundig Satellit 750 indicated that a 12 kHz IF output would be provided for DRM and other uses. While this feature was dropped for the S750 it was included in the parent product from Tecsun - the S2000. When the E-1 first came out it was available with an XM satellit radio module or not (intended for outside North America although this model did become available stateside). When I questioned Eton why they did not include a DRM module or a 12 kHz IF output as an option for the non-XM models they declined to reply. With its constantly evolving stable of receivers, many of which are manufactured by Tecsun, Eton/Grundig could have really given DRM a shot in the arm by providing for it in their premium receivers while not adversely affecting their bottom line. So, I ask again. Did Eton/Grundig drop the ball on DRM? (Mark Coady, Peterborough, ON K9J 6X3, July 21, NASWA yg via DXLD) Hi Mark: I'm not sure if Eton dropped the ball or not. Yes, I would have loved DRM capability on my E1, instead of an XM option. It could be Eton was considering that [DRM], but as they were winding down the production of the E1 their research was showing there was just not a large enough market for DRM, let alone shortwave so they decided not to update the E1. A shame since a receiver to that caliber with a DRM Option would have worked well I'm sure. Just my two cents (Chris Lobdell, MA, cumbredx via DXLD) Difficult to draw a parallel as I would bet XM subsidized adding the XM circuitry to the radio - without that subsidy they might not have offered the E1XM. There was no commercial platform sponsor for DRM. In my opinion the manufacturers could have worked much harder to promote shortwave benefits to the broadcasters that have given up on SW. Instead they were greedy and lazy (Richard Cuff, ODXA yg via DXLD) Chris, it would have helped if Eton had stayed with Tecsun for the E-1 rather than going with an unproven facility in India as that's where the production woes emanated from (Mark Coady, cumbredx via DXLD) That facility in India is one of India's top military electronics producers, a multi billion company. They are far from unproven. The issues the E1 had were more complex than just blaming them. The company in question: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bharat_Electronics (M Maghakian, ibid.) The E1 was well designed as far as its features but translating those features into hardware that would withstand the test of time was a failure. I will not fault the assembler. Did Eton spec the components? (Chris Lobdell, ibid.) I doubt we will ever find out the truth about what happened behind the scenes (Maghakian, ibid.) RADIO EQUIPMENT FORUM +++++++++++++++++++++ EXPERIMENTAL WEBSDR 0-19 MHZ AT PA3FWM'S HOME HAS BEEN TAKEN OFFLINE This experimental WebSDR at PA3FWM's home, covering 0 to 19 MHz, has been taken offline, as announced a few days in advance. There are several reasons for this: The nearby system at the University of Twente is finally available again, at http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901 The antenna at the university seems to be much better, judging by the number of users there and here over the last few days. Running this system occupied equipment that I would rather use for other things (such as further development of the hard- and software). I continuously needed to be careful about possible thunderstorms and disconnect the antenna in time. I never intended to run such a system permanently from my home anyway; I only did so because of the antenna problems at the university site. For now, the frequency range of the system at the university site is limited to 8 bands of 600 kHz each. However, it is planned to change it to general coverage of the HF spectrum in the future, like this site used to have. Thanks everyone for using the test system over the past year or so! Comments can be sent to pa3fwm @ websdr.org (from http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8903/ via Horacio Nigro, Uruguay, July 24, dxldyg via DXLD) Don't DX in the car. You could get a ticket. NO FOOD, RADIO OR GAZING UNDER BG DISTRACTED DRIVING LAW? Banning texting while driving is one issue, but what about outlawing "distracted driving" as a whole? That's the burning question the Bowling Green City Council faces as they introduced new distracted driving legislation to the community on Tuesday night. According to The BG News, the ordinance would ban any type of distraction that takes the driver's attention away from the road. While some residents expressed concern that this vague definition would violate their rights, personal injury attorney Mike D. Bell says the heart of the ordinance is in everyone's best interest. "I understand the intent behind the law and it's great that the legislature is taking advantage of this opportunity to come out to stop distracted driving," Bell said. "As I understand this proposed law, if there's a failure to maintain full time and attention by the driver, they can be cited with a $25 ticket plus court costs--no points on the license--and it's for any driver." Bell says the proposed law is different from the state texting legislation coming into effect at the end of August, which will ban minor drivers from using any handheld device in a vehicle and adult drivers from texting. Bowling Green's law, if passed, would penalize distracted driving of all forms, which could include eating, changing the radio station and gazing out a side window. "Texting and driving and handheld devices and Bluetooth are all convenient, but when they're used in the car, they could be incredibly dangerous and we all know that," Bell said. "Bowling Green City Council believes that this legislation is necessary for them." The council will hold two more meetings to discuss the ordinance with the public before they cast their votes. [which Bowling Green? ::] http://www.northwestohio.com/news/story.aspx?id=778683 (via Brock Whaley for DXLD) UK IS NOW TEXTING MORE THAN TALKING, INCLUDING RADIO USE: http://media.ofcom.org.uk/2012/07/18/uk-is-now-texting-more-than-talking/ (via Hansjoerg Biener, DXLD) NAVY RADIO SYSTEM DISABLES GARAGE DOOR OPENERS. Here we go again... http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/Navy-Causes-Garage-Door-Problems-for-Homeowners-163421346.html This happened in Colorado Springs in 2006 & it also happened in Aurora, CO near Buckly Airforce Base in Dec of last year, when 70 homes to the east of the base had to get their doors fixed (Paul Armani, July 23, ABDX via DXLD) WTFK??? GPS JAMMING This newsletter has talked about cell phone jammers from time to time. These devices are patently illegal to use but are still found operating on occasion in movie theaters or expensive restaurants where ringing phones would be considered a nuisance. However, the use of jammers deprives others from receiving critical and emergency telephone calls, so they are generally frowned upon by the public. Not so well known are GPS jammers. It turns out that there are a number of people who simply don't want their every movement to be tracked -- truck drivers for example. However, the signals from some GPS jammers travel considerable distances and have nasty side effects. The following article shows how GPS jammers work and how they mess up precision landing systems at airports. As you can imagine, this is a pretty serious matter. Various schemes are being tried to get around the problem. http://www.insidegnss.com/node/2976 (CGC Communicator July 24 via Kevin Redding, ABDX via DXLD) REBUILD TUBES [re MADAGASCAR, previous DXLD, comments by Kai Ludwig] Hi Kai, OK on Merlin trying the Russian tubes. 4CX250B were of particular interest as the regular Eimac/CPI ones always exhibited negative screen current in certain wideband amplifiers. This was not a problem as the circuits were designed for that eventuality. The ex-USSR examples ran in the Marconi amplifiers with positive screen current. The circuits could not cope so rather than run with a full set of 6 we ran with three USSR and three USA versions. In the end it was easier to continue with the USA types. There was also a trend in the mid 1990's to use rebuilt tubes. The Americans in the form of Econco offered the service, you would send them a dud tube and they would rebuild it with new fils and replacement grids. Again we found the life of the tube not always very long after the rebuild. Econco were taken over by CPI and it doesn't seem to be such a big player these days. Of course if you had certain Brown Boveri or Siemens tubes then these were no longer available and rebuilds were the only way forward. In BBC times, before privatisation, we used 3Z222EW triodes in the MWT BD272 modulator, STC/ITT stopped making them in 1989. We asked EEV [now e2v] in Chelmsford to make a copy and they did it was the BY1654F and was identical in performance but not appearance! e2v offered rebuilds of BY1144L and BY1161 for a while provided we supplied duds, most were not suitable as the copper anodes became porous to air during the re-manufacture. So that's my experience of the rebuild scene. 73 (Dave Porter, G4OYX, shortwavesites yg via DXLD) REVIEW OF AEREO SERVICE [cf 12-29] The Wall Street Journal reviewed the Aereo remote TV antenna application. They were generally impressed - http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303612804577533070691481182.html?mod=djemTECH_h I wonder: they are calling it a remote antenna, but are they decoding the signal remotely as well? If so, it's no different than a remotely- tunable SDR, it would seem (Richard Cuff / Allentown, PA, July 18, internetradio via DXLD) The antenna as well as the digital tuner are remote. The simulated DVR and any necessary transcoding are done on their servers (Rob de Santos, ibid.) So the SDR comparison is indeed apt (Rich Cuff, ibid.) WHAT TO DO WITH QSL CARDS Glenn, Recently, when asked to dispose of a friend`s QSL cards after he passed away, I came to a realization that I do not know where to send cards to in an event like this. I have amassed a personal collection of QSL cards over the 45 years of SWLing, and had always thought there was a group (run by the Christian Science Radio group) that had a QSL card museum, and actively sought cards to be donated to them. I can no longer find these people. SO, my question is; even remember corresponding with an individual at the museum back then, but can't remember his name. What do we, as SWL's and/or hams do with our precious QSL cards when the time comes? It would be nice to think that someone somewhere would find them of value and add them to some massive collection for eternity. Do you have any suggestions? Drop an email and let me know. Thanks Glenn. Appreciate your time (Bob Combs, New Mexico, via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hi Bob, You are probably thinking of the Committee to Preserve Radio Verifications (CPRV), which moved on from the Christian Science connexion to some archive in Maryland (I think). It`s run by Jerry Berg. You can probably find it by Googling. You know, QSLs have become (like everything?) collectibles, some fetching quite a price, so I am wary of giving them to someone without being sure they aren`t going to turn around and sell them. There is another QSL museum in Austria, which seems to be very well organized. I have met the guy who runs it, Wolf Harranth (years ago). It would qualify as a ``massive collection``. (I don`t know how large the CPRV is). Here`s an article about that: http://www.dswci.org/specials/misc/201109_dokufunk.pdf No doubt there are more QSL museums exclusively for amateur radio. Hope that is of help. 73, (Glenn to Bob, ibid.) PROPAGATION +++++++++++ P.I.G. Bulletin 120722 SOLAR & GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY FORECAST FOR THE PERIOD JULY 23-AUGUST 17 Solar activity should increase up to levels over 150 s.f.u. in next days. Very dynamic development of the minima and maxima below 100 and above 150 s.f.u. will continue in the coming weeks, accompanied by irregular occurrence of C class, some M class and possibly X class flares. Geomagnetic field will be: Quiet on July 25, 31, August 9. Mostly quiet on July 23 - 24, 30, August 3 - 4, 8, 14 - 15. Quiet to unsettled on July 26, August 6 - 7 Quiet to active on July 31, August 12 - 13, 16 - 17. Active to disturbed on July 27 - 29, August 1 - 2, 5, 10 - 11. High probability of changes in solar wind which may cause changes in magnetosphere and ionosphere is expected on July 25 - 28 and August 10 - 11 and 16. F. K. Janda, OK1HH, Czech Propagation Interest Group (OK1HH & OK1MGW, weekly forecasts since 1978) e-mail: ok1hh(at)rsys. cz (via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD) 7/24 Es summary http://dxinfocentre.com/hepburn/logs/dxlog.htm#Z Highlights ... - First ever West Coast 2Es - XHBC 3 Mexicali. MEX - New Short Skip Record - WBRA 3 Roanoke, VA at 415 miles (also had tentative RIC-B 119.15 Richmond, VA which would be only 409 miles) - New FM Country # 5 - BAHAMAS - ZNL 97.5 Nassau - New AIR Band States #20 #21 - NORTH CAROLINA - GSO 116.2 Greensboro - VIRGINIA - PSK 116.8 Dublin - New weatherband State # 25 - SOUTH CAROLINA - KHC29 162.500 Barnwell - 4 new TV - total now 973; autolog worked like a charm grabbing WBRA 3 & WTVF 5 - 11 new FM - total now 1,119 - 29 new AIR - total now 268 - 5 new WB - total now 161. Wow, this the longest I have EVER seen the MUF over 108 MHz, and over such a wide swath, VA to FL to TX. (William R Hepburn (VEM3ONT22) Grimsby ON CAN 43 10 59.5 -79 33 34.3 DX PIX : http://dxinfocentre.com/hepburn/ DX LOG : http://dxinfocentre.com/hepburn/logs/dxlog.htm#Z AUTOLOG : http://dxinfocentre.com/hepburn/logs/dxtv.htm TWITTER : http://www.twitter.com/vem3ont22 TUNERS DT : Hauppauge Aero-m + TS Reader Zenith DTT900 TV : Samsung SV-5000W ?W : WCS 99X-II FM : Sangean HDT-1 Sony XDR-F1HD SCMO : JRC NRD-535D PSB: Icom R-8500 + Microtelecom Perseus SDR ANTENNAS H : modified CM-3671 @ 70' AGL 209' HAAT (w/separate V& U feeds) V : Create CLP 5130-2 @ 74' AGL 213' HAAT V<45 : longwire WTFDA via DXLD) :Product: Weekly Highlights and Forecasts :Issued: 2012 Jul 23 1249 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/weekly.html # # Weekly Highlights and Forecasts # Highlights of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 16 - 22 July 2012 Solar activity ranged from very low to high levels. Region 1520 (S16, L=86, class/area Fkc/1460 on 12 July) was responsible for most of the flares during the week, including the largest. High activity occurred on 19/0558 UTC when Region 1520 produced the largest flare of the week, an M7 accompanied by Type II (estimated velocity 1110 km/s) and Type IV radio sweeps, a 1000 sfu Tenflare, and a partial-halo CME. Activity was at moderate levels two days earlier when Region 1520 produced a long-duration M1/1f flare and partial-halo CME on 17/1715 UTC. The same region produced two days of low activity, with a C7/Sf at 16/2003 UTC and a C4 flare at 18/2218 UTC. With the exception of one C1 flare at 21/2324 UTC from Region 1526 (S18, L=266, class/area Bxo/10 on 21 July), very low levels of activity persisted from the 20th through the remainder of the week as Region 1520 rotated around the west limb. A greater than 10 MeV proton event began at 17/1715 UTC, reached a maximum flux of 136 pfu at 18/0600 UTC, and ended at 21/0310 UTC. This event was associated with the long-duration M1/1f event on 17 July. The greater than 100 MeV proton flux showed a slight enhancement late on 17 July. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit was at moderate levels on 16 July, increased to high levels 17-21 July, and decreased to moderate levels on 22 July. Geomagnetic field activity ranged from quiet to major storm levels. Activity on 16 July began at major storm levels and decreased to unsettled levels as the day passed. 17 July saw quiet to active levels with a periods of minor to major storm levels at high latitudes. The increased activity was attributed to lingering effects from a CME which arrived late on 14 July. Quiet levels followed on 18-19 July. Data from the ACE spacecraft suggested the CME from 17 July swept past on the 20th, and the CME from 19 July passed on the 21st. This brought quiet to unsettled conditions, with intervals of active to minor storm conditions at high latitudes, from the 20th through the end of the week. FORECAST OF SOLAR AND GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY 23 JULY - 18 AUGUST 2012 Solar activity is expected to be at very low levels with a chance for C-class events until 29 July when activity is expected to increase to low levels due to the return of old Region 1522 (N11, L=099). The return of old Regions 1519 (S15, L=107) and 1520 are expected to bring moderate activity levels with a slight chance for X-class events, from 30 July through 13 August. Activity is expected to return to mostly low levels for the remainder of the period as Regions 1519 and 1520 depart. A greater than 10 MeV proton event above 10 pfu is possible with a slight chance for major flare activity from 30 July to 13 August. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is expected to be at normal to moderate levels on 23-27 July, 3-5 August, and 11-15 August. High levels are expected from 28 July to 2 August and on 6-10 August. Geomagnetic field activity is expected to be at quiet to unsettled levels with isolated active periods for the first three days (23-25 July) as a coronal hole high speed (CH HSS) stream becomes geoeffective. Activity is expected to decrease to mostly quiet levels on 26-27 July, then increase to unsettled to active periods through 30 July as a recurrent negative polarity CH HSS becomes geoeffective. Quiet to unsettled conditions are then expected for the remainder of the forecast period. :Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt :Issued: 2012 Jul 23 1249 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 2012-07-23 # # UTC Radio Flux Planetary Largest # Date 10.7 cm A Index Kp Index 2012 Jul 23 95 15 3 2012 Jul 24 100 12 3 2012 Jul 25 105 10 3 2012 Jul 26 110 5 2 2012 Jul 27 115 5 2 2012 Jul 28 115 18 4 2012 Jul 29 115 18 4 2012 Jul 30 125 10 3 2012 Jul 31 125 10 3 2012 Aug 01 125 15 3 2012 Aug 02 120 15 3 2012 Aug 03 120 10 3 2012 Aug 04 130 10 3 2012 Aug 05 130 5 2 2012 Aug 06 130 5 2 2012 Aug 07 125 5 2 2012 Aug 08 125 5 2 2012 Aug 09 115 5 2 2012 Aug 10 115 5 2 2012 Aug 11 115 5 2 2012 Aug 12 110 5 2 2012 Aug 13 100 5 2 2012 Aug 14 100 5 2 2012 Aug 15 100 5 2 2012 Aug 16 95 5 2 2012 Aug 17 90 5 2 2012 Aug 18 95 5 2 (SWPC via WORLD OF RADIO 1627, DXLD) ###