I really believe that it comes down to knowledge and confidence.

I bought a copy of (I think) Communications World in 1973 or 1974 that had a 
feature on TA DX... hearing Europe from America on medium wave and I went, 
“wait... what?”

And then a sample IRCA bulletin in 1974 where I saw someone hear Okinawa on 
1178 KHz on the West Coast... granted it was a megawatt...

I met Nick Hall-Patch because of this same sample IRCA bulletin. “Another DXER 
in my town? Ya kidding me!” 

When I first tuned 1178 VOA Japan in (and I still have the cassette 
recordings...) I just about peed myself with giddiness. It was one of those 
magic hobby moments where your mind is blown for all time. 

Hearing the UK, Germany and Russia on medium wave in 1976 was also one of those 
moments.

My point being: you can hear anything, anywhere if you are willing to put in 
the time with the right knowledge, equipment and timing. 

Colin Newell - Kona, Hawaii — 

> On Jan 11, 2018, at 3:17 PM, Pete Taylor <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> We were on the south coast of  Kauai in Sept.-Oct. 1984 and picked up 
> LT2-1230 Rosario (9/29) and LR1-1070 Buenos Aires (10/4) and got veries from 
> both. I don’t recall hearing any other Spanish-language stations - but of 
> course that was 34 years ago… Receiver? I think it was the ICF 2001. I also 
> had a loop. That helped.
> 
> 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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