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Old December 19th 04, 05:24 PM
4nradio
 
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Australia and New Zealand have both scaled back their broadcasts in years
past, well before the current withering away of European broadcasters. I've
been trying to remember how many years it's been since R. Australia had
transmissions beamed specifically to North America. Has it been 10 years? I
can't recall.

Still, RA's signal gets out phenomenally well, and even the ABC's 120
meterband transmissions are heard regularly on the West Coast of the US.
Anyway, I'd rather listen to broadcasts intended for domestic audiences
instead of the foreign service of any country. This is a large part of the
allure of the tropical bands in particular.

Guy Atkins
Puyallup, WA USA

"Conan Ford" wrote in message
3.159...
I'm located in Calgary, Alberta at about 51 N and 114 W. I've noticed
that
I can often copy Radio Australia and Radio New Zealand International all
throughout the night, even up to 15 mhz sometimes. Shouldn't broadcasts
above about the 49 m band be very hard to hear at night? Sometimes I can
get broadcasts that seem intended for a domestic audience in Australia or
New Zealand. I'm wondering why I can hear these at all. I'm using a
Sangean ATS-803a with a 20 foot horizontal wire fed through a balun and 75
ohm coax.

I've noticed that Radio NZI and Radio Australia don't seem to be scaling
back broadcasts like their European counterparts are. I'm wondering why
this is. My best guess is the sparse population and large area of
Australia makes these broadcasts more useful, as for New Zealand, I'm
guessing the Pacific islands?

I was using the Ilgradio schedule with Scan320DB, but the B04's still
aren't out and the A04's are showing their age. Is there another source
for a quality schedule, or a better database program to use?

Thanks for any info.