India

AIR extended service tonight also.
AIR Visakhapatnam special extended overnight broadcast due to Cyclone Jawad noted today also on 927 KHz in AM mode and 918 khz in DRM mode.

Jose Jacob to dxindia iog (2021-12-04)

United Kingdom

Radio Caroline – 648 kHz update.
Friday 3rd December: Transmitter engineer Alan Beech reports:
A big thank you from everyone here at Radio Caroline to all those who have sent in reception reports over the past week via our website and other means for our improved 648 AM service.

To say that we have been rather overwhelmed and inundated would be an understatement! With just a few exceptions all feedback is that we have a healthy increase in signal and audibility. That was the main aim of our power increase – to improve the signal in our primary coverage areas of Essex, Suffolk, parts of Norfolk and Kent. We wished to overcome the increasing amount of interference caused by power lines and overhead telephone lines whilst on the move and the high number of household devices that cause interference within the home. Any perceived extension of our coverage area is incidental but obviously welcome.

We did receive numerous reports from far off locations saying our signal was still poor and could we increase it some more. Sadly not, as we are licenced by OFCOM to provide a community radio service in the aforementioned areas and that limits the power we can use. Any further increase in power would also significantly increase our electricity costs too as high power radio transmitters have a phenomenal appetite for electricity. We must always be aware of the vagaries of medium wave transmission and reception, and during these winter months the signal may well travel much further and give a fairly steady daytime signal in remote locations, but once the days start to lengthen again in the spring, that reception may well tail off. Night-time always gives extended range to our signal and it has been heartening to see reports from as far away as Portugal, Italy, Czech republic and Northern Finland. Of course, whilst our signal travels a long way at night other stations on the same frequency also travel further and often reception of Caroline in areas with a fair signal during daytime will have poor reception and much interference at night.

A fair number of reports mention our audio quality, and this is something we are aware of. We woud like to point out that options for reliable high speed connectivity at our transmission site are somewhat limited, and we are currently using a 64kb/s feed to site, which can tend to limit quality. However, many of the reports also suggest that our audio quality is excellent, so it is very much both a personal taste and a function of the radio you are listening on. Hopefully we can make adjustments to this to everyone’s satisfaction in due course. For those with an interest in such matters we are using the same DSPx processor we installed in 2017 and the new transmitter is a Harris DX25U, previously located near Rotterdam and used on 828Khz. We are running an authorised radiated power of 4kw from the omni-directional “reserve” antenna at Orfordness.

For those who sent in comprehensive reports and requested a QSL card we will try our best to get acknowledgments issued as soon as we can. As always, please bear in mind that we are all volunteers and already give significant amounts of our free time to keep Caroline on air and there are a LOT of requests!

(The whole story with photos of the transmitter/Ed): https://www.radiocaroline.co.uk/#home.html

Mike Terry to WOR iog (2021-12-04)

United States

The Transatlantic Tests of 1921.
In 1921, on December 9, 10, 11, radio amateurs who were members of both the Radio Club of America (RCA) and the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) successfully spanned the Atlantic Ocean for the first time, from the United States to Ardrossan Scotland, with Morse code signals. Not only were the signals heard in Scotland, but also in Amsterdam Holland (3600 miles), England, Germany, Puerto Rico, Vancouver British Columbia in Canada, Catalina island California (2470 mi.), and the State of Washington.

The transmitter on the U.S. side, station 1BCG, was located in a 10 ft. x 14 ft. wooden hut in a farmer’s field in Greenwich Connecticut. The transmitter had an input power of 990 watts, a T cage antenna, 100 feet long and 70 feet high with a radial counterpoise, and the wavelength used was 230 meters (1.3 MHz).

This Transatlantic Test Project, which was conceived of by radio amateurs, proved that even with modest equipment, the Atlantic Ocean could be spanned with shortwave signals, opening up improved communications for many more purposes. These “short” wavelengths below 200 meters had been considered useless by commercial and governmental interests, resulting in the Radio Act of 1912 banning amateur activity in the wavelengths longer than 200 meters. As a result of the successful efforts of radio amateurs in Transatlantic Test Project , over the last 100 years many experimenters and inventors became focused on continually improving wireless technologies and devices. The direct results of that inventing are the smart phones, smart watches, smart TVs, wireless Internet routers, GPS tracking devices, and Bluetooth headsets, all of which depend on wireless technologies. Those pioneers 100 years ago could never have envisioned the way society has been enabled and transformed by wireless!
2021 marks the 100th year anniversary of the historic Transatlantic Tests. On December 11, 2021 The 1BCG replica transmitter will be operating as W2AN/1BCG on 1.821 MHz, plus or minus, using CW, from The Vintage Radio and Communications Museum of Connecticut. Transmissions from W2AN/1BCG will be one-way, just like the original transatlantic tests in 1921.

You can get a SWL certificate for this Special Event by sending a copy of the transmitted message to 1BCG@AntiqueWireless.org
Schedule: Transmissions start on December 11, 2021, on 1.820 mhz, +/-, at 1800 EST or 2300 UTC, then every 15 minutes thereafter for a total of five hours thusly; 1815, 1830, 1845, 1900, 1915, 1930, 1945, 2000, 2015, 2030, 2045, 2100, 2115, 2130, 2145, 2200, 2215, 2230 and the last transmission at 2245 EST.

More information here: http://1bcg.org/1BCG/

Mike Terry to WOR iog (2021-12-03)

India

Due to the impending  “cyclone Jawar” active in the area, AIR Visakhapatnam will be on air continously   tonight on 927 khz in AM mode & 918 khz DRM mode. (Instead of normal sign off at 1751 UTC / 11.21 pm IST) Power is 100 kW.
Info via Alokesh Gupta.

Jose Jacob to dxindia iog (2021-12-03)

United States

Pacific Asian Log.
The November 2021 edition of  the Pacific Asian Log (PAL) is now available.  It can be downloaded from the Radioheritage website https://www.radioheritage.com/ (Go to the “Radio Guides” drop down menu)

Members of the IRCA mailing list in groups.io can also download the PAL from the files page at
https://groups.io/g/IRCA/files/Station%20Lists%20and%20References/PAL%20Nov%202021a.pdf

As usual, many changes and updates have been incorporated into this latest edition.  I’ve also added a Parallels section listing the frequencies used by various networks throughout the region. It should be
helpful for those who check parallel frequencies during their DX sessions.

Comments and updates from users are welcome and encouraged.  They can be sent to 
portzerbt@gmail.com.

First issued in 2001, The PAL lists medium wave and domestic shortwave broadcasting stations in southern and eastern Asia and the Pacific.  It lists nearly 5000 stations in over 50 countries, with frequencies, call signs, locations, power, networks, schedules, languages, formats, networks and other information.

Bruce Portzer to WOR iog (2021-12-02)

Space

Minor geomagnetic storms are possible on Dec. 3rd when a CME might sideswipe Earth’s magnetic field. The storm cloud was hurled into space on Nov. 29th by an erupting filament of magnetism in the sun’s southern hemisphere. According to NOAA computer models, the bulk of the CME should sail south of our planet with a near miss just as likely as a glancing blow.
https://spaceweather.com/

Ydun Ritz (2021-12-02)

Italy

Today at 11.30 UTC in Pesaro (central Italy), I heard several low power stations using a car radio (located by the sea).
Strong signal reported for Amica Radio Veneta on kHz 1017, Media Radio Castellana on kHz 1098, Media Veneta Radio on kHz 1278 and Radio Diffusione Europea on kHz 1584.

Alberto V., Pesaro (2021-12-01)

South Korea

According to the website of KBS World Radio Japanese language broadcast in South Korea, 1170kHz will be suspended from December 1 to 31 due to facility construction.
Currently, in Tokyo, Japan, I can receive Mongolian broadcasts from Chifeng Radio and Television Station Mongolian General Radio (赤峰广播电视台蒙古语综合广播) in Chifeng City, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China and Chinese broadcasts from the unknown Chinese station on 1170kHz. These cannot usually be received.

Koji Shimotori to DXing.info fb group (2021-12-01)