Les, I often catch myself wondering about what the MW band would sound like 
here IF -- and this is just a hypothetical situation , mind you -- all of the 
AM stations in Canada and the U.S. were to permanently go silent.  Will Mexican 
stations stay on?  If THOSE go off, will AM stations in Central and South 
America stay on?  Will AM stations across the Atlantic and Pacific stay on?  
The DX opportunities for us, should those scenarios occur, could be fascinating 
(it's been over 25 years since I've heard anything from Central America on MW, 
and I'd love to again).  Personally, I honestly, FIRMLY believe there will 
always be SOMETHING on the 530-1710 band to DX, whether domestic or foreign.  I 
just can't picture it drying up completely.



Longwave, on the other hand, presents a different scenario.  About 5 years ago, 
I began DXing non-directional beacons with much interest, and now those are 
slowly going away.  Pity, since those are obviously much easier to ID than AM 
stations!  For DXers on the North American coasts, a future without NDBs on 
longwave won't be as difficult to stomach, as they'll always have European 
broadcast stations to go after.  But for people like myself in the landlocked 
middle of the USA, a longwave band without the beacons will be much more of a 
challenge to DX.



73,

Rick Dau

South Omaha, Nebraska  EN21af

MW: Sony ICF-2010, Grundig AN-200  (over 990 AM stations heard here)

LW: Sony ICF-2010, Quantum Q-Stick paired with Ratzlaff "cake dummy" loop

________________________________
From: IRCA <[email protected]> on behalf of Les Rayburn 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, January 8, 2017 11:05 AM
To: IRCA Radio List - irca@hard-core-dx_com
Subject: Re: [IRCA] [NRC-AM] RIP DX Tests (was: Re: Rackley on Synchronous AM 
Boosters)

Patrick,

True enough. I just turned 55, and I'm just hoping that enough analog signals 
will remain to last my lifetime. Can't imagine a world without radio to DX. The 
Chinese have a saying, "Make friends with change." I've lived long enough to 
see the wisdom in that.

I can say that radio has been a lifelong hobby of mine, licensed as a ham at 
age 9-and active in DXing even before that. I've tried a bit of everything. 
Ham, SWL, AM, FM, TV, Public Service Bands-and enjoyed it all. There is magic 
in the ether and I hope that the younger generation find something similar to 
excite them.

73,

Les Rayburn, N1LF
121 Mayfair Park
Maylene, AL
EM63nf
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