All times and dates strictly UT. MW log editors are welcome to excerpt items, 
reformat and change to favorite timezone if necessary. Rx: mostly DX-398 with 
internal antenna only; some caradio as specified; above 2 MHz on FRG-7 with 
110-foot east-west longwire.
          
These logs are excerpts from my daily all-band reports, mainly SWBC, also 
VHF/UHF, sometimes, utility, ham, which may be found in several archives 
without much delay, such as
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/index.php?topic=Hauser
  
And compiled weekly along with extensive news from many other individuals and 
publications in DX LISTENING DIGEST:
http://www.worldofradio.com/dxldmid.html

** CUBA [non]. C-SPAN cable in the US aired the third (of how many?) episode 
about USG international broadcasting, Nov 26 at 2330 UT; usual repeats are 
Monday 1300 and UT Tuesday 0100 on C-SPAN 2. Or on demand:

The Communicators with Carlos García
Nov 22, 2011 C-SPAN | Communicators 

Carlos García-Pérez talked about U.S. government-sponsored broadcasts to Cuba. 
Radio broadcasts into the communist-ruled country began in 1985, television 
broadcasts in 1990, and they are known as Radio and TV Martí. The broadcasts 
are jammed by the Cuban government and some in Congress argue that the future 
of TV Marti in particular is in question because viewership is small, compared 
with U.S. broadcasts to other countries, and news from other Western-based news 
operations appears to be available. 

This week "The Communicators" airs the third in a series about U.S. 
Government-sponsored broadcasts to other countries. These broadcasts are 
services of the Broadcasting Board of Governors. . .
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/302825-1

In case you are wondering, CGP said he was born in Miami of Cuban parents, grew 
up in Puerto Rico, moved his family back to Miami for this job. Paints a 
picture of an effective RTV Martí, successful lately by sending DVDs of 
programs to Cubans; and vows that the station will continue to be a major media 
source in post-Castro Cuba
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** MEXICO. Pre-sunrise MW DX monitoring now Nov 24 produces some of the same 
things we were getting an hour earlier in Oct before unDST timechanges.

650, Nov 24 at 1301 UT, `Panorama Agropecuario`, 6:01 TC, heard many times 
before when it was at 1200, on XETNT, Los Mochis, Sinaloa. Gets out very well, 
surely the 10 kW claimed rather than previously listed 2 kW.

870, Nov 24 at 1304, XETAR ID immediately heard, but in native language, not 
Spanish, rustic music, then mixing Spanish announcements; atop some CCI. In 
A-season it signed on at 1200, from Guachochi, Chihuahua.

900, Nov 24 at 1311, R. Vida ID in `Café de la Mañana` show, phone numbers for 
call-ins. Previously concluded this is XEDT in Ciudad Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua, a 
name change from listings as La Reina. Has Cantú cuaught up with this yet since 
we last checked in our almost-daily Mexican DX sessions in October when we 
heard it multiply?
http://www.mexicoradiotv.com/frec_am_0800-1090.htm
No! Will it be corrected in WRTH 2012, now probably at the press? In the new 
IRCA Mexican Log which we have not yet seen? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING 
DIGEST)

1030, Nov 24 at 1306, lengthy promo for Tele-Fórmula and its wide coverage not 
only in México but across the US by satellite, good here with KTWO nulled. Says 
this show started at 5:30 am HCM [1130 UT]: XEYC, Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua. Was 
also getting Spanish in KTOK 1000 null, presumably usual XEFV from same ciudad 
(Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** OKLAHOMA. 670 and vicinity, Nov 25 at 1712 UT midday on caradio, distorted 
spur spikes from talk station; have been bothered by this for a long time, 
obviously out of whack nearby (frequency or geographically) transmitter. This 
time I get out a portable and try to find any match from stations on the low 
end of the band, and locals on 960, 1390, 1640 --- no, nothing fits. 

But the crosstalk can also be heard when tuned directly to WWLS 640 Moore. That 
signal is so strong that the only explanation is that it`s coming out of their 
very own transmitter --- but it is NOT synchronized with WWLS itself. As far as 
I can tell, however, it is the same programming of sports talk, also with music 
bits interspersed. WWLS is also running IBOC which puts out the usual noise 
field peaking around 653 on the high side. I think it must be the same audio on 
IBOC delay somehow emitting a portion of the signal in (very distorted) AM even 
further from the fundamental. Has anyone ever run across this defect from other 
IBOC stations? 

Fortunately, WWLS is the only AM IBOC station in the OKC market, KTOK having 
quit it years ago; unlike poor Tulsa with 3 or 4 of them; see 
http://topazdesigns.com/iboc/station-list.html (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING 
DIGEST)

** U S A. 660, Nov 24 at 1302 UT, VG signal from E/W with national ads for Home 
Depot, Geico. Do they operate on the Res? Must have been end of very brief 
network newcast, 1303 ID as ``KTNN AM 660, Window Rock – Bird Springs``, right 
into chanting. The latter isn`t in Rand McNally`s Arizona, but Google finds it 
between Dilkon and Leupp north of Winslow. I assume KTNN just adds other 
faraway Navajo towns at random to their city of license IDs. The point is, here 
they are, long before local sunrise without null toward New York. 

I compared it to 770 for KKOB Albuquerque, which adheres to official sunrise 
times before going non-direxional --- a quite weak signal in English may have 
been that or its non-direxional 230-watt co-channel relay in Santa Fe (Glenn 
Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

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