I can't remember which came first - my coming across a White's Radio Log at age 
7 or hearing those "distant" NYC stations from CT. I do remember wondering why 
WMCA with only 570 of something was louder than WWRL which had 1600 of 
something!

My first DX "machine" was a heavy Motorola portable, the model number of which 
escapes me. This was when we lived in Miami. I strung a 250' antenna across the 
vacant lot next door. I have no idea what direction it favored but do know 
California and Arizona came in. The next radio was a Hallicrafters; I had this 
at prep school in Chattanooga and remember getting two Hawaiians on the same 
morning. I was missing stations in ID, MT and WY so wrote a dozen of them 
asking when their next frequency check was. KOOK-970 told me and also referred 
me to the NRC, providing me with my first indication that there were "others 
out there" with the same hobby. At Duke, a friend of mine who was an engineer 
had a Hammarlund and let me borrow it. My more agile roommate strung up some 
wires among the spires at Duke and this gave me my first taste of foreign DX 
(2WL-1430, NZ, and many Europeans). After graduation, I enjoyed the absolute 
best of both worlds: I was the all night rock jock on WQAM-5!
 60 six nights a week and had Monday mornings off to DX at a time when other 
stations still signed off and had frequency checks. Heaven on earth! (WQAM 
never went off but it would have been fun to tap the tower). 

Surely the highlight of all this had to be the little round-the-world trip my 
wife, Sony ICF 6700W, loop antenna and I took in 1979. In Cape Town, there was 
one local, and I had no idea what to expect. When VOA-1260 Rhodes came in at 
semilocal level with Chuck Mangione and then an ID, it blew me away - and set 
the tone for an evening of DX from Brazil, US, Canada, England, and as much 
else as I could inhale - but nothing from the NE or E. Interesting; must have 
been blocked by Table Mountain. I almost lost the Sony to customs people in 
Cairo, whereas in China, they just asked me to take out the batteries. No one 
cared about the loop back then...

Some day when property size allows for beverages, when I don't have 1240-1600 
pretty well wiped out due to locals and when the noise level drops to a 
tolerable level, I hope to get a Perseus or something of that ilk and get back 
at it a little more actively. Meanwhile, I still have some pretty good 
equipment (below) and do fire it up from time to time. Thanks everybody for 
keeping the DX lists alive and well.

Pete Taylor
Tacoma, WA
12225w 4719n
HQ180 & ICF2010
Kiwa aircore & Palomar loops
DX398, SRF-59 & M37V
Eton E100 + Tecsun PL-300/380






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