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Old September 1st 04, 10:38 PM
RHF
 
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TS,

A second alternative is that you may be hearing WWVH ? ? ?
WWVH= http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq/stations/wwvh.htm
WWV= http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq/stations/wwv.html

QSL-Information for Broadcast-Radio Stations
- Overview Time Signal Stations
http://www.schoechi.de/ez-tim.html

QSL-Information for Broadcast-Radio Stations from Venezuela (VEN)
http://www.schoechi.de/as-ven.html

swag ~ RHF
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= = = (Tim Shoppa) wrote in message
= = = om...
At my location on the east coast of the US, I get semi-reliable
reception of WWV on 5 MHz through most of the night.

(See my WWV usability charts at

http://www.trailing-edge.com/~shoppa/wwv/

for propogation/reception conditions.).

But the 5 MHz signal often "sounds" different than the 10, 15, and 20 MHz
broadcasts. There's an additional beep that seems to come once
a second, and this is sometimes audible when WWV isn't heard at
all. Is it possible I'm picking up YVTO (also a time station at
5 MHz) from Venezuela? I'm not sure I've ever heard a Spanish-language
voice announcment, but presumably the modulation on the voice is less
than the once-a-second beep. The beep seems slightly out of phase
compared to WWV.

Are there any other 5MHz once-a-second-beep stations that might be
audible from the East Coast of the US? Isn't there a Chinese time broadcast
on 5 MHz? But I doubt that I'd be hearing it here on the East Coast. What's
the format of the Chinese broadcast?

Tim.

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