Paul,

It brings back memories on when I lived in Seward in the 60s. The old KIBH
Seward was on 1340 with 250w. In 1964, the station was destroyed in the
March 27th Quake. But KLAM (CLAM) was okay and on from 5:30 AM to 9:30 AM
and 5PM to 10PM, Monday through Saturday, off Sunday. Their ground wave
signal at over 125 miles, over water was pretty good in those days. I even
got a QSL letter from them. Long before there was a station in Valdez.

Patrick

On Fri, Dec 16, 2016 at 6:35 PM, Paul B. Walker, Jr. <
walkerbroadcast...@gmail.com> wrote:

> KLAM Cordova is 250 watts and KVAK Valdez is 1kw, both about 450 miles
> south/southeast of me in Galena, Alaska.
>
> I can kinda regularly here them, but it often borders between barely above
> the mush and fair, at best.
>
> Well, Wednesday December 14th between 1800 and 1900UTC, I had them in
> solidly, like they were locals 5 miles down the road. There was a whine (a
> het) on KLAM from someone on 1449.
>
> Recordings!
>
> Here KLAM:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRyNdQVmljQ
>
> Heres KVAK:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W6uDabqUglI&t=65s
>
> Paul B. Walker, Jr.
> Galena, AK
> Grundig Sattelit 750
> 225 foot long wire
> DXEngineering HF PreAmp
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> The 37th edition of the AM Radio Log is now shipping!
> Info: http://www.nrcdxas.org
>
>
>
_
Hard-Core-DX mailing list
Hard-Core-DX@hard-core-dx.com
http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/
_______________________________________________

THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License
published by Michael Stutz at
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/dsl.html

Reply via email to