Hello All,

Thanks to both Patrick and Tony for the suggestion of Noumea, New Caledonia as 
the likely French station heard on 666 kHz here in Lincoln City, OR this week. 
This was never heard during any of my visits to Grayland, and its signal 
strength was only decent on one out of four days this week.

Another mystery solved this week was the 684 kHz perenially weak station (which 
was finally IDed as a parallel of the much stronger 639-Radio Fiji One, for my 
second Fiji logging). A pesky UnID DU (possibly with a foreign language) is 
mixing almost every morning on 594 kHz with the ABC station, and an Australian 
talk station is giving 639-Fiji fits on certain mornings, depending upon 
propagation. 585 kHz apparently has two different DU's mixing-- one with an 
easy-listening music format, and the other with classic rock (decent MP3's were 
made of both, at different times). 531 kHz usually has the typical DU mix of 
competing Aussies (from which I've never heard any actual ID), but the NZ 
Samoan station has been strangely absent. 

There was a bizarre DU propagation pipeline on Tuesday morning which made both 
738-Tahiti and 2NR-Grafton, Australia mix together in a S9+ snarl around 1250, 
making both stations easily audible on the barefoot Sony SRF-T615 Ultralight. 
This was the first time I've ever heard two DU's fight it out on a barefoot 
ULR! The same thing was happening on 639 kHz with Radio Fiji One and the UnID 
Aussie talk station, both of which were snarling together at around an S8 level.

My listening equipment is very basic-- a modified Tecsun PL-380 DSP Ultralight 
(with remarkably effective 1 kHz DSP filtering from the stock Si4734 chip) and 
two newly-designed 7.5" plug-in loopsticks, one for MW, and one for LW. This 
enables me to chase DX on both bands with one PL-380 (and avoid any TSA 
hassles). For chasing DU's I'm using a portable 3' PVC tuned passive loop, 
which is designed to fit in a crammed compact car trunk. Every morning the loop 
is assembled in total darkness within a couple of minutes, and it provides a 
very potent DXing boost when inductively coupled to the PL-380. Not counting 
the ICF-2010 SSB spotting receiver, the total cost of the station is about 
$125-- about the same as one night's charge here at the Liberty Inn Motel! 

I'll be writing a full DXpedition report (with MP3's and photos) upon our 
return to Puyallup, WA on Saturday. Thanks again for any help in sorting out 
the UnID's-- I'm far from a DU expert, and all suggestions are greatly 
appreciated.

73 and Good DX,
Gary DeBock (in Lincoln City, OR)
           



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