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---[Start Commercial]---------------------

World Radio TV Handbook 2008 is out.
Order yours from
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/redirect2.php?id=wrth2008
---[End Commercial]-----------------------
________________________________________
Hard-Core-DX mailing list
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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://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt

Today's Topics:

   1. AM logs Friday ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
   2. EDXC Conference 2008 (Risto V?h?kainu)
   3. March 2008 transmission of SWR, Finland (Alpo Heinonen)
   4. UK:    Ofcom scuppered 61 pirate broadcasters in 2007 (Paul)
   5. EMWG 10th anniversary contest - about to start (Steve Whitt)
   6. Glenn Hauser logs February 29, 2008 (Glenn Hauser)
   7. HCDX logs between 2008-02-29 0000 UTC and 2008-03-01 0000 UTC
      (Risto Kotalampi)
   8. Feb 29 Logs ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
   9. Glenn Hauser logs March 1 (Glenn Hauser)
  10. logs ([EMAIL PROTECTED])


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 11:21:40 -0000
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] AM logs Friday
To: "Shortwaveworld Shortwaveworld Shortwaveworld"
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Robert
        Wilkner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,   "Logs DSWCI Logs DSWCI Logs DSWCI"
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,    "Ivan_Lebedevsky" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        <[email protected]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

Bolivia, 3310, Radio Mosoj Chaski, 0909-1030,  Initial copy with a female in 
Spanish
language comments.  Heard "Bolivia" mentioned a couple of times during this 
time.  The
female is very longwinded and talks until 0926.  At that time canned ID. 
This is followed
with local type music, which is very enticing.  After one tune, a male 
announcer commences
in comments.  With same format, still audible at 1030.  Signal was fair. 
(Chuck Bolland, February 29, 2008)

China, 6115, Voice of the Strait, Fuzhou, 0955-1000 Heard a weak signal here 
with
music and Chinese comments from a male.  Signal was blocked somewhat at 1000
by station on 6120 KHz coming up.  Still could hear VOS, but it was 
difficult.
(Chuck Bolland, February 29, 2008)

Brazil, 3255, Radio Educadora 6 De Agosto,(pres) 1010-1025 Noted a program 
of music
with a male in Portuguese Language comments between tunes.  Signal was 
difficult to copy
because of being weak.  (Chuck Bolland, February 29, 2008)

Australia, 2310, VL8A, Alice Springs, 1030-1040, Only fades in occasionally 
with
English comments from a male.  Signal was threshold.  (Chuck Bolland, 
February 29, 2008)

Australia, 2325, ABC North Tennant Service, 1032-1040,  Noted a male in 
English language comments with brief comments from a female.  Sounds like we 
are listening
to a live sporting event.  Signal was poor.  (Chuck Bolland, February 29, 
2008)

Australia, 2485, ABC Service, Katherine, 1036, Can only hear carrier here. 
No audio
available due to weak signal.  (Chuck Bolland, February 29, 2008)

Unident, 2445, 1038, Noted a male in comments, but unable to identify the 
language
or any details since the signal was too weak. Language sounded like English 
however.
This could be a harmonic, but it's right on 2445 KHz.  (Chuck Bolland, 
February 29, 2008)

Unident, 2600, 1043-1100, noted a female in unident language comments.  This 
is probably a harmonic or maybe not?  I checked a number of possibles, but 
couldn't find any parallel.  Signal was fair but distorted.  On the hour 
(1100) female gives ID, but couldn't catch it.
  (Chuck Bolland, February 29, 2008)

Note and correction:   All my logs with the Subject Line "AM logs for Thur" 
had
an incorrect date.  They should have been tagged with February 28 2008 vice
February 29 2008.  Please make the correction.  Thank you.

Clewiston, Florida
R-390A used for all loggings


















------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 15:27:39 +0200
From: Risto V?h?kainu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] EDXC Conference 2008
To: [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1


Hello,

a message for those interested in joining the European DX Conference this 
year.

The conference will be held 5-7 September in Vaasa, Finland organised by 
the Finnish DX Association as the 50th Anniversary meeting of the club.

The conference web pages are at www.netikka.net/edxc2008. The pages do not 
include prices of the conference packages, but they will be available soon. 
There will be packages including accomodation at the hotel as well as 
without accomodation (for those willing to use other options). However, all 
accomodation reservation to the conference Hotel Silveria shall be made 
through the FDXA, as the room reservation has been centralized to us.

The pages include a description of an optional post-conference tour and 
those interested can vote upon what tour they specially would like to join. 
However, this voting will be closing soon, so please send your vote as soon 
as possible.


on behalf of the organisation committee

Risto Vahakainu
FDXA

-- 
Risto V?h?kainu
tietotekniikka-asiantuntija
Helsingin yliopisto
Tietotekniikkaosasto/sovelluspalvelut
p. 09-191 23133
mp. 050-529 2909


------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 15:51:12 +0200
From: "Alpo Heinonen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] March 2008 transmission of SWR, Finland
To: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="UTF-8"


Hello folks,
Time to warm our transmitters for 24 hours action starting to run this evening 
at 22 hours UTC . So Scandinavian Weekend Radio 1602 kHz  6170/5980 kHz and 
11720/11690 kHz on whole Saturday day 1st of March 2008.

Check our program, time and frequencytables from  http://www.swradio.net . 
Register yourself  NOW also to our FORUM there! Please join and take part....

+358 40 995559 call and send your SMS's
info(at)swradio.net send your e-mails here

Letters and reports for QSL's (add 2 euros/2 IRC's) write to:

SWR reports
P.O.Box 99
FI-34801 VIRRAT
FINLAND

Best greetings,
Alpo Heinonen
Scandinavian Weekend Radio

------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 20:39:07 +1300
From: "Paul" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] UK:    Ofcom scuppered 61 pirate broadcasters in 2007
To: "Hard-Core-DX" <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

The Register ? Comms ?
Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/28/ofcom_and_the_pirates/

Ofcom scuppered 61 pirate broadcasters in 2007

By Bill Ray

Published Thursday 28th February 2008 07:02 GMT

Sixty-one people were prosecuted for illegally broadcasting in the UK during 
the 2006/7 financial year, according to Ofcom's latest figures 
(http://www.ofcom.org.uk/radiocomms/ifi/enforcement/pstats/stats0607).
One of those got off the charges, with the rest copping fines of about 
?7,000 between them plus ?21,000 in costs. Six convictions for dodgy CE 
marking brought in another ?11,500 in fines, and one CB user got hit for 
?50.

Part of Ofcom's remit is to prevent unauthorised use of the spectrum it 
licenses, generally in response to complaints from legitimate licence 
holders. Ofcom said last year it received 1,300 cases of interference, of 
which more than 80 "were impacting upon key safety of life services".

The UK regulator last week 
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/19/london_pirates/) announced a it had 
shut the door on 22 illegal broadcasters in London.

Fining pirate stations and confiscating their equipment clearly isn't 
working, and no matter how much Ofcom claims they are interfering with 
life-saving services people continue to listen to them - so targeting the 
advertisers might seem worth a try.

In the latest crackdown Ofcom wrote to 20 nightclubs to let them know they 
were breaking the Wireless Telegraphy Act 2006. When pushed, however, they 
admitted they've never actually prosecuted anyone for it (though they have 
asked for specific events to be pulled with some success).

Talking to the pirates, it seems that such an action would be of limited 
value anyway - they make their money from charging DJs for the air-time, 
though none of the pirates we spoke to were making a living out of it.

When it comes to interference it seems the quality of the equipment is what 
matters. One ex-regulator told us that most of the kit is pretty idiot-proof 
these days: "Transmitter modules are readily available from suppliers such 
as Veronica and Broadcast
Warehouse. They are easily assembled and connected and the audio side is 
quite straightforward; however antennas are not plug 'n play and this is 
where knowledge is required and problems arise."

Obviously, badly set up kit could be transmitting on any frequency, or a 
whole range of frequencies - though several readers pointed out that such 
circumstances are not in the interests of the pirate, who will be quickly 
tracked and shut down.
Such tracking will only find the transmitter, housed on top of a tall 
building or (as is increasingly the case) strapped to the side of a 
mobile-phone cell tower where the power supply is more standard and the 
security lower. Much of the illegal activity of the pirates consists of the 
way in which they gain access to, and steal power from, these installations.

Investigators will then try to track down the studio, which will have line 
of sight to the transmitter for a microwave connection. If the studio is 
found, people can be arrested and equipment seized. Some of those arrested 
will get an official caution or conditional discharge (41 of the 61 
prosecuted last year), though many will never get charged. We asked Ofcom 
for the number of arrests last year, for comparison, but it's been unable to 
provide us with an answer.

As for the stories of booby-trapping equipment to prevent its removal, the 
pirates tell us that such activity is generally designed to prevent other 
pirate stations from nicking their transmitters. Such looting is, 
apparently, endemic in London, and hardly something they can report to the 
police.

In fact, competition between the illegal broadcasters seems to be the root 
of much of the violence associated with pirate radio, as evidenced by the 
seizure of knives and even firearms from pirate-radio studios - not 
something the Radio Caroline crowd would have endorsed.

Interference from pirate radio stations could be eliminated through better 
education, or equipment, but the competition issue isn't going to go away. 
Handing out fines and cautions isn't having much of an impact either, but 
technology could make the problem simply disappear. All of the pirate radio 
stations we spoke to are also streamed over the internet, and with mobile 
data moving towards more sensible pricing the need for FM infrastructure is 
rapidly disappearing.

Should a significant proportion of the population move to DAB radio the 
pirates could well find themselves priced out of the market, forced onto the 
mobile internet. It will be interesting to see how many continue with their 
vocation when it ceases to have the kudos of being illegal. ? 



------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 11:01:16 -0000
From: "Steve Whitt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] EMWG 10th anniversary contest - about to start
To: "Hcdx" <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="us-ascii"

Dear all,

The EMWG 10th anniversary contest ia about to start.

On Friday 29 February around 1930utc the quiz will be published on the 
EMWG contest web site (www.emwg-contest.org) in the following ways:

* as an online form
* as a Word file (both .doc and .docx)
* as an OpenOffice.org file
* as a PDF file

The quiz will contain 20 radio related questions (some easy, some hard) 
and 1 elimination question.

banner EMWG contest

The first ten participants will already get prizes (thanks to PlayDX). 
As participating is more important than winning, some EMWG PDFs will 
also be awarded to random participants.

Everybody can only enter the competition once and all address and 
contact details need to be mentioned.

Please don't hesitate to publish this into your publication(s). Should 
you have any interesting items that could be a nice prize for one or 
more contestants, just drop me a line!

73

- Herman -
www.emwg-contest.org
www.emwg.info



------------------------------

Message: 6
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 09:11:36 -0800 (PST)
From: Glenn Hauser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] Glenn Hauser logs February 29, 2008
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

** CANADA. 6160, CKZU and CKZN were taking turns dominating, Feb 29 at 0705 ---
hey, maybe it`s not such a good idea to have them on same frequency, even from
opposite coasts. Two talk programs, per CBC online schedule, CKZN would be
Channel Africa from WRN after 3:30 am local, and CKZU would be Writers &
Company after 11 pm local. There was a rippling SAH between them (unless a
weaker third station was in there to confuse the situation), maybe 15 Hz or so
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** CUBA. Another check Feb 29 of what happens as RHC English is closing down at
0700 on 49 metres: 6000 carrier stayed on a while, but the audible audio seemed
to be WYFR. 6060 switched abruptly from RHC`s closing music piece to some very
different harpsichord-like music for about 10 seconds, presumably CMBF R.
Musical Nacional. Huge signal 6180 was still on at 0703 check with
undermodulated talk network, still not sure which one, until 0705*. Earlier
around 0640 I was hearing the mixing product of RHC in English on 6300, i.e.
6060 leapfrogging over 6180, with a lite SAH, presumably from otherwise
inaudible Sahara (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** INDONESIA. VOI, 9526, not heard at first check 1408 Feb 29, but at 1451
could detect very weak carrier on this off-frequency; poor propagation today,
or QRP? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** TINIAN. Don`t usually hear anything here, but Feb 29 at 1445, good signal in
Vietnamese on 15470. This is RFA at 280 degrees, 14-15. No jamming audible
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** TURKEY. Very surprised to hear unmistakable VOT IS on 6175, Feb 29 at 1456
with flutter. This is scheduled as Emirler site, S of Ankara, about to open
two-hour Arabic service at 168 degrees. That azimuth aims toward Al Quds, down
the Red Sea, across Ethiopia, and the southern tip of Madagascar, hitting
Antarctica at the Mac Robertson Coast. However, the long-path to Enid would be
a bit further east, right across the Arabian Peninsula, and then totally over
water all the way to Culiac?n, Sinaloa, after tangenting 62 degrees south near
the Ad?lie Coast. This seems more likely than short path, which would reach 62
degrees north where it is noon at the southern tip of Greenland (Glenn Hauser,
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

Geophysical Alert Message # Solar-terrestrial indices for 28 February follow.
Solar flux 70 and mid-latitude A-index 24. The mid-latitude K-index at 1500 UTC
on 29 February was 4 (48 nT). No space weather storms were observed for the
past 24 hours. No space weather storms are expected for the next 24 hours
(SWPC)

** VENEZUELA. YVTO, 5000, has moved up its ID announcement ahead of WWVH,
perhaps in order to be in the clear. Good idea. Feb 29 at 0647-0651, heard
``Observatorio Naval Cagigal, Caracas, Venezuela`` at approximately :41-:44
past each minute. The axual time announcement just before minutetop still mixes
with WWV. Could not detect any spur on 5100 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING
DIGEST) 

** VIETNAM. 6020 with hi-pitched hum, on the modulation, not an unstable
transmitter, at 1406 Feb 29, talk did not sound like Vietnamese. This defective
emission is thought to be Vietnam, QRMing Australia before 1400; WRTH has it as
20 kW, minorities network from Buon Me Thuot. HFCC shows site as DAL = Daclac
12N41 108E03. 

DX Asiawaves by Alan [note spelling of surname] Davies 
http://www.asiawaves.net/vietnam-radio.htm 
shows: 6020 VOV-4 Buon Me Thuot, Dak Lak Province 20 320? 2200-1600
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

UNIDENTIFIED. 6074, 8GAL, did not show up Feb 29, at 1359-1401 with V/CQ
marker, bad propagation today; however at 1401 I think I briefly heard traces
of it. Also distracted by much stronger Spanish SSB 2-way around 6072 at 1359,
whose first words heard were ``puta madre`` (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING
DIGEST) ###


      
____________________________________________________________________________________
Looking for last minute shopping deals?  
Find them fast with Yahoo! Search.  
http://tools.search.yahoo.com/newsearch/category.php?category=shopping


------------------------------

Message: 7
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 23:05:02 +0000
From: Risto Kotalampi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] HCDX logs between 2008-02-29 0000 UTC and 2008-03-01
        0000 UTC
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Hard-Core-DX.com logs from 2008-02-29 0000 UTC to 2008-03-01 0000 UTC
---------------------------------------------------------------------

Please visit http://log.hard-core-dx.com/ for the real time logs
and to submit your logs to the HCDX Online Log.




For more information please email [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-----------------------------------------------------


------------------------------

Message: 8
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 18:15:01 EST
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [HCDX] Feb 29 Logs
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

**CHAD. 4904.97, RNT, *0429-0450, Feb 29,  sign on with 10 
seconds of the National Anthem, 50 seconds of silence & opening 
French announcements at 0430. Local Afro-pop music. French talk. 
Fair signal. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**COLOMBIA. 5910.07, Marfil Estereo, Puerto Lleras, 0325-0410,
Feb 29, English religious sermon with Spanish translations. Local 
music at 0403. ID at 0407. Fair to good. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**EQUATORIAL GUINEA. 6250, Radio Nacional-Malabo, *0503-0610,
Feb 29, sign on with National Anthem. Afro-pop music at 0505. Spanish
talk. Abruptly off the air at approximately 0534. Back on the air at
0543 with Afro-pop music. Spanish ballads. Spanish talk at 0601.
Fair to good signal but occasional rtty QRM. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**ETHIOPIA. 7209.87, Radio Fana, Addis Ababa, *0257-0320, 
Feb 29, IS. Opening ID announcements at 0301 & into Horn of
Africa music. Very weak with HAM QRM. Stronger on // 6110 but
with some adjacent channel splatter. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**YEMEN. 9780.05, Republic of Yemen Radio, San?a, 1805-1900,
Feb 29, English programming with Euro-pop music & English talk.  
ID at 1819. English news at 1830. Euro-pop music at 1835. Some 
local music. Even a Billy Joel tune. News headlines at 1855 & local 
music at 1857. Arabic at 1900.  Fair signal strength but an overall 
poor signal in noisy conditions and muffled audio making if difficult to 
understand. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 





**************Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.      
(http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-duffy/
2050827?NCID=aolcmp00300000002598)


------------------------------

Message: 9
Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 17:43:04 -0800 (PST)
From: Glenn Hauser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] Glenn Hauser logs March 1
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

** AUSTRIA. 7325, March 1 at 0008 in German, obviously from ?1 Moosbrunn as
scheduled, but with distorted interference. Seemed like a spur from some other
frequency but could not find anything matching on this band; and then it
appeared the distortion peaks coincided with the program modulation underneath,
as well as not being on a slightly separate frequency; also they would come and
go. Suspect a problem at Moosbrunn (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** CUBA. 11680, new frequency for RHC in Spanish, loud and clear, and best of
the lot when checked for parallels, March 1 at 0015. It was synchronized with
// 13760. It was not synchronized, echoing against much weaker 11760, 9600,
6060, 5965. // 6140 was slightly out of synch with the other two groups. This
could indicate three different transmitter sites and/or three separate audio
feed routings for the same program and/or, least likely, deliberately offset
modulation on adjacent transmitters to even out power consumption, as is done
at Bonaire and various IBB sites such as Tinian. The audio on these was not //
6000 and 9820, which carry separate ``Mesa Redonda`` program at this time. At
0020 the main program was identified as ``Revista Informativa de la Noche de
Radio Habana Cuba``. Also checked Rebelde 5025 just in case, and totally
separate programming from all of this.

11680 is not on any of the online frequency schedules for RHC at this hour, nor
on their own frequency schedule at
http://www.rhc.cu/espanol/frecuencia/frecuencias-espanol.htm
which we have already pointed out is inaccurate in other cases. 

However, 11680 is in use for the Venezuela relay at 15-16, and we also heard it
on one Sunday during the 14-15 UT hour instead of 11875 which collides with
WEWN. 11875 is on the RHC schedule above for 00-05, but not heard now, so it
appears 11680 is its replacement in the evenings, but who knows if this is a
fluke or a permanent change? Did not hear any frequency announcements, but
those are not reliably updated, anyway, announcers being the last to know of
any frequency changes. 

It`s typical for RHC, once it starts using one frequency at a certain time, to
expand it to other times, of course leaving it for monitors to discover what is
happening as no notifications are made to HFCC by this outlaw nation, which
still asserts it follows international broadcasting rules, unlike the US which
dares to broadcast to Cuba without its permission (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX
LISTENING DIGEST) 

UNIDENTIFIED. 7260, good signal with 30-second loop announcement lasting 23
seconds + 7 seconds pause, paraphrased: ``BBC World Service, currently no
service on this channel, but you can hear English and Arabic 24 hours on one of
this satellite`s nearby channels. Details of all our services at
bbcworldservice.com`` with BBC theme music bed. Heard from tune-in 0005 UT
March 1, still at 0015, and at 0050 rechecks. No Merlin/BBC/VTC usage during
this hour on any of the online schedules. Is no one paying attention at Bush
House/VTC master control? Obviously not, and we SWLs are further insulted by
being addressed as satellite listeners. Site? Planning a new service from where
to where? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)


      
____________________________________________________________________________________
Looking for last minute shopping deals?  
Find them fast with Yahoo! Search.  
http://tools.search.yahoo.com/newsearch/category.php?category=shopping


------------------------------

Message: 10
Date: Sat, 1 Mar 2008 02:11:18 -0000
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] logs
To: "Shortwaveworld Shortwaveworld Shortwaveworld"
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Robert
        Wilkner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,   "Logs DSWCI Logs DSWCI Logs DSWCI"
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,    "Ivan_Lebedevsky" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        <[email protected]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

India, 4920, All India Radio, 0120-0140 Male and female in comments. 
Language probably
Hindi?  At 0126 brief music then back to comments again.  Signal was poor 
with fading.
(Chuck Bolland, March 1, 2008)

Angola, 4950, Radio Nacional, 0140-0200,  As usual, the program consists of 
steady Portuguese/Hilife  musical selections. I've always liked African 
Hilife music.  At 0200
time ticks followed with ID and news.  Signal was poor.  (Chuck Bolland, 
March 1, 2008)

Clewiston, Florida
R-390A



End of Hard-Core-DX Digest, Vol 63, Issue 1
*******************************************

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