Re: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22

2010-09-22 Thread Chuck Hutton


 Hi Gary - 
 
If I understand you, you were looking at 972 and 1134 to see if they were 
parallel to 1044. They're both KBS World Radio whereas 1044 is KBS1 and I've 
never heard 972 or 1134 with KBS1 programming.
 
 
Chuck
 
 

 From: d1028g...@aol.com
 Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 17:02:13 -0400
 To: ultraligh...@yahoogroups.com; irca@hard-core-dx.com
 Subject: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22

CLIP
 1044 kHz was the most interesting frequency of the morning, as I heard (and 
 recorded) the same strong TP mix that Dennis received at Grayland. Around 
 1348 there was a real battle on the frequency, apparently with both Korean 
 and Japanese voices. The Japanese is undoubtedly CRI's foreign broadcast 
 to Japan, but the apparent Korean was a mystery. I searched for a KBS 
 parallel to check, but none were at decent strength at the time (972 and 1134 
 kHz 
 were in fades).  
CLIP
 73 and Good DX,
 Gary DeBock 
  
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Re: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22

2010-09-22 Thread D1028Gary
Hi Chuck,
 
Thanks for the information on the 1044 KBS1 station.
 
It sounds like the same situation as the 594-KBS1 station not being  
parallel with the 603 and 972 KBS stations last November, when I was trying  to 
confirm the 594 station identity. As I recall then, you (or maybe Nick)  
mentioned the 711 kHz KBS1 station as the best parallel to check, a  frequency 
which unfortunately is ruined here by oppressive KIRO  splatter.
 
If there are any other KBS1 parallels besides 711 (that are frequent  
visitors to the west coast), I'll happy to check them instead, if and  when 
1044 
kHz has this TP mix again. It was the first time in Puyallup that  I've ever 
heard strong TP competition on the frequency with CRI's Japanese,  although 
Grayland probably has this mix very frequently. Maybe Walt or  Guy (in 
Masset) can give a listen to 1044?
 
73, Gary   
 
 
In a message dated 9/22/2010 3:50:33 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
charle...@msn.com writes:



Hi Gary - 

If I understand you, you were looking at  972 and 1134 to see if they were 
parallel to 1044. They're both KBS World  Radio whereas 1044 is KBS1 and 
I've never heard 972 or 1134 with KBS1  programming.


Chuck



 From:  d1028g...@aol.com
 Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 17:02:13 -0400
 To:  ultraligh...@yahoogroups.com; irca@hard-core-dx.com
 Subject: [IRCA]  Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22

CLIP
 1044 kHz was  the most interesting frequency of the morning, as I heard 
(and 
  recorded) the same strong TP mix that Dennis received at Grayland. 
Around  
 1348 there was a real battle on the frequency, apparently with both  
Korean 
 and Japanese voices. The Japanese is undoubtedly CRI's foreign  broadcast 
 to Japan, but the apparent Korean was a mystery. I searched  for a KBS 
 parallel to check, but none were at decent strength at the  time (972 and 
1134 kHz 
 were in fades).  
CLIP
  73 and Good DX,
 Gary DeBock 

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Re: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22

2010-09-22 Thread Chuck Hutton

Gary: 
 
1062 is never quite as good as 711 but if 1044 is in, maybe 1062 would also be 
favored. 748 and 864 are also frequent visitors when things are good to Korea.
 
Chuck
 
 From: d1028g...@aol.com
 Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 19:45:01 -0400
 To: irca@hard-core-dx.com
 Subject: Re: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22
 
 Hi Chuck,
 
 Thanks for the information on the 1044 KBS1 station.
 
 It sounds like the same situation as the 594-KBS1 station not being 
 parallel with the 603 and 972 KBS stations last November, when I was trying 
 to 
 confirm the 594 station identity. As I recall then, you (or maybe Nick) 
 mentioned the 711 kHz KBS1 station as the best parallel to check, a frequency 
 which unfortunately is ruined here by oppressive KIRO splatter.
 
 If there are any other KBS1 parallels besides 711 (that are frequent 
 visitors to the west coast), I'll happy to check them instead, if and when 
 1044 
 kHz has this TP mix again. It was the first time in Puyallup that I've ever 
 heard strong TP competition on the frequency with CRI's Japanese, although 
 Grayland probably has this mix very frequently. Maybe Walt or Guy (in 
 Masset) can give a listen to 1044?
 
 73, Gary 
 
 
 In a message dated 9/22/2010 3:50:33 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
 charle...@msn.com writes:
 
 
 
 Hi Gary - 
 
 If I understand you, you were looking at 972 and 1134 to see if they were 
 parallel to 1044. They're both KBS World Radio whereas 1044 is KBS1 and 
 I've never heard 972 or 1134 with KBS1 programming.
 
 
 Chuck
 
 
 
  From: d1028g...@aol.com
  Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 17:02:13 -0400
  To: ultraligh...@yahoogroups.com; irca@hard-core-dx.com
  Subject: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22
 
 CLIP
  1044 kHz was the most interesting frequency of the morning, as I heard 
 (and 
  recorded) the same strong TP mix that Dennis received at Grayland. 
 Around 
  1348 there was a real battle on the frequency, apparently with both 
 Korean 
  and Japanese voices. The Japanese is undoubtedly CRI's foreign broadcast 
  to Japan, but the apparent Korean was a mystery. I searched for a KBS 
  parallel to check, but none were at decent strength at the time (972 and 
 1134 kHz 
  were in fades).  
 CLIP
  73 and Good DX,
  Gary DeBock 
 
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 original contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the IRCA, 
 its editors, publishing staff, or officers
 
 For more information: http://www.ircaonline.org
 
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 ___
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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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Re: [IRCA] Puyallup, WA Ultralight TP's for 9-22

2010-09-22 Thread D1028Gary
Hi Walt,
 
Thanks for the Masset report, we are all eager to read your daily TP  (and 
TA) reports once your DXpedition team gets fully set up!
 
This morning was fairly average for TP reception here in  Puyallup, with a 
couple of exceptions. 1044 kHz had an interesting mix of  CRI's Japanese and 
a co-channel (that sounded like Korean to me), but there  wasn't any KBS 
parallel available to check at the time (and the ones  that I was trying for 
wouldn't have worked anyway, according to Chuck :-) Dennis  heard the same 
1044 mix at Grayland this morning.
 
Your European, Middle East and African TA-DX in Masset always sounds  very 
exotic in this mediocre DXing location, from which Guy has temporarily  
bailed. About this time last year most of the TP-DXers were eagerly reading  
the 
daily Asian DX reports from you and Nick in Victoria, and John on Orcas  
Island. They are really missed, although several of us have attempted to post  
our own. Unfortunately, Puyallup is far from prime DXing territory,  and if 
it were not for the bizarre 9' box loop in the back yard, I  would probably 
be limited to receiving the same big guns over and  over. Good luck to 
all of your team!
 
73, Gary  
 
 
In a message dated 9/22/2010 2:33:27 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
can...@gmail.com writes:

Hi,  Gary!  Up here in Masset, reception was unusual here.  The worst  
reception since last Saturday morning.  The BOGs died early today, being  
replaced by the ALA 100 for best TP receptionthis in itself was very  
unusual. 
 The big news was last night:  Best TA reception since  Friday night.  
Many, many TAs with the best for me being 1476 Cotonou  (Benin, Africa) in 
French at almost excellent levels, but as usual for TAs  this would fade 
rapidly 
up and down.  Not sure which direction conditions  are heading.  We'll be 
active until Monday morning in any case.   NHK2 signed off the past 2 mornings 
at 14:40.  About 50% of the stations  give an ID locally then, with the 
rest just a network NHK ID.  Good  fun!  The hot TA performer is the Wellbrook 
array.  Andy Ilkin will  be pleased to hear this, although it continues to 
underperform in a major way  in the mornings.  More in the coming days!  
..Walt Salmaniw,  Masset, Haida Gwaii, BC

On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 9:02 PM, _d1028g...@aol.com_ 
(mailto:d1028g...@aol.com)  wrote:

Hello All,!

It was a morning of fairly average  September TP propagation  here,
generally following Nigel's  description of the regular Asians at  decent 
strength,
but the  second-tier TP stations having weaker signals. As  usual,  however,
there were major exceptions to the script, including a  strong TP mix on 
1044
kHz (which Dennis also heard at Grayland, on  his  E100), and a bizarre S9
fade-in of 648-Voice of Russia at  1356 (after the TP propagation had
apparently fizzled out, and my  ICF-2010 spotting receiver had been shut 
off). The
best bet Asian  lineup  from 639- 675 kHz (639-China, 648-VOR, 657-North
Korea,  666-JOBK, and  675-Vietnam) was back to regular decent strength  
after
some weakness yesterday,  and 738-Taiwan was restored to its  normal 
strength
(along with a  rough-sounding carrier).

1044  kHz was the most interesting frequency of the morning, as I heard  
(and
recorded) the same strong TP mix that Dennis received at  Grayland.  Around
1348 there was a real battle on the frequency,  apparently  with both Korean
and Japanese voices. The Japanese is  undoubtedly CRI's  foreign broadcast
to Japan, but the apparent  Korean was a mystery. I searched  for a KBS
parallel to check, but  none were at decent strength at the time (972  and 
1134 kHz
were in  fades). Dennis' Grayland report of pop Asian  music mixing  with
China (in Japanese) on 1044 kHz gives additional evidence  that  this was
probably the KBS station that we both heard, since Asian pop  music is a 
standard
KBS format. We probably won't ever be sure, but  the 10  kw 1044 kHz KBS
station would be an all-time new Ultralight  TP catch,  if confirmed by 
either of
us in the future. Dennis,  thanks again for your very  useful Grayland
reports!

The  other strange occurrence here was a full-strength fade in of  648-VOR
right after the band had apparently died at 1355 (with the  back yard in  
full
sunlight). My ICF-2010 spotting receiver had  already been taken  inside,
and I was in the process of wrapping up  when I  heard booming music 
signals on
the barefoot SWP, which had  fortunately  been left on 648 kHz. I rushed
over to the 9' loop and  recorded an S9  signal of Russian music, right 
after
every TP  frequency had been  written off as dead. This was bizarre  
enough
to fully awaken  any half-asleep TP-DXer.

The  following were heard on a C.Crane SWP model (7.5 loopstick)
inductively  coupled to a 9' sided PVC tuned passive loop (in the back  
yard):

558  JOCR  Kobe, Japan  Fair strength  with Japanese music  around 1307
585  JOPG  Kushiro, Japan  Fair-poor with deep fades around  1309, //