Just as South Pacific propagation was collapsing in bright daylight at 1335 UTC 
on August 8th I made a final band check to see if any New Zealand or Australian 
stations had escaped my notice at the Rockwork 4 ocean cliff (near Manzanita, 
Oregon). Most of the DU's had already bailed, but there was a very strong 
station playing rock music on 585 kHz. I knew from experience that this could 
be either of two Australian 10 kW stations-- 7RN in Hobart, Tasmania (part of 
the ABC RN network) or David Sharp's independent "Outback Radio" station, 2WEB 
in Bourke. Apart from an ID, the only was to make sure of the station's 
identity was to check for parallel programming with another station in the ABC 
RN network. Parallel programming would indicate that the station was 7RN, while 
clearly different programming would mean that the station was 2WEB. 

In the MP3 linked below the 585 Australian station's powerful rock music signal 
continues for an awesome 3 minutes and 20 seconds, during which time several 
parallel checks were made (Ultralight radios can only tune one frequency at a 
time). The first parallel check for 576-2RN (in Sydney) occurs from 1:02 to 
1:13 into the recording, but 2RN has already faded out, so the 585 station's 
identity is still unknown. The second parallel check (again for 576-2RN) occurs 
from 2:03-2:15, but it is still dead. Finally, at 2:15 a parallel check is made 
for the 25 kW Brisbane RN network station 792-4RN (generating the 2 kHz het), 
which has just enough of a signal left to confirm that its RN network 
programming is speech, and not the music playing on 585 kHz. As such, the 
powerful station playing "Knocking on Heaven's Door" had been narrowed down to 
David Sharp's 2WEB in Bourke, transmitting far and away the most powerful 
signal it has even managed in 9 years of these ocean coast DXpediti
 ons. 

The reception was made on a 7.5 inch C.Crane Skywave Ultralight boosted by a 17 
inch (43 cm) diameter FSL antenna, as in the Rockwork 4 DXing setup photo 
attached with this post. Thanks again to David for his outstanding support to 
the DXing community! 

585-2WEB MP3 (3 minutes 20 seconds) 
Just as South Pacific propagation was collapsing in bright daylight at 1335 UTC 
on August 8th I made a final band check to see if any New Zealand or Australian 
stations had escaped my notice at the Rockwork 4 ocean cliff (near Manzanita, 
Oregon). Most of the DU's had already bailed, but there was a very strong 
station playing rock music on 585 kHz. I knew from experience that this could 
be either of two Australian 10 kW stations-- 7RN in Hobart, Tasmania (part of 
the ABC RN network) or David Sharp's independent "Outback Radio" station, 2WEB 
in Bourke. Apart from an ID, the only was to make sure of the station's 
identity was to check for parallel programming with another station in the ABC 
RN network. Parallel programming would indicate that the station was 7RN, while 
clearly different programming would mean that the station was 2WEB. 

In the MP3 linked below the 585 Australian station's powerful rock music signal 
continues for an awesome 3 minutes and 20 seconds, during which time several 
parallel checks were made (Ultralight radios can only tune one frequency at a 
time). The first parallel check for 576-2RN (in Sydney) occurs from 1:02 to 
1:13 into the recording, but 2RN has already faded out, so the 585 station's 
identity is still unknown. The second parallel check (again for 576-2RN) occurs 
from 2:03-2:15, but it is still dead. Finally, at 2:15 a parallel check is made 
for the 25 kW Brisbane RN network station 792-4RN (generating the 2 kHz het), 
which has just enough of a signal left to confirm that its RN network 
programming is speech, and not the music playing on 585 kHz. As such, the 
powerful station playing "Knocking on Heaven's Door" had been narrowed down to 
David Sharp's 2WEB in Bourke, transmitting far and away the most powerful 
signal it has even managed in 9 years of these ocean coast DXpediti
 ons. 

The reception was made on a 7.5 inch C.Crane Skywave Ultralight boosted by a 17 
inch (43 cm) diameter FSL antenna, as in the Rockwork 4 DXing setup photo 
attached with this post. Thanks again to David for his outstanding support to 
the DXing community! 

585-2WEB MP3 (3 minutes 20 seconds) 
Just as South Pacific propagation was collapsing in bright daylight at 1335 UTC 
on August 8th I made a final band check to see if any New Zealand or Australian 
stations had escaped my notice at the Rockwork 4 ocean cliff (near Manzanita, 
Oregon). Most of the DU's had already bailed, but there was a very strong 
station playing rock music on 585 kHz. I knew from experience that this could 
be either of two Australian 10 kW stations-- 7RN in Hobart, Tasmania (part of 
the ABC RN network) or David Sharp's independent "Outback Radio" station, 2WEB 
in Bourke. Apart from an ID, the only was to make sure of the station's 
identity was to check for parallel programming with another station in the ABC 
RN network. Parallel programming would indicate that the station was 7RN, while 
clearly different programming would mean that the station was 2WEB. 

In the MP3 linked below the 585 Australian station's powerful rock music signal 
continues for an awesome 3 minutes and 20 seconds, during which time several 
parallel checks were made (Ultralight radios can only tune one frequency at a 
time). The first parallel check for 576-2RN (in Sydney) occurs from 1:02 to 
1:13 into the recording, but 2RN has already faded out, so the 585 station's 
identity is still unknown. The second parallel check (again for 576-2RN) occurs 
from 2:03-2:15, but it is still dead. Finally, at 2:15 a parallel check is made 
for the 25 kW Brisbane RN network station 792-4RN (generating the 2 kHz het), 
which has just enough of a signal left to confirm that its RN network 
programming is speech, and not the music playing on 585 kHz. As such, the 
powerful station playing "Knocking on Heaven's Door" had been narrowed down to 
David Sharp's 2WEB in Bourke, transmitting far and away the most powerful 
signal it has even managed in 9 years of these ocean coast DXpediti
 ons. 

The reception was made on a 7.5 inch C.Crane Skywave Ultralight boosted by a 17 
inch (43 cm) diameter FSL antenna, as in the Rockwork 4 DXing setup photo 
posted at https://app.box.com/s/dqaag49l6uboqcfboq4b7fn5fy9dsr1f 
Thanks again to David for his outstanding support to the DXing community! 

585-2WEB MP3 (3 minutes 20 seconds) 
https://app.box.com/s/u64u4pvx2u1ofb5u87ze10p0ynqire1u 

73 and Good DX, 
Gary DeBock (in Puyallup, WA, USA) 
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