Maybe I should have started listening earlier, judging by some of Dennis' catches. However, I can't say that listening from 1405 to 1425UT was a complete washout by any means, with the bulk of the action on the lower band. Any morning with HLSA-603 at full strength here is not to be sniffed at...
pretty darn good audio (all of it understandable by a native speaker, at least briefly): 594 JOAK; JJ man, but there was some weaker mx also on the North Flag 603 HLSA at 1414UT //558 774 JOUB 1566 HLAZ at 1420 reasonable audio at times during the period (much of it understandable by a native speaker, though often battling w/splash or noise): 567 JOIK, //594 576 RR talk by man at 1415UT 639 CNR-1 //4460 at 1422UT 747 JOIB 972 HLCA not so reasonable audio, occasional words or phrases in splash or noise could be understood by a native speaker 558 mostly HLQH //603; at 1405UT however, presumably JOCR, as not //603 then 828 JOBB 1134 mx, not //972 or 4460, so most likely JOQR 1242 likely JOLF; JJ talk by woman, at 1422UT Burbles in the splatter and noise (if lucky, language might be guessed at by cadence of talk, or parallel established by changes in talk or music) : 621 sounded CC, and not //N. Korea on 3320 711 perhaps HLKA 846 maybe //594?? 1314 1386 NHK2 //774 1476, mx, not //774 1512 1575 Strongish het, no audio (either undermodulated or ravaged by splatter): 864, 1008 best wishes, Nick ********** Nick Hall-Patch Victoria, BC Canada _______________________________________________ IRCA mailing list [email protected] http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/irca Opinions expressed in messages on this mailing list are those of the original contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the IRCA, its editors, publishing staff, or officers For more information: http://www.ircaonline.org To Post a message: [email protected]
