[IRCA] TPs from Orcas Island: Sept 23, EXCELLENT

2009-09-23 Thread John H. Bryant

Gee,

It was a very interesting morning!  The reception pattern continues 
to be somewhat unusual, with a very abrupt, pronounced peak for ten 
minutes right at dawn, rather than ramping up and then dropping 
rapidly. This morning, for only the second time this season, there 
was an extended post-dawn Asian morning, with the Big Gun Japanese 
improving to solid 9s well after dawn.


In the pre-dawn enhancement, a full 30 minutes before dawn, things 
were fairly average or just above, but there were still several 
interesting things...


540: Beside an echo-ridden CNR1, there was another Asian signal here. 
Wonder what it was?


756: More CNR1s with Echo effects

810: Intermixed with KGO and the semi-local religious station, I'd 
almost swear that I was hearing Japanese, but the only one listed is 
the big AFN US military station, so I guess that it was Pyongyang. 
None of the Russian or CC stations indicate breoadcasts in JJ.


846  864: Both of these frequencies continue to show what appear to 
be open carriers, sometimes at quite strong levels. Occasionally, I 
hear programming that may either be a second station or the primary 
being WAY under-modulated. WHO?


891: The star of the morning was 891, with occasional pop music 
numbers and a man talking. I first noted it at 1330, 25 minutes 
pre-dawn, with an in-your-face level 9 signal. I am not sure of the 
language unless it is Korean that I recognize with only limited 
confidence (I'm pretty sure that it was NOT KK) I know that it was 
not standard CC, RR, JJ, VV or any Pacific Island language.  More by 
elimination than knowledge, I think it was Thailand.  They have a 
megawatt US transmitter on 891 that Patrick has reported in past 
seasons with some regularity and that several of us have caught a few 
times at Grayland. The PAL listed // was in-active and Asia Waves 
frequency for Radio Thailand in Thai was not //, if the 7 MHz. 
frequency was even them. The signal faded down into the murk after 5 
minutes or so, but was present again at 1355 recheck. I followed it 
to 1402, but it was too low to catch an ID at 1400, of course.  It 
did have a 2+1 TC at 1400, however.  This evening, I'll try to post a 
recording and hope for some assistance.


1053: I continue to hear some programming most mornings here. Only 
once out of about 20 mornings has it - maybe - been // to North Korea 
2850. Unfortunately, it has never gotten to the level of sure 
language recognition. I'm fairly sure that at least part of the time 
it is Nagoya, but there may be two or three stations that show here 
from time to time.


The upper band continued to be less than past years, but better than 
the past weeks. The usual suspects.


I'm going down to Grayland for Tuesday through Thursday dawns next 
week. Maybe I can sort a few of these things out.


John B.

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Re: [IRCA] TPs from Orcas Island: Sept 23, EXCELLENT

2009-09-23 Thread Bruce Portzer

John

See below for a few comments:

John H. Bryant wrote:

Gee,

It was a very interesting morning!  The reception pattern continues to 
be somewhat unusual, with a very abrupt, pronounced peak for ten 
minutes right at dawn, rather than ramping up and then dropping 
rapidly. This morning, for only the second time this season, there was 
an extended post-dawn Asian morning, with the Big Gun Japanese 
improving to solid 9s well after dawn.


In the pre-dawn enhancement, a full 30 minutes before dawn, things 
were fairly average or just above, but there were still several 
interesting things...


540: Beside an echo-ridden CNR1, there was another Asian signal here. 
Wonder what it was?


756: More CNR1s with Echo effects

810: Intermixed with KGO and the semi-local religious station, I'd 
almost swear that I was hearing Japanese, but the only one listed is 
the big AFN US military station, so I guess that it was Pyongyang. 
None of the Russian or CC stations indicate breoadcasts in JJ.


846  864: Both of these frequencies continue to show what appear to 
be open carriers, sometimes at quite strong levels. Occasionally, I 
hear programming that may either be a second station or the primary 
being WAY under-modulated. WHO?
I've been hearing the same carriers plus 837 with great regularity, but 
assumed I just wasn't hearing them well enough to produce audio.  I have 
pulled occasional bits of audio on 864 that seem to be Korean.  My first 
guess is something that's way undermodulated.  At least now I don't feet 
so bad about not hearing audio.


891: The star of the morning was 891, with occasional pop music 
numbers and a man talking. I first noted it at 1330, 25 minutes 
pre-dawn, with an in-your-face level 9 signal. I am not sure of the 
language unless it is Korean that I recognize with only limited 
confidence (I'm pretty sure that it was NOT KK) I know that it was not 
standard CC, RR, JJ, VV or any Pacific Island language.  More by 
elimination than knowledge, I think it was Thailand.  They have a 
megawatt US transmitter on 891 that Patrick has reported in past 
seasons with some regularity and that several of us have caught a few 
times at Grayland. The PAL listed // was in-active and Asia Waves 
frequency for Radio Thailand in Thai was not //, if the 7 MHz. 
frequency was even them. The signal faded down into the murk after 5 
minutes or so, but was present again at 1355 recheck. I followed it to 
1402, but it was too low to catch an ID at 1400, of course.  It did 
have a 2+1 TC at 1400, however.  This evening, I'll try to post a 
recording and hope for some assistance.
If you're interested, I can forward an MP3 to a Thai coworker.  I played 
him a recording of 891 once and he confirmed the language as Thai and 
the content as some mundane news story about the Thai Parliament.  This 
station also has very distinctive music at times, with gongs, horns, and 
cymbals.  It sounds like the sort of stuff that could only come from 
that part of the world.


1053: I continue to hear some programming most mornings here. Only 
once out of about 20 mornings has it - maybe - been // to North Korea 
2850. Unfortunately, it has never gotten to the level of sure language 
recognition. I'm fairly sure that at least part of the time it is 
Nagoya, but there may be two or three stations that show here from 
time to time.


I heard the Japanese station mixing with the jammer yesterday morning.  
Japan was sometimes on top.


The upper band continued to be less than past years, but better than 
the past weeks. The usual suspects.


I'm going down to Grayland for Tuesday through Thursday dawns next 
week. Maybe I can sort a few of these things out.


Cool. Chuck, Nick, and I, and maybe others will be there starting Friday 
night 10/2, so we'll just miss one another.  Let us know what you hear, 
so we know what to look for.


John B.



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contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the IRCA, its 
editors, publishing staff, or officers

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