DX LISTENING DIGEST 14-25, June 18, 2014 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 2014 contents archive see http://www.worldofradio.com/dxldmid.html [also linx to previous years] 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 1726 CONTENTS: *DX and station news about: Alaska, Antarctica non, Ascension, Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada and non, Europe, France non, India, Korea South, Madagascar, Malaysia, Mongolia, North America, Papua New Guinea, Romania, Solomon Islands, Spain, Taiwan, Turkey, UK non, USA, Yemen SHORTWAVE AIRINGS OF WORLD OF RADIO 1726, June 19-25, 2014 Thu 0330 WRMI 9955 [confirmed] Thu 1230 WRMI 9955 [confirmed; now with France via Taiwan QRM] Thu 2100 WBCQ 7490v[confirmed on webcast] Thu 2100 WTWW 9475 [confirmed] Fri 0326v WWRB 5050 [confirmed at 0338, overmodulated] Sat 0630 HLR 7265-CUSB Hamburger Lokalradio Sat 1430 HLR 7265-CUSB Hamburger Lokalradio Sat 2330v WTWW 9930 [did not play] Sun 0030 WRMI 9495 [confirmed] Sun 0401 WTWW 5830 [confirmed] Mon 0300v WBCQ 5110v-CUSB Area 51 Tue 1100 WRMI 9955 [now with France via Taiwan QRM] Wed 0630 HLR 7265-CUSB Hamburger Lokalradio Wed 1315 WRMI 9955 Wed 1430 HLR 7265-CUSB Hamburger Lokalradio Wed 2100 WBCQ 7490v Thu 0330 WRMI 9955 [or 1727 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 WORLD OF RADIO PODCASTS HAVE RESUMED starting with #1701: Tnx to Dr Harald Gabler and the Rhein-Main Radio Club. http://www.rmrc.de/index.php?option=com_podcast&view=feed&format=raw&Itemid=156&lang=de http://tunein.com/radio/World-of-Radio-p198/ 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. HAARP GETS REPRIEVE The U.S. Air Force said Wednesday it will give research institutions and other agencies more time to try to save the $290 million HAARP research facility in Gakona, Alaska. An Air Force spokesman said the process of closing the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, which had been slated to begin this week, will be delayed for at least several weeks and perhaps longer. The agency said it may put off dismantling the site for up to 10 months to allow a transfer to another agency, an option that has been promoted by scientists from the University of Alaska and around the world. HAARP, backed by the late Sen. Ted Stevens when he wielded great power over the defense budget, has been used both for basic research of the ionosphere and for investigation of communications and satellite technology. "We will proceed with removal of government property not essential to operations and will seek to reduce maintenance costs through additional storage of equipment and winterization," Air Force spokesperson Ed Gulick said. "Air Force leadership is currently considering the option of deferring the dismantling for up to 10 months to allow time for a potential transfer to another entity." Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski has pressed the Pentagon to consider the transfer option instead of taking the site apart. In May, University of Alaska President Pat Gamble wrote that the university could take ownership of the facility directly or through a lease, or it could work with others in the research community to develop options for covering operational costs. He said that the main purpose of HAARP is to study techniques through which the U.S. could use "high power radio transmissions to manipulate Earth's ionosphere for its strategic advantage." "The ionosphere is an integral part of the modern battlefield -- it affects GPS navigation, satellite communication, missile tracking radars, orbital surveillance and submarine communication, to name just a few applications," he said. "I am convinced that with a little more time and broader range of discussions within the U.S. and internationally, we can develop a pay- for-use business plan to ensure the long-term availability of this laboratory," Gamble said. HAARP directs electric power generated on the site to 180 antennas spread across 30 acres. The transmissions heat electrons in the ionosphere, creating changes that are monitored back on Earth. Read more here: http://www.adn.com/2014/06/11/3512277/haarp-granted-last-minute-reprieve.html?sp=/99/100/&ihp=1#storylink=cpy (via David R. Alpert, 818-588-NEWS Twitter: twitter.com/DaveAlpert http://www.newsjunkiepro.com WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** ALASKA. COMPUTERS REPLACE HUMANS READING WEATHER REPORTS By RACHEL D'ORO Associated Press Jun 13, 3:59 AM EDT ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- Two outpost offices of the National Weather Service in Alaska are finally ending what has been a bygone practice for most of the nation for almost two decades - using real human voices in radio forecast broadcasts. The Nome and Kodiak offices are switching to computerized voices that nationally go by the names of Tom, Donna and, in some parts of the country, Spanish-speaking Javier. It's an idea first hatched in the mid-1990s as part of a move to modernize the weather service, an agency of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Local weather forecasts are a big deal to many people in Alaska because, more than in some other parts of the United States, the forecasts can be a matter of life and death. The forecasts are broadcast on NOAA's weather radio network. In Nome and Kodiak, weather reports are crucial for many because of the severe weather that can affect fishing vessels in far-flung regions, including the Bering Sea (think of the violent storms on the cable television show "The Deadliest Catch") and the Gulf of Alaska. Knowing what the weather will do is also extremely important to pilots and passengers needing to get to larger cities. Kodiak is on an island, and Nome is on the western coast with no roads to link it to another major Alaska hub city. The weather forecasts are so important that they are also broadcast over radio stations in Nome, including KNOM, which first reported the changes. The Nome office briefly activated the technology this week through the Fairbanks office, one of three forecast offices in Alaska. Other smaller outpost offices scattered throughout the state have already gone the digital voice route. A technological kink, however, prompted the Nome office to go back to local weather service employees reading the forecasts until the problem is rectified in the near future, officials said. It's a job that meteorological technician Robert Murders dreaded when he first moved to Nome, an old gold rush town about 550 miles northwest of Anchorage. Then he got to enjoy reading the forecasts. He was watching the Discovery Channel reality show, "Bering Sea Gold," last season when he heard one of his own broadcasts in the background. "That was kind of cool," Murders said. But he also recognizes the speed and efficiency of using the automated voices, which are updated immediately, even if no one is in the office. There is no target date for making the switch at the service office in Kodiak, located on the island of the same name. Angel Corona, with the weather service's data-acquisition branch in Anchorage, said work is underway to patch that office with the Anchorage forecast office for the broadcasts. The Nome and Kodiak offices are being brought into the digital-voice era as part of a national initiative involving improvements to the system, Corona said. Alaska is the only state that still has such smaller outposts, while similar offices were closed long ago in the lower 48. Other sites to be converted later to digital voices are in the U.S. territories of Guam, American Samoa and Northern Mariana islands, officials said. Wherever the digital voices are deployed, they can be customized to pronounce locations accurately. Tom, Donna and Javier are a huge improvement over the first voice introduced so long ago. There was some dissatisfaction with that voice, dubbed Paul, who sounded like a Scandinavian robot. The voices used today have been better received. "It sounds pretty good," Corona said. "It sounds like a computer, but you can understand it." That's all that matters to Lucas Stotts, the Nome harbormaster. That and getting weather updates as quickly and accurately as possible, he said. Besides, he said, some humans read those reports in monotone voices anyway (via Mike COoper, DXLD) ** ALBANIA [and non]. 9485, R. Tirana?? Don`t you believe my item in the International Band Loggings section of the June NASWA Journal. I rechecked my original report and the frequency was correct as 9845. It seems the editor introduces errors in the frequencies, and even puts them in the ``proper`` order under the wrong frequency. In the May issue, there was another one misreported from me: Kuwait on ``11755`` instead of 17550. I asked the editor to correct it in the next issue, but this was ignored. So I have to deal with them here. Just beware of that column where mistakes will be made and not corrected. Just above ``9485`` in the June issue on page 40 was another boner, Vietnam via WHRI on ``9175`` instead of 6175. There I have no way to be positive whether: 1, the other reporter typoed the frequency 2, the editor did it; or most unlikely, but possible: 3, the station was really on that frequency due to a punch-up error. Anyone hearing such an error is obliged to explicitly state that is the case, so readers don`t have to guess if it was an editing error! (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ALGERIA [non]. 9535, FRANCE, R Algerienne, Holy Qur'an 6/15, 0510. Prayer chanting, M in possible Arabic under stronger REE (via Nobelejas Spain). Presumed, no clear ID heard (Rick Barton, El Mirage, AZ, Slinky and random wire, Grundig Satellit 750, Drake R8, Hammarlund HQ-200, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) Yes, collision 05-06 UT since beginning of A-14 season has not been corrected, just as I expected (gh, DXLD) ** ANTARCTICA [non]. BBCWS have confirmed the annual mid-winter broadcast to British Antarctic Survey bases in Antarctica is taking place on Saturday, but that shortwave frequencies are yet to be confirmed according to this email received this morning (18 June): "Dear Mr Pennington, Thank you for your email with regrets for a slightly belated reply. The BBC Mid Winter Antarctica broadcast will go ahead this year as previously. The date of the broadcast is 21/06/2014 at 2130 GMT. However, we have still not determined the frequencies of the broadcast. We'll let you know what they are as they are. I regret not being in a position to give you 'complete' details... All best, Dejan Calovski Audience Relations BBC World Service" However, Dan Ferguson on DXplorer reports: "I'm told there will be a test today, June 18, at 2130-2145 as follows: 7350, ASC, 207 5875, WOF, 184 9890, WOF, 182 5985, DHA, 203 The three best frequencies will be used for the broadcast June 21 at 2130-2200." (Dan Ferguson, DXplorer yg June 18) (Alan Pennington, June 18, BDXC-UK yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) Mal sehen, wie die Signale in Europa herein kommen. in der vergangenen halben Stunde hier in Stuttgart gehört: "I'm told there will be a test today, June 18, at 2130-2145 UT as follows: [BEFORE the test]: 7350 Ascension 207 degr, noch CRI Kashgar Italienisch 7345 kHz, aber Sendeschluß um 2127 UT 5875 Woofferton 184 degr, digital Stanag Militär? 5871.1 - 5874.3 kHz 9890 Woofferton 182 degr, VOA Sao Tomé Französ. 9885 kHz, R Cairo 9895, d.h. Splattern 9890.8 bis 9899.5 RTTY UTE 9884.125 kHz 5985 Dhabayya 203 degr, total frei 5980/5985/5990 kHz Kanäle. 73 wb June 18, at 2130-2145 7350, ASC, 207 5875, WOF, 184 9890, WOF, 182 5985, DHA, 203 5875, SINPO 44434 for me in North West England 7350, 33233 9890, No Signal; 5985, No Signal Programme is Outlook which is currently scheduled on BBCWS. No interval signal was played. Posted by: (Ste Cooper, DXLDYG via DXLD) I could hear all four frequencies, as follows: 5875: excellent 5985: very poor 7350: good 9890: fair/poor (Alan Roe, Teddington, UK, ibid.) Recordings from the Twente SDR for each frequency are : http://www.shortwave.am/audio/midwintertest/ 9890 seems to have only been on the air for 5 minutes instead of the full 15 and before 7350, Firedrake on 7355 can be heard (Stephen Cooper, UK, ibid.) Test BBCWS today, June 18, at 2130-2145 UT in southern Germany as follows: 7350 Ascension 207 degr, S=9+20dB -50dBm wideband signal 7344.7 - 7354.3 kHz from ASC. QRM CNR Beijing 7345 kHz adjacent channel. 5875 Woofferton 184 degr, s-on 21.30:12 UT, broadband 5869.8-5880.3 kHz, UTE digital 5872.5 kHz, digital Stanag military? 5871.1 - 5874.3 kHz 9890 Woofferton 182 degr, suddenly s-off at 2137 UT came not on air again. S=9+20dB -48dBm; VOA Sao Tomé French til 2130 UT 9885 kHz, R Cairo 9895, spurious 9890.8 to 9899.5 kHz; RTTY UTE signal on 9884.125 kHz. Very bad frequency selection; better empty channels are 9735, 9765, 9840, 9855, 9860, 9865, 9925, 9930 kHz 5985 Dhabayya 203 degr, S=9+5dB in Germany, sidelobe totally empty channels 5980/5985/5990 kHz. played pause annmt loop BBC.com 2145-2147 UT. s-off 21.47:26 UT. QRM, 2 kHz whistle tone interference of 5983 kHz spurious of VOV1 Hanoi Me Tri site 73 wb (Wolfgang Büschel, ibid.) ** ARGENTINA. 11711-, June 13 at 0122, pleased to hear RAE in presumed Japanese, only poor signal, but no het from Egypt, q.v., missing from 11710v (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ASCENSION [and non]. Ascension problem Press release from the BBC WS: Date: 13.06.2014 Last updated: 13.06.2014 at 17.32 Category: Radio; World Service The BBC today issued the following statement regarding disruption to BBC SW services to West and Central Africa. During the morning of Wednesday 11 June, the BBC shortwave broadcasts in English, French and Hausa to West and Central Africa were affected by problems with the electrical power supply at the transmitter station on Ascension Island. The power was lost at 00:40, and some services were moved to other transmitter sites that regrettably cannot offer the same quality of service. Broadcasts on a few frequencies could not be transmitted at all between 05:30 and 06:30. Since then, the BBC has been able to restore some services so that they are again being broadcast from Ascension. These will continue to be broadcast through the weekend, and the BBC plans to re-instate the full service on the afternoon of Monday 16 June. We very much regret the loss of service to the audience caused by this major fault. CG adds: This caused some inaccurate speculation in the Nigerian press. For example: http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/confusion-over-bbc-voa-hausa-services/180729/ There was confusion in some parts of the north yesterday when radio listeners of the BBC and VOA Hausa Services were unable to tune to either of the stations forcing the bellief that the military clampdown on the Nigerian media had been extended to include the foreign radio stations. However, spokesmen for the Ministry of Information and the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation dismissed the notion of a clampdown on the BBC and VOA Hausa Services, saying there was no directive to that effect. They added that both services are not even regulated by the NBC and saw no reason why both stations with millions of listeners in the north should be taken off the air. But the explanation offered by the ministry and NBC failed to allay concerns, as a resident in Yola, Adamawa State, Mr David Molomo, who was unable to tune in to any of the radio stations said the development had hampered the free flow of information as expected in a democratic setting like ours. Molomo said it was not healthy for Nigerians hence the need for the federal government to direct the military authorities to retrace their steps. Another resident, Yakubu Musa, described the incident as unfortunate, saying it was sad that government would go to this length of blocking air waves in the name of fighting Boko Haram. Musa added that they did that to the print media and are now extending similar treatment to the broadcast media without any concrete reasons. “Government needs to realise that the media are partners in the fight and must be carried along not harassed. “Honestly, with what is going on the era of military clampdown is back and will be resisted by the media in the country and the entire globe,” he maintained. Another respondent, Bilkisu Bello Altine after expressing surprise after she had tried several times to tune her radio searching for both stations yesterday was told that NBC and the military had blocked the air waves through a coding system. Altine said even if the military was clamping down on the media as a strategy to fight terrorism, at least some explanation to teeming Nigerians was of utmost importance because a well informed society was necessary for societal development (via Chris Greenway, UK, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) So what was the cause of the power outage? IIRC, they use both wind and diesel there (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Speaking of BBCWS via Ascension, reception on 7355 at 0500 has been very poor for me since late May. This 41 meter beam had been the strongest of any BBCWS SW transmission. Still listed as the Southern Africa beam; perhaps Ascension is now using a different antenna which doesn't provide the favorable backlobe towards NA? (Steve Luce, Houston, Texas, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** AUSTRALIA. Vintage FM has been missing off air (3210 kHz) for past couple of days (Ian Baxter, Australia, 0850 UT June 18, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** AUSTRALIA. 15450, June 12 at 1408, talk in English about scripture but not a declamatory sermon per se; poor-fair with flutter. It`s the all-English sesquihour from HCJB until 1530 on 310 degrees toward S Asia, yet doing better here than Turkey does for its English USward at 1230-1325 on same 15450. 1415 a program change but no intervening ID. I`ve yet to hear them utter ``Reach Beyond``, the hyped new branding of the organization; wonder just how much influence HQ in Colorado Springs has on far-flug outliars such as Melbourne/Kununurra? Are they going to abolish ``HCJB``, which has really never been applicable beyond Ecuador, certainly not in Australia? I assume the slogan ``Heralding Christ Jesus` Blessings`` was a back-formation once they got the callsign in the 1930s. Or did they decide to locate in Ecuador just so they could utter that? If they had gone to Colombia, it could have been a bit less convoluted, as ``Heralding Jesus Christ`s Blessings``. In fact there is/was an unrelated commercial station there, HJCB. BTW, most if not all other Ecuadorian radio stations originally had numbers in their callsigns, I assume denoting provinces or regions, but HCJB somehow avoided that complication --- first among equals?? {later checking WRTH 2014 Ecuador: most Ec MW stations still have a final number after their four letters, but not all, and 690 is really HCJB1!} Likewise they came up with a Spanish version, ``Hoy Cristo Jesús Bendice``, which is a bit forced, having to insert ``today`` to make it work, but what about tomorrow? Did they ever come up with more-or- less workable slogans in any of the many other languages they once used, and have added now via Australia?? How about German? Do they ever say ``Herr Christus Jesus Begnadet``? If not, why not? ``Die Stimme der Anden`` is a sexier slogan, but connexions with that Range are getting immer dimmer und dimmer (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) AUSTRALIA/ROMANIA, 15399.973 HCJB (via Australia) 1057 Heard with English and Chinese religious program (M speaking in English repeated in Chinese by another M) over R. Romania Int. which was on 15400. You could plainly hear the 27 Hz het created by the two. Romania was ending their French program, went off the air, and came back on weaker with apparent English program. (17 June). Can you hear the 27 Hz het? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1ZlLoswyHA&feature=youtu.be 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** BANGLADESH. Study tour for ETE students at Short Wave Transmission Center of Bangladesh Betar http://www.ulab.edu.bd/Latest-News/Study-tour-for-ETE-students-at-Short-Wave-Transmission-Center-of-Bangladesh-Betar/ --- (Alokesh Gupta, New Delhi, June 15, dx_sasia yg via DXLD) Viz. with 5 photos including antennas: The Department of Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering, ULAB, organized a study tour for the ETE students of ULAB at the Short Wave Transmission Center of Bangladesh Betar, Kobirpur. This tour was mainly organized for the students who currently are doing Analog Communication course. 32 students and 3 faculty members of ETE department were part of this educational tour. The ETE students learned about the technicalities involved in the transmission of Short Waves. They also have been shown antennas with smart rotators, and the high power (250 KW) transmitter used for international transmission purpose. The officials of Bangladesh Betar were very helpful in guiding the students through all the sections of the transmission center. The tour ended with Prof Dr. Rezaul Karim Mazumder (Head, ETE, ULAB) thanking the Bangladesh Betar officials for their support (via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA [and non]. 3310.0, June 14 at 0118, very poor signal with music, but it`s neither of my talky locals 960 or 1390 which can put a mixing product here, so tentatively R. Mosoj Chaski. However, at 1245 check when of course Bolivia could not make it, now the audio on 3310 matches KGWA 960 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 3310, Radio Mosoj Chaski, Good program, best in LSB. On USB there is always a man spoken, maybe a baken [?], not sure, June 19 [no time]. RX Perseus SDR + Icom IC-7410 antenna vertical + Super Kaz. 73, (Maurits Van Driessche, Belgium, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA. CHASQUI DX PFA – JUNIO 2014 --- CQ, CQ, CQ…Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano, todas las horas son UTC, desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: 3310.00, R. Mosoj Chaski, Cochabamba; 10/06 1049-1110, 33333, px news en quechua informan sobre la situación política en Venezuela, ID "Mosoj Chaski en quechua" 6134.80, R. Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz; 16/06 2340-0005, 33333+, px El Maestro Informa, tema del día Los recursos de la participación popular ID "En esta radio informamos.. Radio Santa Cruz la primera" 6154.90, R. Fides, La Paz; 16/06 2305, 44444+, px El hombre invisible, ID "Ha sido dos actividades en que el grupo Fides se ha venido preparando", news La recepción la he efectuado del 10/06 al 17/06 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una antena de hilo largo de 12 metros y una antena loop. Recuerden que las grabaciones que adjunto, serán mejor escuchadas con los audífonos. Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Chasqui DX, DX LISTENING DIGEST via dxldyg) ** BOLIVIA. 4716.64 approx., June 16 at 0103, R. Yura with better signal than usual in music. The DX-398 on the porch pulls it better than the PL-880, but I`m using a longer antenna too on the `398. USB mode improves readability. 0129 with nice Andean music; 0133 some yelling; 0134 DJ in Spanish with timecheck, more music; 0135 more DJ, seems a bit overmodulated on mike, mixing with song by YL; 0136 mentions ``hasta las 10 de la noche``. Retune at 0200, sign-off ID including frequency starting with ``47--`` but can`t tell if announcing ``17`` after that. 0201 a bit of music and modulation stops, but carrier stays on past 0205. Had been QRM free but now some lite 2-way mixing in (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Radio Yura Identification (2014-06-19) http://youtu.be/23GPWTCd9HQ 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA. 5952.44, Emisora Pio XII, Very good sound and clear, 0055 UT June 19. 73, (Maurits Van Driessche, Belgium, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA. 6024.97, R. Patria Nueva. Discovered that the station`s webstream was 1:26 behind the live audio. Accounting for the delay, I was able to hear one of the three "Patria Nueva" IDs during the promos at 2359:37 despite V. of Vietnam [sic: it`s China 6020] (Albania) playing music and splattering over. Also heard mention on "El Mundo". But the other IDs just didn't make it through. (7 June). 6024.97, R. Patria Nueva, 1000:20 canned ID by W before the next hour of news. The morning reception here has been QRMed by Martí and the jammer on 6030, but the evening reception is clear in the half hour before Martí comes on 2330-0000 (China fades out). (9 June) 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA. 6135-, June 13 at 0105, Radio Santa Cruz full ID with SW and FM frequencies, 0106 banco ad; good, way over the het from Aparecida, Brasil tonight. 6155+ Fides carrier detectable too (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 6134.8, June 16 at 0105, R. Santa Cruz about the best I`ve heard them, rating a good signal, pop music with only lite het from Aparecida. Recheck 0200, music playing right thru ToH, 0203 ``Radio Santa Cruz`` ID and more music. Probably to sign off a few minutes later. This was a VG Bolivian night; see also R. Yura. However, no signal at 0129 from 5952.4 R. Pio Doce nor from 6155+, R. Fides, apparently already off by 0100 (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) June 16 on 6134.81v, with R. Santa Cruz at 0207 with the theme music for the start of their IDs/sign off announcements; 0209 start of the "Santa Cruz" song they play before going off the air (attached brief audio) and today 0211* (Ron Howard, California, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) 6135 continued under MADAGASCAR! 6134.84, Radio Santa Cruz, Strong and clear with many IDs, 0103 UT June 19. 73, (Maurits Van Driessche, Belgium, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** BOLIVIA. 6155.143, Probably R Fides La Paz Bolivia heard already at 0835 UT June 18, noted on remote SDR posts in Australia, Tokyo-JPN; as well as in FL and NY-USA receiving units. Adjacent KBS Japanese service 6155.0 kHz stronger in Japan at same 08-09 UT slot (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) 6155.13, Radio Fides, La Paz, Fair talks by female, 0115 UT June 19. RX Perseus SDR + Icom IC-7410 antenna vertical + Super Kaz. 73, (Maurits Van Driessche, Belgium, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** BRAZIL. CHASQUI DX PFA – JUNIO 2014 --- CQ, CQ, CQ…Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano, todas las horas son UTC, desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: 4865.00 BRASIL, R. Verde [sic] Florestas, Acre; 10/06 1115-1140, 44444, tocan mx varias en forma continua. No dan ID. 4885.00, BRASIL, R. Dif. Acreana, Rio Branco; 17/06 1105-1130, 33333, news sobre el mundial del football, el agro y la madera. No escucho ID. La recepción la he efectuado del 10/06 al 17/06 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una antena de hilo largo de 12 metros y una antena loop. Recuerden que las grabaciones que adjunto, serán mejor escuchadas con los audífonos. Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Chasqui DX, DX LISTENING DIGEST via dxldyg) ** BRAZIL. 5990.04 approx., June 17 at 0118, surprise new poor signal, 25332, with music, // much stronger 6180, so EBC Brasília has reactivated extra transmitter here instead of 5999.6, avoiding RHC. Is slightly on hi side, in AM mode, altho original purpose was supposedly to test DRM domestically with 4 kW, a power I can now believe. Recheck 0556, JBA but content seems // 11780, 6180 RNA (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 5990.07, R. Nacional da Amazônia, 0835 end of ZY Pop song, then deep- voiced M announcer taking phone calls. "Bom dia"s. Talk with mention of Paraná, São Paulo, Puerto Alegro [sic]. Back to more pops at 0847. Fair signal // tremendous 6180.01 (17 June) 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** BRAZIL. 9586.55, Super Rádio Deus é Amor at 0205 in Portuguese with Christian song and preacher - Poor, // 6120 very poor & 9565 poor June 14 (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening in my car, by the lake, with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. 9645.24 approx., June 16 at 0145:03, happened to tune across talk in Brazuguese from R. Bandeirantes when they emitted another automatic timesignal on the quarter-hour, but about 3 seconds late; why? To impress those without accurate chronometers or even access to WWV, PPE. {Is there competition among the ZYs to provide quarter-hour timesignals? On May 11 at 0145 I heard one on 11915, R. Gaúcha} (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. 9629.970, ZYE954 Rádio Aparecida, SP, logged with like Portuguese Fado music singer, S=6-7 poor at -89dBm level at 0855 UT June 14. \\ 11854.841 kHz. 9565.075, ZYE727 SRDA noted as usual with Brazilian Port. sermon, very poor S=4-5 at 0900 UT June 14. \\ 11764.725 kHz at 0955 UT on June 14. 9818.727, Very odd frequency as usual by ZYR90 Rádio Nove de Julho, Rádio Catolica, from São Paulo, SP, poor S=4-5 signal, church chimes heard at 0905 UT June 14 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 14, WORLD OF RADIO 1727, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9818.75, Rádio Nove de Julho, São Paulo at 0108 in Portuguese with Catholic songs and talk - Poor June 14. (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening in my car, by the lake, with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** BRAZIL. RADIO INCONFIDENCIA FAZ PARCERIA COM EBC RADIOS E TRANSMITE WORLD CUP FIFA 2014 --- Radio Inconfidência in partnership with EBC Radios in World Cup Fifa brazil 2014. Sintonizei em 15190 kHz, 2010 UT, SINPO 45444, OM narra jogo entre COSTA RICA X URUGUAY. No meio da locução destaca a EBC RADIOS. 6010, 2027 UT, Rádio Inconfidência, OM narra jogo que estava Costa rica 2 e Uruguay 1 e diz alo a emissoras no estado do Amazonas e Paraiba ``emissoras da rede publica de radios`` Fala dos 33 celsius em Fortaleza Ceara e diz novamente nome de emissoras. SINPO 45444. Receptor Tecsun PL 660, Antena Telescópica 14/06 (Daniel Wyllyans, Nova Xavantina MT, http://dxbrazilsw.blogspot.com.br/ June 14, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Yes, EBC is the main public radio network, though not listed at all on pages 114-115 of WRTH. There is just a brief mention on p. 117 that it runs RN da Amazônia (Chris Greenway, UK, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CANADA. MARE Gary Vance checked in with the following comment: "BTW I haven't heard CFRX on 6070 kHz either." So has ANYONE heard any details about what is going on with their SW transmitter? The website says "A recent e-mail from the engineering staff indicated that efforts to restore CFRX back to life haven't been on their radar since the recent move from the 2 St. Clair Ave. W. location to the new downtown studios. The silence on 6.070 MHz continues!" That update was dated June 1. I [kvz] have asked who to bug at CFRB and ask (politely!) that they move the CFRX transmitter up on the priority list. ... Steve (the CFRB/CFRX QSL manager) responded by noting "The director of engineering Wally Lennox informed me about two weeks ago that with all the efforts of moving their studios into a new location in downtown Toronto over the last year, CFRX really hasn't been on the radar at all. I'm hoping it will appear on somebody`s radar now the move has happened! "It seems to me that it's the engineering people who have the real desire to keep it going Encouragement in their direction will probably gain more results. The new solid state replacement transmitter, which came in with great promise a few years ago, has turned out to be a real problem unit. It`s been off more than on, as we all know. As well, the change in ownership over the last two years, has also had an impact. The previous owner sprung for the new transmitter, the 'new' management don't seem interested. "Except for sending notes to the engineering people, I'm not sure what else to suggest." (MARE Tipsheet June 13 via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** CANADA. Shortwave Stations CKZU and CKZN on 6160 kHz (2014-06-14) http://youtu.be/qRiXR-vijx0 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** CANADA. 6754-USB, June 13 at 0110, Trenton VOLMET with same warble on modulation as heard recently on 15034-USB. Strange that both transmitters are doing this; problem must be upline (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CANADA [non]. Radio City will be on the air Friday June 20th on 7290 kHz via IRRS from Romania with 150 kW, and via Challenger Radio, Italy on 1368 kHz at 1800 to 1900 UT with 10 kW. Radio City will also have a repeat on Saturday June 21st between 0800 to 0900 UT on 9510 kHz. There is also the weekly transmission via Radio Mercurs in Riga, Latvia on 1485 kHz on Saturday evenings at 1900 to 2000 UT. The 4th Saturday of the month there is a transmission via Hamburger Lokalradio on 7265 kHz (carrier and upper side band) at 1200 to 1300 UT. Please send all reports to: citymorecars@yahoo.ca Thank you! 73s, (Tom Taylor, June 15, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CANADA. Sporadic E analog TV DX June 15, UT: 1802 on ch 2, letterboxed drama fades in from the northeast, in English; it`s a movie with Mel Gibson, Alan Alda and Helen Hunt, which means ``What Women Want``, including a rather graphic sex scene seen. Signal is fairly steady with ghosting, but not snow-free, and the bug in lower right, if any, is hard to discern most of the time, so suspected Global, but at 1806 I can see it is CTV, and that matches the programming on CHBX, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., as listed via http://local.ca which I`ve found the most convenient way to look up on-air Canadian TV programming for any locality. 1810 clinched with a promo for local news covering Timmins, North Bay, etc., tho did not hear SSM mentioned. Does this really originate in one of those other cities? Just in case, I also monitored for DTV on 3 but nothing; nor any Es on FM, starting with 88.1 from SSM. CHBX fading out around 1835, and nothing more today (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CANADA. Canada's newest FM radio station is now testing CONFIRMED - -- Just did a quick FM bandscan on my new to me Sony XDR-S3HD [what a DX machine on FM!!!] stopping on 97.9 to check for the long delayed CKEZ-FM when I was treated to a local grade signal playing, get this, the totally unheard of [in these parts] format of new rock. I figured it was probably CKEZ, started typing this post, to be greeted by a very staid sounding, hyper-legal test ID, voiced by Doug Freeman owner of CKEC-FM, IDing the new CKEZ-FM sister station and seeking reception / interference reports! Kind of cool hearing a senior citizen IDing a new Rock station. Past experience has suggested to me that nothing reaches better than a new, testing FM station - tweaks are being made, coax is fresh, connections clean etc. Plus, CKEZ-FM is a class C1 with a decent amount of height - EHAAT of 240 metres or so and a max power of 100 kW [it`s a directional]. Unfortunately its directional pattern doesn't encourage trop or Es in say Ontario, Quebec, New England etc. but sometimes signals do wrap around a bit. It is very well placed for European trans-Atlantic DXers, so someone in the UK or Ireland might catch them. For those of you ABDXers that are big time FM DXers - feel free to spread the word to your DX community (Phil Rafuse, VY2PR, Stratford PE Canada, June 14, ABDX via DXLD) ** CHILE [and non]. 12365 USB mode, Radio Cooperativa 2110 UT. Widely heard here in Europe during football WORLD CUP Brazil 2014 live transmissions. Das Relay von Radio Cooperativa aus Chile war um 2110 UT auf 12365 kHz USB mit Vorberichten zum WM-Spiel CHL-AUS zu hoeren. Allerdings wurde um 2124 UTC abgeschaltet. VMC 2130 UT. Um 2130 UTC war dann VMC Charleville aus Australien mit einem Seewetterbericht auf 12365 kHz zu hoeren (Patrick Robic-AUT, A- DX June 14 via BC-DX June 19 via DXLD) ** CHINA [and non]. 9745, CNR1, JUNE 8, 1645. CNR1 programming in CC to pips at ToH, then straight into Firedrake music jamming. Lists show RFA starting up at 1700, so that is likely the reason for the crash and bang music. (Barton-AZ) 13970, CNR1. 6/11 1130. Long talk by M in Chinese. Good (Rick Barton, El Mirage, AZ, Slinky and random wire, Grundig Satellit 750, Drake R8, Hammarlund HQ-200, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) CNR1 jamming morning of June 12: 15870, June 12 at 1251, CNR1 jammer with ID, poor-fair; none in 14s 15970, June 12 at 1251, CNR1 jammer, fair; none in the 16s, 17s 18980, June 12 at 1253, JBA SAH with bit of modulation, the 12-13 UT Thursday (and Monday) frequency for RFA Tibetan via Kuwait (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See also CUBA 10960, CNR1, 6/13, 1040. M and W in Chinese. VG. 16100, CNR1, 6/13, 1120. M in Chinese. VG. Good // on 15970. VG // 10960. No other CNR jamming or Firedrakes heard this monitoring session (Rick Barton, El Mirage, AZ, Slinky and random wire, Grundig Satellit 750, Drake R8, Hammarlund HQ-200, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) CHINA/PHILIPPINES, 12150, Usual white noise scratching jamming of Chinese government against VOA Tinang-PHL 12-13 UT outlet slot. Heard in English language at 1225 UT on June 13, news item comment on present Northern Iraq public muslim war of Sunnis terrorist fraction. Comments of republican 'falcon' senator McCain and Pres Obama comments on former Pres Bush's family war against Sunni Arabs Pres Hussein; in past decades (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) 18980, June 13 at 1350, CNR1 jammer with fair-good signal, the OSOB, which isn`t saying much on ``15 meters`` (yes, this is about 15.8 m, while everything in the so-called 15-m hamband is 14.xx meters). 18980 per Aoki is the Fri & Tue 11-12 & 13-14 frequency for RFA Tibetan via Kuwait, the target unheard. 17485, Friday June 13 at 1419, CNR1 jammer, very good, vs unheard RFA Tibetan 14-15 M/W/F via Thailand; // only fair 17740, which Aoki lists as CNR1 jamming at 14-15 but no known target (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 16360 CHINA CNR 1, 6/14, 1145, M and W in CC. Good. Swept bands from 9-18 MHz., no //s or Firedrake channels heard this session (Rick Barton, El Mirage, AZ, Slinky and random wire, Grundig Satellit 750, Drake R8, Hammarlund HQ-200, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) 15195, June 14 at 1300, Firedrake mixed with CNR1 jamming, fair. 15550 & 15585, June 14 at 1305-1306, CNR1 jamming against V. of Tibet via TAJIKISTAN, both fair against hets on their low sides (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 15195, TAJIKISTAN, Radio Free Asia at 1358 in Tibetan, two men in a discussion, 1359:30 taped announcements and off at 1400; jammed by Firedrake which also went off at 1400 - Poor June 14 (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening in my car, by the lake, with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) 17300, CNR1 6/16, 1140. Two males in Chinese, fair signal. Noted //s on 16750 (OK signal), 16300 ("WOW!" signal), 16100 (good) and 10960 (good). No Firedrake opera [sic] music heard during bandsweep (Rick Barton, El Mirage, AZ, Slinky and random wire, Grundig Satellit 750, Drake R8, Hammarlund HQ-200, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) CNR1 jamming June 15: 13850, June 15 at 1254, CNR1 jammer, poor-fair; presumably against an inaudible 100-watt Sound of Hope nuisance unit on Taiwan; 13845 WWCR not yet a problem today 16100, June 15 at 1256, CNR1 jammer, fair-good, ditto target; no others in the 12s, 14s, 17s, 18s, and the usuals in the 15s. Firedrake and/or CNR1 jamming morning of June 16: 18980, June 16 at 1237, Firedrake jamming mixed with CNR1 jamming on good signals vs RFA Tibetan via Kuwait, unheard, its Monday & Thursday frequency during this 12-13 hour 18930, June 16 at 1334, CNR1 jamming only, very good signal but with flutter, Monday-only 13-14 channel of RFA Tibetan via Kuwait, unheard 15195 & 15250, June 16 at 1258, CNR1 jammers, poor and clear; and fair with CCI respectively; open carrier already on 15265. After 1300, 15265 jamming with het replaces 15250; and 15115 is added to 15195 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 16450, CNR1, 6/17, 1040. Dialogue with M and W, VG. Noted //s on 13100 (poor), 12370 (VG), 12190 (VG). All were absent on post 1100 recheck (Rick Barton, El Mirage, AZ, Slinky and random wire, Grundig Satellit 750, Drake R8, Hammarlund HQ-200, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) CNR1 jamming, morning of June 17: 18990, June 17 at 1257, CNR1 jammer, poor, maybe CCI from RFA Kuwait 16920, June 17 at 1257, CNR1 jammer, fair 18980, June 17 at 1352, CNR1 jammer, good with flutter, lite SAH CCI 16300, June 17 at 1353, CNR1 jammer, good with flutter 15870, June 17 at 1354, CNR1 jammer, good with flutter 15550, June 17 at 1355, CNR1 jammer, very poor 16360, June 18 at 1347, CNR1 jammer, fair; none higher. Only weak signals on 17 MHz broadcast band in degraded propagation and nothing audible on 18980, where RFA Tibetan via Kuwait is supposed to be jammed on Wednesdays during this hour (thot it might be hiding under FRG-7 19000 kHz birdie). No other CNR1 jammers audible on 14, 13, 12 MHz, and on 15 MHz only the usual inbanders, 15115, 15195, 15265 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Firedrake music jam against RFA Mandarin at 18-19 UT, (17-21) 5890 9355 9745 11555 (1853 UT Wednesday, June 18, 2014. 73 (Wolfgang Büschel, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CHINA [and non]. SINGAPORE/CHINA, 11740, HEAVY BAD MIXTURE of two co-channel signals, both NHK Radio Japan Kranji, Singapore relay and also CNR2 Business Radio from Lingshi, China, observed at 1250 UT, S=9+15 or -63dBm on remote unit at Nara-JPN (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) ** CHINA [and non]. Interesting reading. 1000+ mile tropo on an mp3 player. Chris Kadlec posted this on the Facebook group just a few minutes ago (Mike Bugaj, June 17, WTFDA via DXLD) -------- Original Message -------- Subject: [WTFDA] China and Taiwan have just been POUNDING in for... Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2014 08:04:33 -0700 China and Taiwan have just been POUNDING in for the last few days here in Korea up to 1,250 miles and not just the little stuff across the sea. I've been staying in a hostel here before leaving the country and happen to have the luck of staying with a Chinese guy who has helped me ID some of the many signals. On Sunday, I went to Chuncheon in the north central mountainous part of Korea (140 miles inland) for a basic Korean bandscan but the entire dial was Chinese, including most of the local frequencies. Most were on seek. A lot of Taiwan!! That's more than 800 miles to the south. Second, southern China! Loads of southern China stations, including Quanzhou, Fujian, and my furthest catch so far, "Meizhou diantai zhong he guangbo" 94.8 in Meizhou, just a tad short of Hong Kong. That's about 1,250 miles on the MP3 player, marking my first 1,000+ mile reception on the little mini tuning machine using an earphones wire antenna!!! The propagation mode though? Unclear. I was in Gangneung (northeast coast) on the beach this morning and was hit with low-band stations in the EXACT same region (up to 88.75). Strong and long-lasting but low on the dial. In Gangneung, there are only 13 stations audible on the dial to start. On the bus trip back to Seoul, the dial was FULL of Chinese to the top of the band. Unknown areas for that at the moment, but very persistent and again, more tropo sounding. Hard to tell because they faded out quicker as I was moving on a bus. Perhaps Es, but my MP3 player is usually unable to receive skip, only tropo. I find it hard to believe that tropo could hop 4,500 foot mountain peaks and be heard on the beach on the opposite coast, but Sunday's was certainly not skip and the tropo forecast has been hot in that same region. Either way, I heard stations strong until the bus stopped. When I got off the bus, they were ALL GONE. I couldn't get them back, despite having them in strong for 3 hours while on the bus, up mountains, into valleys, through the inner city, all strong, til I got off the bus. (Does being in a fast moving metal box help things?!) I'll take 1,250 mile tropo. I was resigned to the fact that this season had been a bust and that I'm leaving Korea this week... but who knew inland Korea could get hit so hard with Chinese stations or that the entire dial (more than 100 stations at a time) could be filled 140 miles inland on a short 1,000 foot mountaintop! In one easy word, SCORE!! I hope to throw in some recordings of these amazing catches soon. (via Mike Bugaj, WTFDA via DXLD) Sorry, but all the clues point to sporadic E, notably that this is the peak of the season in the northern hemisphere. Unfortunately, it seems Chris does not TV-DX, to get a feel for rising and falling MUFs. Does he check Es maps as well as tropo maps? (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CHINA [non]. 1520, June 17 at 1132 UT, CRI relay in English is about equal level to CBS News Update from KOKC OKC, making slow SAH of 48/minute = 0.8 Hz, i.e. KYND Cypress TX serving Houston (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** COLOMBIA. AMPLITUD MODULADA EN BOGOTÁ --- Con la reciente reactivación del canal 1580 kHz por parte de la organización Radiópolis (léase William Vinasco); nuevamente están en el aire y activas las 32 frecuencias autorizadas para emitir en Bogotá en la banda de AM, así el panorama de la onda media en Bogotá es el siguiente: 540 HJKA RADIO AUTÉNTICA 570 HJND SEÑAL RADIO COLOMBIA 610 HJKL LA CARIÑOSA 610 650 HJKH ANTENA DOS 690 HJCZ W RADIO en // 99.9 MHz 730 HJCU MELODÍA ESTÉREO 770 HJJX RCN en // 93.9 MHz 810 HJCY CARACOL en // 100.9 MHz 850 HJKC CANDELA AM 890 HJCE RADIO CONTINENTAL 930 HJCS LA VOZ DE BOGOTÁ 970 HJCI RADIO RED 1010 HJCC ACUARIO ESTÉREO 1040 HJCJ COLMUNDO RADIO 1070 HJCG RADIO SANTA FE - Q'HUBO RADIO 1100 HJCN BBN RED RADIODIFUSIÓN BÍBLICA 1130 HJVA VIDA A.M. 1160 HJOC FUEGO AM 1190 HJCV RADIO CORDILLERA 1220 HJKR RADIO MARÍA 1250 HJCA RADIO CAPITAL 1280 HJKN RADIO ÚNICA 1310 HJJZ AVIVA RADIO 1340 HJFB AMOR ESTÉREO en // 96.3 MHz 1370 HJKX RADIO MUNDIAL 1400 HJKM EMISORA MARIANA 1430 HJKU UNIMINUTO RADIO 1460 HJJW NUEVO CONTINENTE 1490 HJBS PUNTO CINCO 1520 HJLI LIBERTAD 15-20 1550 HJZI G12. RADIO 1580 HJQT CANDELA ESTÉREO en // 101.9 MHz Cabe recordar que el fuerte invierno que azotó a Colombia a finales del año 2010 había dejado por fuera de aire muchas emisoras, que luego poco a poco se fueron reactivando. Bueno sí, he de creerle --- a la última actualización disponible del Plan Técnico de Radiodifusión AM del Ministerio de Comunicaciones (julio-2013) la señal de Radio Santa Fé se está operando con 30 kW; curioso si es que desde hace algún tiempo las identificaciones de las emisoras colombianas han dejado de anunciar la potencia con la cual transmiten; además salvo algunas excepciones (Caracol Btá [sic: original garble I can`t figure out --- gh], un par de Señal Radio Colombia y tal vez alguna RCN) las potencias de transmision de emisoras colombianas no superan los 50 kW (Rafael Rodríguez R., Bogotá D.C. - COLOMBIA http://dxdesdecolombia.blogspot.com June 14, condiglista yg via DXLD) ** COLOMBIA. CHASQUI DX PFA – JUNIO 2014 --- CQ, CQ, CQ…Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano, todas las horas son UTC, desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: 5910.06, Alcaraván Radio, Puerto Lleras; 12/06 0010-0020, 44444+, mx, ID "Para el Mundo desde Colombia, La Voz de tu Conciencia", mx, ID "5910 Alcaraván Radio y 6010 Onda Corta La Voz de tu Conciencia señal de Colombia para el Mundo" NOTA: Pensé que al escuchar ese ID estaban trasmitiendo en //. He verificado la señal si estaba en // y no es así. Aparentemente es un programa grabado que usan ambas estaciones. Escuchar grabación adjunta. 6010.00, R. La Voz de tu Conciencia, Bogotá; 12/06 0021-0105 44444 mxf LA varias, pasillo, joropo, etc. ID "Colombia haciendo una radio diferente, La Voz de tu Conciencia.. 6010" NOTA: no están en // con 5910.06 Alcaraván Radio. La recepción la he efectuado del 10/06 al 17/06 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una antena de hilo largo de 12 metros y una antena loop. Recuerden que las grabaciones que adjunto, serán mejor escuchadas con los audífonos. Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Chasqui DX, DX LISTENING DIGEST via dxldyg) ** CONGO DR. 5066.370, R. Télé Candip heard June 14 from Perseus site in Sydney AUS well beyond nominal 1905* UT - Long talk by man from before 1900 UT to about 1948 UT (language unknoen). Although not sure, this could have been World Cup coverage/commentary, based on the announcers` style of speech. Local highlife music at 1948 UT until carrier off suddenly in mid-song at 2016:10 UT. This is not a short path length - 8,030 mi! SINPO 2-3/3/3/3/2 (Bruce W. Churchill-CA-USA, DXplorer June 5 via BC-DX June 19 via DXLD) 5066.371, R. Tele Candip heard June 18 from Perseus site in Australia well on 1734 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews, dxldyg via DXLD) ** CUBA. 640, Radio Progreso, Guanabacoa, Ciudad de la Habana. 0714 June 16, 2014. Great, this one is wobbling. 1140, Radio Mayabeque, La Salud, Mayabeque. 1043 June 8, 2014. Cuban vocals, male at 1110 "Esta es Radio Mayabeque..." Weak Radio Musical Nacional co-channel. 1160, UNIDENTIFIED. 1050 June 16, 2014. Orchestral score (not parallel Enciclopedia, listed on 1160 though I've yet to log it), lost to WCFO, East Point, GA power up at 1059. Suspect Radio Bayamo, Cuba, but no parallels audible. 1310, Radio Enciclopedia, Nueva Gerona, Isla de la Juventud. 1048 June 16, 2014. Good with piano solo, parallel glorious 530. 1350, Radio Ciudad del Mar, Aguada, Cienfuegos. 0738 June 16, 2014. Spanish ballad, male and female announcers, ID. Very good (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater FL, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CUBA. 13740, June 12 at 1408, no signal from the CRI relay in English; never got round to rechecking later in the bihour. But I did check 15535, the A-14 change registered in HFCC, but still imaginary. (Another one --- NOT --- is 13590 instead of 9570 for 1200 Cantonese, 1300 English). 6165, June 13 at 0101, RHC English is missing, and still off at 0118 and 0140 rechex; 6000 is on at 0101, but it too is gone at 0147, leaving RHC English with zero frequencies, tsk2. Not checked again until 0441, when 6000 is on; 6165 is on with bigsig but no modulation. Just another SNAFU night at RadioCuba. 6000, circa 0600 UT June 13, RHC has achieved English modulation, unlike earlier 0441 open carrier, and 0147 not even that. 15370, June 13 at 1317 is today`s missing RHC frequency, hardly necessary with 15340 on, but also depriving us of the leapfrogs. 17730, June 13 at 1352, another missing RHC frequency, but hardly necessary as 17580 is in well. IIRC, 17730 was on earlier in the hour as I tuned across; yes: Wolfgang Büschel had a ``nice clear signals`` via Nara, Japan remote unit at 1314 June 13 on 17730, 17580, 15340, 15230, presuming short-path across the night. 13740, June 13 at 1354 open carrier, 1425 check CRI English relay as scheduled except in imaginary HFCC, so the Cubans have managed to get 13740 on the air today unlike yesterday. 9570, June 14 at 1254, bits of music audio cutting on every few seconds, i.e. CRI relay in Cantonese. No such problem with RHC itself on 9550. Wiggle that patchcord! 15400, June 17 at 1301, RHC canned announcement that 9850 ``will stop`` at 1300; strange they insert this about one frequency only, and never mention that they have started on 15400 & 15310, leapfrog mixing products (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** CUBA. 9240.0 Cuban spy number station, Spanish, opening by female, and some tones heard at 0940 UT June 18, S=9 -75dBm strength in Australia (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) ** CUBA. Over the weekend Cuba was added to the WTFDA database at http://db.wtfda.org All you need to do to find it is type CU into the field for state. The material was taken from Emisoras de FM and updated from http://www.radiocubana.cu/index.php/directorio-de-radio-emisoras-cubanas and Jim Thomas (Mike Bugaj, Enfield, CT USA, June 11, WTFDA via DXLD) ** CYPRUS. 15802-15824, June 14 at 0124-0125* heavy OTH radar pulsing, which would have been bad news for WWCR if it were on now; presumed from here (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** DOMINICA. Confirmações recebidas - FM. Caros amigos, Seguem os dados das últimas confirmações recebidas: 106.1 - Voice of Life - Marigot - DMA - Recebido Carta confirmarória. 123 dias. V/S: Clementina Munro (General Manager). QTH: PO Box 205, Roseau, Dominica Depois de 20 anos de hobby posso dizer que é uma raridade receber a confirmação de dois países novos em um único dia. Com Dominica e São Vicente & Granadinas [q.v.], agora fazem parte da minha lista um total de 117 países confirmados. Estou fazendo o possível para terminar o ano com ao menos 120. :-) As imagens das confirmações estarão disponíveis em breve em meu blog. 73 (Ivan Dias Jr. - Sorocaba/SP https://www.youtube.com/regionaldx http://ivandias.wordpress.com http://twitter.com/ivandiasjr June 15, radioescutas yg via DXLD) ** EASTER ISLAND [and non]. Members, I have been increasing the entries on the Australasia section of the inactive and Closed database. I couldn't resist the temptation to locate one of the world's most remote masts. It has now disappeared no doubt dismantled between 2009 and 2011. The monopole for Radio Manukena 580 kHz used to be at 27 09 24S 109 25 27W. It is visible on the Historical images of Google Earth. I have had less luck finding the masts on the Galápagos Islands. Similarly if anyone knows where the mast in Mata-Utu on Wallis & Futuna used to be I (and no doubt other members) would be very grateful! 73's and 88's (Dan Goldfarb, June 14, mwmasts yg via DXLD) ** ECUADOR. 3280, Poor talks in Spanish, maybe La Voz del Napo? 0021 June 19. RX Perseus SDR + Icom IC-7410 antenna vertical + Super Kaz. (Maurits Van Driessche, Belgium, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** EGYPT. 11710v, June 13 at 0122, R. Cairo missing from this frequency tonight, clearing it for Argentina, q.v. on 11711-. So I check the other channels: 12070, June 13 at 0123, R. Cairo, huge distorted signal but modulation level suppressed, plus humbuzz, not much pulsing spurring above/below this, but see 9965! 9315, June 13 at 0124, R. Cairo, music and Spanish, fair signal, undermodulated but not too distorted, best of the lot 9965, June 13 at 0123, R. Cairo, Arabic, distorted but readable, good signal. Tuning thru the entire range at 0129, however, I find multiple filthy extremely distorted spurs from 9965, matching modulation, peaking very approximately, and constantly shifting: 9920, 9960, 9977, 9988, 10010, 10032, 10066. At 0135, I attempt to locate the ranges around each of them, also approx and fluxuating: 9915-9926, 9940-9948, 9973-9995, 10005-10015, 10024-10037, 10060- 10070, 10082-10086. By sheer luck WRMI 9955 and WWV 10000 are avoiding most of this mess. 9965, June 14 at 0110, R. Cairo is back in whack tonight, no spurs all over the place, just whine marring Arabic modulation on own frequency. 11710v, June 14 at 0128, R. Cairo is back on here from absence last night, again hetting Argentina 11711-. 9315 rather weak; 12070 strong and distorted (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Question to experts! Someone knows the email address of the Russian section of the Cairo Radio? Last year they had a change of "soap", kind of like all done uniformly. The idea is that it should be: russian_service@yahoo.com cairorussian@yahoo.com Mail to these addresses passes, but if comes to the right place - the big question. Someone listens to Cairo by satellite? There's e-mail address is announced at the beginning of the transmission, but disassemble short through distortion does not work (Andrew Kuznetsov / "open_dx") via RusDX June 15 via DXLD) ** EUROPE. Laser Hot Hits noted with a move from 4025 down to 4015 kHz from tune in at 0415utc today. Sent from my iPad. Posted by: (John Hoad, June 13, BDXC-UK yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** EUROPE. PIRATE (EUROPE), 6220, Tip & Elvis 0014* closing announcement by M, part of a song, then off. Confirmed in a chat this was Tip & Elvis and 500 watts. (15 June) 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** EUROPE. Last Sunday we were not very lucky with propagation conditions. Although good reception was reported from different parts of Europe, also much poorer reception was the case at other locations. Variable; especially 7700 kHz was poorer than we hoped for although the signal improved during the last 2 hours. Positive was 9302 kHz which replaced 5800 kHz. Knowing we used only relatively low power on 9302, it performed quite well in wide areas of Central Europe. Thanks for all of you sending in reports; much appreciated!! Enjoy next Sunday's broadcast. 73s, the FRS team, a Balance between Music & Information joined to one Format. FRS-Holland POBox 2702 6049 ZG Herten The Netherlands e-mail: < frs@frsholland.nl> (via Roberto Scaglione, June 13, bclnews.it yg via DXLD) Betreff: Aw: [BDXC-UK] FRS today on 9302 kHz. The frequency is 9301.06 kHz. 1830 UT ID and music, English announcement, SINPO 34433. 73 (Harald Kuhl, Germany, 1833 UT 15 June, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD) Now at 1900 UT it´s a strong S9+5dB-Signal here in Goettingen/Germany 73 (Harald Kuhl, ibid.) Reception here was fair initially - SINPO 34433 - but since 1900 it has been fading and has dropped from S7 to below S3 on the meter by 1915. 73 (Dave Kenny, Caversham Berks, AOR7030 +25m long wire, ibid.) Initially FRS were a weak signal here, but later on in the evening (2058 UT 15/6) they had improved considerably to SIO 455. Sign-off by Dave Scott, followed by an interesting "FRS goes DX" at 2100. The frequency seemed to be 9301.1 kHz. 73's (Nick, Buxton, Rank, UK, Sony ICF2001D, long wire & ATU, 16/6, ibid.) ** EUROPE. On Sunday June 15th - Radio Channel 292 6070 kHz/AM shortwave is airplaying several Programs - created for them by CoolAM Radio! Best Free Radio Greets (André, CoolAM Radio - ShortWave 6735, HOT RADIO - ShortWave 6735, the Netherlands, http://www.coolam.nl June 13, DXLD) Click on the cheesecake for lots more linx (gh, DXLD) ** EUROPE. Recently, I've started posting some videos of the Perseus SDR on Youtube. Things that may be of interest should you care to view. Here are some links; European Pirates as heard in Pennsylvania, USA (Part 1) (2009-12-06) http://youtu.be/5KY7rgXgcZg European Pirates as heard in Pennsylvania, USA (Part 2) (2009-12-06) http://youtu.be/ui59ILrTnX0 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** FRANCE [non]. From Sunday June 8 Radio France Internationale make a time and frequency changes for the Chinese broadcasts on shortwave as follows: 1100-1300 on 9955 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs, new transmission 2200-2300 on 7310 TSH 300 kW / 325 deg to EaAs, no change 2200-2300 on 9660 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs, additional frequency Cancelled broadcasts: 0930-1030 on 7325 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs 0930-1030 on 11875 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs 2300-2400 on 9955 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs http://swldxbulgaria.blogspot.com/2014/06/new-shortwave-schedule-of-radio-france.html -- 73! (Ivo Ivanov, QTH: Sofia, Bulgaria, Equipment: Sony ICF-2001D 30 m. long wire, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXKD) Sites both TAIWAN. That explains the new CC QRM to WRMI until 1300 on 9955 (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** GERMANY. EMR Today/ R Gloria, HLR next week 20th/21st/22nd June EMR Today 15th June (Testing for the summer conditions): 9485 KHz between 1500-1600 UT 7265 KHz between 1600-1700 UT Please send all E.M.R. reports to: studio@emr.org.uk Thank you! RGI-Schedule for June 22nd [Sunday] 0600 to 0800 UT on 7265 kc 0800 to 1000 UT on 9485 kc 0900 to 1000 UT on 6005/7310 Internet: 0900 to 1000 UT shortwaveservice.com/6005 Internet: 1500 to 1700 UT ColoRadio.org & laut.fm/jukebox (repeated 13 July) radiogloria@aol.com good listening, reports welcome! Every Saturday and Wednesday the programs of HLR: 0600 to 0800 UT, on 7265 KHz 0800 to 1100 UT, on 6190 KHz 1100 to 1500 UT, on 7265 KHz Every Sunday the programme of HLR 1100 to 1500 UT program in German 0n 9485 kHz. Please send all reports to: redaktion@hamburger-lokalradio.de Thank you! 73s, (Tom Taylor, June 15, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** GREECE. 15630, June 14 a 0124, Greek music, fair, among few signals on band, H.R. still chugging along as if nothing has happened, // stronger 7475 and strongest 9420 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Again morning transmissions of Elliniki Radiophonia Tileorasi: from 0600 on 7475 AVL 100 kW / 182 deg NoAf Greek, instead of 11645 from 0600 on 9420 AVL 170 kW / 323 deg WeEu Greek. Video on June 16 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJW5upN2sVs&feature=youtu.be (DX RE MIX NEWS #857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via DXLD) But June 18 at 06-07 UT on air 9420, 11645, and 15630 kHz (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) My reception report for Tuesday and Wednesday, June 17-18, 2014 TUESDAY 6/17 | WEDNESDAY 6/18 1900 2000 2100 2200 2300| 0000 0100 0200 kHz Az. kW Station 00000 15241 15241 15241 XXXXX|XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX 7450 323 100 1 15241 25242 25242 25242 XXXXX|XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX 15630 285 100 2 XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX 00000|00000 55455 55555 7475 285 100 1 XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX 00000|00000 00000 00000 15650 226 100 2 15241 25342 25342 35343 00000|00000 55455 55555 9420 323 170 3 (John Babbis, Silver Spring MD, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Logged June 18: 06-10 9420 11645 15630 kHz 13-17 9420 11645 17- 7450 9420 15650 73 wb (Wolfgang Büschel, ibid.) ** GREECE. LA RADIO PÚBLICA GRIEGA CELEBRA UN AÑO DE EXISTENCIA by gruporadioescuchaargentino La cadena pública de radio y televisión griega celebra su primer año de transmisiones. Tan sólo unas 600 personas trabajan allí ahora. Son parte de Nerit, la cadena sustituta, y consideradas traidoras por parte de sus ex compañeros: "Es muy doloroso recordar aquellos días. Perdí a una amiga muy cercana porque veía las cosas diferentes", lamenta Jrisa Ramelioti, empleada en Nerit. El cierre de los tres canales de televisión, las 19 radios locales y 5 nacionales, el coro y la orquesta de ERT, que costaban unos 300 millones de euros al año, casi supuso unas elecciones anticipadas cuando un partido decidió abandonar la coalición gubernamental. El Ejecutivo reaccionó creando un canal provisional, conocido como DT, valiéndose de despedidos de ERT: "Todo hombre necesita trabajar para mantener a sus hijos y pagar facturas. Nada es seguro ahora en Grecia", apunta Jrisa como motivo para aceptar la oferta del Gobierno. La policía desalojó en noviembre a quienes ocupaban la sede de la TV pública y Nerit comenzó a emitir desde allí el pasado 4 de mayo. Emplea a unos 300 de los ex trabajadores de ERT con un contrato renovable de dos meses: "Dejé las protestas porque el Gobierno me hizo una buena oferta y no creía que ERT fuera a reabrir", explica Odine Linardatou, jefa de la sección internacional. "En la vida pasan cosas malas pero debemos superarlas y hay que ir siempre por la vía legal", elabora. Los griegos pagan tres euros al mes como impuesto para financiar Nerit. Antes pagaban 4,2 euros por ERT. El nuevo canal ha sido inaugurado con escasa programación original, aparte de los informativos y deportes. El resto de la parrilla suele consistir en películas griegas de los 50 y 60. Los telediarios han sido criticados por favorecer al Gobierno, algo negado por sus trabajadores: "Por primera vez somos completamente objetivos", apunta Odine. Otros compañeros sí admiten cierto control gubernamental, pero creen que sucedería lo mismo si gobernase la Izquierda Radical (Syriza), el principal partido de la oposición. Algunos acusan a quienes siguen organizando protestas contra el cierre de ERT de seguir directrices de esa agrupación. La polémica ha acompañado a Nerit desde el inicio de sus emisiones. Su ex presidente, Yorgos Prokopakis, fue apartado de la cadena dos días después por desavenencias con el consejo supervisor. Se quejó de que algunos de los periodistas contratados por Nerit mediante oposición no habían cumplido los requisitos. No hubo un proceso transparente de selección y dieron tiempo a la gente para que hicieran diplomas falsos", critica Babis Kokosis, ex empleado en ERT. Él es uno de los rebeldes: continúa presentando un programa de radio en una cadena con las siglas de la compañía clausurada. Lo hace desde el edificio contiguo a la sede de Nerit. Sus compañeros continúan emitiendo informativos de TV a través de internet desde los estudios de la tercera cadena, situados en Salónica y protegidos por su alcalde, como muchas de las radioemisoras locales. Son unos 400: "El Gobierno quiere ocupar la TV pública con personal afín y no va a desarrollar funciones culturales", critica Babis. Denuncia además que la repartición de espacio digital ha beneficiado a las privadas. "Es mentira que estemos con Syriza. Somos gente de izquierdas y derechas. Nuestro movimiento tiene que ver con valores democráticos y de dignidad personal y laboral", explica el ex reportero. Hace ya un año del cierre de ERT y ahora se gana la vida colaborando en distintos proyectos. Asegura que no le da para vivir: "Si todos hubiéramos permanecido unidos, ERT no habría cerrado", expone. Sólo una calle separa su actual oficina, la de quienes abogan por la restitución de ERT, del edificio donde trabajó durante años (El Mundo, España via GRA blog http://gruporadioescuchaargentino.wordpress.com/2014/06/16/la-radio-publica-griega-celebra-un-ano-de-existencia/ June 15 via DXLD) Lots of info there we don`t see in English. Includes ``vepit`` lower case Greek logo: http://www.typologies.gr/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/DT-nerit.jpg (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** GREECE [and non]. Re: Toxic Time Bomb at former Kavalla site Is anyone charged with demolishing the site at all? I proceed from the assumption that this is not the business of IBB or the US government in general anymore, once they left and took away what they still could use, thanks to clever agreements once struck with this "host country". It's presumably a problem of the Greek government now, and it is hardly a surprise of course that they simply do nothing here. What became of the transmission facility near Briech in Morocco, by the way? My guess: Still there as left by IBB as well, i.e. with ruins of transmitters from which parts like the solid-state modulators have been ripped out (Kai Ludwig, June 18, shortwavesites yg via DXLD) ** INDIA. AIR Lucknow noted today morning from sign on at 0025 UT on 4900 instead of regular 4880 kHz. Schedule on 4880 is 0025-0430(Sun 0415v), 1215-1741. Yours sincerely, (Jose Jacob, VU2JOS, National Institute of Amateur Radio, Hyderabad, India, June 15, dx_india yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** INDIA. The special limited edition QSL for All India Radio's International Radio for Disaster Response trial special broadcast on 5th & 6th June 2014 is getting ready for dispatch. Those who have not yet sent the reports to AIR may please send it to the following email at the earliest: spectrum-manager@air.org.in Yours sincerely, (Jose Jacob, VU2JOS, National Institute of Amateur Radio, Hyderabad, India, Mobile: +91 94416 96043, http://www.qsl.net/vu2jos June 15, dx_india yg via DXLD) ** INDIA. AIR CURRENTLY RUNNING LARGEST SHORTWAVE DRM SERVICE IN THE WORLD === RadioandMusic.com New Delhi 13 June 2014 Media specialist Sharad Sadhu has said India’s public broadcaster All India Radio (AIR) continues to roll-out new transmitters, which are also capable of running the DRM standard. AIR is current running probably the largest shortwave DRM service in the world, and medium wave services are planned, he told RadioAsia 2014 organised by the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union in Colombo, Sri Lanka. An estimated 78 new transmitters will ensure around 70 percent of the Indian population will be able to receive DRM services, when implemented. Several production houses are now manufacturing DRM sets, he said. Sadhu called for manufacturers to consider integrated digital radio chipsets, allowing FM, DAB+, DRM and other digital radio standards on the same radio set. Meanwhile, an academician said radio listenership in India is going down because of a dearth of innovation in on-air programming and a lack of differentiation. K Padmakumar from the School of Communication at Manipal University sounded a warning to private radio broadcasters ahead of Phase III of FM licensing and said there was also the problem of too many commercial activities – advertising and promotions in programming. Padmakumar added that there was too much pressure on on-air talent as cost-cutting by stations had led to too much multi-tasking. Phase III will see 839 FM frequencies auctioned in over 200 smaller cities and towns. Meanwhile, World DMB project director Bernie O’Neill said three Asian countries have begun or will start digital radio trials over the next few months. A trial is already under way in Malaysia, while Thailand (military coup permitting) and Indonesia are due to test the technology in 2014. Hong Kong already has 15 DAB+ audio services live on air. Over 300,000 devices have been sold in the territory to date. Historically, one issue that has hampered digital radio take up has been the lack of support by car manufacturers. But that is changing, said O’ Neill. New figures show 55 per cent of new vehicles in the UK now come fitted with DAB digital radio. Another panellist – Albert Tseng from Keystone Semiconducter, which manufactures digital radio chips – warned that take up of the technology was still slow and that killer applications and more compelling content were necessary for digital radio to succeed. Rafiqul Haque, MD of Radio Today, Bangladesh, gave an update on the country’s nascent radio scene. His station was the first private FM station in 2006. When it first launched, advertising agencies and listeners were sceptical. But in eight years, the station has built not only a successful brand but transformed radio into a much loved media. While the station runs a music intensive format, Radio Today also features several radio drama series and community projects about health and well-being. As a partner of Voice of America (VOA), the station broadcasts news bulletins from the international broadcaster. http://www.radioandmusic.com/content/editorial/news/air-currently-running-largest-shortwave-drm-service-world (via Mike Terry, dxldyg via DXLD) ** INDONESIA. 9525.9, June 16 at 1250, very poor carrier on characteristic off-frequency, no doubt VOI, but no modulation detectable. Atsunori Ishida, http://rri.jpn.org/ reports it`s been more than a carrier daily since June 7, going from Japanese to English today at 1303, but ``*1000v-2100v* (Often poor modulation or no modulation)`` (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** INDONESIA [and non]. 9525.891, Voice of Indonesia Jakarta Cimanggis carrier appeared at my first check this morning around 0941 UT, so seemingly real operation starts at 1000 UT on their English service. 9680.051, RRI Jakarta Cimanggis, S=9+10dB --64dBm signal strength downunder in Australia. Hit a little bit by adjacent signal from CNR5 program from Beijing on 9685 kHz (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) No time for 9680; the same? ** IRAN [non]. 9760, June 16 at 0529, music on fair signal, Nikkei? No, 0530 timesignal and Farsi talk, so it`s R. Farda, scheduled here until 0600 via Biblis, GERMANY. No signal from Japan on 9595 either (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** IRAN [non]. Radio Ranginkaman, Radio Rainbow in Farsi to WeAs 1600 on 7575 Grigoriopol https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Y4zMz8ykeE&feature=youtu.be (Ivo Ivanov, Bulgaria, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ITALY. Radio Padania Libera e l'occupazione selvaggia dello spettro FM Radio Padania avrebbe monopolizzato in questi anni il mercato delle frequenze, rivendendole a privati. A denunciarlo è Salvatore Giordano, editore dell’emittente palermitana Primaradio, secondo cui nell’ultimo anno Radio Padania avrebbe ripreso ad “occupare” frequenze rimaste libere in Sicilia, le ultime tre trasmettono da San Vito Lo Capo (Trapani), da Erice FM 99.5 (Trapani) e da Romitello-Borgetto Fm 102.3 (Palermo). Frequenze che saranno vendute o cedute a emittenti nazionali o locali che possono permettersi simili operazioni. “Grazie a un emendamento alla legge finanziaria del 2001 (Governo Berlusconi) presentato dal deputato leghista Davide Caparini – spiega Giordano -, Radio Padania ha acquisito gratuitamente in questi anni oltre 250 frequenze in tutta Italia, sud e isole comprese, e ne ha rivendute tantissime ricavandoci dei soldi. Dopo troppi anni finalmente il dipartimento comunicazioni del Ministero dello sviluppo economico, grazie a un recentissimo parere dell’Avvocatura dello Stato, dà a tutti gli ispettorati regionali la facoltà di spegnere questi impianti e mi auguro che di fronte ai sacrifici quotidiani di tante radio private lo facciano senza perdere altro tempo. Se una radio commerciale vuole ampliare la copertura lo può fare solo acquistando a caro prezzo un ramo d’azienda, ovvero una frequenza FM di un’altra radio”. Secondo Giordano, Caparini, attuale deputato leghista e segretario di presidenza della Camera, nonché fondatore dell’emittente padana, con il suo emendamento alla legge Finanziaria del 2001 avrebbe consentito “solo ed esclusivamente alle radio comunitarie nazionali, cioè Radio Padania e Radio Maria, di completare le rispettive coperture in deroga alla legislazione vigente in materia radiotelevisiva che impedisce a tutti gli altri l’occupazione di nuove frequenze o canali”. “Radio Padania – continua il proprietario di Primaradio – ha potuto così occupare in giro per l’Italia tutte quelle frequenze rimaste libere che sono divenute poi di sua proprietà, incrementando il patrimonio dell’emittente di una cifra variabile tra un minimo di 15 e un massimo di 25 milioni di euro” (ANSA, 17 giugno 2014 via Roberto Scaglione, June 18, shortwave yg via DXLD) Same story in bclnews.it yg had garble all over the place, why? And now for the Google translation attempt: (gh) Radio Padania Libera and Employment wild spectrum FM Radio Padania would dominate the market in recent years the frequency and resold to private. A complaint is Salvatore Giordano, publisher of the issuer Primaradio Palermo, according to which in the last year Radio Padania would resume to "occupy" frequencies remained free in Sicily, the last three transmit from San Vito Lo Capo (Trapani), Erice FM 99.5 (Trapani) and Romitello Borgetto-Fm 102.3 (Palermo). Frequencies that will be sold or given to local or national broadcasters who can afford such operations. "Thanks to an amendment to the Finance Act 2001 (the Berlusconi government) presented by the League's deputy David Caparini - says Jordan - Radio Padania has acquired free of charge in recent years more than 250 frequencies throughout Italy, including the islands and south, and has sold many ricavandoci money. After too many years, finally the communications department of the Ministry of Economic Development, thanks to a recent opinion of the State Attorney, gives all regional inspectorates the right to turn off these plants and I hope that in the face of daily sacrifices of so many private radio stations in the do not waste any more time. If a business wants to expand radio coverage can do so only by purchasing a high price for a business or an FM frequency to another radio." According to Jordan, Caparini, and current League's deputy secretary of the Bureau of the Chamber, as well as founder of the issuer valley, with its amendment to the Finance Bill 2001 would have allowed "only and exclusively to the national community radio stations, namely Radio Radio Padania and Mary, complete their shells at variance with the existing legislation on broadcasting which prevents all other employment for new frequencies or channels." "Radio Padania - still the owner of Primaradio - was able to occupy around Italy remained free all those frequencies which then became his property, increasing the assets of the issuer of an amount ranging from a minimum of 15 and a maximum of 25 million Euros." (Reuters, June 17, 2014) Note that credit to ANSA ``translates`` to Reuters! Any justification for that, and if not, how can we trust Google translate not to go totally haywire in other instances? (Glenn Hauser, DXLD) ** KOREA NORTH. KOREA D.P.R., 15141 to 15174 kHz overtime, terrible SCRATCHY digital noise jamming of Kujang site, similar heard during silent slot on 15180 kHz before 1000 UT. Aimed on 15160 kHz against KBS Kimjae Korean at 09-10 UT. S=9+10dB (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 14, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** KOREA NORTH [and non]. UZBEKISTAN/N KOREA/UAE, 15630, Korean language program, tentatively Radio Free Chosun from Tashkent UZB at 1329 UT on June 13. Signal strength observed at Nara-JPN remote SDR unit at S=9+15dB or -60dBm. Jammed by North Korean govt white noise scratchy jamming signal, broadband covered 15613 to 15648 kHz wide. 15640 And hit also heavily DWL Dari to Afghanistan target next channel spacing, DWL coming from UAE relay site Al Dhabbaya at 1330 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) ** KOREA SOUTH. 6135, June 14 at 1242, JBA carrier, no doubt new clandestine V. of Freedom, now that frequency is clear, no more than 10 kW (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hi Glenn, June 14 (Saturday) with another day of just pulsating noise jamming (a la Shiokaze), against the clandestine - Voice of Freedom. Interesting to find “Hao Hao English” today from 1350-1400, with a repeat English and Chinese language lesson from earlier last week; "Can I take a quick nap?". Weekend schedule? On the weekend only filler (repeat) shows? Had an UNID underneath VOF after 1335 onward, playing some music. Possibly Yemen or Madagascar? Far too weak to tell which. Needs a lot more monitoring to try to tell which it is underneath VOF. BTW – At 1225 noted VOF with QRM from Firedrake on 6140; FD mixing badly with Radio Australia (Singapore); FD off at 1227 (Ron Howard, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Voice of Freedom in Korean to NoKorea 1901 June 10 on 6135 Hwaseong https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICyVYleeu0E&feature=youtu.be (Ivo Ivanov, June 12, dxldyg via DXLD) Observed schedule of VOF (6135) for “Hao Hao English” program: Monday-Friday with English/Chinese language lesson from 1300 to 1310 UT. Saturday-Sunday from 1350 to 1400 UT. June 15 heard 1350-1400 with repeat of last Friday's show ("How are you feeling?", etc.). Again heard UNID after 1330; again too weak to tell anything about it. (Ron Howard, CA, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) So if it`s really for North Korea, why are they doing anything in Chinese? (gh, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) Voice of Freedom - North Korea Tech Article (via Ian Baxter-AUS, SW txsite June 14 via BC-DX June 19 via DXLD) Viz.: SOUTH KOREA STEPS UP PROPAGANDA RADIO BROADCASTS South Korea has stepped up propaganda radio broadcasts targeted at North Korea and attracted a fast response from the country. Voice of Freedom, one of three government-run radio stations that broadcasts to the north, launched a tentative shortwave service at the beginning of May, but the signal is already being aggressively blocked by the North Korean authorities. The station is operated by South Korea’s Ministry of Defense and has been broadcasting towards North Korea for years. Programming was halted in 2004 after an inter-Korean friendship accord but was resumed in 2010, shortly after the South Korean Cheonan corvette was sunk with the loss of 46 lives. South Korea accused the North of torpedoing the ship. The FM transmissions used by the radio station probably only reach a few kilometers into North Korea but shortwave is capable of traveling much further. With a clear channel, the signal can easily cover the entire country. In fact, radio monitors in the U.S., Japan and other countries have been hearing the signal. But since May 22, the signal has often been covered in noise — jamming by powerful transmitters in North Korea intended to make the station impossible to hear. North Korea routinely jams shortwave broadcasts aimed at the country from overseas, particularly those of Voice of America, Radio Free Asia and two stations operated by South Korea’s National Intelligence Service. In the last couple of days, the jamming has been absent — something that occasionally happens, presumably due to electricity or technical problems. Here’s what Voice of Freedom sounded like on June 10, as recorded by Ron Howard in California. The program is “How How English” (or possibly Ha(o Ha(o English), an English-language instruction show. Increase in Power Voice of Freedom is about to get a little more powerful, according to Jamie LaBadia, the engineer building the transmitters. “I have one transmitter on at 5 Kilowatts,” he wrote in a message to Glenn Hauser, who publishes the popular “DXLD” shortwave radio newsletter. “I’m awaiting the arrival of some capacitors to upgrade the De-Coupling in both transmitters, then I will finish up the protection circuits so I can increase power to 10 Kilowatts.” But such an increase probably won’t be enough to be heard over the North Korean jamming. “I know we are getting our “clock cleaned” by jammers from the north,” he wrote. “It started out with just a “dash”, C.W. [morse code] jammer. However, now it is a tactical Multi-Pulse jammer. Well, it must mean we are being heard in the target area. I don’t imagine they would waste a powerful resource like that on an ineffectual signal.” Other Stations On Air The increase in broadcasts comes six months after another station, MND Radio, left the airwaves. It was programmed by South Korea’s Ministry of National Defense and ran a few hours of programming a day via shortwave since 2011. Two other radio stations, Voice of the People and Echo of Hope, have been broadcasting anti-DPRK programming via shortwave for years and are believed to be run by South Korea’s National Intelligence Service. An investigation by North Korea Tech in 2013 pinpointed the site of the Voice of the People broadcasts to a fortified field north of Seoul. The location of the Voice of Freedom transmitter hasn’t been disclosed or determined. La Badia, the engineer working on the project, said he’d signed an agreement to keep its location a secret. Some have linked the transmissions to a site near Hwasong, south of Seoul, that is also said to be home to the Echo of Hope broadcasts, but no evidence has been presented to back up those claims. A transmitter site in Hawsong, south of Seoul, that is said to be home to a South Korean intelligence service radio station (Google/NorthKoreaTech)[caption] A transmitter site in Hawsong, south of Seoul, that is said to be home to a South Korean intelligence service radio station. The transmission towers can be seen in fields to the left of the river. (Google/NorthKoreaTech [caption]) (North Korea Tech via DXLD) Ian had this station location traced some in 2009 year - at least; see also Nagoya Aoki frequency list. As KBS station reported also by Ludo Maes in Oct 1997. and MW and SW reported by Jari Perkioemaeki-FIN OH6BG in Dec 2007 too. KOR_Suwon Hwaseong Jeongnammyeon MW 4mast directional antenna at 37 09 04.27 N 126 59 39.15 E and 2 x 2 easy dipoles at 37 09 39.55 N 126 59 39.99 E and 37 09 27.39 N 126 59 37.89 E and 2 x 3 masts like corner reflector steep fountain like antennas 37 09 35.48 N 126 59 38.25 E 37 09 31.84 N 126 59 35.98 E zoom in (Wolfgang Büschel, June 14, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews via DXLD) ** KUWAIT. 15540, Radio Kuwait; 1928-1939+, 11-June; "Kuwaiti Heritage" on cooking with spices such as saffron & zatar to 1932 into English pop tunes. SIO=454 (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, All logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** KYRGYZSTAN. Radio Maranatha, Shortwave Relay Sce in Pashto or Dari to WeAs 1739 June 10 on 5130 Bishkek https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yjJqljlfwIc&feature=youtu.be (Ivo Ivanov, June 12, dxldyg via DXLD) ** MADAGASCAR. Radio Madagasikara 6135 kHz --- Bit unexpected hearing this yesterday morning at 2130. Did the weekend NSW DXpedition catch it, too?? Blog post and audio clips at: http://medxr.blogspot.com.au/2014/06/radio-madagasikara-6135-khz-surprise.html Cheers all, (Rob VK3BVW, June 15, ARDXC mailing list via DXLD) viz.: Some lovely reception of Radio Madagasikara on this not-often-heard frequency of 6135 kHz here at Mount Evelyn. Here's the logbook entry and some audio clips of the transmission: 6135, R. Madagasikara - Ambohidrano. Short "Radio Madagasikara" ID between a delightful music program of East Afro pop songs at 2135. Co- channel QRM from CRI's Croatian service between 2110 and 2130, then Madagasikara became the dominant station on the frequency. A very solid signal, with a late weekend schedule on June 14. Running parallel with the usual 5010.29 kHz also heard, but the 60mb outlet was weaker by that time of the morning. 6135 kHz appears to be a far more stable frequency, too. AUDIO CLIP #1 AUDIO CLIP #2 AUDIO CLIP #3 [none of these are hotlinx here --- gh] 73 and good DX to you all. (Rob Wagner VK3BVW, blog via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) No, mate; chased Brazilians, etc., and Brother Scare chased us!!!! The pest!!! even on 5015 !!!! (anon., but sounds like Johno Wright, ARDXC via DXLD) 6135.00, R Madagasikara, 1859, June 15, football commentary in presumed Malagasy. Stable on exact nominal freq which seemed clear at first but possible SAH detected from Voice of Freedom which Thomas Nilsson (tnx!) reports hearing slightly later on 6135.014. Quite a decent signal compared to former 5010. Also tentative MDG logs of carrier only on June 12, 13, 14, 15 around 0220 (Martien Groot, Schoorl, Netherlands, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Former 5010? I noticed a carrier drifting around at 5010.6-5010.7, still there now at 2040. Heard also yesterday around 5010.2 till about 2100. Thanks for the tip, usually we have very very limited possibilities to hear MDG 6135 in Europe. 73 (Thorsten Hallmann, Münster, Germany, http://www.muenster.org/uwz/ms-alt/africalist dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 6135.00, R Madagasikara, June 16, 0158, carrier on already, next to R Sta. Cruz 6134.83, but in the clear 0215:03 when RSC carrier finally off. Faded up nicely, 0226 sung NA?, 0229 Malagasy male & female "kilohertz" announcement, 0231 Booker T. & MG's "The time is tight", Carl Douglas "Kung fu fighting" but signal strength definitely decreasing by now until covered by co/channel VOA carrier 0258. TADIL- A bonker occasionally reported here by Glenn Hauser was only just about audible so did not really spoil the fun. Very pleased to hear MDG so clearly after several mornings of only being able to make out their carrier, cf my previous report (Martien Groot, Schoorl, Netherlands, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) INDIA/MADAGASCAR, 5010.005, AIR Thiruvananthapuram in Hindi, at 1715 UT June 18, and annoying 700 Hertz interference tone of adjacent 5010.712 to .728 kHz, MDG Radio Madagasikara from Antananarivo, wandering frequency around (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** MADAGASCAR. QSL: MGLOB Volonondry, 13765, QSL-card in 45 days for reception report to monitoring@mglob.mg (Kurt Enders, Bickenbach, Germany, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** MALAYSIA. (SARAWAK [non]), 9835, Sarawak FM, 1014 studio W DJ announcer in BM and into romantic SE Asian song. W again at 1024 with ID, talk, and another ID at 1025 before going back to romantic music. Apparent canned promo/ID by M over music at 1031, then immediately back to music. Has been off for a long time due to fault in a transmitter transformer and in the antenna per e-mail Ron Howard got from the station. (29 May) 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core- dx via DXLD) 11665, Wai FM (tentative); 1228-1310+, 7-June; W in unknown language with unknown language pop tunes and took brief phone call. Pre-ToH tentative ID sounded like "Wah" FM, not "Wye". 1300 pips (no tone) into news by M in unknown language with two brief promos (ads?); 1310 back to W in unknown language and tunes. Typical programming as logged in the past. SIO=2+52+ (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, All logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) 5964.701, RTM Klassik Kajang MLA transmission, logged at 1936 UT June 7 in Colombo Sri Lanka remote post. S=9+5dB or -74dBm. Channel hit heavily by TRT Emirler transmission on 5960 kHz even. [and non] 7295, Bad mixture of 500 kW unit CRI Kashgar English to NE and NoAF, Sahel, WeAF at 19-21 UT, and odd 7295.028 kHz RTM Traxx FM program from Kajang-MLA noted at 1955 UT. Also 7295.028 kHz odd on June 8 at 1105 UT, S=9+10dB or -64dBm dowunder on remote unit in Australia (wb, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 7 / 8, dxldyg via DXLD) Didn't check that service daily in the past, but noted ODD FREQUENCY 7295.028 kHz on June 8th at 1955 UT. At present 1625 UT heard RTM ID and nice smooth female singer also on 5964.700 kHz. http://www.radiomalaysia.net/zender/96/Klasik-Nasional.html RTM shortwave 6050 kHz acc Aoki only 02-15 UT on air. 73 wolfy (Wolfgang Büschel, ibid.) Both 9835 and 11665 heard at 1558 UT June 12 with S=9+15 or -59dBm on remote unit in downunder Queensland, pop music, followed by like National Hymn on exact 1600 UT. 11665 kHz on http://www.rtmsarawak.gov.my/ listen to stream: http://www.rtmsarawak.gov.my/sadafm.html scheduled 21-16 UT, ended operation on shortwave after NatHymn at 1602 shortwave 9835 kHz \\ listen to stream at 1610 UT, on http://www.rtmsarawak.gov.my/srwkfm.html But 7295 kHz Traxx FM is OFF air today. Empty channel. 73 wb (Wolfgang Büschel, June 12, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) http://traxxfm.rtm.gov.my/traxxfm/index.php http://cdn.stream.my/player/playback.php?channel=rtm-ch013&quality=auto Segmented transport stream (each fragment ~ 270 kb), TS-file with H264 in still image and audio to aac, no chance for Winamp or VLC. But on the Internet is at least the audio.., with the (Adobe)-web-player (roger, Germany, June 12, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) 11665, Wai FM at 1323 in Bahasa Malay with Malay pop tunes, taped ID and promo - Good June 14 (Harold Sellers, Vernon, British Columbia, Listening in my car, by the lake, with the Eton E1 and Sony AN1 active antenna, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) June 16 finally heard Traxx FM via RTM (7295) back on the air again with good reception at 1332. Heard Kevin's show "Evening Buzz. Next week he will be in Sarawak covering the Rainforest World Music Festival for Traxx FM. Rainforest World Music Festival – The Official Site http://rwmf.net/ (Ron Howard, CA, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9835, Sarawak FM via Kajang, 1346-1430, June 17. Live coverage of the annual Qur'an International Level recitation competition (Tilawah Al- Qur’an) held in Kuala Lumpur; Qur’an recitations from 10 to 15 minutes long; competition ends on June 21 (Saturday). During the week check for possible // coverage on other RTM stations (6050, Asyik FM; 5965.7, Radio Klasik; or perhaps Wai FM, 11665). http://www.iqna.ir/en/News/1418467 (Ron Howard, Asilomar State Beach, CA, E1 & CR-1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) On June 18 on air: 5965.701, 6049.987, 7295.026 (6050 kHz Asyik FM (noted only two weak stations on 6049.987 RTM and .999 kHz probably as HCJB Quito EQA at 1006 UT) 9834.9985, 11665.0 kHz at 0825 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) On June 18 on air: 5965.701, 6049.987{10 UT}, 7295.026, 9834.9985, 11665.0 kHz at 0825 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 19 via DXLD) ** MEXICO. 650, June 17 at 1123, Mexican music alone on very poor signal, fadeout by 1129, presumed the usual XETNT Los Mochis, Sinaloa. I miss most sunrise skip in the summer, not being awake early enough; today`s SR in Enid was at it earliest, 1113 UT. No other Mexicans making it on low band, except: 880, June 17 at 1124, romantic music, with KRVN nulled, maybe XEPNK also Los Mochis, not usually heard. 1570, June 17 at 1131, XERF, ``La Poderosa`` is still propagating well from Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila, atop the QRM, but plugging its availability on FM, internet (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MEXICO. (960), June 17 at 0500 I am listening to the XEK Nuevo Laredo webcast instead of in a KGWA Fox-hole. Corto version of NA plays, IDs mentioning inauguration on May 17, 1937, so station is now serving the fourth generation of listeners, back to traditional Mexican music, no XEW chimes this time, and no ``Let It Be``, which remains a mystery from some other 960 outlet (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MEXICO. Not much Es around here June 12 after the big opening yesterday; recuperating and giving me time to compile the report. Finally, UT June 13 at 0017, some video appears on 2 while I`m aimed northeast, where 6m maps show all the axion is, but I suspect it`s Mexican and rotating south by 0025 that`s evident as the Simpsons are in Spanish. Back to nothing, but rechecking after my SW DX session, at 0209 there is again something on 2 from the south, developing nowhere. 0445 again some weak CCI on 2. Bits of sporadic E TVDX as MUF pokes above 55 MHz now and then, June 13; nothing earlier circa 1430 UT but: 1633 on 2, tune-in finds fútbol from Azteca 7 per bug in UR; Mundial? 6m Es map shows hardly any activity and none of it from the south 1645 on 2, now a studio talk show with 3 women and one man 1707 on 2, silly ballgame again, most likely XHTAU Tampico; lunch 1758 on 2, Azteca-7 SBG in again, but mostly nothing Sporadic E TV DX, June 16: according to tropo map, I am looking for some DTV from the NW, but not even Dodge City on 6; 6m Es map also shows northwest as the direxion for opening, and then checking channel 2 I see signs of Es at 1600 UT, but it`s from the southwest! As often, G7IZU fails to show any such activity, apparently due to lack of interest by Mexican hams for 6 meter DXing. 1600 on 2, CCI peaking SSW, 1602 cooking show, with same-offset CCI from animation; in the QRM I make out TU CANAL in upper right of one of them, i.e. XEPM-TV, 100 kW, Juárez, Chihuahua, more to the SW. 1604 on 2 can make out TU CANAL bug again along with 10:04 AM clock = MDT. 1603 on 2, again in the CCI mess, I can see an ID super in small letters upper right, mentioning XH--- HERMOSILLO, so that`s a definite on XHHMA-TV, 30 kW with Televisa-9 net, which I have assumed on that basis several times before. These two stations are almost exactly the same bearing from here, with Hermosillo much further. Exact calculations with W9WI.com site coördinates using http://www.convertalot.com/great_circle_distance_calculator.html Hermosillo: 240 degrees at 1468 km Ciudad Juárez: 239 degrees at 949 km 1603 on 4, now MUF up to here, string of ads including Colgate (three syllables in Spanish!), OXO, Excedrin; 1606 adstring is still going; 1607 promo for Azteca 13, then program Kids TV(?). 1620 CORTE INFORMATIVOS / AZTECA NOTICIAS = brief headlines, peaking VG, promo Mundial on sibling net Azteca-7; huge adstring resumes: 1627 finally back to program which is Venga Alegría as in LL program bug. Based on Hermosillo on 2, assume this 4 is also there: XHHSS-TV, 100 kW on A-13 net. MUF drops down to 2 and/or Es patch is moving. 1607 on 6, MUF now up to here briefly with soccer; 1614 video CCI from talk show; did not reach audio for either. There is also a 6 in Hermosillo, XEWH-TV, 11.6 kW, with Telemax, i.e. not // any of the national networks. And if the soccer is really Mundial, does it have to be Azteca-7 network? The only one in that area is XHLSI-TV, 50 kW in Mazatlán, Sinaloa. 1615 on 5, brief video from algo, maybe soccer. 1616 on 90.7, Mexican music in briefly, only long enough for partial RDS display as ``90.70 SI TE``. Unusual to add the final zero. I was tuning up from 87.75 and this is the first one I found. XHHLL, La Kaliente, Hermosillo, looks likely. Dreamhost says the WTFDA FM Database is down, and still down a few hours later, where there might be RDS info to identify this; otherwise, any suggestions? No other FM DX heard. 1630 on 2, Venga Alegría show and Azteca 13 bug in UR. PTA means Chihuahua city or Nogales, Sonora most likely. Show title mentioned verbally again at 1653. 1632 on 4, soccer just as a GOOOOOOOAAAAAAALLLLL is scored in the Germany/Portugal game at Salvador da Baía. Also Azteca-7 bug in UR. W9WI.com shows only two 7s-on-4, neither from the previous area viewed, but CY = Colima is closer to it: Manzanillo, CY XHNCI-TV 19,860 + H 19-05-14N 104-18-00W XLIC Matias De Romero, OX XHPSO-TV 40,000 Z H 16-52-48N 095-02-02W XLIC 1645 on 2, MUF down to here with CCI only; 1647 briefly dominating is soccer, but not necessarily Azteca-7 net. At 1656 during game, looks like Televisa-2 star bug in UR; 1658 promo for TELEVISA DEPORTES, so maybe just clips, not play-by-play. Does only Azteca 7 have rights to broadcast full Mundial games in México? {Answer: ``MEXICO: All national team games and one or two live games a day are carried over the air by Televisa and Televisión Azteca [which channels not specified]. Televisa also offers its 30 live matches online. Complete coverage is carried only on the Sky satellite service`` (How the world watches the World Cup, AP via Enid Eagle June 17 via DXLD)} 1656 on 3 briefly algo, maybe novela. TV DX out by 1703, nothing more past 2030 UT. Fitful sporadic E opening occasionally poking into loband VHF TV channels, June 17, UT: 1555 on 2, fade-in Televisa 4 net with f bug in LR, from south; 1600 a bit of English, maybe clip within this rather than Canada oppositeward 1605 on 3 and 4, weak video from algo 1617 on 2, still weak CCI including f-4 1839 on 2, CCI more from the southwest with fútbol; not checked much more after or before this hour, until UT June 18: 0312 on 2, fútbol, tentatively Azteca 7 in UR, weak in & out; 6m maps show Es from the northwest only 0327 on 2, TELEACTIVA bug in UR, i.e. XEFB-TV Monterrey NL, interviewing someone, maybe FB fan 0349 on 2, game fades in, glimpse of UR bug may be Pacífico oval 0429 on 2, still lite CCI; also in Spanish on 3 and 4 0435 on 4, CCI is heavier, but soon back down to only: 0443 on 2, fútbol, bug in LL may be generic Televisa 0447 on 2, fútbol, now the bug in LL is a triangle, what?? 0449 on 2, two guys conversing, with Azteca-13 bug not in UR corner, but to the left of there 0505 on 2, still some signal peaking southwest when I quit (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MONGOLIA. 12084.876, Proper S=9+20dB or -60dBm signal logged on remote Nara, Japan, SDR unit. English program of Voice of Mongolia from Ulan Bataar, talks on Labour matter examples in poor Mongolia country. Logged at 0914 UT on June 14 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 14, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** MYANMAR. 9730.0, Myanmar R, Rangoon Yegu, light pop music program, S=6 -92dBm signal downunder in Australia, 0911 UT June 18. 7200.083, Myanmar Radio, Rangoon Yegu, S=5 -100dBm poor signal fade-in at QL-AUS at 0956 UT. 7344.992, ? Pyin Oo Lwin, Pyin U Lwin, Thazin Radio, in Kachin (according to Nagoya Aoki list) weak signal in downunder Australia, at 1018 UT on June 18 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) ** NEWFOUNDLAND. 6159.97, CANADA, CKZN, St. John's, Newfoundland. 0804 June 16, 2014. Coming out of news with, "You're listening to CBC Radio One." Clear, fair (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater FL, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Here on June 20 near solstice, gaisma.com shows SR/SS times in St. John`s : 0503-2102 local = UT -2:30, or 0733-2332 UT. Vancouver BC: 0507-2122 local = UT -7:00, or 1207-0422 UT or in reverse the SS-SR night hours are: St. John`s : 2332-0733 UT Vancouver : 0422-1207 UT The two overlap only between 0422 and 0733; of course 6 MHz propagation will exist somewhat into the daytime on each edge. CBC News being live, and consequently programming between it, is NOT on the UT half-hours from Newfoundland, but same as elsewhere, echoing against Vancouver at real hourtops (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See also CANADA ** NEW ZEALAND [and non]. RNZI scheduled 0651-0758 UT 11725 AM, 9890 DRM, to Tonga, but heard instead 11725 AM and 7330 DRM on remote SDR unit in Australia, 07-08 UT June 18. Usually scheduled here in 41mb at 1551-1750 UT. S=9+5dB -70dBm strength. But 7330 hit terrible noise on adjacent PNG 7324.954 kHz Wantok Radio Light from Port Moresby at 0826 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) ** NIGERIA. 9689.895, Probably Voice of Nigeria from Ikorodu in Hausa towards W Africa noted on poor threshold level at 0845 UT June 14 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 14, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 15120-AM, June 15 at 0607, Voice of Nigeria, good signal with news by YL, but undermodulated, with light squeal. You never know whether this will be on the air and/or propagating. Tonight there are many other signals on 19m at this hour (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 15120 AM I heard yesterday (June 14) from 1732 again after approx. two weeks of silence. Also this afternoon (June 15) with weak modulation and this morning with considerably lower signal strength compared to "normal". Some more VON Logs: Yesterday 15120 DRM was leaving before 1957 and 9689.9 AM Hausa was already there at 1958. Today, DRM was there till 1959 and 9690 (quite close to nominal today it seems!) came up at 2001 and IDd as VON Abuja. [and non?] A strong carrier appeared on 9690 at 1900 and switched on and off a few times till 1905, with only very few seconds of modulation, unknown non-european language. Interesting: This signal was accompanied by obviously a spurious signal on approx 9688.3. 73 (Thorsten Hallmann, Münster, Germany, http://www.muenster.org/uwz/ms-alt/africalist June 15, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) see also ASCENSION [and non] Voice of Nigeria back on air after several days silence: 0500-0700 15120 IKO 250 kW / 007 deg NoAf English 0800-1000 15120 IKO 250 kW / 007 deg NoAf English 1700-1730 9690 IKO 250 kW / 248 deg WCAf Igbo 1730-1800 15120 IKO 250 kW / 007 deg NoAf Arabic. Videos from June 16: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=no_jgq_8K4E&feature=youtu.be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jjo9Wh9pgcY&feature=youtu.be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoNsTUEsUy8&feature=youtu.be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEKqjSpAbuQ&feature=youtu.be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ui5DKWERSF0&feature=youtu.be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMrR9RD0H_U&feature=youtu.be (DX RE MIX NEWS #857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via DXLD) 15120-AM, June 17 at 0550, VON M&W mumbling, and rumbling from LF pitch, but unseems a het from another station, rather self-imposed; unreadable tho fair signal (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Heute morgen VoNIG Ikorodu auf 15119.998 kHz praezise. in AM Modus um 06-10 UT am 18. Juni, einige features gesprochen von Ansagerin in English, auch ein Report über die Buchmesse in Lagos. Beijing stoert heute morgen wenig. On June 19 rather on even 15120 kHz around 0910 UT news in English about Nigerian church, some string instrument jingle. S=9+20dB -54dBm here in Europe, seemingly at 007deg azimuth outlet. There appears to be a transmitter fault here with a loud high-pitched whistle tone accompanying the audio in their 15120 kHz service (Wolfgang Büschel, June 14/18/19, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 19 via DXLD) ** NIGERIA [non]. GERMANY, Transmissions of Hamada Radio International in Hausa are cancelled 0530-0600 9610 NAU 100 kW / 180 deg WeAf Mo-Fr. No signal from June 9 Video from June 16: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xN3urll0vi8&feature=youtu.be Video from May 19: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOk_nIe85yY (DX RE MIX NEWS #857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via DXLD) This goes and comes irregularly; I guess on the verge of paying their bills or not (Glenn Hauser, DXLD) ** NORTH AMERICA. 1710, 22/05/14 21:30:00 8 Radio Insight, 22121 1710 22/05/14 22:00:00 8 Captura de Pirata Radio Boston em AM interferindo na Radio Celestial de Nova York === US e uma estação de TIS legal de NJ, 21122 Nome: (Marcelo Bahl Cidade/Estado: Quatiguá --- Paraná Receptor: FRG-8800 Antena / Complemento: Discone AH8000 de 100-3300 MHz da Icom - e quadripolo Estrela helicoidal com quatro pontas de 53mtrs cada sendo três aterradas em suas extremidades radioescutas yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ! Amazing logs for pirates all the way to southern Brasil; but less QRM than within the MW band. Part of many extensive reports for a MW monitoring contest. Times are local = UT -3. Not explained what the ``8`` means; other logs have other one or two-digit numbers in this position. Nothing about these being via remote receivers (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** NORTH AMERICA. UNIDENTIFIED. 6770.52, "Old Time Radio". 0324 June 15, 2014. Fair with old radio drama. Also at 1056 June 16, 6770.58, also with an old radio serial, clear and fair (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater FL, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** NORTH AMERICA. 6935-USB, June 16 at 0142, pirate music which was not on earlier in the hour: sirens and screaming; finally caught ID at 0159:45, XLR8 in a stage whisper, more music; fairly good signal (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** NORTH AMERICA. Hi Glenn, Thanks for the great YHWH log! [June 10 on 12035] I monitor for this religious pirate quite a bit and had never found it before during the 1300 time period. June 12 checked at 1351 to hear him on 12040-AM. This program was new and one I had not heard before (normally he repeats many of his programs); fair reception and very readable. Thanks again for the tip! (Ron Howard, California, June 12, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) I am a bit frustrated that my work sked interferes with my radio monitoring after 1200 UT most days; and that this station seems to be so unpredictable as to which frequencies that it might pop up on. That said, I will redouble my efforts to log it here at my Arizona QTH and share with all of you what signal strength levels get on them here. If nothing else, I am anxious to hear this interesting new station. 73 from the sticker-patch (- Rick in AZ Barton, ibid.) Rick - here's a link to a running thread I started on HFU - good info on YHWH and links to some recordings - it's a bizarre station - I've been chasing since the fall and have only copied three times. http://www.hfunderground.com/board/index.php/topic,15663.0.html (Rich FPE Ray, Burr Ridge, IL, ibid.) Hi Rick, Just to make it more challenging to find station YHWH, seems he now not only daily changes frequencies, but also is broadcasting at different times now. June 14 found on new 7555-AM kHz, at tune in of 0407 till 0431 sign off. A repeat of an earlier show. Mostly fair, but moderate/heavy amount of summertime QRN/static. Today's four minute audio of a typical segment that I have heard many times before. Station YHWH, 7555 AM kHz, 0425 UT, June 14, 2014.mp3 - File Shared from Box: https://app.box.com/s/4x8a18cq5k0qty77yaux (Ron Howard, CA, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** OKLAHOMA. 6090, June 16 at 1303 very weak mixture of my two locals, 960 KGWA and 1390 KCRC; 2 x 960 = 1920, 3 x 1390 = 4170; 1920 plus 4170 = 6090. External mixing or possibly receiver-produced; never hear this at night with any fundamental signal on 6090 such as Anguilla (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** OKLAHOMA. 90.1, June 15 at 1310 UT, KUCO is broadcasting dead air instead of `Pipedreams` and from 1330 also nothing from `Sing for Joy` either until cutting on at 1341:04. Same thing happened June 14: at 1600 UT teaser for `The Score`, but at 1606 after the news, more dead air and we gave up after 10 minutes, but back to music at 1638 check. What`s going on here? No one minding the store, even by remote control? [Later:] 90.1, KUCO, dead air for long periods I have been hearing: Staff explain that the broadcast PC mutes itself unpredictably, so someone has to rush in to reset it. They are trying to resolve this problem just as frustrating for them as for listeners (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 7324.954, Wantok Radio Light from Port Moresby at 0826 UT June 18 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) With QRDRM from NZ, q.v. ** PERU. QSL: Radio Tarma, 4775, E-QSL + infos in 0 days for reception report to gerenciageneral@grupomonteverde.com (Kurt Enders, Bickenbach, Germany, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** PERU. CHASQUI DX PFA – JUNIO 2014 --- CQ, CQ, CQ…Aquí Pedro F. Arrunátegui para compartir algo con los que disfrutan y aman el DX latinoamericano, todas las horas son UTC, desde la tierra de los incas, les informo mediante este Quipus lo siguiente: NOTA: He podido notar en esta quincena, que algunas radios de Perú no están saliendo a las 1100 UT como era costumbre, en el caso de R. Huanta y Tarma ellos están efectuando su s/on a partir de las 1130 UT. 4747.20 PERÚ; R. Huanta 2000, Ayacucho; 17/06 1135-1150, 44444, px Noticiero Sin Fronteras, tratan sobre los programas de educación técnica, ads en quechua y español, Cooperativa Bella Esmeralda, Agro Banco te da crédito para lo que requieras en el agro, semillas, equipos, etc. ID "Usted sintoniza Sin Frontera por Radio Huanta 2000". 4774.90, PERÚ, R. Tarma, Tarma, Junín; 17/06 1154-1210, 44444, ads Municipalidad Provincial de Tarma, ID "Acercarse a las oficinas de Radio Tarma", px Noticiero Confidencial, ID "Saludos a los amigos que están en sintonía de Radio Tarma". 4789.87 PERÚ, R. Visión, Chiclayo; 12/06 1125-1145, px la Voz de la Salvación de la Iglesia Pentecostal La Cosecha, ID "Junto a la estación de Radio Visión en esta ciudad de Chiclayo", mx religiosa. 4824.48 PERÚ, R. La Voz de la Selva, Iquitos; 12/06 1104-1120, 33333, px LVS noticias, news, ID "Buenos días amigos, estamos en contacto con Radio La Voz de la Selva", ID "Amigos de LVS noticias" 4955.00 PERÚ; R. Cultural Amauta, Ayacucho; 12/06 2335-0002, 44444+, px avisos y comunicados en quechua, ID "Radio Cultural Amauta", ads en español. 4985.50, PERÚ, R. Voz Cristiana, Chilca, Huancayo; 11/06 0005-0025, 44444, mx religiosa, ID "Estás en sintonía de Radio Voz Cristiana", mx religiosa, ID "Gracias a todos los que están escuchando a Radio Voz Cristiana", mx, ID "Promesa de Dios en Radio Voz Cristina" 5459.95 PERÚ, R. Bolívar, Trujillo; 11/06, 0030-0050, 44444, mxf tropical andina, ID "Más potente, más nítida, Bolívar señal ganadora", mx, ID "Más potente Bolívar da la hora". La recepción la he efectuado del 10/06 al 17/06 en compañía de mi sabueso Icom IC R72 acompañado del Mizuho KX-3, una antena de hilo largo de 12 metros y una antena loop. Recuerden que las grabaciones que adjunto, serán mejor escuchadas con los audífonos. Muchos 128´s PFA (Pedro F. Arrunátegui, Lima, Chasqui DX, DX LISTENING DIGEST via dxldyg) ** PERU. 5980, June 13 at 0112, JBA carrier from R. Chaski until cutoff at 0114:01.5* which is 11.5 seconds later than two nights ago. [and non]. 5980+, June 14 at 0105, R. Chaski very poor but enough signal to detect some talk modulation, until cutoff at 0114:07*, which is 5.5 seconds later than yesterday. Compared offset frequency to 5970+ Itatiaia and found that the ZY is now very slightly higher off its nominal than the OA is. 5980.0, June 16 at 0101, R. Chaski has enough signal to audiblize some music, but it`s all talk soon until cutoff at 0114:19* which is 12 seconds later than last check 48 hours ago. Comparing frequency offset to some neighbors with 5 kHz BFO steps on the DX-398: tonight, Chaski closely matches 5950 WRMI, 5935 WWCR, 6000 RHC, while 5970+ Itatiaia is pitched just a bit higher. 5980, June 17 until 0114:25*, R. Chaski carrier cutoff 6 seconds later than yesterday (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 5980, Radio Chaski, Red Intregridad, Fair talks 0052 UT June 19. RX Perseus SDR + Icom IC-7410 antenna vertical + Super Kaz. 73, (Maurits Van Driessche, Belgium, Hard-Core-DX mailing list via DXLD) ** PERU [and non]. 6173.9, June 13 at 0102, JBA carrier in heavy splash from huge 6180 Brasil where they are excited about winning some SBG; anyhow, there is nothing on 6170 or 6165 to bother it from the other side. Off-frequency makes 6173.9 certainly R. Tawantinsuyo, as measured by others, but it will take a lot more than this for me to log any programming, let alone any modulation. Chaski 5980 also JBA tonight, but Bolivia [q.v.] 6135- with a much better signal. Lost it right after 0102, off? But rechecking at 0141 it`s JBA again and remeasured on 6173.9, with 6165 Cuba still off (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** POLAND. Polskie Radio German service to be ceased for ever on July 1, 2014, after 70 years in service. Sehr traurige Meldung auf der Webseite von Polskie Radio: Home Nachrichten Radio Ueber uns Kontakt Archiv Unser Abschied --- 12.06.2014 00:01 Liebe Hoererinnen und Hoerer, am 1. Juli 2014 muss die Deutsche Redaktion des Polnischen Rundfunks nach 70 Jahren ihren Sendebetrieb einstellen. In unserem Namen und im Namen aller Mitarbeiter, die Ihnen und Ihren Landsleuten sieben Jahrzehnte lang unser Land mit grossem Engagement vermittelt haben, danken wir Ihnen fuer Ihr Interesse, die Treue und Sympathie, die Sie uns entgegengebracht haben. Tschuess und alles Gute sagt Ihnen das Team der Deutschen Redaktion des Polnischen Rundfunks. See more at: (via Dietrich Hommel-D, A-DX June 15 via BC-DX June 19 via DXLD) So it started in 1944y before WWII was quite over, or as soon as it was over? Weren`t there any German broadcasts from Poland while under Nazi control? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** ROMANIA. Radio Romania International, heard on 6/15/14 on 15170 at 2050 UTC. I listened to their weekly Sunday DX Mailbag program where they acknowledge reception reports from listeners. During the program they announced a new quiz competition open to listeners. The winner of the quiz will win a 7-day full board stay to Romania. Contest details are mentioned on their broadcasts and also available at their website, http://www.rri.ro (Larry Zamora, Garland, TX, June 17, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Customarily they do make clear that winners have to pay their own way to and from Romania! But [later} this time they include airfare *to* Bucharest (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** RUSSIA. See WORLD OF HOROLOGY ** SAINT VINCENT & GRENADINES. Confirmações recebidas - FM Caros amigos, Seguem os dados das últimas confirmações recebidas: 107.5 - NBC Radio - Belmont - SVT - Recebido PPC assinado. 123 dias. V/S: Ilegível. QTH: PO Box 705, Kingstown, St. Vincent & Grenadines Depois de 20 anos de hobby posso dizer que é uma raridade receber a confirmação de dois países novos em um único dia. Com Dominica [q.v.] e São Vicente & Granadinas, agora fazem parte da minha lista um total de 117 países confirmados. Estou fazendo o possível para terminar o ano com ao menos 120. :-) As imagens das confirmações estarão disponíveis em breve em meu blog. 73 (Ivan Dias Jr. - Sorocaba/SP https://www.youtube.com/regionaldx http://ivandias.wordpress.com http://twitter.com/ivandiasjr June 15, radioescutas yg via DXLD) Trans-equatorial propagation (gh) ** SARAWAK [non]. 15410, June 12 at 1228 interview in presumed Iban, poor but no jamming audible or any QRM; 1229 YL mentions Radio Free Sarawak, 1230 bit of percussive music, off at 1230:20*. Presumably still via RVA Palauig, PHILIPPINES site. Probably employs some of the alternate frequencies earlier from 1100: 15420, 15430, 15460 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) CLANDESTINE, 15430, R. Free Sarawak. Came on with a false start briefly at 1046, then on at 1050 and audio up at 1052 with music. 1100 heard the usual sign on with IDs and website easily copied. Only fair signal though. (17 June) 73 (Dave Valko, Dunlo, PA, USA, hard-core-dx via DXLD) ** SAUDI ARABIA. 13774.966, BSKSA Riyadh in Urdu language logged with endless muslim HQ prayer presenter at 1303 UT on June 13, S=9+10dB or -63dBm (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) 15380, June 15 at 0608, Qur`an on very poor signal, but none at all usually audible. Aoki shows R. Riyadh HQ service at 0545-0857 and 1200-1357 when it`s more likely, both on same 500 kW, 310 degree beam USward. Also shows CNR1 after 0600 on 15380, not a jammer! But unheard now (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SCOTLAND. UK BBC Commonwealth Voices A four-week online radio station, BBC Commonwealth Voices will launch in July to celebrate Glasgow 2014. The station, which lacks the national DAB coverage enjoyed by London 2012, will be produced by BBC Scotland but only stream for six hours a day. Launching on 16 July, BBC Commonwealth Voices will be based at the Forge Shopping Centre in the east end of Glasgow and will offer local people from the area a chance to gain skills in research, broadcast and social media, as they make content which tells the cultural story behind the Games in their home city. Morning presenter Cat Cubie says: "Summer 2014 is going to be amazing in Scotland. I'm so excited to be part of BBC Commonwealth Voices and to be hearing from the people of Glasgow as their city comes to life." The station, which is in collaboration with the Commonwealth Broadcasting Association, will share content with public service broadcasters from around the Commonwealth and will broadcast every day from 10am-4pm. It will also be re-broadcast overnight on BBC Radio Scotland Digital and Medium Wave. Cat Cubie will start the day from 10am - 12noon, with Colin Kelly taking the early afternoon programme from 12noon - 2pm, and BBC Radio Scotland's Ian Hamilton ending the day from 2pm - 4pm. Meanwhile, presenter Hardeep Singh Kohli will be the voice of the station, to be heard on jingles and stings throughout the four-week period. Editor of BBC Commonwealth Voices, Colin Paterson, says; "This is a real opportunity for local people to get their teeth into the broadcasting industry, to develop skills, but more importantly to have fun and really feel part of the cultural activity in Glasgow." The presenters on the three live programmes, will be partnered with someone from the local community looking to gain broadcasting skills. The programmes will have a mix of music and speech, with music having emphasis on Scottish artists, but also on music from around the Commonwealth. BBC Commonwealth Voices is part of the BBC's year-long contribution to the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games. Posted on Monday, June 16th, 2014 at 12:52 pm by Radio Today UK (via Steve Whitt, MWN editor, MWCircle yg via DXLD) ** SEYCHELLES [non]. U.K.(non), Additional frequency of FEBA Radio in various languages: 1330-1345 on 9720 TRM 125 kW / 345 deg SoAs English Mon 1330-1345 on 9720 TRM 125 kW / 345 deg SoAs Telugu Tue/Thu/Fri 1330-1345 on 9720 TRM 125 kW / 345 deg SoAs Tamil Wed 1330-1345 on 9720 TRM 125 kW / 345 deg SoAs Kuvi Sat 1330-1345 on 9720 TRM 125 kW / 345 deg SoAs Kannada Sun 1345-1400 on 9720 TRM 125 kW / 345 deg SoAs Tamil Mon/Wed/Sat 1345-1400 on 9720 TRM 125 kW / 345 deg SoAs Malayalam Tue/Thu/Fri/Sat Note: frequency is not registered in HFCC Database (DX RE MIX NEWS 857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via DXLD) ** SOLOMON ISLANDS. I had no idea till now, but I am mentioned by name and location in a blog on the website for the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation. The blog is written by SIBC General Manager Ashley Wickham. Scroll down for the March 21st, 2014 entry: http://www.sibconline.com.sb/you-me-sibc/ As a side note, they are "licensed" for 10 kW on 9545/5020/1035 kHz but only run 5 kW on all the SW and MW Services. With the new transmitter, I think they are expected to go back up to 10 kW. Not Sure about the MW signal (Paul Walker, PA, June 15, NRC-AM via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) [There is a lot more info about SIBC here, notably this which starts:] Article 7, By Ashley Wickham, April 03 2014, WAVES OF CHANGE The national broadcaster has been undergoing changes some of which listeners will have noticed from about August last year. There have been at least a couple of reasons for the changes which I will try to explain. SIBC is now regarded as a State Owned Enterprise (SOE) and has to comply with the SOE Act of 2007, in addition to the original Broadcasting Act of 1976 which established the Corporation in 1977. For thirty years SIBC operated as a public service broadcaster under the ‘umbrella’ of government. The Broadcasting Act required SIG to provide funds whenever SIBC’s revenue income was insufficient to fund it annual operations. Most SOEs e.g. SIEA, SI Ports Authority, SI Water Authority, the Postal Corporation and CEMA operated under similar legislation and most found themselves in the same financial difficulties as SIBC especially when the economy and governance suffered badly from 1996 to 2003. In 2007 Parliament enacted the SOE Act especially to ensure that public utilities – then called statutory authorities – would be better managed and operated. For the SIBC it meant that SIG sees it as an ‘enterprise’ that i) must operate as a commercial business and ii) is expected to provide citizens and residents with various services that government would be expected to provide as its obligations to the communities. In other words SIG could now contract SIBC to provide services to the national community that Government is obliged to provide. These are called Community Service Obligations (CSOs) and last year SIBC entered into and successfully completed its contract with government. This year Government has offered another contract and SIBC has taken this up. What does it mean for listeners? . . . (via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) Includes change in music policy 5019.876, SIBC Honiara checked at 0700 to 0800 UT on June 18, S=8 or - 78dBm fair signal into remote Brisbane SDR unit. Female voice reading news from 0700 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** SOUTH AFRICA. SABC’S MOTSOENENG RECEIVES WIFE AS A GIFT Added by Sapa Reporter on 13 June 2014. http://www.techcentral.co.za/motsoeneng-receives-wife-as-a-gift/48881/ Traditional Venda chiefs have given SABC acting chief operating officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng a wife, a cow and a calf, the Sowetan reported on Friday. Women were lined up in Thohoyandou, Limpopo, on Wednesday for Motsoeneng to choose one. He and other SABC executives were in the area for a meeting with Mudzi wa Vhurereli ha Vhavenda, a lobby group of traditional leaders and healers. “The girls were around 10 and they paraded for him to choose. He chose the one he liked,” Mudzi executive secretary Humbelani Nemakonde was quoted as saying. “All the girls were there with their parents. Their parents knew what was going to happen and they all agreed.” The woman Motsoeneng chose was pictured in the newspaper bare-breasted next to him. She is a 23-year-old human resources management student. He received the gifts because he was “committed to his job and understands the strategic objectives of the SABC”. In February, public protector Thuli Madonsela released a report which found Motsoeneng’s appointment irregular. His salary increased from R1,5m to R2,4m in one year. She found he misrepresented his qualifications, that he passed matric, to the SABC. — Sapa (via Bill Bingham, RSA, DXLD yg via DXLD) ** SOUTH AFRICA. {tentative} 15420 via Meyerton Sentec broker. Strong carrier only at 1318 UT on June 13, but noted CRASH start suddenly at 1318-1320 UT midst on BBCWS program with French translated interview, just on soccer world cup games comment in Brazil, like forecast report at Dutch Oranje team vv against Spanish soccer national team starts later coming UT tonight (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) ** SOUTH CAROLINA [non]. U S A. 5950, FLORIDA, WYFR [sic], Okeechobee. 1724 June 15, 2014. Good with Overcomer Ministry crap. Wonder how well this gets out to the Caribbean at this time. Noted 5015 at 0757 June 16, excellent and with the exact script and program ID as when tuned to 5950 the day before (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater FL, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 15190, June 18 at 0555, TOM via RAN via WRMI playing some woman ranting against Pres. Obama; maybe stolen from Fox, as Brother Scare uses unattributed clips to bolster his own rants, and private US SW stations have no qualms about pushing anti-American propaganda abroad. VG signal, much better than usual in the nightmiddle (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SPAIN [and non]. 11910, June 12 at 1303 as I tune across, ears perk up during Morse code --- of course, it`s only the standard opening of REE`s `Españoles en la Mar`, IIRC spelling out that title, now starting after only 3 minutes of news instead of 5 or 6. Who cares what`s happening in the world? Surely nothing more than three minutes` worth. 11910 is the Beijing relay; poor signal with REE direct on 17715 somewhat better, while 21610, 21640, 21540, 21515 remain JBA if at all with 13m in the summer doldrums (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENIN DIGEST) ** SPAIN. INDICATIVOS ESPECIALES PROCLAMACIÓN REY FELIPE VI http://aer.org.es/archivos/1336 (Pedro Sedano, June 15, noticiasdx yg via DXLD) Viz.: RESUELVE Autorizar desde el 18 de junio hasta el 18 de septiembre de 2014, a los titulares de autorizaciones de radioaficionado la utilización de distintivos de llamada especiales, manteniendo el sufijo de su distintivo y modificando su prefijo y cifra de distrito, conforme a lo siguiente: Prefijo: Distintivos con prefijo EA, utilizarán el prefijo AM Distintivos con prefijo EB, utilizarán el prefijo AN Distintivos con prefijo EC, utilizarán el prefijo AO Distrito: antepondrán la cifra 0 a su cifra de distrito Ejemplos: Al distintivo EA4URE correspondería AM04URE Al distintivo EB4URE correspondería AN04URE Al distintivo EC4URE correspondería AO04URE (Toni / EA3GYE / AM03GYE, AER blog via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** SRI LANKA. 11905, June 4 at 0114, SLBC carrier is on, poor with flutter, barely making out the start of music at 0114:48, and the 2+1 mistimesignal ending at 0115:18.5. Their offness varies little. 11905, June 16 at 0114:31 tune-in, SLBC carrier is on (Chaski hasn`t quite precessed late enough to present a monitoring conflict); very poor carrier with flutter, music added about 15 seconds later, and 2+1 timesignal ends at 0115:18 as expected. 11905, June 17 at 0114:46 music starts from SLBC, and 2+1 mis- timesignal still ends at 0115:18; very poor with flutter (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** SRI LANKA. 15319.875, Extreme odd frequency signal of AWR Trincomalee relay station, in Khmer language religious Bible reading at 1310 UT on June 13. S=9+10dB or -69dBm signal at remote Nara, Japan SDR post (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) ** SWEDEN. Hi DXers, there soon will be another transmission coming from SAQ on 17.2 kHz: ----------------------------------------------------- Transmissions on Alexanderson Day Sunday 29 June 2014 SAQ will be on air on Sunday 29 June. We try to start the transmitter soon after 0830 UT so there will be a test signal from about 0840 UT and a message will be sent at 0900 UT. A similar procedure will start at 1130 UT and the message will be repeated at 1200 UT. The frequency is 17.2 kHz CW. ----------------------------------------------------- source: http://alexander.n.se/in-english/saq-transmission/ 73 (via Harald Kuhl, June 14, BDXC-UK yg via DXLD) ** SWEDEN [non]. U.K.(non), BABCOCK music, before start of IBRA Radio in Tigrinya: 1555-1600 11610 MEY 100 kW / 015 deg EaAf. Video on June 13: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1liqhnxi9yg&feature=youtu.be New additional transmission of IBRA Radio effective from June 1 1700-1730 11610 MEY 100 kW / 015 deg EaAf Tigrinya. Video June 13: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9rzhbJzpQ8&feature=youtu.be IBRA Radio Swahili 1715-1730 not active at present, planned for July 1 1715-1730 11785 DHA 250 kW / 220 deg CeAf Swahili, look video at 1729. 1730-1800 11785 DHA 250 kW / 220 deg CeAf Swahili. Video from June 13: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvIv1jwHXxk&feature=youtu.be (DX RE MIX NEWS #857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via DXLD) ** TAIWAN. 11914.847, In order to check Brazilian Rádio Gaúcha Porto Alegre RS on remote SDR unit in Nara-JPN and Brisbane-AUS, I heard instead RTI Indonesian via Tainan center at S=9 level. Aoki lists wrongly only 10-11 UT slot, but Indonesian female reader noted already at 0925 UT June 14, so WRTH 2014 spring PDF supplement show real 09-11 UT slot. Hit a little bit co-channel of even frequency 11915.0 of CNR2 Business R from Baoji, China (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 14, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** TAIWAN. From Sunday June 8 Radio France Internationale make a time and frequency changes for the Chinese broadcasts on shortwave as follows: 1100-1300 on 9955 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs, new transmission 2200-2300 on 7310 TSH 300 kW / 325 deg to EaAs, no change 2200-2300 on 9660 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs, additional frequency Cancelled broadcasts: 0930-1030 on 7325 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs 0930-1030 on 11875 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs 2300-2400 on 9955 PAO 250 kW / 352 deg to EaAs (DX RE MIX NEWS #857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via DXLD) [and non]. As I advised Jeff White today June 16: ``Jeff, This morning at 1238 check, CCI from France relay still on 9955, but now the frequency has been adjusted to within a few Hz of WRMI, rather than an audible het. NOT GOOD ENOUGH! Looking thru Aoki list, there is NO need for them to be on 9955, with all these unused frequencies nearby in the 11-13 UT period: 9940, 9945, 9950, 9965, 9970. Cross checking HFCC, lacking all the Taiwan usage, agrees except has T8WH on 9950 (but probably not active). Perhaps you can get with the RFI frequency manager if not Taiwan`s`` (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** TAIWAN. 9734.942, UNID carrier on S=8 -80dBm strength heard already at 0930 UT, seemingly from Tainan RTI site. Scheduled CBSD program in Cantonese from 10 UT. ** TAIWAN. UNIDENTIFIED. 9540.038, Chinese station, probably some SOH TWN program? 09-10 UT (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) ** TIBET [non]. TAJIKISTAN/CHINA, 15542 and 15588 kHz, both Voice of Tibet programming in Tibetan at 1326 UT on June 13, both hit heavily by China mainland govt jamming by CNR spoken jammer - not Firedrakce music - on adjacents like even frequencies 15540 and 15590 kHz channels, S=9+10dB or -61dBm (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) ** TURKEY. Received in the p-mail June 12 another letter from TRT, sealed only with a cupric? mini-staple. It contains another gorgeous pouch, the third one I have received from them and they are all different. This one is mostly red with intricate golden filigree which the scans do not do justice to: http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTpouch5.jpg http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTpouch6.jpg Zippered, could be used as coin purse, but never to be marred here. The four previous images can be found at http://www.worldofradio.com/QSL.html to which all these are being added. Plus a square coaster with rounded corners showing Topkapi Palace from the outside, different from previous ones, but with the same 3-D-ish overlay diffraxion grid: http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTTop.jpg I have won another Question of the Month contest! Last entered a few months ago. Do they keep track of each winner`s previous prizes? Also a card with TRT SW schedule on one side, satellite sked on the other. Nothing about programming. The envelope itself is a keeper, really a cover with a real postage stamp on it honoring TRT on its fiftieth anniversary (is that all??): http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTcover.jpg Stamp says Bir Asra Dogru (minus the diacritics) which Google immediately translates as ``toward a century``, but only halfway. Closeup of the stamp and postmark, 02.06.2014 which means it took only a dekaday to arrive (background not really bluish as this came out): http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTstamp.jpg While I`m at it, also adding linx from the QSL page to older items: Türkçe Vizion view of a collosseum event: http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTcal1.jpg 2013 calendar on other side of above: http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTcal2.jpg Cappadocia coaster from 2012, with faces in the rocks?: http://www.w4uvh.net/TRTCap.jpg (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) [and non]. 13635, June 15 at 0611, Turkish music from TRT; fair signal, but too much ACI from 13630 Australia. Turkey making it now tnx to solsticial conditions, 500 kW, 310 degrees USward. 9770 & 9870, June 16 at 0112, both Spanish frequencies from Voice of Turkey are missing: nothing on 9770, weak signal on 9870, probably India. Yet neighbors on 30m are propagating well: Romania, Egypt. Still nothing at several more chex, until at 0151, now they are both on as the Spanish hour is almost over! Both good with music, 0154 sign-off in non-stilted Spanish as La Voz de Turquía, 0155 ``volveremos mañana a la misma hora en la misma frecuencia``, brief IS to 0156*. Would that be at 0151 or 0100? Power failures at Emirler? Operators fall asleep? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** UKRAINE. VIDEO: Radio Tower Damaged in Ukraine --- Seguimos padeciendo los desmanes. Los que se las prometieron muy felices desmontando la OC están viendo que, la alternativa con emisoras locales, muchas veces son aventuras mucho más costosas... ¡Pero la estulticia no tiene límites y los engreídos europeos piensan que todo el mundo está hecho de la misma pasta y, por consiguiente, con la misma idiocia! CORDIALES SALUDOS / GOOD LUCK / JUAN FRANCO CRESPO * STAMP JOURNALIST (AIPET), SÀLVIA 8 (MAS CLARIANA), E-43800 VALLS-TARRAGONA (ESPAÑA-SPAIN-ESPAGNE-SPANIEN), June 13, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Viz.: El Jueves 12 de junio de 2014 16:04, FEBC escribió: A RADIO TOWER FEBC USES GOES OFFLINE AS FIGHTING IN UKRAINE INTENSIFIES http://www.febc.org/febc-radio-tower-goes-offline-fighting-ukraine-intensifies Explosions have rocked the hillside by our Eastern Ukrainian radio tower, suspending all radio transmissions due to damage sustained during increased fighting between pro-Russian separatists and the Ukrainian central government. The tower is located in the twin cities of Slavyansk and Kramatorsk, which have been especially hard-hit in recent weeks. Hundreds have died and thousands have been evacuated from the area. Learn more about the on-going situation in Ukraine by watching this video. The tower is located in the twin cities of Slavyansk and Kramatorsk, a region especially hard-hit in recent weeks. Despite the election of a new president, fighting continues. Hundreds of people have died and thousands evacuated. During this time of crisis, our workers in Eastern Ukraine helped evacuate families who adopted children from the area. A church we partner with is now occupied by rebels, which has become a battleground of death and destruction. After several tense talks with the rebels, our director in Slavyansk is safe, but tensions remain high. FEBC has been actively broadcasting in Ukraine for the past two decades through local stations. In 2012, our first FM station was opened in Slavyansk and Kramatorsk, drawing many to the Lord. While this station is currently offline due to sustained damage, FEBC continues to broadcast in other parts of Ukraine, bringing the Good News to millions in a country trying to recover from 70 years of communism and 20 years of corruption and moral disarray. Ukraine is at a critical crossroads: politically, economically, and spiritually. It’s more important than ever that we are on the ground, proclaiming Jesus as Lord and Savior. Far East Broadcasting Company P.O. Box 1 La Mirada CA 90637 You received this email because you are subscribed to Marketing Information from Far East Broadcasting Company (via Juan Franco Crespo, Spain, June 12, DXLD) marketing? Jesus? ** U K. 5450, Military One Times Net Information Broadcast, the USB mode, 0106 to 0141 with numerous IDs, but the best one was at 0141, SINFO=2,5,2,4,2, I heard the weather report for Kandahar, no information available (Afghanistan) at 0125 (John Davis, northeast of Columbus OH, the 1000A and the 42’ Windom antenna connected to the 637’ long wire. 6/1/2014, NASWA Flashsheet via DXLD) ** U K [non]. Suspended transmissions of BBC World Service to Thailand 0100-0300 on 11600 SNG 100 kW / 000 deg to SEAs English May 26-June 9 0300-0500 on 7370 NAK 250 kW / non-dir to SEAs English May 26-June 9 0500-1100 on 11700 SNG 250 kW / 000 deg to SEAs English May 26-June 9 (DX RE MIX NEWS #857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) You won't want to watch this silly video on the new BBC global audience estimate: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeC3tyWZMa4&feature=youtu.be (Dr. Hansjoerg Biener, June 18, DXLD) The following website has some good BBC transmitter hall photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/russell_w_b/2512456492/ (James Mills, June 16, shortwavesites yg via DXLD) LIGHTS OUT AT BUSH HOUSE --- Glenn, This feature in the New Yorker's "Photo Booth" feature is worth a look: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/photobooth/2014/06/lights-out-at-the-bbc-bush-house.html#slide_ss_0=1 Also, you might like the short story posted today on the magazine's Web site, "The Night Andropov Died." Regards, (Chuck Albertson, Seattle, June 18, DX LISTENING DIGEST) The slide show unseems behind a paywall (gh) ** U K. Radio Caroline - House of Commons - Early Day Motion 97 http://www.parliament.uk/edm/2014-15/97 RADIO CAROLINE'S 50TH BIRTHDAY * Session: 2014-15 * Date tabled: 12.06.2014 * Primary sponsor: Crouch, Tracey * Sponsors: Jackson, Glenda Dobbin, Jim That this House congratulates Radio Caroline on its 50th birthday this year; calls on Ofcom to exhaust all avenues in making the provisions available to celebrate its birthday by broadcasting on a medium wave frequency which appears unwanted by both the BBC and commercial operators as a broadcast platform; expresses its disappointment that, having pioneered commercial radio in the UK and for the past decade being a fully licensed broadcaster, Radio Caroline, a cornerstone of British radio history, until now has been denied by Ofcom the opportunity to secure a medium wave frequency from which to broadcast; and regrets that as a result its devoted listeners are confined to listening to Radio Caroline via the internet and unable to enjoy its musical offerings in transit. From Wikipedia: An early day motion (EDM), in the Westminster system, is a motion, expressed as a single sentence, tabled by Members of Parliament that formally calls for debate "on an early day". In practice, they are rarely debated in the House and their main purpose is to draw attention to particular subjects of interest. EDMs may not be signed by government ministers, Parliamentary Private Secretaries or the Speaker of the House of Commons. EDMs remain open for signature for the duration of the parliamentary session. EDMs can be tabled on matters ranging from trivial or humorous topics to those of great importance. The censure motion by which the Labour Government of James Callaghan was ejected had its origin in an early day motion (no. 351 of 1978–79), put down on 22 March 1979, by Margaret Thatcher. MPs may ensure the text of an EDM is printed in Hansard by mentioning it by number in questions to the Leader of the House of Commons after the Business Statement (normally on a Thursday when the house is in session). More at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_day_motion (via Mike Terry, dxldyg via DXLD) ** U S A. THE DANGER TO VOICE OF AMERICA IS MAINTAINING THE STATUS QUO The June 8 editorial "An independent voice" discounted the problems plaguing U.S. international broadcasting and understated the need for fundamental reform. While our foes are working 24/7 to demonize the United States, the management of our international broadcasting meets once a month. Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton rightfully called U.S. international broadcasting "practically defunct." That is why the House Foreign Affairs Committee recently passed bipartisan legislation to overhaul it. As the legislation recognizes, we should be aligning our broadcasting efforts with our foreign policy objectives -- the taxpayer-funded Voice of America is not just another news outlet. The editorial overlooked that this is consistent with VOA's current mandate, which requires the organization to "present the views of the United States government" and "be consistent with the broad foreign policy objectives of the United States." Mandating quarterly meetings with the State Department is hardly a slippery slope to propaganda. Indeed, the secretary of state is a member of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, the VOA's parent body. And as far as an "exodus" of journalists from the VOA? Their own union calls the "status quo . . . more dangerous to the existence of the VOA than the enactment of this Bill." Freedom of information around the world is essential for our national security objectives. The real "dangerous step" would be to do nothing. Edward R. Royce, Washington The writer, a Republican, represents California's 39th District in the House, where he chairs the Foreign Affairs Committee (Washington Post via Mike Cooper, June 12, DXLD) VOICE OF AMERICA REQUIRES OUR SUPPORT Regarding the June 8 editorial "An independent voice": The Voice of America (VOA) has a twofold mission: to present the policies of the United States and responsible discussion of and opinion on these policies; and to serve as a consistently reliable, authoritative source of news. These two missions are inextricably joined: VOA audiences must be confident in the truthfulness of what they hear in news broadcasts before they will accept as legitimate what they hear in other programming. The VOA has been a vital instrument of public diplomacy. In many areas of the world, it has often been the only instrument available for the United States to communicate with foreign audiences. That is no less true today than in 1959. Hans N. Tuch, Bethesda --- The writer was deputy director of the Voice of America from 1976 to 1981 (Washington Post via Mike Cooper, June 16, DXLD) ** U S A. WASTE AND ABUSE OF POWER AT THE BROADCASTING BOARD OF GOVERNORS, ACCORDING TO AUDIT — FOREIGN POLICY BLOG REPORTS June 17, 2014 - BBGWatcher - Featured News, Hot Tub Blog, Media Reports --- BBG Watch Commentary Audit of the Broadcasting Board of Governors Administration and Oversight of Acquisition Functions [caption?] We feel sorry for new Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) chairman Jeff Shell and all current BBG members. They have inherited a mess. But they shouldn’t feel sorry for International Broadcasting Bureau (IBB) and Voice of America (VOA) executives, many of them still around in key positions, who have created this mess. These officials should have been dismissed or reassigned to small, windowless offices in the basement of the Cohen building. The BBG Board could then tell Congress that at least all key IBB and VOA people responsible for this fiasco are no longer in charge and new managers are being appointed to deal with the problem. As it is, there is a new three-person interim management team at IBB, but some key executives are still firmly in charge of various parts of the IBB bureaucracy where they had created these problems. There has been no management change at the Voice of America at all, and no accountability. Waste and Abuse of Power at the Broadcasting Board of Governors, According to Audit — Foreign Policy Blog reports Not even a year after its last scandal, the U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) is accused of wasting taxpayer money — again. The State Department and BBG’s inspector general revealed mismanagement and abuse of power in a new audit released Tuesday, Reid Standish reports in Foreign Policy Blog. READ MORE: Waste and Abuse of Power at the Broadcasting Board of Governors, According to Audit, By Reid Standish, Foreign Policy Blog, June 17, 2014. http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2014/06/17/waste_and_abuse_of_power_at_the_broadcasting_board_of_governors_according_to_audit (BBG Watch blog via DXLD) Viz.: The BBG, an independent federal agency responsible for international broadcasting, caught flack last July for its expensive aerial program aimed at Cuba that less than 1 percent of Cubans listen to. The new audit outlines how the BBG contracts department, which is responsible for planning and managing supplies, services, and construction for BBG's affiliates, awarded contracts based on personal connections and used contractors without prior approval, thereby violating the Antideficiency Act. The audit goes on to state that the BBG's use of these contractors resulted in $431,502 that was not certified and $51,140 that was not available when the contractors began working. The mismanagement did not stop there, though. The audit also details a laundry list of other violations, such as how the BBG failed to make the contract process open and competitive, resulting in $419,020 of funds that were mismanaged through poor planning and a whopping $3.5 million in costs incurred because of unsupported contract pricing. Similarly, the inspector general found that the BBG did not comply with Federal Acquisition Regulation requirements, which led to $24,325 in additional costs from a lack of contract oversight and $475,347 in unauthorized commitments. The mismanaged amount dwarfs that at the center of the AeroMartí controversy. AeroMartí is broadcast by plane -- to the tune of $24 million over six years -- but the Cuban government routinely jams the plane's broadcasts. To its credit, the BBG wants to ground AeroMartí, but anti-Castro lawmakers block legislative attempts to defund it. The BBG, through its affiliates such as Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the Middle East Broadcasting Networks, and the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, provides news and information to more than 175 million people in 59 languages with a variety of radio, television, and online programming. The news outlets under the BBG's purview have evolved in purpose over the years, from countering Nazi and Japanese propaganda during World War II to defusing communist spin. After the Cold War, the outlets took on a more traditional news role. However, a House bill aiming to force the affiliates, most notably Voice of America, to explicitly support the U.S. government and its policies is pending in Congress. In the audit's wake, the inspector general made a series of recommendations to prevent repeat incidents and is developing new accountability mechanisms for the BBG (via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) ** U S A [non]. 15440, June 17 at 1300, very poor, ``Voice of America, Washington DC, signing off`` and Yankee-Doodle-Dandy IS. Thus concludes the Vatican Radio relay in Russian via Tinang, PHILIPPINES, as VOA obviously has no shame, no qualms about violating Separation of Church and State (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) {In case anyone doesn`t get what I am talking about, a USG entity giving preferential treatment to ANY one particular religion opens itself to (justifiable) claims by ALL other religions [and non religions] that they should also get access to IBB facilities! --- gh} ** U S A. Hello friends, I apologize for the delay in responding to your emails from the past few weeks. After returning from travels in May, my audience research duties have greatly expanded (in quantity, not in importance). Furthermore, at home, I have installed a new PC running Windows 7, and applications crash nearly every time I open them. (Fldigi is an interesting exception: it's usually stable.) This PC problem and finding a solution are cutting into my productivity. I will resume sending emails as soon as I get home this afternoon, probably starting with program 62 and working my way back in time. VOA Radiogram for 14-15 June 2014 (program 63) is MFSK32, with a couple of surprises at the end... (Kim Elliott, June 13, via roger, dxldyg via DXLD) "...couple of surprises" ? Sorry, but I could not find really surprising things --- but better that nasty surprises. ;-) http://www.rhci-online.de/VoA_Radiogram_2014-06-14.htm ("....and applications crash nearly every time I open them" This all have probably cost money, that is the difference............) (roger, Germany, June 16, dxldyg via DXLD) ALWAYS well worth looking at Roger`s pages, especially for the hi-def ham DRM images appended (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. [re 14-24, Jerry Lenamon visiting Greenville] Hi Glenn, my comment on > Using GE and Bing, I've examined the 2700 acre antenna field. I've done the same, and found on GE image 31 Jan 2012 - I couldn't see the 2nd slewable TCI, which Jerry mentioned. GR-A 17 rhombics 1 LPH at Bethany 305degr ? 17 curtains GR-B 14 rhombics 1 LPH at Bethany 305degr ? 14 curtains 1 TCI 160deg slewable ± 12 / 24degr azimuths are in degrees 32 45 55 67 91 94 146 {160±} 164 174 183 202 205 225 236 286 305 correction 10 32 45 55 67 91 94 146 {160±} 164 174 183 190 202 205 225 236 286 305 and also 10 / 190degr bi-directional rhombics are also bi-directional 45/225, 55/235deg, curtains are 91deg, rhombics 94deg. I found also older remain installations on - probably - feed towards northwesterly Bethany OH 305deg, and Dixon/Delano CA 286deg. What purpose is the MW sidefire 4 mast antenna on Site-B? and Greenville receiving site at 35 37'56.76"N 77 29'01.21"W too 73 wolfy (Wolfgang Büschel, DX LISTENING DIGEST) It just occurred to me why I couldn't find the rhombic aimed at Mexico City (225 ). It's hiding in plain sight. 45 + 180 = 225. The azimuth sheet Macon made even shows it. BR03 is listed with a target of Prague plus it's also listed with a target of Mexico City. There are a couple of problems with this scenario; the feeds and terminations don't seem right. A terminated rhombic is fed at the back end, the end away from the beam and the termination is connected at the front end, the end toward the beam. There are two rhombics (#16 and #17) aimed at 45 . A very close look at #16 shows a termination line at the 45 end of the rhombic but the feedline appears to go to the 225 end only. In other words, if it's terminated then the directivity is only toward 45 . The smaller rhombic (#17) is similar; the feed is at the 225 end. However, on this one the termination line runs virtually the entire length of the antenna. The termination support posts could (possibly) carry an extra feed line. Again, I see no evidence of a separate feed at the 45 end which would allow a uni-directional beam toward Mexico City. Antenna #8, the one listed as having an azimuth of 3 and 183 clearly has a feed line at the 3 end. In fact the closer I look at #8 the less it looks as though it is switchable. I don't see any mechanism or enclosure to house a switch to route the feed to one end or the other. So, unless there are feeds that are unclear on GE or there is a switch to take out the termination I still don't see an azimuth of 225 . JL (Jerry Lenamon, June 11, via Wolfgang Büschel, DXLD) Thanks Jerry, re GA and GB sites. I looked into old frequency operation tables and WRTH's, on VOA, RFE, AFRTS, UN Radio, and Organization American States broadcasts to Latin America. But still left some question remain. My guess is, that the log- periodics 305deg and 286deg are FORMERLY for feed services from Greenville to Bethany OH, Dixon and Delano CA in the past. One of the 305deg LPH has been moved some 225-230 meters northerly to free space for feeder lines and new antenna on Santiago 174deg curtain. Also was used as feeder for decades before satellite feed came in favour: feeder services in ssb mode from Greenville by 40 kW only, to Tatsfield UK receiving station - for Woofferton UK relay; to Ueberacker receiving station site west of Munich to feed-relay via Ismaning 35 kW Collins ssb txs to RIAS Berlin, VOA Rhodes, Tangiers and Thessaloniki, or from Holzkirchen to RFE Gloria and RL Playa de Pals. Re MEX 225 / 235deg, check carefully all images 91 / 94 degr: Early days list show GR always as 94degr, but later also UNO Radio etc. in 19 mb as 15410 kHz noted later as 91 degree curtains, in \\ to still 94 degree azimuth of rhombics. Next to the two red pins on Site-A I wonder older installation poles, as well as 174degr antenna design - probably - slewable installation ???? please comments... What purpose is the MW sidefire 4 mast antenna on Site-B? Is that a R Marti progr reserve unit for replace R Marti FL in emergency thunderstorm hurricane time? vy73 wb (Wolfgang Büschel, via DXLD) ** U S A. WORLD OF RADIO 1725 monitoring: confirmed on WBCQ 7490 webcast, Thursday June 12 at 2100, but inaudible here on 7490v itself; how is it further east, even in Europe off the back? Simultaneously confirmed on WTWW-1 9475: good signal but noticeably weaker than WTWW- 2 9930 with BS; must not be running full power on #1. Also confirmed on WWRB, 5050, UT Friday June 13 at 0329:28 after a respectful pause of 78 seconds from the interruption of the previous g.h. Unfortunately, once again this week, the SW transmission is overmodulated, distorted. Have asked Dave to turn down the volume. OTOH, the webcast this week altho running, is totally silent, rather than very soft requiring turning up the volume. Next: Sat 0630 & 1430 on Hamburger Lokalradio, 7265-CUSB. How is reception this summer in Europe? Sat 2330 on WTWW, 9930 UT Sun 0030 on WRMI, 9495 UT Sun 0400 on WTWW, 5830 UT Mon 0300 on Area 51 via WBCQ, 5109v-CUSB; etc. Full schedule including many more webcasts, AM, FM and satellite: http://www.worldofradio.com/radioskd.html WORLD OF RADIO 1725 monitoring: confirmed resumed on WTWW-2, 9930, Saturday June 14 at 2330; also on WTWW-1, 5830, UT Sunday June 15 at 0400, both very good signals. The UT Sunday 0030 airing on WRMI-9, 9495, played back the previous show, 1724, as usually but not always happens. Next: UT Monday 0300 on Area 51 via WBCQ, 5109v-CUSB Tuesday 1100 on WRMI, 9955 Wednesday 0630 & 1430 on Hamburger Lokalradio, 7265-CUSB Wednesday 1315 on WRMI, 9955 Wednesday 2100 on WBCQ, 7489v [and non]. WORLD OF RADIO 1725 monitoring: confirmed on Area 51 webcast UT Monday June 16 starting 2 minutes early at 0258. OMG! I said ``recorded May 12`` in the intro instead of June 12. But soon obviously with the latest info, not month-old. (I also caught myself writing May -- on some of my recent logs instead of June --; hope I got those corrected before publication.) Also audible poorly on 5109v- CUSB. Ivo Ivanov confirms that the source of the off-frequency Chinese het QRM to 9955 WRMI at +1230-1300* I have been hearing for the past week, is indeed TAIWAN, but it`s the 250 kW Paochung site relaying Radio France Internationale, 352 degree beam. This replaces 23-24 UT, which had been the less troublesome collision with WRMI. So it`s QRMing WOR not only Thursdays at 1230 but Tuesdays at 1100 before I awaken (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) WORLD OF RADIO 1725 monitoring: confirmed the 1100 Tuesday broadcasts in WRMI 9955 at 1120 check June 17: VG signal, no jamming audible, but with CCI from France via TAIWAN in Chinese still unnecessarily a few Hz away, surging during WRMI fades. Next: Wednesday 0630 on Hamburger Lokalradio, 7265-CUSB Wednesday 1315 on WRMI, 9955 Wednesday 1430 on Hamburger Lokalradio, 7265-CUSB Wednesday 2100 on WBCQ, 7490v WORLD OF RADIO 1725 monitoring: confirmed after 1315 UT Wednesday June 18 on WRMI 9955, no CCCCI now but signal only fair aimed away from us. Next: Wednesday 2100 on WBCQ 7490v. I hope to have 1726 ready for first airing UT Thursday 0330 on 9955. WORLD OF RADIO 1726 monitoring: confirmed first airing, UT Thursday June 19 at 0330+ on WRMI 9955; fair signal generally above pulse jamming level; tnx a lot, Arnie! Also confirmed June 19 at 1230 on WRMI after gh/WRMI ID. Still atop but with CCCCI [Chinese language co- channel interference] from RFI via TAIWAN several Hz away also causing a low rumble. How long will it take to get them to move? Next: Thu 2100 on WBCQ 7490v Thu 2100 on WTWW 9475 UT Fri 0326v on WWRB 5050 Sat 0630 & 1430 on Hamburger Lokalradio 7265-CUSB Sat 2330 on WTWW 9930 UT Sun 0030 on WRMI 9495 (usually previous episode) UT Sun 0400 on WTWW 5830 UT Mon 0300v on Area 51 via WBCQ 5110v-CUSB (last week from 0258) Tue 1100 on WRMI 9955 Wed 0630 & 1430 on Hamburger Lokalradio 7265-CUSB Wed 1315 on WRMI 9955 Wed 2100 on WBCQ 7490v (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 9955, WRMI, Radio Miami Int'l (presumed); 1120, 7-June; English Wavescan DX program; new huxter station in Madagascar coming-- joy! SIO=4+23- with buzz pulser jammer (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, All logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9955 at 1230-1300* June 12, now WRMI has CCI from Chinese making low audible heterodyne, probably TAIWAN; see WOR report. At 1259 WRMI fill music and Bob Zanotti ID from Switzerland: now he has redone it to insert the first `dot` into www.wrmi.net! I remain mystified why so many otherwise savvy people tend to omit that dot after www when citing websites, but never the final dot. 9955, June 13 at 0602, nice familiar filler music medley, polka from WRMI instead of BS, why? Over lite pulse jamming. BS remains blasting in on 11825, 7570, but we`re grateful that some other BS/WRMI frequencies remain rather weak here, 11730, 7730, 5015, 5950 even in the nightmiddle; those must efficiently beam away from us. 17700, June 13 at 1418, surprised to hear a good signal here, ``Sweet Bye & Bye`` instrumental hymn; 1420 some salsa with English lyrix, 1424 soul music. Guess what? 17790 is missing and this is the kind of fill music Radio Africa Network typically plays: yes, got to be that, mis-punched frequency, 1434 with preacher on I Corinthians. For now it doesn`t really matter as nothing else is on 17700, but at 1523 I can barely hear Vatican Radio SMG under it with SAH, Hausa scheduled 1500- 1530. Catholix vs Protestants, or something! Clear again after 1530 per HFCC. 17700 is still running RAN/WRMI at 1810. 21525, June 13 at 1811, very poor signal from Brother Scare; tnx to tip from Bob LaRose in S California who IDed it as WRMI. He said it was very good, better than BS on 21600 WHRI, but not here, both VP: too close? 21525 still not on the WRMI frequency grid which has not been updated since June 4; nor is 17700. WRMI initially planned to use 21525 when it took over Okeechobee last December, but had a problem with matching the antenna or some such. So this may be a test, but it seems to be working now (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 17700, June 13 at 2011, R. Africa via WRMI is still here instead of 17790, presumably until QSY to 15190 time at 2100. Tomorrow back on 17790? Yes! At 1401 check June 14. Ivo Ivanov points out that the SMG transmission at 1500-1530 on 17700 is not Vatican Radio but VOA relay in Hausa: Voice of America in Hausa to WeAf 1527 on 17700 Santa Maria di Galeria https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9ywhDbfuK4&feature=youtu.be 9955, Sat June 14 at 1251, Jeff White talking about Flagler and his overseas railroad down the Keys, so must be `Viva Miami` as scheduled this quarter-hour; still with annoying low audible het from presumed TAIWAN usurping frequency at least during this semi-hour. Jeff also says the show I heard on Sunday at 1230 with the same problem was not `Wavescan` but another `Viva Miami` (which still doesn`t appear on the schedule grid dated May 31) (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) WRMI with TOM on 21525 kHz (Replaces 17790? [no]) at 1700 UT. Noted the last couple of days. Got positive ID today at 1700 UT. I did not see this change on their new frequency schedule. Decent signal here in WCNA (better than WHRI 21600). (Bob LaRose, San Diego, June 13, dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) [and non]. 17790, SINGAPORE (Kranji), BBC WS 6/14, 1515. M in (listed) Urdu and mixing equally with RMI Africa (via Okeechobee). Good, sans QRM (Rick Barton, El Mirage, AZ, Slinky and random wire, Grundig Satellit 750, Drake R8, Hammarlund HQ-200, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) 9955, June 18 at 1245, AWR Wavescan via WRMI with segment recorded from the May NASB meeting at VOA Greenville, host explaining how group will split into two for tours inside and outside; more in subsequent episodes. [see CONVENTIONS & CONFERENCES] Before closing, Jeff says that WRMI has some special programming for month-long duration of the World Cup from sportsguy Bruce Baskin: daily 60-second WC Today wrapups at 0259 & 1059 on 9955; weekly 15- minute show on the Radio Africa Network transmitter 15190, Sundays at 2200, Mondays at 1300. 9955 still with CCCCI from France via TAIWAN until 1300 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 5830 & 9475, June 13 at 0059, both WTWW-1 frequencies are off, but WTWW-2 on 9930 and WTWW-3 on 12105 are on with usual programming. 5085, June 14 at 0109, WTWW-2 has again made its night switch from 9930 earlier than WTWW-1, still on 9475, so bodes well for 23 hours later, clearing 9925 for KBC. 5830, June 17 at 0558, WTWW-1 is off while WTWW-2 is on 5085; at 1119, 5830 is still off; at 1453, WTWW-1 is also off 9475, while WTWW-2 is on 9930. 5085 & 5830, June 18 at 0604, both WTWW-2 and WTWW-1 are off. Next check 1241, 5085 is off, already on 9930; and 5830 is on but with weak signal, and modulation too distorted to understand, still thus at 1345. I fear the same will apply to 9475 once 5830 moves to that at 1400, but from *1400 it`s loud & clear as normal (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) [and non]. PALAU/USA, 9930 TERRIBLE mixture of TOM USA and another English sermon prayer on T8WH ch3 from Palau Medorn site in Pacific. 0925 UT June 18 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) On this occasion, WTWW-2 evidently stayed on 9930 all night instead of 5085 (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 7490.34, WBCQ Monticello ME (presumed); 1940-2001+, 11-June; Old C&W & jazz tunes; into apparent huxter program at 2000; all vox uncopyable. SIO=252, apparently having a problem. 15420 OK with sing- song Aggressive Christianity huxtress (Harold Frodge, Midland MI, USA, Drake R8B + 125 ft. bow-tie; 85 ft. RW & 180 ft. center-fed RW, All logged by my ears, on my receiver, in real time! DX LISTENING DIGEST) 5109v-CUSB, June 13 at 0107, as best I can tell, WBCQ is not on here tonight for another AWWW oldie, but operational on better 7490 and best 9330-CUSB at 0126. 7490v, June 14 at 0132, `Allan Weiner Worldwide`, the only WBCQ program which gets to be trimulcast, also on 9330v-CUSB but a few words off synchronization, and also on 5110v-CUSB, a good many seconds behind in strange feed routing configuration to what must be three transmitters next to each other in Monticello. He`s running way long this week over a sesquihour from 0000 start; addressing Mark Levin, a far-right talkhost, and anticipating needed political changes this November; and mailbag replies. 7490.1, June 16 at 0119, WBCQ has varied to about here, during BS, while much stronger WRNO is still steady on 7505.2; preacher sounds like Billy Graham, but I don`t think he would have been talking about global warming, casting doubt. Maybe it`s Franklin (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. More and more wooden registrations of World Harvest Radio from June 12: 0800-0900 7365 HRI 250 kW / 047 deg WeEu English Sat 0800-0830 11565 HRI 250 kW / 245 deg AUS English Sun, (now 0830-1000) 1200-1300 7385 HRI 100 kW / 025 deg ENAm English Mon-Thu/Sat 1200-1300 9840 HRI 100 kW / 025 deg ENAm English Fri/Sun 1300-1500 9495 HRI 100 kW / 173 deg SoAm Eng/Spa 1500-1600 9495 HRI 100 kW / 173 deg SoAm Eng/Spa Tue-Sun 1500-1600 17610 HRI 100 kW / 315 deg WNAm English Sun 2000-2100 7315 HRI 100 kW / 025 deg ENAm English 2100-2200 7315 HRI 100 kW / 025 deg ENAm English Tue-Sun 2100-2300 9840 HRI 100 kW / 025 deg ENAm English Mon 2200-2300 7385 HRI 100 kW / 025 deg ENAm English Tue-Thu/Sat/Sun 2200-2300 17610 HRI 100 kW / 315 deg WNAm English Mon Previous wooden registrations of World Harvest Radio, all not active: 0500-0530 7385 HRI 100 kW / 315 deg WNAm English 1000-1100 15660 HBN 100 kW / 270 deg SEAs English 1300-1400 17760 HRI 250 kW / 047 deg WeEu English 2100-2200 15530 HRI 250 kW / 047 deg WeEu English Mon-Sat 2200-2230 11775 HRI 250 kW / 047 deg WeEu English Sat/Sun 2200-2230 15670 HRI 250 kW / 260 deg MEXI English Mon-Fri 2230-2400 11775 HRI 250 kW / 047 deg WeEu English (DX RE MIX NEWS #857 from Georgi Bancov and Ivo Ivanov, June 17, 2014, dxldyg via DXLD) ** U S A. 1000, June 18 at 0615 UT, gospel huxter in English almost zero-beat with KTOK OKC, about same level and mutually nullable, close to 90 degrees apart, no doubt the oft-cheating KKIM Albuquerque NM, on 10 kW day power instead of legal 38 watts night (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Hi Glenn, KKIM has been a regular best heard close to SRS. Also noted on day facilities on a regular basis is 1010 Amarillo and 1060 Farwell. I've been chasing 1530 New Boston but with Colorado Springs, Shakopee, Cincinnati and now Norton clogging up the frequency I wonder if I will ever hear it. Although tonight the K index is to hit 5 so maybe I will have a chance. 73 (Todd Skaine, Woodbury MN, June 18, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 1060 KIJN Farwell TX (Spanish gospel) is a perpeptual cheater, but I haven`t noticed 1010 KTNZ Amarillo (ESPN) (Glenn Hauser, ibid.) ** U S A. 1490, FLORIDA, WAFZ, Immokalee. 0719 June 16, 2014. "La Ley" slogan, Mexi-tunes. Very poor on fade-ups and under WWPR, Bradenton which is mostly black gospel these days. No ID but paralleled to the WAFZ stream, which doesn't have a mobile app (Terry L Krueger, Clearwater FL, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. 1530, June 17 at 0559 UT, the two cheaters ID neatly one after another: first, KCMN, Colorado Springs on the I-25 Radio Network; then KLBW 1530.com, New Boston TX. Todd Skaine in MN reports another 1530 daytimer on at night, KQNK Norton KS, not yet heard here (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ** U S A. Heard on 1700 last night at 2303 EDT, KNAA585 New York with continuous loop and callsign mentioned over and over (Mike Bugaj, Enfield, CT, Elad SDR and 40' long flag, 15 feet off the ground running NE to SW. June 15, mwdx yg via DXLD) ** U S A. RADIO LEGEND CASEY KASEM DIES AT 82 http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/15/showbiz/casey-kasem-obit/index.html?hpt=hp_t1 Video clip there as well 73 Best of DX (via Shawn Axelrod VE4DX1SMA, VEPC4SWL, Winnipeg MB, June 15, NRC-AM via DXLD) Plus many other obits in the mainstream media And a huge piece of my formative years is gone. Wasn't a Sunday that went by from about 1977-83 that I didn't tune in to American Top 40. During a time in my life that was oftentimes downright bewildering and depressing, it was one of the few things to which I could actually look forward. Those were shoes that couldn't be filled (although Shadoe Stevens did try in 1988) and still can't be (IMHO, Ryan Seacrest is just dreadful as a countdown host). Really, there's not much more that I could add, except --- Casey, thank you for everything. Sincerely, (Rick Dau (still keeping his feet in the ground and still reaching for the stars) S Omaha, Nebraska, IRCA via DXLD) ** U S A. LPFM and AM Revitalization FCC Remarks Read some of the FCC's remarks about both LPFM and AM Revitalization efforts in this Radio World article: http://www.radioworld.com/article/lpfm-the-little-engine-that-could/270879 While we focus on the impact of any regulatory changes from the perspective of DX'ers, I'm also interested in how these efforts might affect us as listeners and citizens. Providing increased localization of media outlets is important, and should be mandated by regulation. The airwaves are a vital natural resource, and their use should demand that they be used in the service of the public, not just as a commodity to make profit. While LPFM aims to provide diversity and serve smaller populations, around here those lofty aims don't usually last long. In order to survive, they generally spiral towards more religious programming. A market that is already well served by dozens of stations. It remains to be seen if these small stations can reach enough of a market to remain economically viable. -- 73, (Les Rayburn, N1LF, Maylene, AL, EM63, June 16, NRC-AM via DXLD) I think some groups figure the hard part is getting the license & keeping the transmitter on the air. It isn't. The hard part is coming up with programming that appeals to enough people to donate enough money to pay the bills. I don't think religious programming in itself is inherently wrong for LPFMs. I had hoped the service would see *local* churches operating stations to broadcast their services, and their choirs, and maybe a loop of community & church news, something like that. Unfortunately indeed all too many LPFMs are broadcasting *national* religious programming. One nearby in Kentucky runs the EWTN satellite feed. That simply wasn't the intent of the LPFM service. I think the FCC messed up that element of the LPFM regulations. They should have required some minimum proportion of the day's programming be produced at studios within the station's coverage area. Doesn't matter what the nature of that programming is, just that it be local. == (Doug Smith W9WI, Pleasant View, TN EM66, WTFDA via DXLD) Doug, I actually think a requirement that full powered stations, both AM and FM produce a percentage of their programs locally would help to revitalize radio as a medium. It also would serve the public interest. And despite what the media barons might think, I believe it might even be good for business. Mass-produced satellite delivered programming has had the unintended consequence of creating a "vanilla" landscape on the dial that doesn't provide compelling reasons for people to tune in, or support advertisers. LPFM was mostly a political solution designed to appease critics of media ownership relaxation (like myself). No doubt engineered by the NAB and others who knew that most of these stations would fail under the burden of trying to be economically viable in an increasingly competitive landscape -- without the benefit of a large coverage area afforded to full power stations. At 52, I'm starting to sound like a crusty old man, but I remember when radio was so much more. A vital part of local life, it defined our communities, and made them better places for all of us to live. I fail to see how another hour of Shawn Hannity is contributing much to public life. 73, (Les Rayburn, N1LF, June 17, ibid.) ** U S A. We have a new one on 87.7. If I do hear anything on this frequency, it`s the 87.7 in Memphis, but today I hear a station from Harbert Hills Academy in Olive Hill, Tennessee, relaying WDNX 89.1. It has a good signal into Savannah, TN. Haven't checked at home yet (Kevin Redding, Crump, TN, June 17, ABDX via DXLD) Are they really 87.75, analog TV channel 6 audio? (Glenn Hauser, DXLD) ** UZBEKISTAN [and non]. US-BACKED UZBEK RADIO TEAMS UP WITH WIKIPEDIA | Text of report by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) website on 17 June For decades, Uzbekistan has been counted among the world's most restrictive societies, ranking at the bottom of surveys on fundamental freedoms and human rights. Far from being silenced by the country's rigid censorship regime, RFE/RL's Uzbek Service, known locally as Radio Ozodlik, is pioneering ways to collect and generate information for audiences eager for knowledge and news. Radio Ozodlik recently launched the OzodWiki project, a partnership marrying the service's reporting capabilities with the resources of the Uzbek edition of Wikipedia, the online, crowd-sourced encyclopedia. Like virtually every other independent information initiative, Wikipedia is currently blocked inside Uzbekistan. The explanation is simple, according to Alisher Sidikov, Uzbek Service director, who says that in content and concept it is simply at odds with the country's authoritarian order. The OzodWiki project involves hyperlinking selected words and phrases that are used in Radio Ozodlik reports to entries in Wikipedia where they are defined and explored. The relationship is mutually beneficial, enabling Ozodlik users to click through to expanded information resources, while popularizing Wikipedia by driving new topics and audience their way. In addition, Radio Ozodlik recommends current topics for Wikipedia to define, while Wikipedia sources content to Radio Ozodlik. Sidikov explained that whenever possible, he seeks to publish reports in step with Wikipedia's content to provide users with the fullest possible understanding of current events and maximize readership for both partners. This strategy was on display during the Euromaidan demonstrations in Ukraine and Russia's annexation of Crimea in March: Radio Ozodlik published a series of reports using the words "Euromaidan" and "annexation," and Wikipedia posted entries explaining the terms for its readers. "It's a nice cooperation where we don't have to do background," Sidikov said. "There is a team of Wikipedia contributors who add the background to those stories which are vital." The partnership has generated related projects, including a regular radio programme on Radio Ozodlik that highlights Wikipedia's main contributors and topics for the week. Since the launch of the partnership in February 2014, visits to Wikipedia's Uzbek edition have risen 300 per cent, totalling approximately 136,000 visits in April. Sidikov attributes much of the growth to the discovery of Wikipedia by Radio Ozodlik visitors, and the site's increased attention to current affairs. In another measure of Wikipedia's new popularity, Sidikov says that individuals have contacted it asking to write for the site. The project has also raised Radio Ozodlik's visibility, since Wikipedia frequently cites it as a source. "When one day Wikipedia becomes accessible in Uzbekistan." said Sidikov, "there is no doubt that people will be looking up information based on Radio Ozodlik's reports." The Uzbek version of Wikipedia, which currently logs upwards of 100,000 articles, is run by Nodir Atayev, who founded the site and himself has contributed over 1000 entries. Atayev, 27, is a graduate of the Soros-funded Central European University. Sidikov said that Radio Ozodlik had been following the rise of Wikipedia and the work of Atayev and his partners before embarking on the project. "You'll rarely see these types of people in our part of the world who would do it for free and just for one vital cause, which is to add information," he said. Source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty website, Washington D.C., in English 17 Jun 14 (via BBCM via DXLD) ** VANUATU. 7259.962, Tentatively R. Vanuatu, Port Vila, weak S=6 or - 88dBm signal noted downunder in Australia at 0730 UT June 18 (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) ** VIETNAM. 12019.113, Extreme odd frequency signal of Vietnam's Son Tay site, VOV Hanoi in English, S=7 in Tokyo-JPN remote unit. 1230- 1300 UT operation slot heard at 1240 UT on June 13. 12000.0, Another Son Tay site service at same time, VOV in Russian, some comment on Ukraine political separation trouble, and immense Ukraine debts in Earth Gas order purchases from Russia in the past. Several times some feed break happened between Hanoi broadcasting house and tx center at Son Tay site (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 13 via DXLD) 9635.754, V of Vietnam Son Tay outlet in Vietnamese, interview program heard on SDR unit downunder in Australia at 0903 UT June 18, S=8 - 78dBm strength. News on Iraq civil war Suni against Shiit religion nationals (Wolfgang Büschel, wwdxc BC-DX TopNews June 18, dxldyg via DXLD) ** WALES. BBC Radio Wales, Wrexham transmitter on 657 kHz seems to sound rather distorted this morning (0645 UT 14/6). Noticeable on speech, but music sounds terrible. 73's (Nick Rank, Buxton, UK, BDXC- UK yg via DXLD) ** YEMEN. Radio Sana'a in English back on shortwave again on June 13: 1800-1900 on 6135 ALH 050 kW / non-dir to N/ME. Two videos on June 13 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N8LEe4FyALo&feature=youtu.be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFmmCLD5EvM&feature=youtu.be More videos of Radio Sana'a in English with very good reception, 1759-1859 6135 ALH 050 kW / non-dir to N/ME. Five videos from June 14: http://swldxbulgaria.blogspot.com/2014/06/more-videos-of-radio-sanaa-in-english.html 73! (Ivo Ivanov, QTH: Sofia, Bulgaria, Equipment: Sony ICF-2001D 30 m. long wire, Web: http://swldxbulgaria.blogspot.com/ dxldyg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) June 14: Radio Sana'a in English to ME 1800 on 6135 Al Hiswah https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cy8Pfzn0V18&feature=youtu.be Radio Sana'a in English to ME 1813 on 6135 Al Hiswah https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98QAAMgJVV0&feature=youtu.be Radio Sana'a in English to ME 1826 on 6135 Al Hiswah https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qx0f3n-AROc&feature=youtu.be Radio Sana'a in English to ME 1845 on 6135 Al Hiswah https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouN7upZPMZ0&feature=youtu.be Radio Sana'a in English to ME 1856 on 6135 Al Hiswah MP4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4zbutJg-yg&feature=youtu.be (Ivo Ivanov, ibid.) UNIDENTIFIED. 960, June 16 at 0501 UT, Mexican NA is audible, and at 0502 `Let It Be`, orchestral Beatles tune, as so often heard during the KGWA Fox-Hole of dead but hummy air. This sequence would almost lead me to believe both musix are coming from XEK, but there is QRM from others. One of these nights I`ll try to hear XEK webstream instead, per Cantú: http://216.251.77.56:9000/listen.pls confirmed funxional at 1519 UT June 16 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See MEXICO UNIDENTIFIED. 9778.5-USB, June 14 at 0112, Spanish 2-way INTRUDERS, het from algo on 9780 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) UNIDENTIFIED. Emissora em 9815 kHz - às 2240 horas UT. Amigos, qual emissora transmite em mandarim ou talvez tibetano, das 2200 às 2300 horas UT, na frequência de 9815 kHz? Estava certo de que se tratava da Radio Free Asia. Foi o que achei nesse site: http://www.shortwaveschedule.com/index.php?freq=9815 Postei o vídeo no Youtube e depois enviei um informe de recepção com o link do vídeo. A RFA disse me em e-mail que não se trata da mesma. Grato por qualquer ajuda nesse sentido. Não achei nada no HFCC A14, EIBI A14, lista Aoki A14 e Shortwave Info. Só achei no Shortwave Schedule. 73! (Rubens Ferraz Pedroso (PY5-007SWL). Bandeirantes - PR, 12 June, radioescutas yg via DXLD) A RFA estava aqui até o 22 de Abril: 22-24 UT via Kuwait em tibetano. Então eles começaram a pular em muitas freqüências para evitar o jamming chinês. Talvez eles voltaram a esta freqüência. 73, (Eike Bierwirth, Alemanha, ibid.) Valeu amigo pela ajuda. Para mim seria mesmo a RFA, mas uma funcionária da emissora disse-me por e-mail que não é. Boas escutas. 73! (Rubens Ferraz Pedroso (PY5-007SWL), Bandeirantes - PR, ibid.) UNIDENTIFIED. 9905, June 16 at 0111, very weak talk, LAH; mixing product? Nothing listed on 9905 in Aoki except for half an hour per week from T8WH and this isn`t it (Glenn Hauser, oK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) UNIDENTIFIED. 17762-USB, June 14 at 0127, 2-way in Luso Portuguese accent, INTRUDERS (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS ++++++++++++++++++++++++ ACKNOWLEDGED on WORLD OF RADIO 1726: Gerald T Pollard, Raleigh NC, for a generous summer solstice check to P O Box 1684, Enid OK 73702. TO BE ACKNOWLEDGED FUTURELY: Glenn, still listening to the HF bands, all the while with Brother Scare dominating the scene. "What Has God Wrought" with the shortwave spectrum? Please announce my contribution, Chuck Ermatinger (accent on first syllable, and I prefer a soft G). It'll be an ego-boost for me. :-) (Chuck Ermatinger, MO, with a contribution via PayPal to woradio at yahoo.com) PUBLICATIONS ++++++++++++ MORE FACEBOOK DX GROUPS [please don`t abandon DXLD yg as a result] From my list... Radio & DXing History: Radio broadcasting history https://www.facebook.com/groups/223202391220276/ 1421 miembros John Schneider's Radio Broadcasting History Facebook page: A place to share photographs... Old and vintage radios https://www.facebook.com/groups/142389439790/ 443 miembros For anyone who has an old or vintage radio, transistor, wooden-made, hand-made, or just a... Radio Pennants, Stickers & QSLs https://www.facebook.com/groups/1451712608380458/ 133 miembros A place where you can upload your Radio Pennants, Stickers, & QSLs scans. Un lugar donde... ------ General radio/SWL/DX/ham 73 Hobby Radio Buffs https://www.facebook.com/groups/73hobbyradiobuffs/ 1286 miembros Anyone interested in any or all aspects of hobby radio operations to include Ham, SWLing,... WorldDX https://www.facebook.com/groups/132350483551183/ 292 miembros WorldDX is an open and lightly moderated group for radio enthusiasts, who enjoy... Radio Watch https://www.facebook.com/groups/156623244465392/ 662 miembros All about broadcasting and DX-ing SDR - Software Defined Radio https://www.facebook.com/groups/sdrbrasil/ 490 miembros Software Defined Radio is gaining more adherents worldwide. Here in this space we can... I Take Pictures Of Transmitter Sites https://www.facebook.com/groups/transmittersites/ 5911 miembros This is a group for people that have an interest in radio & tv transmitters, towers and... International Lone Wolf Shortwave and Amateur Radio Club https://www.facebook.com/groups/swl.ham/ 1765 miembros Welcome to the Biggest International Independent Shortwave and Amateur Radio Club on... WRTH - World Radio Tv Handbook https://www.facebook.com/groups/wrthgroup/ 995 miembros This is the official WRTH facebook group. You will find announcements regarding... Switzerland In Sound https://www.facebook.com/groups/105423956179175/ 137 miembros Do you miss Swiss Radio International? Well if you do come join the FACEBOOK group for Bob... Mediumwave Arctic Radio Club https://www.facebook.com/groups/317263911719764/ 91 miembros About the Arctic Radio Club ARC ARC is a club for mediumwave listeners only. The club,... Latin America HISTORIAS DE RADIO https://www.facebook.com/groups/700853696639020/ 49 miembros Este grupo ha sido creado para difundir exclusivamente las producciones del programa "Historias de Radio" de Daniel Camporini, BA, Argentina. PROYECTO FENIX https://www.facebook.com/groups/323863424408408/ 142 miembros Proyecto Fénix es un intento de rescatar nuestros archivos sonoros y gráficos que hemos.. "CADENA DX" https://www.facebook.com/groups/531629043622500/ 149 miembros informacion Diexista de transmisiones de emisoras en ondas cortas. Antenas y... Radioescutas - Ondas Curtas, AM e FM https://www.facebook.com/groups/418850251512284/ 899 miembros No Mundo do Dexismo https://www.facebook.com/groups/ibraz361/ 893 miembros Este grupo busca compartilhar com muitos Dexistas e radioescutas do mundo, todas as... Radioescucha de la onda media desde Chile https://www.facebook.com/groups/Chile.DX/ 204 miembros Grupo para radioescuchas chilenos y del mundo, amantes de la Onda Media. Fotos recuerdos. As ondas curtas são fontes de cultura, história, geografia e artes de povos distantes.... Radioescucha onda corta desde Chile / Short wave radio listening from Chile https://www.facebook.com/groups/10150106421310068/ 715 miembros Hola amigos: Reciban mis saludos, se creó este grupo dedicado a la radioescucha de onda... Radioescuchas https://www.facebook.com/groups/239935732726108/ 19 miembros Radios Antiguas - Vintage Radios https://www.facebook.com/groups/radios.antiguas/ 634 miembros Espacio dedicado a compartir la afición de la radio entre las personas que disfrutan de.. Solo QSLs https://www.facebook.com/groups/oqslcd/ 418 miembros QSL cards in shortwave listening. Sometimes referred to as SWL cards, they can confirm..? La Galena del Sur https://www.facebook.com/pages/La-Galena-del-Sur/301538759900862/ Blog Personal Actualizaciones del blog de Horacio Nigro Geolkiewsky en http://lagalenadelsur.wordpress.com/ 73 & DX (Horacio Nigro Geolkiewsky, Montevideo, Uruguay, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) CONVENTIONS & CONFERENCES +++++++++++++++++++++++++ NASB MAY MEETING AT GREENVILLE Re: We're still waiting for a full report on this year's NASB meeting from their website and/or Jeff White (gh, dxld, June 11, via BC-DX) Other than the news release and photos that we issued just after the NASB meeting (on the NASB Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/nasbshortwave we don't plan to publish a detailed report on the meeting. There have been a few good reports written by DXers who attended. And we are presenting recordings from the meeting on Wavescan. We have already broadcast a three-part interview with Ray Robinson and Jerry Plummer in Greenville, the opening remarks, a video about IBB-Greenville, and this weekend we have an excerpt from Kim Elliott's talk about Radiogram. We will continue to broadcast excerpts from the meeting on future editions of Wavescan (Jeff White, WRMI, June 19, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Latest photos from the meeting are here: https://www.facebook.com/nasbshortwave/photos_stream (gh, DXLD) You`re invited! BORDERHUNTER SUMMER MEETING 2014 INFORMATION: Hi Free Radio and pirate fans! It's already time for another one! From the 4th to the 6th of July 2014, everyone of distinction in the scene meets once again – both listeners and stations! On this particular weekend, it’s provisionally planned that the next Borderhunter summer meeting (well-known and well-loved across Europe) will take place in the first week-end of July. Only those who already know about this fantastic meeting, know what the home stayers miss. As in every year, the question of where to stay overnight is no problem! You can stay in a car, tent, caravan, hotel, B&B or at the accommodation at the camp site (complete with beds, but bring a sleeping bag) – everything can be brought along, as everything is best provided for. The meeting begins officially on Saturday, as usual. In addition, every year many hobbyists travel on Friday, which the boss of the organisation also has no problem with. Everyone is always most cordially welcome at any time! You can safely leave your picnic basket at home with your mother – the selection of meals and drinks is so vast, that you will be a little bit heavier when you return home on Sunday! And all this and more at affordable prices. However in order not to drive the meeting organisation into financial ruin, there is a small contribution of 2 Euros per person which is obligatory. Radio Borderhunter will organise a meeting for friends of the free radio and pirate hobby, that is not only unique, but will also remain unsurpassed – that we promise all hobbyists! In order that we can better plan, we request that you let us know when you are coming, in advance if possible. As we want to make sure that we have enough food beforehand, for example. Reservations, applications and questions should be directed to the following e-mail address: summermeeting2014 @ hotmail.com The exact route to the meeting will be given in advance. Most of you will know it from previous years. Our motto for this meeting, as always is: come, see, be amazed, be at home. All free radio friends are cordially welcome at the BORDERHUNTER SUMMER MEETING on the 4th until the 6th of July 2014!!! It’s a nice present for yourself, don’t stay at home but meet a lot of other free radio enthusiasts! 73s, (via Tom Taylor, June 15, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DX LISTENING DIGEST) W9DXCC DX CONVENTION AND BANQUET (Press Release #2 6/8/14, Schaumburg, IL): All DXers and guests are invited to attend the 62nd annual W9DXCC DX Convention and Banquet September 19-20th, 2014, an ARRL approved Operating Specialty Convention. The Northern Illinois DX Association, sponsor of W9DXCC, has selected a new location with expanded capacity. Activities begin on Friday with DX University for new and experienced DXers. The Convention is Saturday with a full program, QSL checking, exhibits, W9D on the air, CW pileup contest, and many prizes. The Banquet Saturday evening is a time to relax with speaker ARRL First Vice President Rick Roderick, K5UR, the DX Countdown, and grand prizes. Hospitality suites and other related activities will continue. For convenient nearby shopping, the famous regional Woodfield Mall featuring nearly 300 stores and restaurants is directly south of the hotel. September, 19-20, 2014 Hyatt Regency Schaumburg 1800 East Golf Road Schaumburg, IL 60173 DX-U – Friday, opens at 8:30 AM. -- A full day of exciting topics: Software, Propagation, Station Engineering, DX Contesting, Pileups, QSLing, and Conquering a Small Lot. PROGRAMS – Saturday, opens at 8:00 AM. "The Amsterdam Island FT5ZM DXpedition", Ralph Fedor, K0IR "Topband DXpedition Operations, comparing the 160 meter operations from Amsterdam and Wake Island", Craig Thompson, K9CT "DXpeditions for the Rest of Us", Jim Fitzpatrick, WI9WI "DXpeditions and the 21 st Century Dynamics", Bob Allphin, K4UEE "Cycle 24 Update, FT5ZM Skewed Paths, Maunder Minimum and More", Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA "ARRL Roundtable Discussion", ARRL First Vice President Rick Roderick, K5UR; ARRL Central Division Director Dick Isely, W9GIG and DX Advisory Committee, Jim O’Connell, W9WU REGISTRATION -- Go to and click Registration. Registration is open now via PayPal or download the form and send a check. Early registration ends August 1st. Banquet orders must be received by September 13th. Click Location & Lodging for hotel reservations. UPDATES -- Check often for new developments. (via Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin No. 1167, June 16, 2014, Editor Tedd Mirgliotta, KB8NW, Provided by BARF80.ORG (Cleveland, Ohio), via Dave Raycroft, ODXA yg via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) WORLD OF HOROLOGY +++++++++++++++++ RUSSIA ======== WINTER TIME ------------------------- adopted in the first reading FEDERAL LAW On Amending the Federal Law "The calculus of time" Article 1 The Federal Law of June 3, 2011 ? 107-FZ "On the Calculation of Time" (Collected Legislation of the Russian Federation, 2011, ? 23, p. 3247) as follows: 1) Paragraph 2 of Article 11 shall read as follows: "time zone - part of the territory of the Russian Federation, on which a single time established by this federal law"; 2) Edit Article 4 part 5 as follows: "5. Daylight Savings Time is not implemented."; 3) Article 5: Part 1 shall read as follows: "On the territory of the Russian Federation established time zones whose boundaries are formed based on the borders of the Russian Federation, the territories forming each time zone, and the manner of time in time zones."; Part 2 deemed null and void; Part 3 shall read as follows: "3. Moscow time is the starting time when calculating local time in time zones. Moscow time corresponds to the time zone in the third national time scale of the Russian Federation UTC (SU) +3. Numerical values ??of the local time in different time zones differ by an integer number of hours. Local while in the Russian Federation the same time zone equally. Scores minutes and seconds in all time zones of the same. add Part 4 as follows: "On the territory of the Russian Federation establishes the following time zones and their corresponding time values??: 1 hour zone (Moscow time minus 1 hours ago): Kaliningrad region; 2 time zone (Moscow time): Republic of Adygea, Republic of Dagestan, Republic of Ingushetia, Kabardino-Balkaria Republic, Republic of Kalmykia, Karachay-Cherkessia Republic, Republic of Karelia, Republic of Mari El, Republic of Mordovia, Republic of Severnaya Ossetia – Alania, Republic of Tatarstan, Udmurtia Republic, Chechen Republic, Chuvash Republic, Krasnodarskiy kray, Stavropolskiy kray, Arkhangelskaya oblast, Astrakhanskaya oblast, Belgorodskaya oblast, Bryanskaya oblast, Vladimirskaya oblast, Volgogradskaya oblast, Vologdskaya oblast, Voronezhskaya olast, Ivanovskaya oblast, Kalugskaya oblast, Kirovskaya oblast, Kostromskaya oblast, Kurskaya oblast, Leningradskaya oblast, Lipetskaya oblast, Moskovskaya oblast, Murmanskaya oblast, Nizhenovgorodskaya oblat, Novgorodskaya oblast, Orlovskaya oblast, Pskovskaya oblast, Rostovskaya oblast, Ryazanskaya oblast, Samarskaya oblast, Saratovskaya oblast, Smolenskaya oblast, Tambovskaya oblast, Tverskaya oblast, Tulskaya oblast, Ulyanovskayaoblast, Yaroslavskaya oblast, city of federal importance Moscow and St. Petersburg, Nenetskiy Autonomny Okrug; 3 time zone (Moscow time plus 1 hour): Republic of Bashkortostan, Komi Republic, Permskiy kray, Orenburgskaya oblast; 4 time zone (Moscow time plus 2 hours): Kurganskaya oblast, Omskaya oblast, Sverdlovskaya oblast, Tyumenskaya oblast, Chelyabinskaya oblast, Khanty-Mansi Autonomny Okrug - Yugra and Yamal-Nenetskiy Autonomny Okrug; 5 time zone (Moscow time plus 3 hours): Republic of Altai, Altaisky kray, Kemerovskaya oblast, Novosibirskaya oblast, Tomskaya oblast; 6 time zone (Moscow time plus 4 hours): Republic of Tyva, Republic of Khakassia, Krasnoyarskiy kray; 7 time zone (Moscow time plus 5 hours): Republic of Buryatia, Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) (Aldanskiy, Amginskiy, Anabarskiy, Bulunskiy, Verkhnevilyuiskiy, Viliuiskiy, Gorny, Zhigansky nationalny evenkiy, Kobjajskiy Lenskiy, Megino-Kangalasskiy, Mirninskiy, Namskiy, Neryungrinskiy, Nyurbinskiy, Olekminskiy, Oleneksky evenkiyskiy nationalny, Suntarskiy, Tattinsiky, Tomponskiy, Ust-Aldanskiy, Ust- Maiskiy, Khangalasskiy, Churapchinskiy and Eveno-Bytantaiskiy nationalny ulus (rajon), the city of republican significance Yakutsk), Zabaykalskiy kray, Irkutskaya oblast; 8 time zone (Moscow time plus 6 hours): Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) (Verkhoyanskiy, Oymyakonskiy and Ust-Janskiy ulus (rajon), Primorskiy krai, Khabarovskiy kray, Amurskaya oblast, Evreyskaya Autonomnaya oblast; 9 time zone (Moscow time plus 7 hours): Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) (Abyiskiy, Allaikhovskiy, Verkhnekolymskiy, Momskiy, Nizhnekolymskiy and Srednekolymskiy ulus (rajon), Sakhalinskaya oblast; 10 time zone (Moscow time plus 7 hours): Kamchatkiy krai, Magadanskaya oblast, Chukotkiy Autonomny okrug. Article 2 The present Federal Law shall enter into force on October 26, 2014 at 2:00 00 minutes. http://asozd2.duma.gov.ru/work/dz.nsf/ByID/6C0FB7261F1D541C43257CBA0030A223/$File/%D0%97%D0%90%D0%9A%D0%9E%D0%9D%D0%9E%D0%9F%D0%A0%D0%9E%D0%95%D0%9A%D0%A2.DOC?OpenElement (Viktor Rutkovskiy, Ekaterinburg, Russia / “open_dx” via RusDX June 15 via DXLD) So if Moscow time is UT +3 in winter, the other zones range from UT +2 in the extreme west to UT +13 in the farthest east. The question is, whether there will still be DST in the summer advancing all these by one hour? For a while previously, some zones were skipped, so there were two hours between adjacent ones (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST) LANGUAGE LESSONS ++++++++++++++++ THE RISE AND FALL OF AUSTRALIAN SLANG 11 June 2014 Last updated at 16:55 ET Article written by Jon Donnison, Sydney correspondent Australians have long been famed for their rich and varied vocabulary of slang expressions, but experts say a new generation of Australians is coining fewer of them and borrowing more from abroad. Australians have always had a way with words. The underlying principle of speaking the lingo down under seems to be: if in doubt, shorten it. "Afternoon" to "arvo". "Journalist" to "journo". "Swimming trunks" to "swimmers". "Sunglasses" to "sunnies". "Postman" to "postie". "Mosquito" to "mozzie". The list is endless. . . http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-27805070 (via Gerald T Pollard, NC, DXLD) MUSEA +++++ AM: No Static At All A few days ago, The Los Angeles Daily News featured an article called "When AM Radio Created Their own Versions of Songs". Within the article, there was a reference to a version of the 1978 Steely Dan hit song, "FM (No Static at all) that was created for KHJ. They had refused to air the song because it seemed like a blatant endorsement of their competition. So, a special version was created with the new lyric, "A-M- No Static At All". I knew instantly that I had to hear that! YouTube to the rescue. Here's a link to a song that only Medium Wave DX'ers could truly appreciate: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LHbyNTfd3Y You can also listen to a Podcast that contains several of these special versions of songs recorded for AM radio stations: http://laradiowaves.com/audio/RadioWaves37.mp3 -- 73 (Les Rayburn, N1LF, Maylene, AL, EM63, June 17, NRC-AM via DXLD) I remember seeing the movie "FM" that that song was written for, I loved it even though it was widely panned. It was about a fictional progressive radio station that went on strike because a conglomerate bought it and ruined it (in their eyes), coincidentally the station I had listened for years to at that time, WBCN Boston had the same thing happen to it in real life no where near as exciting although much closer to what was happening in real life to those types of stations around that time. The station was run with scabs for DJ's for about a month and they lost so many listeners that the company capitulated, it was a great station, one of the first progressive rock stations in the country, went on the air in 1968, story here if you're interested: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WBCN_%28FM%29 (Bob Young, Millbury, MA, ibid.) Similarly, KMPX in San Francisco broadcast album-oriented rock back in the days when it was called underground. The DJs were generally from Top 40 AM stations who felt there was more to the music than what could be said in three minutes or less. KMPX became very popular in San Francisco, and the owner decided that the DJs were getting paid too much money. Out of the kindness of his heart, he instituted a pay cut and they instituted a strike. They pooled their money and bought a floundering classical station owned by Metromedia named KSAN. They moved their format from KMPX to KSAN, and KSAN immediately became the #1 FM station in San Francisco for younger demographics, and also became the station that was copied in every major market. KSAN lasted from 1967 until it went country somewhere around 1980 (Mike Hawkins, IRCA via DXLD) I enjoyed listening to KMPX when we lived in Cupertino in the mid 1960s. Around that time, I heard via the grapevine that an ex-NRCer, Ben Patch, was involved with the station when they first started the underground. Does that ring a bell with anyone? I don't remember the strike, etc., perhaps it happened after we left Cupertino for Winston- Salem in 1968. Also, I believe that FMer KSJO in San José started underground shortly before we moved. Used to listen to a great folk music show with Kin (Baggy) Baggot (sp) on KSJO, at that time (John Sampson, ibid.) DIGITAL BROADCASTING --- DRM See BRAZIL; INDIA; NEW ZEALAND; NIGERIA; ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ PAPUA NEW GUINEA; USA RADIO EQUIPMENT FORUM +++++++++++++++++++++ RADIOSHACK UPDATES LATEST STORE CLOSURE PLAN Retailer Now Plans To Close 200 Stores per Year over Next 3 Years By Mark Heschmeyer June 11, 2014 http://www.costar.com/News/Article/RadioShack-Updates-Latest-Store-Closure-Plan/161346 Stymied by an impasse with its lenders over its plan to close up to 1,100 stores this year as part of a restructuring plan, electronics retailer RadioShack has scaled back the plan to now close 200 stores per year over the next three years. "The net result will be that we can achieve a good portion of our objective just over a longer timeframe," said John Feray, executive vice president and CFO of RadioShack. The Fort Worth-based retailer could not find mutually agreeable terms to obtain consent from its lenders necessary to proceed with a more aggressive closure program. However, the company said it continues to have "good dialogue on this topic." RadioShack said it is also working with its landlords to find an efficient and cost effective means to reduce rent expense. It has enlisted A&G Realty to assist in that effort. The company has yet to give much information about which stores may be impacted when by the new plan. "Going back to April, we looked at that 1,100 hundred stores maybe a little differently than perhaps you might have from your view," Joe Magnacca, CEO of the company told analysts. "we looked at it from a location basis, from a store profitability basis, from a duplication of store perspective, and we got that number based on those criteria." Were it to have closed 1,100 stores, it would have left RadioShack with 3,000 domestic stores. Regarding its remaining stores, Magnacca said the company was trying to take "a much more strategic view of our real estate and getting to a place sooner than later." RadioShack reported this week that its first quarter performance was challenged by an industry-wide decline in consumer electronics and a soft mobility market which impacted traffic trends throughout the quarter. Total net sales and operating revenues were $736.7 million, compared to $848.4 million last year. Comparable store sales were down 14% driven by traffic declines and soft performance in the mobility business. "We are also successfully reducing our costs, with a particular focus on removing expenses that do not impact the customer experience, and have taken steps to lower our corporate headcount, leverage technology, and reduce discretionary expenses. Our entire team is focused on executing our vision, adapting to the environment, managing our balance sheet, and driving sustainable change," Magnacca said (via Mike Cooper, WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) A few weeks ago I inquired at the (only) RS in Enid. Said no chance of this story closing: it makes too much money (gh, DXLD) Pioneer FH-X700BT CAR STEREO for FM; vs Pioneer Supertuner IIID for AM Just a brief note to say I now have a Pioneer FH-X700BT car stereo in my car - installed it myself - installation easy - FM is as sensitive as stock but with Ginsu knife selectivity - I can listen to CIOO on 100.1 100 miles away in spite of local Class C1 CHTN on 100.3. I also have picked up CIOK on 100.5 some 150 miles away. In a nutshell, selectivity is getting pretty close to the Sony XDR wondertuner. AM sensitivity is not bad, but less than stock. I passed on an HD variant with hotter AM section as I have lots of AM DX capability, my travel time seldom involves night, and I wanted a double DIN in my dash for looks and larger buttons for my 50 year old eyes and fingers. RDS requires a very strong signal. Weak FM signals are reduced to communications audio - no problem for a DXer. It can be configured for a signal strength meter, so I have that set up - a total of 5 bars - very useful for showing how even strong locals can see a major signal dip around certain buildings etc while driving. FM audio quality on locals is fantastic - great stereo separation - the stock Delco/Delphi was almost mono even on locals. In a nutshell, highly recommended for FM DXers who want to replace their factory radio. If you want AM DX capability in your car as well, take Bruce Carter's advise and opt for a Supertuner IIID with HD. I did purchase a service manual [PDF] for the FH-X700BT and with it I know what tuner IC it uses. I hope to put up a link to the IC data sheet sometime. In summary, it does use adaptive IF with, IIRC, a bandwidth that gets as narrow as 40 KHz on super weak FM [there are many "steps" of IF bandwidth along the way] - thus explaining both the communications grade FM DX audio and the fantastic selectivity. AM has no such benefits, stuck with a fixed bandwidth allowing, at best, AM freq response up to 3700 Hz and with audio rolloff added on weak signals (Phil Rafuse, VY2PR, Stratford PE Canada - still listening to newly testing CKEZ-FM on 97.9 [see CANADA], June 14, ABDX via DXLD) TV ANTENNAS CANNOT BE BANNED Your HOA or local government cannot forbid you from having an outdoor TV antenna except in very rare circumstances. Google "OTARD" for more information (Trip Ericson, http://www.rabbitears.info WTFDA via DXLD) Trip, Quite right -- and something I'm keenly aware of. I even obtained permission to put up an outdoor antenna from our HOA. But haven't worked out the installation yet. It required a near-legal battle, and extensive time to obtain the permission. even with OTARD, most HOA's simply put boilerplate language restrictions against outdoor antennas in their covenants. As someone who works professionally with the law enforcement and emergency management communities on their messaging, I can tell you that Digital TV has caused a lot of problems, especially in severe weather situations. As my father used to say, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it". I've yet to see any proof that analog TV or radio is or was, "broke". Declining revenues have as much to do with programming decisions as they do with increased competition from "digital" competition. Yes, the public now has access to mobile data services, and on-demand programming, but instead of rushing to embrace HD video, the public spends it's time watching low-rez YouTube videos of cats. And while Pandora is great, it doesn't work well in mobile environments. Analog FM works great in the mobile environment already. Why rush to change that situation? The issue is content, not how the content is delivered. More diversity of programming, local content, and innovative programming would restore audience share faster than any technology driven solution. IBOC should face facts, their experiment is a complete failure on AM, and only slightly better on FM. The fact that they have enough lobbying clout to get bills passed, influence FCC regulations, and can strong-arm automotive manufacturers into including HD radios doesn't mean that the public has embraced their product. Far from it (Les Rayburn, Director, High Noon Film, 130 1st Avenue West, Alabaster, AL 35007-8536, ibid.) PROPAGATION +++++++++++ GEOMAGNETIC INDICES Compiled by: Phil Bytheway E-mail: phil_tekno@yahoo.com Geomagnetic Summary May 1 2014 through May 31 2014 Tabulated from email status daily (K @ 0000 UTC.) Date Flux A K Space Wx 1 126 6 1 no storms 2 135 3 0 no storms 3 133 7 3 no storms 4 132 16 1 no storms 5 139 10 2 no storms 6 139 3 0 minor, R1 7 146 4 2 minor, R1 8 148 20 4 moderate, R2 9 152 8 1 no storms 10 150 9 3 no storms 11 164 12 3 no storms 12 163 8 2 no storms 13 159 5 2 no storms 14 163 6 2 no storms 15 152 5 1 no storms 16 139 5 1 no storms 17 134 4 1 no storms 18 128 5 1 no storms 19 117 4 2 no storms 20 117 4 0 no storms 21 114 3 1 no storms 22 111 9 3 no storms 23 116 19 5 minor, G1 24 118 6 2 minor, R1 25 113 4 1 no storms 26 108 4 0 no storms 27 106 4 2 no storms 28 99 4 2 no storms 29 103 7 1 no storms 30 102 9 2 no storms 31 104 4 1 no storms Sx – Solar Radiation Storm Level Gx – Geomagnetic Storm Level Rx – Radio Blackouts Level (IRCA DX Monitor June 14 via DXLD) :Product: Weekly Highlights and Forecasts :Issued: 2014 Jun 16 0322 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 09 - 15 June 2014 Solar activity began the period at low levels, increased to high levels by midweek, and ended the period at moderate levels. In total, 17 solar flares were measured at or above the M1 (Minor) threshold this period, three of which were X-class (R3-Strong) flares. Region 2087 (S18, L=155, class/area=Eac/220 on 13 Jun) was the most productive region of the period and kicked things off with a pair of X-class flares on 10 Jun. The first event was an impulsive X2/Sf (R3-Strong) flare at 10/1142 UTC with an associated Tenflare (1400 sfu), a Type-II (878 km/s) radio sweep, and with a subsequent coronal mass ejection (CME) visible off the east limb in SOHO/LASCO C2 coronagraph imagery beginning at 10/1200 UTC. The second event was an X1/1f (R3-Strong) flare at 10/1252 with an associated Tenflare (530 sfu), a Type-IV radio sweep, and a subsequent partial halo CME visible off the east limb in C2 coronagraph imagery beginning at 10/1325 UTC. Post-event forecaster analysis and WSA-ENLIL model output suggested that these CMEs would narrowly pass by Earth on or around 14 Jun at 1900 UTC, but were ultimately not observed in ACE solar wind data or at ground-based magnetometer stations. Region 2087 struck again on 11 Jun, producing an X1/Sf (R3-Strong) flare at 0906 UTC with an associated Tenflare (190 sfu) and a subsequent CME off the east limb first visible in C2 coronagraph imagery at 11/0924 UTC, which was later determined to be directed away from the Sun-Earth line. In addition to the three X-class flares detailed above, Region 2087 produced an additional seven M-class flares in the R1 (Minor) category. Regions 2080, 2085, and 2089 were certainly outclassed by Region 2087 but would not go quietly. Region 2080 (S12, L=261, class/area=Dkc/340 on 08 Jun) contributed an M1/Sn flare at 11/0534 UTC, Region 2085 (S20, L=257, class/area=Ekc/490 on 12 Jun) produced an M1/1B flare at 12/0937 UTC and an M3/1f flare at 12/2216 UTC with an associated Tenflare (220 sfu), a Type-II (1679 km/s) radio sweep, and a Type-IV radio sweep. Finally, Region 2089 (N18, L=197, class/area=Dai/150 on 15 Jun) produced an M1/Sf flare at 12/2003 UTC. No proton events were observed at geosynchronous orbit although the greater than 10 MeV proton flux became slightly enhanced (flux values remained below 1 pfu) early on 13 Jun, likely associated with the M3 flare from Region 2085 at 12/2216 UTC. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit was at normal to moderate levels over the past week and reached a maximum flux value of 227 pfu on 13 Jun at 1405 UTC. Geomagnetic field activity was predominately quiet with isolated periods of unsettled conditions on 11 and 14 Jun. FORECAST OF SOLAR AND GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY 16 JUNE - 12 JULY 2014 Solar activity is expected to be at predominately low levels with a chance for moderate activity throughout the outlook period. No proton events are expected at geosynchronous orbit. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is expected to be at predominately normal levels with a chance for moderate levels throughout the outlook period. Geomagnetic field activity is expected to be predominately quiet with periods of unsettled conditions likely on 16-18 Jun, 25-26 Jun, and 11 Jul due to coronal hole high speed stream (CH HSS) effects. :Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt :Issued: 2014 Jun 16 0322 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 2014-06-16 # # UTC Radio Flux Planetary Largest # Date 10.7 cm A Index Kp Index 2014 Jun 16 130 10 3 2014 Jun 17 130 8 3 2014 Jun 18 130 8 3 2014 Jun 19 130 5 2 2014 Jun 20 130 5 2 2014 Jun 21 130 5 2 2014 Jun 22 130 5 2 2014 Jun 23 130 5 2 2014 Jun 24 120 5 2 2014 Jun 25 120 8 3 2014 Jun 26 120 8 3 2014 Jun 27 120 5 2 2014 Jun 28 120 5 2 2014 Jun 29 120 5 2 2014 Jun 30 120 5 2 2014 Jul 01 120 5 2 2014 Jul 02 120 5 2 2014 Jul 03 120 5 2 2014 Jul 04 120 5 2 2014 Jul 05 120 5 2 2014 Jul 06 120 5 2 2014 Jul 07 115 5 2 2014 Jul 08 115 5 2 2014 Jul 09 115 5 2 2014 Jul 10 115 5 2 2014 Jul 11 115 8 3 2014 Jul 12 115 5 2 (SWPC via WORLD OF RADIO 1726, DXLD) Solar activity forecast for the period June 20 - 26, 2014 Activity level: mostly low X-ray background flux (1.0-8.0 A): in the range B1.5-B9.0 Radio flux (10.7 cm): a fluctuation in the range 95-150 f.u. Events: class C (0-10/day), class M (0-3/day), class X (0-1/period), proton (0-1/period) Relative sunspot number (Ri): in the range 20-125 RWC Prague, Astronomical Institute, Solar Dept., Ondrejov, Czech Republic, e-mail: sunwatch(at)asu.cas.cz ______________________________________________________________________ Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period Jun 20 to Jun 26, 2014 Because of higher solar activity, we expect moderately unsettled geomagnetic condition in the first half of next week. The first half, the local geomagnetic field at in the Czech Republic and Budkov observatory (IAGA code BDV) should be quiet to unsettled. Second half of next week, active conditions possible but unlikely. The local K- index should not exceed K=4. Tomas Bayer Institute of Geopysics of the ASCR Budkov observatory, Czech Republic ______________________________________________________________________ Geomagnetic activity forecast for the period June 20 - July 16, 2014 Geomagnetic field will be: quiet on June 28 - 30, July 2 - 3, 9, 12 mostly quiet on June 21, 23, July 4 - 5, 10, quiet to unsettled on June 20, 22, 24 - 25, July 11, 13 quiet to active on June 26, July 1, 7 - 8, 14 - 15 active to disturbed June 27, July 6, 16 Amplification of the solar wind is expected on: June 21 - 23, July 6 - 7, 10 Preliminary summary: - Cycle 24 maximum is apparently just behind us. Although it was generally not low, were among the lowest in the last hundred years. Sunspot activity increased already at the end of October 2013, but the response in earth's ionosphere was particularly evident later: since the end of February, until early April 2014. Now, we expect a roughly four-year decline in solar activity to the next solar cycle minimum. Remarks: - Reliability of predictions is temporarily reduced with respect to significant changes in the configuration of active regions, which indeed is after the cycle peak nothing unusual. - Parenthesis means lower probability of activity enhancement. F. K. Janda, OK1HH, Czech Propagation Interest Group (OK1HH & OK1MGW, weekly forecasts since 1978) e-mail: ok1hh(at)rsys.cz (via Dario Monferini, DXLD) TIPS FOR RATIONAL LIVING ++++++++++++++++++++++++ RED STATE RADIO with MARK FAULK Show Info --- "Populism: The political doctrine that supports the rights and powers of the common people in their struggle with the privileged elite." Tune in every week as activist, author, filmmaker....and now, candidate for the Oklahoma State Legislature Mark Faulk does what he does best, unearthing the scams, corruption, and ugly politics that are destroying America. Increasingly, America has become a country of extremes, of haves and have-nots, of rich and poor, of red states and blue states. And then there's Oklahoma. As Rachel Maddow recently said, "Oklahoma is turning it up to eleven. If Oklahoma gets any redder it's going to start blistering and peeling." The Oklahoma state legislature and Governor Mary Fallin have recently passed laws banning cities from raising the minimum wage, taxing solar power, and is even considering banning all marriage just to punish "the gays". But it hasn't always been that way. Once upon a time, the reddest thing in populist Oklahoma was its original state flag, an expansive sea of deep red surrounding a single blue and white star in the middle with a 46, representing the 46th state in the nation. In fact, it was so red that it was eventually banned as being "too communist" On Red State Radio, we will dig deep into the (red) dirt and expose the greed, extremist politics, and the influence of groups like ALEC in Oklahoma as they test market every oppressive law they can dream up before they unleash it on the rest of America.Tune in, call in, and join the debate as we reclaim Oklahoma, and America, in the name of populism, FOR THE PEOPLE. [and previous 58-minute podcasts available:] http://toginet.com/shows/redstateradio (via Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) ###