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http://www.bruceatchison.blogspot.ca/2013/06/shortwave-isnt-what-it-used-to-be.html
TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

SHORTWAVE ISN'T WHAT IT USED TO BE.

Eighty-one dollars was a lot of money back in 1971. Even so, I managed to 
convince my 
mom to buy me a Sony shortwave radio. It was a dream-come-true for me. Having 
discovered the joys of international broadcasts in 1966 through the classroom 
radio 
at Jericho Hill School for the Deaf and Blind, I finally had my own receiver. I 
felt 
overjoyed as Mom paid for it and we rode the Greyhound bus home to Fort 
Saskatchewan.

If my mother figured I wouldn't listen to it for long, she was sorely mistaken. 
I 
carried that portable everywhere and listened to it for hours that summer. I 
remember 
waking up at 5:00 A.M. one morning and tuning in Radio Australia. They played 
some of 
the local rock bands on the show that I tuned into. I didn't think much of the 
music 
but I felt proud that I heard songs which none of my peers had heard on 630 
Ched, the 
local rock station in Edmonton.

With a long wire in the basement, I was able to improve shortwave reception. 
Stations 
from various European countries boomed in during the evenings while Asian 
stations 
came in well each morning. Though I did hear stations from South America, only 
HCJB 
in Quito, Ecuador had English programming. 

There were plenty of jamming stations during those days too. Transmitters in 
the 
Soviet Union transmitted noise on the same frequencies as stations from America 
with 
programs in Russian so their people couldn't hear them. Even so,no western 
governments jammed English broadcasts from Radio Moscow and those of satellite 
countries behind the Iron Curtain.

As with any technology, new improvements often leave users of older 
technologies out. 
I discovered, to my annoyance, that amateur radio operators and utility 
stations 
transmitting voice signals from point to point used a mode called single 
sideband. It 
was energy-efficient and took up less room on the dial. Unfortunately for me, 
it 
sounded garbled on my AM receiver. Mom put her foot down regarding buying 
another 
radio so I contented myself with the one she bought me.

I don't have that receiver today but I have a similar model. When I listen to 
shortwave now, I find little in the way of interesting programming. Private 
Christian 
stations in America broadcast programs ranging from ranting preachers to 
conspiracy 
theory survivalist hucksters. Most of the European broadcasters can only be 
heard on 
the Internet and many Asian stations have moved their too. Some have gone off 
the air 
entirely. For most enthusiasts, the glory days of shortwave are over.

I wrote about HCJB in Quito, Ecuador in my new book called How I Was Razed: A 
Journey 
from Cultism to Christianity. Check out the e-book version, now on sale for 
$3.99, at 
Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Virtual Bookworm Publishers. For those who like 
paperbacks, visit How I Was Razed.


http://delicious.com/gr_greek1/zak (all my pages )




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