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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]-----------------------
________________________________________
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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. HCJB Australia A08 (sakthi vel)
   2. VOA increases Tibetan b'cast timings (Alokesh)
   3. RE;  Dxers Unlimited?s mid week edition for 18-19 March 2008
      (Prof. Arnaldo Coro Antich)
   4. HCJB A08 (Alokesh)
   5. IRN odd (Wolfgang Bueschel)
   6. March 19 Logs ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
   7. Re: IRN odd (Wolfgang Bueschel)
   8. HCDX logs between 2008-03-19 0000 UTC and 2008-03-20 0000 UTC
      (Risto Kotalampi)
   9. New MW QSL  (#2985) (Patrick Martin)


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

Message: 1
Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 12:00:17 +0000 (GMT)
From: sakthi vel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] HCJB Australia A08
To: Listening In rogers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

HCJB Australia A08 
T1 Effective Sunday, March 30 2008 ? Saturday, October
25, 2008

SOUTH PACIFIC
0730-0930  English 11750 (Daily)

SOUTH EAST ASIA - A08 T1 
0000-0030 Indonesia (Bahasa) 15405 (Daily)
0030-0100 Myanmar (Rawang) 15405 (Daily)
1200-1230 Malay (Bahasa) 15540 (Sun)
1230-1330 English 15540 (Mon-Sat)
1330-1330 Myanmar (Rawang) 15435

SOUTH ASIA
1400-1430 English 15425 (Sun)
1400-1430 Urdu 15425 (Mon-Sat)
1430-1445 Nepali 15425 (Daily)
1445-1500 Malayalam 15425 (Sun)
1445-1500 Gujarati 15425 (Mon)
1445-1500 Urdu 15425 (Tue)
1445-1500 Marathi 15425 (Wed)
1445-1500 Bhojpuri  15425 (Thur)
1445-1500 Punjabi  15425 (Fri)
1445-1500 Tamil  15425 (Sat)
1500-1515 Chhattisgarhi 15425 (Sun, Fri & Sat)
1500-1515 Kuruk 15425 (Mon & Thur)
1500-1515 Marwari 15425 (Tue)
1500-1515 Telegu  15425 (Wed)
1515-1530 Hindi 15425 (Daily)

EAST ASIA ? A08 T2
2230-2300 Japanese 15525 (Sun & Sat)
2230-2300 Mandarin 15525 (Mon - Fri)
2300-0000 Mandarin 15525 (Daily)
0000-0030 English 15525 (Daily)
1030-1130 Mandarin 15400 (Daily)
1130-1200 Mandarin 15400 (Sun & Sat)
1130-1200 Fujian 15400 (Mon - Fri)
1200-1230 English 15400 (Daily)
12300-1330 Mandarin 15400 (Daily)
1330-1400 Mandarin 15400 (Sun & Sat)
1330-1400 Fujian 15400 (Mon - Fri)
1400-1430 English 15400 (Daily)

All times are in UTC
(Jaisakthivel, Ardic DX Club, Chennai, India. Via
Rebeca, HCJB Australia, Web: www.hcjb.org.au For more
details about A08 visit www.dxersguide.blogspot.com)


///////////////////////
For Contact: Jaisakthivel,59,Annai Sathya Nagar,
             Arumbakkam,Chennai-600106,India 
Visit: www.dxersguide.blogspot.com
       www.sarvadesavaanoli.blogspot.com
Join: www.groups.yahoo.com/group/sarvadesavanoli
Mobile: +91 98413 66086
///////////////////////


      Bring your gang together - do your thing. Go to 
http://in.promos.yahoo.com/groups


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

Message: 2
Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 21:23:48 +0530
From: "Alokesh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] VOA increases Tibetan b'cast timings
To: "CUMBRE DX" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

VOA increases Tibetan b'cast timings

from DXAsia News 
9:17 PM (2 minutes ago)

VOA increases 2 hrs of b'casting as per the following schedule :
0300-0400 hrs on 15545 17665 21570 kHz.
1600-1700 hrs on 7395 9395 11865 kHz.

Detailed b'cast list of Tibetan language.
http://dxasia.info/language/Tibetan

(Alok Dasgupta via www.dxasia.info)




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

Message: 3
Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 12:29:57 -0400
From: "Prof. Arnaldo Coro Antich" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] RE;  Dxers Unlimited?s mid week edition for 18-19
        March 2008
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], HCDX <[email protected]>,    Gayle
        Van Horn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252; format=flowed

Radio Havana Cuba

Dxers Unlimited

Dxers Unlimited?s midweek edition 18- 19 March 2008

By Arnie Coro

Radio amateur CO2KK

Hi amigos radioaficionados, around the world and orbiting planet Earth? 
ONCE AGAIN, with a zero sunspot count, and NO CORONAL HOLES, I give you 
my welcome to the mid week edition of Dxers Unlimited .I am Arnaldo, 
Arnie, Coro, radio amateur CO2KK, your host here at this Radio Havana 
Cuba twice weekly program, devoted entirely to the promotion and 
development of our wonderful hobby , yours and mine: RADIO? a hobby we 
can enjoy in so many different ways that they defy imagination? from 
having the unique opportunity of helping to save the lives of people 
aboard a sinking boat via amateur radio, to enjoying the beautiful sight 
of a valley below a TV tower where you have climbed to install a new ham 
radio repeater for your radio club, or perhaps you may be fascinated by 
the beautiful music heard on the 60 meter Tropical Broadcast Band coming 
from several African stations? Si amigos, yes my friends, oui mes amis, 
radio is a really challenging hobby, where you can relax placing small 
electronic components to circuit boards in your quest towards a new 
receiver, or simply desolder parts from old circuit boards removed from 
electronic equipment that otherwise will go to the junk yard and pollute 
the environment. So far , my list of the many ways we can enjoy our 
radio hobby has grown up to 83 and for sure, there are many more to be 
explored.

Item two: A broken down, or an obsolete cellphone can be the source of 
two highly valuable devices? a nice high quality electret microphone 
element, and an also high quality optimized for voice communications 
earphone? So, don?t throw away the old analog cellphones before removing 
the microphone element and the earphone capsule? My amateur radio two 
meters band handie talkie now has a much better microphone element than 
the original one, thanks to that simple surgical electronic transplant 
operation? it took about an hour to extract the analog Nokia cellphone 
microphone element and then install it on the old 1991 vintage YAESU FT 
411 two meters band handie talkie? Reports received on the local 145.190 
Havana Metropolitan Area repeater were very encouraging, telling me that 
the Nokia microphone element from the cellphone was a much better 
quality mike than the original element used by YAESU? And of course that 
as soon as I am able to get a hold of another broken down cellphone I 
will use it to replace the active element on an very old 6 meters band 
transceiver that has received some not very nice audio quality reports?

Item three: Radio hobby related questions keep coming in to arnie at rhc 
dot cu on a daily basis, they add up, and now I have a big backlog ? 
that I hope to be able to catch up with during the weekend? In the 
meantime , here is the answer to a question sent in several different 
forms by nine listeners from places so far apart as South Africa and 
Australia, and as near to Cuba as the Bahamas, that by the way, is the 
closest to Cuba nation? because Cayo Lobos, or Lobos Key that forms part 
of the Bahamas archipelago is just 22 kilometers away from the northern 
coast of Cuba across the Old Bahamas Channel?The question is about 
wideband receiving antennas that can be built and installed by the 
average short wave listener that obviously is not a radio engineer? So 
now, here is ASK ARNIE, the most popular section of Dxers Unlimited, 
answering today the question, which broadband antenna design is the 
easiest to homebrew by the average short wave listener?

Well I must say that the reply to this question has to be divided in two 
parts: the first part is about the FAN BROADBAND ANTENNA, that is the 
easiest of them all to homebrew, and the second part is about the 
somewhat more complicated TTFD or Tilted Terminated Folded Dipole 
Broadband antenna, so well researched by my good friend and topmost 
antenna ??guru? Professor L.B. Cebik , radio amateur W4RNL.

So, let?s start with the FAN DIPOLE , after a short break for station 
ID? stay right on this frequency or world wide web connection , as Dxers 
Unlimited?s mid week edition continues in a few seconds? I am Arnie Coro 
in Havana?

?..

Si amigos, you are listening to Radio Havana Cuba?s radio hobby program? 
Now , as promised here is information on how to assemble and install 
your own fan dipole antenna, one of the easiest to build broadband 
systems for short wave reception.

In actual practice, I have tested and experimented with three different 
sizes of FAN ANTENNAS? one, designed to work from 3 to 10 megaHertz, but 
also capable of good performance up to around 20 or 22 megaHertz, 
another one of a much more practical size that works nicely from 6 to 18 
megaHertz and a compact, much smaller version that was designed during 
the peak of solar cycle 23 for optimum performance between 15 and 45 
megaHertz. As you may realize , these antennas cover a typical three to 
one frequency ratio, but they will still provide rather good reception 
on higher frequencies.

Let?s start with the medium sized FAN DIPOLE, that according to letters 
and e-mail messages received from Dxers Unlimited?s listeners around the 
world, is the one most feasible to homebrew and install? It is made of 
number 12 bare copper wire. You start by cutting six identical lengths 
of wire that are 9 and a half meters long each? Each wire is attached at 
one end to a high quality insulator, that you can even make yourself to 
save money. The FAN antenna is a dipole, that has three wires on each 
side of the center insulator, that is made from a heavy piece of 
polyethylene used as a kitchen cutting board in its original application.

You will have to drill several holes to the polyethylene cutting board 
in order to hold the six wires to it, and also to hold the antenna 
feeder wires.

The wires forming each leg of the antenna spread out from the center 
insulator so that at the end they are separated by one and a half meters 
from each other ?.

The antenna feedline is connected to each of the wires forming the 
dipole, and my advice is to use a very easy to homebrew air dielectric 
one to one balun or balanced to unbalanced transformer that will 
interconnect the antenna to a coaxial cable feedline.

The overall length of the actual antenna is about 20 meters, including 
the required insulated cords that hold the antenna wires to the two 
support structures.

The actual antenna length is 18 meters, so it will operate as a dipole 
with broadband characteristics between 6 and 18 megaHertz, allowing very 
nice reception of the international short wave broadcast bands starting 
at 49 meters, and going up to 41, 31,25, 22, 19 and 16 meters? So you 
end up with an antenna that works very well for receiving the seven most 
used international short wave broadcast band? But that?s not all amigos 
!!! There are more good things about this FAN DIPOLE? it will allow 
amateur radio operators to use if on 40, 30, 20, 17 ,15, 12 and 10 
meters too?again on the seven most active ham bands?

And because the antenna works so nicely from 6 to 18 megaHertz it will 
make a very worthwhile addition to your communications utilities 
monitoring station too.

The SIX WIRE FAN DIPOLE, is also a nice looking antenna system, that can 
be installed easily by just two persons? Please don?t attempt to install 
this antenna all by yourself, because it will be rather difficult due to 
the many wires involved?

By the way , the air core balanced to unbalanced wide band transformer 
is made on a length of white PVC pipe of twelve millimeters diameter to 
which three interlaced wires are wound for a total of twelve turns? This 
makes a very nice high performance low loss BALUN, that will cost next 
to nothing?

For cable runs no longer than 15 to 20 meters you can use RG58 or RG59 
coaxial cable, but if the antenna is located more than 20 meters away 
from the shack,, it is a much better option to use LOWER LOSS RG213 50 
ohms coaxial cable?

One final comment about this general purpose broadband short wave 
antenna system? I have even used it, with the help of an antenna tuner, 
to operate on the 6 meters or 50 megaHertz amateur band, and made 
contacts with stations several thousand miles away from Havana !!!

There is no magic involved in the overall length of this antenna or in 
the separation of the wires at the ends? just plain good sound radio 
engineering , confirmed by actual highly reliable practical results? Of 
the three FAN DIPOLE designs , the one just described is certainly the 
most popular one, although the smaller more compact version has also 
received good comments from Dxers Unlimited?s listeners that have built 
it because they had no other choice due to lack of enough space to 
install the 18 meters long version of the FAN ANTENNA?

If you need any help , or want to clarify something about this antenna 
design, just send an e mail to arnie at rhc dot cu and I will be very 
happy to reply as soon as possible? The better antennas you have, the 
more you will always enjoy our hobby amigos !!! As the spring equinox 
approaches, installing a new short wave antenna will be a very rewarding 
project amigos !!!

??

You are listening to the mid week edition of Dxers Unlimited, and here 
is now our next item?it?s about amateur radio operators here in Cuba now 
getting ready for the upcoming Atlantic and Caribbean Tropical Hurricane 
Season, due to start on the first day of June. Among the many 
preparations in progress are reinforcing some of our two meters band 
repeaters antenna systems, so that they can be able to survive to more 
than 150 miles per hour winds. Antennas installed atop high towers that 
are located high up in mountains or high raise buildings are always 
subjected to extreme forces that can destroy them precisely at the time 
that they are most needed, and that?s why our radio clubs are involved 
in the building and installation of very rugged antennas for the two 
meters band repeaters that play such an important role handling 
emergency communications?

And now amigos at the end of the show, here is Arnie Coro?s exclusive 
and not copyrighted HF plus low band VHF propagation update and 
forecast? Be ready for the first nice equinoctial DX openings on the 17, 
15, 12 and 10 meters amateur bands?They will be starting during this 
week, so they are a very good solid reason to keep your ham radio 
transceivers on and tuning around the many beacons that provide 
information about band openings? If you hear even just one single 
beacon, then it?s time to start calling CQ DX and raise some activity on 
the band where the beacon is heard? Solar flux still at very low levels 
and no signs of cycle 24 anywhere to be seen, but again, the equinoctial 
DX will be here for us to enjoy despite the very low solar activity? See 
you all at the weekend edition of Dxers Unlimited next Saturday and 
Sunday amigos !!! And don?t forget to send me an e-mail with your signal 
reports and comments about the program, plus any radio hobby related 
questions that you may want to ask, as always I am at your service my 
friends !!!




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

Message: 4
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 06:30:00 +0530
From: "Alokesh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] HCJB A08
To: "CUMBRE DX" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="iso-8859-1"

HCJB GLOBAL VOICE - Ecuador 
A08 BROADCAST SCHEDULE
(30 March to 25 October 2008; rev. 18 March 2008)
 
UTC   UTC Freq. TX Power Ant.Azi Target Days    Site
Begin End (Khz.)(KW)    (Degrees)Region SMTWTFS
--------------------------------------------------
         
COFAN
0000 0030 6050 50 18/172   S.America   1111111 Ecuador
1100 1130 6050 50 18/172   S.America   1111111 Ecuador
         
GERMAN(High)
0230 0300 9780  100 325     Mexico     1111111 Ecuador
0700 0730 9740  100 35      Europe     1111111 Ecuador
0700 0730 21455 1   35/225  Eur./S.Pac 1111111 Ecuador
2300 2400 12040 100 131     S.America  1111111 Ecuador
1100 1300 15350 4 DRM 35    Europe     1111111 Ecuador
         
GERMAN(Low)
0300 0330 9780  100 325     Mexico     1111111 Ecuador
0630 0700 9740  100 35      Europe     1111111 Ecuador
0630 0700 21455 1   35/225  Eur./S.Pac 1111111 Ecuador
2230 2300 12040 100 131     S.America  1111111 Ecuador
         
KULINA
2245 2300 11920 250 126     Brazil     1111111 Ecuador
         
PORTUGUESE
0900 1030 9745  100  100    N.Brazil   1111111 Ecuador
0900 1030 6160  110  100    N.Brazil   1111111 Ecuador
1730 2000 15295 100  139    Brazil     1111111 Ecuador
2300 0230 11920 250  126    Brazil     1111111 Ecuador
2300 0230 12020 100  100    Brazil     1111111 Ecuador
2300 0100 11795 4DRM 110    Brazil     1111111 Ecuador
         
QUECHUA
0900 1030 6125  100 155     S.America   1111111 Ecuador
2100 2300 9745  100 155     S.America   1111111 Ecuador
         
QUICHUA
0800 1100 690  50 000/180   Ecuador     1111111 Ecuador
0830 1300 3220 10 90(Vert.) S.America   1111111 Ecuador
0830 1300 6080 10 90(Vert.) S.America   1111111 Ecuador
0800 1100 21455 1 35/225    Eur./S.Pac  1111111 Ecuador
2100 0300 6080 10 90(Vert.) S.America   1111111 Ecuador
0000 0300 3220 10 90(Vert.) S.America   1111111 Ecuador
         
SPANISH
0030 0500 6050  50  18/172  Ecuador     1111111 Ecuador
0100 0500 9745  100 324     Mexico      1111111 Ecuador
1100 0500 690   50  000/180 Ecuador     1111111 Ecuador
1130 1500 6050  50  18/172  Ecuador     1111111 Ecuador
1100 1300 11960 100 355     Cuba        1111111 Ecuador
1100 1500 11690 100 150     S.America   1111111 Ecuador
1300 1500 11960 100 330     Mexico      1111111 Ecuador
1100 1600 21455 1   35/225  Eur./S.Pac  1111111 Ecuador
1900 2330 6050  50  18/172  Ecuador     1111111 Ecuador
2000 0500 21455 1   35/225  Eur./S.Pac  1111111 Ecuador
2100 2300 12000 100 150     S.America   1111111 Ecuador
2300 0100 12000 100 157/330 N/S America 1111111 Ecuador
         
WAODANI
1030 1100 6050  50  18/172  S.America   1111111 Ecuador
2330 2400 6050  50  18/172  S.America   1111111 Ecuador
         
Mailing Address:  
HCJB Global Voice
Casilla 17-17-691    
Quito, Ecuador  S.A.
+593 2 226 4765   

Frequency Manager:  Allen Graham (HCJ)
---------------------------------------

Alokesh Gupta
New Delhi,India.


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

Message: 5
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 19:58:05 +0100
From: "Wolfgang Bueschel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] IRN odd
To: "HCDX" <[email protected]>, "DXLD"
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

IRAN  13801.545, Voice of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Zahedan; 1410-1428*
15 March, 2008. Nonstop discussion by man and woman in Arabic, abruptly off
mid-sentence. Clear and fair. Frequencies that are reported to the .000 were
arrogantly measured on the IC-R75 (vs. the NRD-535).
(Terry L Krueger-FL-USA, dxld Mar 17)

On March 19th 0530-1430:
Odd 13789.96KAM and 13801.00ZAH kHz.

Also Azeri nominal 6200 1430-1657 seems odd 6201.95SIR kHz oscillating.
Remaining 17 channels in 1430-1500 UT slot rather on or near even xx.00 kHz.

Arabic 1630-0527 UT on March 19th now on 6201.95 ... 6202.06SIR kHz.

[previously also on 6065..66v hitting R Sweden: IRIB Sirjan Telefunken 500 
kW beast in Arabic wandered again to odd 6066.39 kHz Febr 26, 6066.87 Febr 
29, but wanders oscillating around 30 Hertz.]

German 1730-1827 on odd 7380.09KAM.
All other IRIB on even channel, also French 7380.00SIR at 1830 UT.
73 wb



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

Message: 6
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 15:24:37 EDT
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [HCDX] March 19 Logs
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

**INDONESIA. 9525.98, Voice of Indonesia, 1125-1200, March 19,
tune-in to local music. Programming in listed Mandarin. English ID
at 1200 & programming in Japanese. Fair signal. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**PERU. 5014.32, Radio Altura, Cerro de Pasco, 0410-0500*, 
March 19, Spanish announcements, IDs. Peruvian music. Canned
announcements. Abrupt sign off. Fair. On later than usual & reception
better than usual. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**PHILIPPINES. 9615, Radio Veritas Asia, 1140-1155*, March 19,
tune-in to listed Mandarin. Short English segment at 1144 with story 
about Bobby Fischer. Back to Mandarin at 1149. English ID announcement
at 1155 & off. Fair. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**U.S.A. 21695, WHRI, Cypress Creek, SC, 1445-1505+, March 15,
New frequency? Punch-up error? Spur? English religious programming. 
ID at 1500. Weak but readable. // 9840. No sign of Libya. 
(Brian Alexander, PA) 
Update to this log: Thanks to Glenn Hauser for determining that this
is a receiver generated spur. Receiver leapfrogging spur caused by 
WHRI 9840 leapfrogging over WYFR 11855 and landing on 21695. 
9840+11855 = 21695. This kind of receiver spur or image possible with 
both 9840 & 11855 extremely strong. Thanks Glenn. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
**ZAMBIA. 9430, CVC, Lusaka, 0510-0535, March 19, lite pop music.
ID. English news about violence in Tibet. Poor to fair. Tnx to Glenn
Hauser for tip. (Brian Alexander, PA) 
 
 
 
 



**************Create a Home Theater Like the Pros. Watch the video on AOL 
Home.      
(http://home.aol.com/diy/home-improvement-eric-stromer?video=15?ncid=aolhom00030000000001)


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

Message: 7
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 23:53:27 +0100
From: "Wolfgang Bueschel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [HCDX] IRN odd
To: "HCDX" <[email protected]>, "DXLD"
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

Maybe an error by the station engineer, when on 6202.06SIR :
IRIB Sirjan in Arabic back on 6067.75 at 2230 UT Mar 19th.
73 wb

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Wolfgang Bueschel" Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2008 7:58 PM
Subject: IRN odd

> IRAN  13801.545, Voice of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Zahedan;
> 1410-1428*
> 15 March, 2008. Nonstop discussion by man and woman in Arabic, abruptly
> off
> mid-sentence. Clear and fair. Frequencies that are reported to the .000
> were
> arrogantly measured on the IC-R75 (vs. the NRD-535).
> (Terry L Krueger-FL-USA, dxld Mar 17)
>
> On March 19th 0530-1430: Odd 13789.96KAM and 13801.00ZAH kHz.
>
> Also Azeri nominal 6200 1430-1657 seems odd 6201.95SIR kHz oscillating.
> Remaining 17 channels in 1430-1500 UT slot rather on or near even xx.00
> kHz.
>
> Arabic 1630-0527 UT on March 19th now on 6201.95 ... 6202.06SIR kHz.
>
> [previously also on 6065..66v hitting R Sweden: IRIB Sirjan Telefunken 500
> kW beast in Arabic wandered again to odd 6066.39 kHz Febr 26, 6066.87 Febr
> 29, but wanders oscillating around 30 Hertz.]
>
> German 1730-1827 on odd 7380.09KAM.
> All other IRIB on even channel, also French 7380.00SIR at 1830 UT.
> 73 wb



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

Message: 8
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 23:05:02 +0000
From: Risto Kotalampi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HCDX] HCDX logs between 2008-03-19 0000 UTC and 2008-03-20
        0000 UTC
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Hard-Core-DX.com logs from 2008-03-19 0000 UTC to 2008-03-20 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: 9
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 16:56:01 -0700
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Patrick Martin)
Subject: [HCDX] New MW QSL  (#2985)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
        [EMAIL PROTECTED],      [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
        [EMAIL PROTECTED],      [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
        [EMAIL PROTECTED],      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: Text/Plain; Charset=US-ASCII

670   WSCR   IL, Chicago, after 16 months and 3 f/ups, I finally got my
ppc card back signed by Greg Davis CE. I had the old WMAQ QSL'd from
back in the 60s, and they were easy to get a nice card from. Even the 50
KWers are tough to QSL these days. Address: 455 North City Front Plaza
Drive, 6th Floor, Chicago IL  60611. (PM-OR)

Patrick Martin
KGED QSL Manager




End of Hard-Core-DX Digest, Vol 63, Issue 21
********************************************

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