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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. Logs on 29-5 (Zacharias LIangas)
   2. Introducing the Shortwave Radio Audio Archive (Zacharias LIangas)
   3. The Conet Project - Recordings of Shortwave Numbers Stations
      [ird059] () (Zacharias LIangas)
   4. The Shortwave Report 5/31/13 Listen Globally! (Zacharias LIangas)
   5. AWR Wavescan Tribute to Ekala (Jaisakthivel)
   6. Tue Dx (Charles)
   7. Glenn Hauser logs June 4, 2013 (Glenn Hauser)
   8. SHORTWAVE ISN'T WHAT IT USED TO BE. (Zacharias LIangas)
   9. Tune in to Radio Dialogue (Zacharias LIangas)
  10. Re: Tune in to Radio Dialogue (Ivo Ivanov)


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

Message: 1
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 14:22:06 +0300
From: Zacharias LIangas <[email protected]>
To: [email protected], [email protected],
        [email protected];
Subject: [HCDX] Logs on 29-5
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain

Please reply to [email protected]


Logs on 29-5...
......but quite short timed except in several instances  
R75+ 16 V a/o H 

4950 RN Angola 2032 with talks in PP  S5 QSB 2 
4976 Uganda 2033 songs S10  undermoded 
5860 Farda //7590 2035 with pop songs 44544
5890 CNR1 //4800 2036 with S10 43433
5930 (Golos Rosii?) 2037 with low audio  and due to high QRN  relatively 
difficult to 
understand even language S6  ID  heard but not very clearly on 2100  with 
immediate 
sign off 
6120 S R DA 2050 head with rather sports  program , as were intense talks 
similar  to  
it , Signal S2 checked to be //11765 though in this freq  SRDA is suppressed by 
an 
Arabic lang station 
7380 unIDed with very garbled audio on 2053 with S9 signal  A short  sign  off  
on 
2055  for ca 1 min  and passes   TOH 
9745 Bahrain is now 2100 on the clear ! S3 ‘
5915 poss. Zambia  2105  with phone ins (heard  afro spelling ) in vernacular  
with 
S5 max signal  24222due to fast fades 
5939.8 (pres) voz Missionaria (per eibi )2110 with talks in Brazilian 
Portuguese and 
unclear ID  then 2111  back to talks  S5 
6245 pirate 2117 with old pops S9 
6305 pirate 2120 with Germanic songs S2 
9835 RTM Sarawak  still here on 2120 with nice S8 signal ! 
11780 R N Amazonas 2132 with S5 signal 24333
4835 Australia in 2132 with S3 Also 4910 on 2133 with S3
4885 R C Para 2132 with signal S3
4915 Macapa & other on 2134 with total signal S3 

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






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

Message: 2
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 14:33:30 +0300
From: Zacharias LIangas <[email protected]>
To: [email protected], [email protected],
        [email protected];
Subject: [HCDX] Introducing the Shortwave Radio Audio Archive
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain

Please reply to [email protected]
\\\


Introducing the Shortwave Radio Audio Archive

http://www.hamradiopodcast.com/introducing-the-shortwave-radio-audio-archive/?
fb_source=pubv1
by Robert Nemitz (K9SAT)
I am very happy to announce a project to share and archive our shortwave radio 
recordings: The Shortwave Radio Audio Archive.
Many of you probably already know that I believe archiving our shortwave radio 
broadcasts is vital now.  Many broadcasters are leaving the air, and many 
target 
areas are being removed altogether. Meanwhile, over the past two years there 
have 
been new broadcasters coming on the air, often doing test transmissions before 
beginning broadcasting in earnest. These, too, are significant in radio history.
I have already populated the site with more than eighty recordings, most of 
which 
I’ve posted here over the past two years. I still have thirty or more to add. 
Already 
in the archive: Radio Bulgaria (now silent), Radio Netherlands Worldwide, The 
BBC WS 
special broadcast of the Diamond Jubilee, and a very interesting Vatican Radio 
broadcast announcing the selection of the new pope.
If you subscribe to the SW Radio Audio Archive’s podcast, you’ll be able to see 
and 
download the entire existing collection and new recordings as they are added.
To make this project work, we need your participation!   You can help in two 
ways:
Share your shortwave radio recordings! 
Simply create an Archive.org account, upload your recording, and share the link 
with 
us (we have a nifty web form for submissions). Full details are available on 
this 
page.
Simply subscribe to the podcast, download the recordings… and save them. 
By doing this, you’ll be making an archived copy of all of the recordings. Here 
are 
two ways to subscribe to the podcast:
Use your podcast application to subscribe to our RSS feed.

Here is the feed URL: http://shortwavearchive.com/archive?format=rss
or subscribe via iTunes by clicking here
Donations and radio-related, commercial sponsorships are also welcome.
On the site, we state that “Multiple archives in multiple storage locations 
ensure 
the integrity of this collection over time.”  This is very true of all 
archives: the 
more forms of back up, the better. Especially since archive-quality digital 
storage 
does not yet exist. Safety and integrity come with redundancy.
Remember, this project is a collective, community effort, so I hope you will 
consider 
sharing your recordings with the rest of the world!
Cheers 73,
Thomas, K4SWL
The Shortwave Radio Audio Archive



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






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

Message: 3
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 14:35:19 +0300
From: Zacharias LIangas <[email protected]>
To: [email protected], [email protected],
        [email protected];
Subject: [HCDX] The Conet Project - Recordings of Shortwave Numbers
        Stations [ird059] ()
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain

Please reply to [email protected]


The Conet Project - Recordings of Shortwave Numbers Stations [ird059] ()
http://archive.org/details/ird059/
tcp d1 1 the swedish rhapsody irdial    
       00:00           
 00:00   
  
04:171tcp d1 1 the swedish rhapsody irdial
03:332tcp d1 2 counting cia irdial
02:013tcp d1 3 counting control irdial
04:354tcp d1 4 phonetic alphabet nato irdial
03:295tcp d1 5 5 dashes irdial
04:386tcp d1 6 the lincolnshire poacher mi5 irdial
03:287tcp d1 7 gong station chimes irdial
02:378tcp d1 8 dfd 21 irdial
02:049tcp d1 9 ready ready 15728 irdial
01:0010tcp d1 10 bugle irdial
01:3811tcp d1 11 5 note version czech lady irdial
02:1812tcp d1 12 three note odditiy irdial
06:3013tcp d1 13 new star broadcasting irdial
04:4014tcp d1 14 counting station spanish irdial
03:3115tcp d1 15 english lady 00000 ending irdial
03:3116tcp d1 16 attencion 3 finals irdial
03:1317tcp d1 17 4 note rising scale irdial
05:1518tcp d1 18 ciocirlia irdial
03:1719tcp d1 19 czech lady irdial
01:4620tcp d1 20 2 letter ys irdial
01:0921tcp d1 21 2 letter el irdial
01:4022tcp d1 22 5 dashes irdial
02:2323tcp d1 23 2 letter rk irdial
02:5624tcp d2 1 nnn french irdial
00:3625tcp d2 2 strich irdial
01:5426tcp d2 3 dfd21 dfc37 irdial
02:5127tcp d2 4 drums and trumpets irdial
01:4728tcp d2 5 nnn english irdial
02:0929tcp d2 6 english lady 00000 ending irdial
01:0030tcp d2 7 nnn german irdial
01:3431tcp d2 8 the russian man d-va northern russian voice irdial
00:4932tcp d2 9 phonetic alphabet nato irdial
01:0733tcp d2 10 spanish lady irdial
00:3034tcp d2 11 strich english irdial
01:1135tcp d2 12 2 letter nu irdial
00:3836tcp d2 13 g3 strich irdial
03:3437tcp d2 14 yt irdial
01:3938tcp d2 15 5 dashes irdial
01:4539tcp d2 16 german man irdial
04:5740tcp d2 17 english man irdial
01:3641tcp d2 18 english man german and german lady irdial
01:4242tcp d2 19 german lady irdial
01:1343tcp d2 20 chinese numbers irdial
04:2444tcp d2 21 spanish lady complete sequence irdial
01:3845tcp d2 22 2 letter md irdial
01:1346tcp d2 23 english man irdial
00:4747tcp d2 24 german lady irdial
00:5448tcp d2 25 phonetic alphabet nato irdial
02:2549tcp d2 26 phonetic alphabet nato irdial
03:2050tcp d2 27 nancy adam susan irdial
01:1851tcp d2 28 counting control irdial
02:4452tcp d2 29 nancy adam susan male irdial
01:3353tcp d2 30 cherry ripe irdial
01:5754tcp d2 31 russian lady irdial
00:3755tcp d2 32 russian man irdial
01:5356tcp d2 33 nnn english irdial
00:5957tcp d2 34 frank young peter irdial
01:0558tcp d2 35 cherta irdial
00:5859tcp d2 36 russian counting man irdial
02:1560tcp d2 37 olx irdial
00:5761tcp d2 38 6 tones irdial
02:0262tcp d2 39 high pitch polytone irdial
00:3163tcp d2 40 high pitch polytone irdial
01:1764tcp d2 41 high pitch polytone irdial
01:0065tcp d2 42 high pitch polytone irdial
01:1166tcp d2 43 oriental language irdial
02:0367tcp d3 1 ready ready irdial
01:0068tcp d3 2 iran iraq jamming efficacy testting irdial
01:1669tcp d3 3 english lady irdial
00:3470tcp d3 4 english lady jammed irdial
00:3471tcp d3 5 english man version 1 irdial
00:4872tcp d3 6 english man version 3 irdial
00:5873tcp d3 7 english man irdial
03:4974tcp d3 8 magnetic fields irdial
01:3075tcp d3 9 magnetic fields different voice irdial
01:2476tcp d3 10 oblique irdial
00:3577tcp d3 11 nnn old incarnation irdial
04:1678tcp d3 12 5 dashes i say again irdial
01:4979tcp d3 13 2 letter kg irdial
02:3580tcp d3 14 4 figure counting 10 rough tones irdial
03:2881tcp d3 15 2 voices in one transmission irdial
07:1682tcp d3 16 tyrolean music station irdial
00:4683tcp d3 17 3 note interval signal irdial
01:3384tcp d3 18 10 rough tones irdial
00:2985tcp d3 19 achtung irdial
01:2386tcp d3 20 a irdial
00:1387tcp d3 21 voice sample irdial
00:5988tcp d3 22 voice rapid dots irdial
01:0689tcp d3 23 strich with rare message irdial
03:1990tcp d3 24 hier ist dfc seben und dreizig irdial
02:3491tcp d3 25 2 letter pn irdial
00:1892tcp d3 26 sample count irdial
02:0993tcp d3 27 2 letter vo irdial
00:4194tcp d3 28 2 letter hk irdial
04:0095tcp d3 29 2 letter dm irdial
01:1196tcp d3 30 8 note rising scale irdial
00:5597tcp d3 31 spruchnummer 1 irdial
00:4898tcp d3 32 spruchnummer 4 irdial
01:0599tcp d3 33 random pop irdial
02:51100tcp d3 34 nomer 101 irdial
00:35101tcp d3 35 okno okno onko irdial
03:21102tcp d3 36 nomer 198 irdial
01:23103tcp d3 37 723 papaqui irdial
01:53104tcp d3 38 298 irdial
01:24105tcp d3 39 815 irdial
01:53106tcp d3 40 167 irdial
00:20107tcp d3 41 moscow coup attempt irdial
03:37108tcp d4 1 russian man complete irdial
02:49109tcp d4 2 yt irdial
00:34110tcp d4 3 555 konec irdial
00:25111tcp d4 4 preska irdial
00:26112tcp d4 5 cherta irdial
00:39113tcp d4 6 count in russian irdial
02:03114tcp d4 7 count in russian different voice irdial
01:02115tcp d4 8 1-10 announcement irdial
00:50116tcp d4 9 1-10 announcement female irdial
01:12117tcp d4 10 counting in polish irdial
02:42118tcp d4 11 konec konec irdial
00:48119tcp d4 12 pozor irdial
02:15120tcp d4 13 russian lady test count and message irdial
04:09121tcp d4 14 russian man irdial
01:47122tcp d4 15 spanish lady 2 finals irdial
00:22123tcp d4 16 spanish counting irdial
00:24124tcp d4 17 spanish counting 4 figure groups irdial
02:19125tcp d4 18 spanish man irdial
01:17126tcp d4 19 spanish lady 00000 ending irdial
02:26127tcp d4 20 spanish lady 00000 ending different voice irdial
06:39128tcp d4 21 eastern music station irdial
01:42129tcp d4 22 eastern music station different voice irdial
00:43130tcp d4 23 unidentified chinese station irdial
01:27131tcp d4 24 nnn french early version irdial
00:59132tcp d4 25 nnn hungarian irdial
06:13133tcp d4 26 wiskey tango viente y uno irdial
02:32134tcp d4 27 the crackle irdial
02:30135tcp d4 28 the backwards music station irdial
01:13136tcp d4 29 faders irdial
02:52137tcp d4 30 workshop irdial
00:50138tcp d4 31 the pip irdial
02:40139tcp d4 32 the buzzer irdial
00:52140tcp d4 33 m1 irdial
04:48141tcp d4 34 m1b irdial
03:10142tcp d4 35 m2 irdial
00:33143tcp d4 36 m3 irdial
00:20144tcp d4 37 m3 irdial
00:27145tcp d4 38 m3 irdial
00:17146tcp d4 39 m3 irdial
00:15147tcp d4 40 m3 irdial
00:15148tcp d4 41 m3 irdial
00:22149tcp d4 42 m3a irdial
00:50150tcp d4 43 m3b irdial
&#10025; Prefer flash? · Embed · Questions/Feedback? &#10025;
For more than 30 years the Shortwave radio spectrum has been used by the worlds 
intelligence agencies to transmit secret messages. These messages are 
transmitted by 
hundreds of Numbers Stations.

Shortwave Numbers Stations are a perfect method of anonymous, one way 
communication. 
Spies located anywhere in the world can be communicated to by their masters via 
small, locally available, and unmodified Shortwave receivers. The encryption 
system 
used by Numbers Stations, known as a one time pad is unbreakable. Combine this 
with 
the fact that it is almost impossible to track down the message recipients once 
they 
are inserted into the enemy country, it becomes clear just how powerful the 
Numbers 
Station system is.

These stations use very rigid schedules, and transmit in many different 
languages, 
employing male and female voices repeating strings of numbers or phonetic 
letters day 
and night, all year round.

The voices are of varying pitches and intonation; there is even a German 
station (The 
Swedish Rhapsody) that transmits a female child's voice!

One might think that these espionage activities should have wound down 
considerably 
since the official end of the cold war, but nothing could be further from the 
truth. 
Numbers Stations (and by inference, spies) are as busy as ever, with many new 
and 
bizarre stations appearing since the fall of the Berlin wall.

Why is it that in over 30 years, the phenomenon of Numbers Stations has gone 
almost 
totally unreported? What are the agencies behind the Numbers Stations, and why 
are 
the eastern European stations still on the air? Why does the Czech republic 
operate a 
Numbers Station 24 hours a day? How is it that Numbers Stations are allowed to 
interfere with essential radio services like air traffic control and shipping 
without 
having to answer to anybody? Why does the Swedish Rhapsody Numbers Station use 
a 
small girls voice? 

These are just some of the questions that remain unanswered.

Now you will be able to hear this unique and extraordinary phenomenon for 
yourself, 
as Irdial-Discs releases THE CONET PROJECT: the first comprehensive collection 
of 
Numbers Stations recordings released to the public.

This Quadruple CD is an important historical reference work for research into 
this 
hitherto unreported and unknown field of espionage. The CDs contain 150 
recordings 
spanning the last twenty years; taken from the private archives of dedicated 
shortwave radio listeners from around the world. 

There's more information in the included PDF booklet and via the official site 
for 
this 4xCD collection.

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






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

Message: 4
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 14:38:28 +0300
From: Zacharias LIangas <[email protected]>
To: [email protected], [email protected],
        [email protected];
Subject: [HCDX] The Shortwave Report 5/31/13 Listen Globally!
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain

Please reply to [email protected]


The Shortwave Report 5/31/13 Listen Globally!

https://indymedia.org.au/2013/05/31/the-shortwave-report-53113-listen-globally


Dear Radio Friend,
The latest Shortwave Report (May 31) is up at the website 
http://www.outfarpress.com/shortwave.shtml in 3 forms- (new) HIGHEST QUALITY 
(128kb)
(27MB), broadcast quality (16MB), and quickdownload or streaming form (6MB) 
(28:59) 
Links at page bottom
(If you have access to Audioport there is a highest quality version posted up 
there 
{35MB} http://www.audioport.org/index.php?op=producer-info&uid=904&nav=&;)

This week's show features stories from Radio Deutsche-Welle, the Voice of 
Russia, 
Spanish National Radio, Radio Havana Cuba, and NHK World Radio Japan.
>From GERMANY- The European Commission is going ahead with a 47% tariff on 
>Chinese 
solar panels despite the opposition of 14 EU nations. German small arms sales 
reached 
a new high last year, and the government has decided to purchase a dozen drones 
since 
Parliament has blocked their manufacturing in country. 150,000 French 
demonstrated 
against new laws allowing same-sex marriage. Russia has denounced the EU 
decision to 
lift an arms embargo to aid Syrian opposition forces.
>From RUSSIA- With the green light given for the EU supplying the Syrian 
>opposition 
with weapons, the Pentagon is weighing its military options- though they 
assured the 
world that there will be no US boots on the ground. Meanwhile Russia announced 
it 
will provide government forces with an advanced air defense system.
>From SPAIN- Efforts to convene an international conference on Syria are being 
undermined by actions of western countries. Sectarian violence continues to 
worsen in 
Iraq, with more than 700 killed in attacks in April. In Europe youth 
unemployment is 
at record highs with an entire generation facing no prospects for work. 
Ethiopia is 
creating a massive hydro-electric plant by diverting the Nile River, causing 
great 
consternation in Egypt and other downstream nations.
>From CUBA- Venezuelan President Maduro has accused the Spanish language 
>version of 
CNN of promoting a coup in his nation. In Chile high school students staged 
their own 
march to demand free quality public education. Ecuador has denounced the 
British 
government for violating Julian Assange's human rights. Last week a British 
soldier 
was savagely murdered in England and a wave of anti-muslim hate crimes have 
followed.
>From JAPAN- India and Japan are signing a deal for Japan to export nuclear 
technology. A Japanese town full of citizens displaced by the Fukushima 
disaster are 
suing for more compensation. Nuclear regulators are launching a new probe to 
see if 
the earthquake in Fukushima caused the disaster rather than the tsunami. 2 
nuclear 
power plants in South Korea have been shut down. Australia has retained the top 
spot 
in an international survey on people's happiness.

There is an article about the Shortwave Report by Cassandra Roos on line -
http://www.campusprogress.org/soundvision/780/big-stories-shortwaves

I was interviewed for an informative weekly radio show Mediageek, available at 
http://radio.mediageek.net

All that plus times and frequencies for listening at home. It's free to 
rebroadcast, 
please notify me if you're airing it and haven't notified me in the last month, 
please mention the website if you only air a portion. If you just want to 
listen and 
have a slow connection, try the streaming version- lower sound quality but good 
enough and way easier if you don't have a high-speed internet connection. If 
streaming is a problem because of your slow connection, download the smaller 
file- it 
takes 20 minutes or less, and will play swell in any mp3 player application 
(RealPlayer, Winamp, Quicktime, iTunes, etc) you have on your computer.
NEW TIME SLOT on KZYX! This program will be aired on Sunday afternoon at 4pm 
(PDST) 
on KZYX/Z Philo CA, you might be able to stream via < http://www.kzyx.org >
Podcast- feed://www.radio4all.net/responder.php/podcast/podcast.xml?
series=outFarpress+presents
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/series-podcast-outfarpress/id602376726

I hope you'll listen and air this if you're connected with a radio station. I 
am 
still wondering how to get financially compensated for the 25 hours I put into 
this 
program weekly- any ideas are appreciated. Any stations rebroadcasting this (or 
listeners) are welcome to donate for production costs. You can do so through 
the 
website. Many thanks to those that have donated! No Guilt! (maybe a little)
links for this week's edition-
< http://www.outfarpress.com/swr_05_31_13_128.mp3
Player > (27 MB) HIGHEST QUALITY
< http://www.outfarpress.com/swr_05_31_13.mp3
Player > (16MB) Broadcast Quality
< http://www.outfarpress.com/swr_05_31_13_24.mp3
Player > (6MB) Slow Modem streaming
Website Page-
< http://www.outfarpress.com/shortwave.shtml >
&#161;FurthuR! Dan Roberts

"Nationalism of one kind or another was the cause of most of the genocide of 
the 
twentieth century. Flags are bits of colored cloth that governments use first 
to 
shrink-wrap people's minds and then as ceremonial shrouds to bury the dead."
--Arundhati Roy

Dan Roberts
Shortwave Report-
www.outfarpress.com
YouthSpeaksOut!-
www.youthspeaksout.net






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






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

Message: 5
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 20:21:05 +0800 (SGT)
From: Jaisakthivel <[email protected]>
To: ardic <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] AWR Wavescan Tribute to Ekala
Message-ID:
        <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

Adventist World Radio



Special One Day QSL Card

? ? ?As was announced a few weeks ago, a special one day QSL card will be 
offered for reception reports of the broadcast of the special edition of the 
AWR DX program, "Wavescan" that honors the closure of the Ekala Shortwave 
Station in Sri Lanka. ?The Seventh-day Adventist denomination made its first 
broadcast from the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation back in 1951, on the very 
first day of what was the new SLBC Commercial Service on shortwave. ?Over the 
years, these initial radio broadcasts blossomed into Adventist World in Asia, 
AWR-Asia, and the programming of Adventist World Radio is still on the air 
shortwave from the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation, though these days from 
the ex-Deutsche Welle Relay Station located near Trincomalee on the east coast 
of the island of Sri Lanka. ?

? ? ?Without a specific?announcement, SLBC closed their historic Ekala station 
on the last day of May and they transferred their international programming to 
the station at Trincomalee. ?To honor the long and illustrious history of the 
Ekala Shortwave Station, the AWR DX program "Wavescan" is airing a 
special?edition under the old title, "Radio Monitors International" and this 
will be broadcast beginning next Sunday, June 9, and during the?following days 
next week. ?These?days, "Wavescan" is researched and written in Indianapolis by 
the AWR DX Editor, Dr. Adrian Peterson, and it is produced in the studios of 
shortwave station WRMI by Jeff White, who is noted also for his key roles with 
NASB, the National Association of Shortwave Broadcasters in the United States. 
?The AWR international DX program "Wavescan" is on the air from stations in the 
AWR network, and also from WRMI, WWCR & WINB in the United States, and from 
Spaceline in Bulgaria.??

? ? ?The old Ekala Radio Station is of such significance in the long history of 
international radio broadcasting that the well known International Radio 
Monitor in Colombo Sri Lanka, Victor Goonetilleke, is campaigning widely to 
have the site recognized as an International Heritage Site.

? ? ?This once-in-a-lifetime special QSL card will feature a?reproduction?of 
two QSL cards that were in use from AWR in Poona-Pune nearly forty years ago. 
?All reception reports of this special program will be verified with this 
special event QSL card, and return postage and an address label will be 
appreciated. ?The only address is:-
?
Adventist World Radio
Box 29235
Indianapolis
Indiana 46229
USA
? ?
Wavescan Scheduling: A13 Transmission Period


March 31, 2013 - October 26, 2013

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DayUTCCall? ? kHzkWStation? LocationCountry
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sun1030WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
1530AWR15335250Media Broadcast? NauenGermany
1600KSDA15360100Adventist World Radio? AgatGuam
1600KSDA15670100Adventist World Radio? AgatGuam
2230KSDA15320100Adventist World Radio? AgatGuam
2330KSDA17650100 Adventist World Radio? AgatGuam
Mon1100WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
WedMN00WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
1100WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
1900WINB? 13570? 50World International? Red LionPennsylvania USA
Thu0300WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
Fri0315WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
Sat1100WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
1300WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
1530WWCR2 12160? 100Worldwide Christian? NashvilleTennessee USA?
2230WRMI? ? ? 9955? 50Radio Miami Int? MiamiFlorida USA
SpacelineBulgaria
.==============================================================================

-- 

Dr. Adrian M. Peterson
Co-ordinator - International Relations & DX Editor
Adventist World Radio
N9GWY - Ex KA9YPQ


[email protected]

Adventist World Radio
Box 29235
Indianapolis
Indiana 46229
USA
317 891 8540

(Jaisakthivel, ADXC, Tirunelveli, India)

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

Message: 6
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 12:52:05 -0000
From: "Charles" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>, "Anker Petersen"
        <[email protected]>,       <[email protected]>, "Glenn 
Hauser"
        <[email protected]>,   "'HardcoreDX'" <[email protected]>,
        <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>,
        <[email protected]>
Subject: [HCDX] Tue Dx
Message-ID: <28D9BAA3E0F0490FBE44A22EA8F1C736@CharlesBolland>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="us-ascii"

Peru, 4809.968, Radio Logos, 0210-0230,  At tune in, noted a male in Spanish
Language comments.

The content of his discourse may be religious judging from the tone and
pace.  After the talking, music is presented.  At 0229 more comments by a
male which sounded like news.  At 0232 music continues.  Signal was fair
but without the QRM would have been good.  (Chuck Bolland, June 4, 2013)

 

Excalibur

26N 081W

 

 

 

 



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

Message: 7
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 09:26:58 -0700 (PDT)
From: Glenn Hauser <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [HCDX] Glenn Hauser logs June 4, 2013
Message-ID:
        <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

** AUSTRALIA. 6132-6133 & 6167-6168, June 4 at 1144, squishy spurblobs are back 
from the 6150 R. Australia transmitter, very distorted audio matching 9580, 
while 6150 itself sounds OK atop Cuba. First heard May 28 but not in the 
meantime, checked some days. 

So the Shepparton-1 transmitter, which is an SW100A, has problems. It`s the 
same one used later in the days in order, on 5995, 9710, 11650, 15240, mostly 
in English, so look out for similar plus/minus 17-18 kHz spurs around those 
frequencies (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** BANGLADESH. 15505, June 4 at 1359, BB IS plays past 1400, no timesignal, but 
opening Urdu at 1400:08; very poor (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** CHINA. Firedrake [non], only CNR1 jamming, June 4 before 1200:
13920, poor with het at 1159; none in the 12s, 14s

Before 1300 June 4:
none in the 12s, 13s, 14s at 1251
15970, good at 1253
16100, fair at 1253
16160, fair at 1253
17170, very poor at 1254
17450, fair at 1254; none in the 18s

Before 1330 June 4:
16160, good at 1319; none in the 17s
16110, suspicious open carrier at 1320 before 16100 comes on but 16110 remains 
on too
16100, fair at *1320
15970, fair at 1323
14980, fair-good at 1323
14870, very poor at 1323
14700, fair-good at 1323
13830, poor at 1324
12870, fair at 1324
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** CUBA [and non]. 12120, June 4 at 0523, still no RHC on mistuned harmonic of 
6060, but the Spy Lady is spouting Spanish numbers alternating with digital 
bleeps, and also mixing with RTTY which I assume is from somewhere else (Glenn 
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** FRANCE [non]. 9955, June 4 at 0527, RFI English is back on SW! Thanks to 
Brother Scare whose contract with WRMI expired May 31 (plus a couple bonus 
days), forcing WRMI to replace him with many hours of WRN relays again, as 
detailed in my last report. No jamming either now, and fair-good signal, which 
is much better than usual. Strange propagation tonight with little direct from 
Europe on 31m, making this along with 9330 WBCQ and 9885 VOA French via 
Botswana (switches to Greenville at 06) the SSOBs.

Report on banking rules; 0530 ID as `Paris Live` at 7:30 am so it must really 
be live; continues with news headlines from Africa. RFI via WRN via WRMI is now 
daily at 05-06 & 09-10 UT (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See also USA: 
WRMI for more

** INDIA. 15050, June 4 at 1205-1217.5* AIR Delhi with nice music in Tamil 
service, until cut off late and in mid-announcement; then tuned to 15040 and 
there`s the Burmese service at about same poor level.

9690, June 4 at 1329, sufficiently fair with plucked instrument music, presumed 
Tibetan announcement, more such music, never any AIR IS, but 1330 `Namaskar` 
and opening GOS in English with frequencies, 1330.5 news. // 13710 is very poor 
and // 11620 is a JBA carrier (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** KOREA NORTH [non]. 11835, June 4 at 1326 RHC has some CCI, talk, music, very 
weak underneath. Presumably Voice of Wilderness, one of the Bible Voice 
services, 250 kW, 45 degrees from Trincomalee, SRI LANKA, 1300-1400(Sundays 
-1430) in Korean per Aoki (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** MALAYSIA. 9835, June 4 at 1152, song in English, ``you`re my brother --- 
sister --- family``; segu? to another at 1153 seemed Malay but then heard ``Be 
in love``, from Sarawak FM. BTW, I see that India is also on 9835 at 1330-1740; 
should be quite a collision (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** MEXICO. 6010, June 4 at 1146, can`t hear XEOI but there is a JBA carrier, 
maybe it or Asia. Has it stayed on air since return June 2 and has anyone heard 
it anywhen? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** OKLAHOMA [and non]. 800, June 4 at 1120 UT after sunrise, KQCV OKC is now 
missing, leaving a remnant of Mexican music likely XEROK plus a SAH. Still 
nothing at 1137, 1219, 1245 chex but on at 1405 with gospel huxter. May not 
have anything to do with tornado aftermath.

1460, KZUE El Reno, remains silent by 1405 UT June 4, surely tornado-caused but 
still unknown exactly what happened to La Tremenda (Glenn Hauser, Enid, DX 
LISTENING DIGEST)

** PAKISTAN [non]. 15560, June 4 at 0520, spirited discussion in SW Asian 
language, fair signal, better than 15400 Dabanga/Madagascar, for example. 
Hadn`t noticed this before. HFCC shows it`s IBB in Urdu, 250 kW, 90 degrees 
from Nauen, GERMANY at 0400-0600 since 7 May.

But Aoki shows it`s Mashaal Radio in Pashto, otherwise same. RFE/RL info about 
this operation: ``Radio Mashaal was launched in January 2010 in order to 
counter a growing number of Islamic extremist radio stations in Pakistan's 
Northwest Frontier Province (now Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province) and the Federally 
Administered Tribal Areas along the border with Afghanistan. Languages: Pashto. 
Coverage: 9 hours daily``. Five of which:

DX Re Mix News, Bulgaria shows the R. Mashaal schedule via MBR is now:
0400-0600 on 15560 NAU 250 kW / 090 deg to WeAs Pashto
0600-0900 on 15360 NAU 250 kW / 090 deg to WeAs Pashto
And BTW, the other site in Germany, Wertachtal, is now closed down, completely 
off. RIP (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** PERU. 5980, June 3 at 0058 hymx, 0100 different music, usual sounder and 
announcement to R. Chaski cutoff at 0101:41.5*, which is 5 seconds later than 
yesterday (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** U S A. 9955, WRMI, has replaced Brother Scare with 93 hours per week of WRN 
relays. Consult the current WRN North America schedule grid at the times 
previously given. It`s not easy to find without a direct link:
http://www.wrn.org/listeners/assets/PDFs/WRN_ENGLISH_NORTH_AMERICA_A13.pdf

So the WRMI times now include, in many cases more than once per day:
Poland, Prague, Israel, Swissinfo, RFI, Channel Africa, Asia Calling, KBS, 
Sweden, RNZI, Vatican, Slovakia, Guangdong, Banns (Denmark), Media Network 
Plus, and of course WORLD OF RADIO at 1730 Saturdays. 

However, can`t hear anything on 9955 at 1520 June 4, so suspect they are again 
turning off the transmitter Mon-Fri 14-23 during the WRN block (Glenn Hauser, 
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) See also FRANCE [non]

** U S A. 12105, Tuesday June 4 at 1325 check, WTWW-3 is back in Russian, the 
original language at this hour (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

UNIDENTIFIED. 1350, June 4 at 1125 UT, Osgood File; he`s as bad as Paul Harvey 
was, working commercials into the narrative. So it`s a CBS station, fades out 
before he`s finished. Most likely KMAN Manhattan KS or maybe KRNT Des Moines IA 
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)



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

Message: 8
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 08:27:48 +0300
From: Zacharias LIangas <[email protected]>
To: [email protected], [email protected],
        [email protected];
Subject: [HCDX] SHORTWAVE ISN'T WHAT IT USED TO BE.
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain

Please reply to [email protected]
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 )






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

Message: 9
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 08:29:02 +0300
From: Zacharias LIangas <[email protected]>
To: [email protected], [email protected],
        [email protected];
Subject: [HCDX] Tune in to Radio Dialogue
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain

Please reply to [email protected]

https://twitter.com/radiodialoguefm/status/341858908404600832
Tune in to Radio Dialogue #Bulawayo on 12115khz shortwave between 
1800hrs-1900hrs for 
news and views from around #Zimbabwe

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






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

Message: 10
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 06:06:40 +0000
From: Ivo Ivanov <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected], [email protected],
        Hard-Core-DX <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [HCDX] Tune in to Radio Dialogue
Message-ID:
        <CANVtGkB+7N2k_XBOAsGsFawnAePqtGddq0LX==ckddde+6i...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Correct frequency is 12105, not 12115 1600-1700 UT


2013/6/5 Zacharias LIangas <[email protected]>

> Please reply to [email protected]
>
> https://twitter.com/radiodialoguefm/status/341858908404600832
> Tune in to Radio Dialogue #Bulawayo on 12115khz shortwave between
> 1800hrs-1900hrs for
> news and views from around #Zimbabwe
>
> http://delicious.com/gr_greek1/zak (all my pages )
>
>
>
>
> _
> Hard-Core-DX mailing list
> [email protected]
> 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
>



-- 
73!
Ivo

*QTH*: Sofia, Bulgaria
*Equipment*: Sony ICF-2001D 30 m. long wire
*New email*: [email protected]


End of Hard-Core-DX Digest, Vol 126, Issue 5
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