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Bill Whitacre's SDR in Lubec, Maine is the best East Coast SDR (so far).
 
http://qhkiwisdr.proxy.kiwisdr.com:8073/
 
Most of the time if I can hear it (TA DX) here, I can get it on his receiver 
and vice versa. The only other North America receiver that comes close (so far) 
is this other Maine one run by WA2ZKD:
 
http://rx2.wa2zkd.net:8073
 
Its antenna is not as directional as Bill's so the domestic QRM builds up more 
quickly in the post-sunset period. At and a bit before sunset both radios are 
good.
 
I do a bit better on Latin America here than either of the Maine receivers. I 
haven't heard a Brazilian on either of those yet. 610 and 760 are fairly common 
here. 700, 840, 860, 1000, 1040, 1100, 1220, and 1290.3 aren't rare either.
 
The third best East Coast receiver for TA's is this NJ coastal one:
  
http://jerseyshoresdr.hopto.org:8073
 
Though not as good as the top two, it's better than some of the bad-antenna New 
England and eastern Canada ones.
 
The only other East Coast SDR's I find moderately useful are these in Florida:
 
http://keywest.twrmon.net:8073
 
http://qth.ddns.net:8073
 
These are primarily useful for Latin American checking. Sometimes, due to the 
positioning of the auroral zone, I'm getting South Americans on channels such 
as 700 when Florida is getting domestics (e.g. WLW) not attenuated by aurora 
there. A great Latin America run in New England does not guarantee even more 
stupendous results in the SE US.
 
There's not a lot in the Caribbean and South America, at least with sensitive 
antennas. These Dominican Republic, Bonaire, and southern Brazil ones are 
somewhat useful.
 
http://dr.twrmon.net:8073
 
http://bonaire.twrmon.net:8073
 
http://px2a.homeip.net:8073
 
I'm surprised at how little from Europe shows up on the Florida, Caribbean, and 
South America receivers. I've had 1215 Absolute UK bonkers-loud here and could 
not raise a hint of it on those SDR's. If any TA delivers to the US Deep South, 
the Caribbean, and South America it's the 1521 Saudi. On a now-defunct 
Venezuelan SDR, Saudi was the only TA with actual audio. Spain (684, 855) and 
some others were hets only. 
  
We could really use some forward-position SDR's in places such as Newfoundland, 
Bermuda, Barbados, and the eastern tip of Brazil around Natal. On the other 
side we do have a good one in Iceland but we could use some more southerly ones 
such as Azores, Ascension, and Tristan da Cunha. Existing radios in Portugal, 
the Canaries, and South Africa are not very sensitive. UK, Scandinavian, Dutch, 
and German receivers vary wildly in terms of DX-ability. Some are quite good 
and some stink.
 
There are new SDR's coming online all the time. Some go away too. Just remember 
that a good location doesn't always mean good DX. Often there is little 
attention given to antenna gain, directivity, and electrical noise immunity at 
MW. Receivers are often optimized for HF ham, VHF/UHF/microwave aircraft, and 
other utility listening such as police and fire.
 
It's always worthwhile to check the three major links pages periodically.
  
http://sdr.hu/?top=kiwi
 
http://www.websdr.org/
 
https://www.globaltuners.com/
 
If something new and useful for long range DX comes online either in the 
Atlantic or Pacific zone, please share the details and any DX you may have 
noted with it.
 
Mark Connelly, WA1ION 
South Yarmouth, MA, USA
 
<<
Ultimately, that or another Kiwi WebSDR will be located at Masset in the Haida 
Gwaii - which is an awesome location for some great DX early warning data 
gathering.

I?m looking forward to better radio conditions and a higher MUF - looking at 30 
MHz of largely empty spectrum is depressing.

Colin Newell - Victoria - B.C. CANADA -

> On Jan 31, 2019, at 9:56 AM, C B <bevd...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> I listened on my Elad and your Kiwi SDR this morning with the same results. 
> I'm looking forward to that watershed TP session.
> Craig BarnesWheat Ridge, CO
> 
>>

<<
>> Hooked  up to my dual flag and PHASER -
>>
>> http://184.66.42.39:8073
>>
>> Up and down as I fiddle with stuff - ultimately this unti will end up
>> on Haida Gwaii at Walts cabin...
>>
>> No guarantees -- loading can be slow...
>>
>> Send reports.
>>
>> --
>> Colin Newell - Editor and creator *of *Coffeecrew.com
>> <http://www.Coffeecrew.com> and DXer.ca <http://www.DXer.ca> - VA7WWV
>> | Twitter @CoffeeCrew | Victoria - Canada
>>


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