>From April 9-12 a Mini-DXpedition was conducted on a 6th floor oceanfront room 
>at the Royal Kona Resort Motel in Kona, Hawaii. This was the first of many 
>long-range DXing trips based upon the performance boost provided by a medium 
>gain FSL antenna-- which was specifically designed to easily pass through 
>airport TSA security checkpoints. A new-design 5 inch (127mm) "Frequent Flyer" 
>FSL antenna was packed inside a matched-size plastic tote within a hand-carry 
>suitcase-- and breezed through TSA security screening in both the Seattle and 
>Kona airports (without even a single question ever being asked). This FSL 
>antenna has inductive couple gain roughly similar to that of a 4' air core box 
>loop (but with a lower noise reception advantage), and was used to boost DX 
>station gain on a 7.5" loopstick C.Crane "Skywave" Ultralight radio. This 
>combination was effective enough to track down many exotic Pacific Island 
>stations (540, 621, 1440, etc.) at S9 levels during transmitter-site suns
 et skip propagation into Kona, as well as Asian TP-DX of varying strength 
around local sunrise. 

This Kona trip was primarily designed as an anniversary celebration with my 
wife, so before we took off I had (somewhat reluctantly) agreed that DXing 
would have a secondary priority to sightseeing over the four days. Because of 
this there were many frequencies that could not be investigated in Kona, but I 
knew very well which Pacific island stations were tough challenges in both 
North America and Japan-- and I was determined to go after them with a 
vengeance. 540, 621 and 1440 would all receive serious attention in Kona-- not 
because they were great challenges in Hawaii, but because most DXers in both 
North America and Japan needed all possible information about them if they were 
to have any chance of reception at all. Besides this I was eager to try my 
long-range luck chasing exotic Asians around local sunrise with the innovative 
FSL antenna, but I knew that east-west propagation was almost totally dependent 
upon solar activity-- and as it turned out both the A and K indexe
 s shot up after our arrival. 

Overall the Kona MW propagation to the Pacific islands was exceptional around 
local midnight (as expected), but the sunrise propagation was somewhat 
challenging for long range Asians Perhaps the biggest success of this entire 
trip was the interest and excitement that the "Frequent Flyer" FSL antenna 
series (the major experimental project here this past winter) has inspired 
among DXers who routinely travel to foreign countries and other faraway venues. 
As I write this Craig Barnes of Wheat Ridge, Colorado is preparing his own 5 
inch "Frequent Flyer" FSL- based DXpedition to Hawaii-- and he already has some 
experience TP-DXing with one of these models at both Kalaloch, Washington and 
Rockaway Beach, Oregon. Good luck, Craig! 

531 6DL? Dalwallinu, Australia Presumably the one with the same-sounding 
announcer and program as the one on 630-4QN at the time (at 1547 on 4-9; see 
MP3 for 630-4QN), but it didn't seem to be exactly parallel (maybe a time zone 
delay?) 
https://app.box.com/s/7bg1hruxrufccuys5axc4yzumexr3q36 

540 2AP Apia, Western Samoa This station features a lot of Samoan music (with 
both male and female announcers), and dominates the frequency in Kona at night 
as long as it transmits. Unfortunately it doesn't follow the listed PAL sign 
off time of 1000, but runs past this time routinely, making it tough to track 
down an exact sign off time during my limited sessions. My guess is that it 
signs off sometime between 1030 and 1100. The following MP3 is of S9+ level 
Samoan Christian worship music at 0931 on 4-9. This overwhelming signal was one 
of the most awesome recorded during the entire DXpedition 
https://app.box.com/s/8ejvx8s7udh5ibtqymtxs5ew65mquqcl 
Energetic Samoan music at 0956 on 4-12. This is typical of the station's music 
format 
https://app.box.com/s/tbo84s7gb2jci6gfxkawo7rsqpmpkyp3 
More typical Samoan choral music at 0835 on 4-11 -- a staple of programming in 
the station's format 
https://app.box.com/s/z8ecbvx14fyqx0tpjtw2ahy2r7omhst4 
The usual male announcer in Samoan at 0845 on 4-11 
https://app.box.com/s/zirqxu76dj7bywxyk1jynoushnw0zyv6 
The usual female announcer in Samoan at 0856 on 4-11 
https://app.box.com/s/6rkd8ckcd1005fyc5itupxowaf6jqhex 

558 Radio Fiji One Suva, Fiji Somewhat of an underperformer considering its 
South Pacific location and (nominal) 10 kW power level. My guess is that the 
station has some transmitter and/ or antenna issues. Here is some fair level 
male speech with island music at 1001 on 4-9, which the strongest signal it 
managed during the entire trip 
https://app.box.com/s/ly0u5y34rg85e1aotimyjjj1bksunsd3 

558 UnID-TP Once again, this weak signal sounded a lot like the 630-4QN program 
at the time (1548 on 4-11), so my guess is that 6WA in Wagin, Australia is the 
most likely possibility 
https://app.box.com/s/10plmz0gumpjk7ymwi6ay44oqzo67ong 

603 HLSA Namyang, S. Korea One of the common Asians which ran the gauntlet of 
dicey solar activity. It was fairly good at 1521 on 4-12, but was MIA during a 
couple of days 
https://app.box.com/s/9s3g67w2j5ge9ggsj31kwuwnqmfdiyh9 

621 3RN Melbourne, Australia This LR network station would start to fade in 
just when Radio Tuvalu was about to sign off (around 1000), although it never 
provided any serious competition for the exotic station. This MP3 was made just 
after Tuvalu's sign off at 1006 on 4-9 
https://app.box.com/s/x0k4bnu3jmytorhzjphz5a6nqyet4h5r 

621 Radio Tuvalu Funafuti, Tuvalu A very tough station to track down on the 
mainland, but certainly a "piece of cake" in Kona. Routinely has sign off at 
1003 UTC, preceded by island choral music and the national anthem (sung by the 
same choral group). Around 0950 a female announcer begins the routine by giving 
a monolog news broadcast about 5 minutes long, typically followed by an island 
music song right before the fixed 5-minute sign off routine. The latter two 
features are included in the following 8 minute recording (at near S9 strength) 
made at 0955 on April 10 
https://app.box.com/s/3z2ql91i5afhhi6kmjsnvos4p9q2j56y 
The usual female announcer with her 5 minute news broadcast at near S9 strength 
at 0955 prior to the sign off routine on April 11. The lady giving the correct 
pronunciation for "Tuvalu" is at the 11 second point 
https://app.box.com/s/knpjrxdb40p7hfe9xx7djlwyz3fzf8j3 
Around five minutes of typical Island choral music at good-level strength at 
0921 on 4-9 
https://app.box.com/s/0vouj030pvoxy96o7xtvg45zq0uxed1n 
Here is a different recording of the female-announced news broadcast just prior 
to the sign off routine at 0956 on 4-9 (at very good strength) 
https://app.box.com/s/u0rg1xlye0le5jth12x8wccw6nc5sv99 

630 4QN Townsville, Australia This 50 kW station was far and away the strongest 
Australian signal heard throughout the trip. Unfortunately it wasn't in the 
same time zone as fellow LR network stations on 531 and 558 in Western 
Australia, making parallel checks seem dubious. Here is a typical signal at 
1543 on 4-9 
https://app.box.com/s/j82og05m8v4umqacm78e41cs1xht21to 

657 Pyongyang BS Pyongyang, N. Korea This bizarre station was far and away the 
strongest Asian heard during the trip-- almost like it was a South Pacific 
semi-local. When solar activity cooled off it could blast in with serious 
power, such as at 1555 on 4-9 
https://app.box.com/s/9exi01zvab4y2fjemxbqhz6ma1q3gv8o 
For those who really don't mind wacky-sounding music (this is your final 
warning), the 3 minute long version of this signal is posted at 
https://app.box.com/s/m69fuqcxrjul7y06wu5f5ge63bap3cka 

693 UnID-TP This mystery signal showed up at 1604 on 4-9, after NHK2 (JOAB) 
sign off. Obviously there is male speech and some kind of backup music at 
various times, but I'm totally unfamiliar with stations on this frequency 
(except for JOAB). Any hints or suggestions? This station only showed up on 
4-9; rising solar activity brought in only 690-Honolulu splatter on the other 
three days 
https://app.box.com/s/8yabwqs7llyac52tsfv4taannfuggedq 

(The rest of this Kona DXpedition report will be posted later) 

73 and Good DX, 
Gary DeBock (DXing in Kona, Hawaii) 
7.5" loopstick C.Crane Skywave Ultralight + 
5 inch "Frequent Flyer" FSL antenna (a new combo photo, including the 
sleep-deprived DXer, is posted at 
https://app.box.com/s/9hx4t2zdykclvh6ma9xotmp5bthp91ee ) 


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