On Feb 21, 12:35 pm, dxAce wrote:
bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 21, 9:37 am, saki wrote:
I just put up a nice new inverted L and am hearing all sorts of new things,
but I wonder if one of you can help me with this.
Listening with an Icom R75, Los Angeles area, picked up a fluttery signal
on 17660 at about 1445Z, woman announcer in slow French (didn't sound like
a native speaker) with music that slowly faded by 1455Z, couldn't get an
ID.
EiBi IDs this frequency at this time as "GAB African Music", which isn't
much help. Anyone have any ideas?
----
Icom R75
Yaesu FRG 7700
Drake SW4A
This would be the African nation of Gabon, quite possibly in French.
However, Gabon also shows up (as Afrique No. 1) at the same time, in
French, on 17630 kHz. It ruotionely puts in a moderate to strong
signal here in California. Could one of these be what you were
hearing? Does AN1 broadcast on two nearly adjacent freqs at the same
time?
I think 17760 is some kind of jammer, out of Gabon of course.
dxAce
Michigan
USA- Hide quoted text -
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I think you may be right. Here is something from Tony Snow at BDXC:
THE MOYABI STORY
Compiled by Tony Rogers - for British DX Club journal Communication
(Excerpt
February 2006: The Libyan opposition Sawt al-Amal (Voice of Hope) can
now be heard at 1200-1400 in the range 17660 to 17780 kHz (Observer
reports it is from Moldova with 250 kW). Sawt al-Amal is now
accompanied by three or more other signals in the same frequency
range, presumably being used as jammers: One, which identifies as
Libyan Radio (ID "idhaat al jamaheriya til ozma") carries a lot of
Arabic music; this signs on just before 1200 with transmitter tones
similar to those used by transmitters in the CIS.
*A second station, usually heard from 1215-1530 UTC on or around
17670-80 kHz, carries continuous West African and French music.
Observations indicate that this may be coming from one of Africa No
1's high-power transmitters at Moyabi, Gabon. There are also bubble-
jammers and other forms of interference, such as continuous carriers
or non-stop Arabic music. Check 17660 to 17680 kHz from 1200-1500
UTC.*
Sawt al-Amal previously broadcast via satellite with a UK licence. It
is probably linked to the former CIA-backed station Voice of the
Libyan People which broadcast during the 1980s.
The behaviour of one shortwave transmitter at Moyabi in February 2006:
0700-1030 Africa No 1 on 17630
1030-1100 Radio Japan in Italian/Swedish on 21820
1100-1130 Africa No 1 on 17630
1130-1530 Franco-African type music on 17670/75/80
1530-1600 Africa No 1 on 17630
1600-1900 Africa No 1 on 15475
*Africa No 1's absence from 17630 at any time between 1130 and 1530
seems to be accounted for by the appearance of the non-stop Franco-
African type music shadowing the Libyan opposition station Sawt al-
Amal on 17670/75/80 until it signs off at 1400, with the music then
remaining on air until 1530 when the transmitter switches back to
17630 with Africa No 1 programming. (TR, BDXC e-mail news 19
February); a second transmitter originating from Moyabi was seemingly
added for the music service, leaving Africa No 1's service on 17630
kHz uninterrupted.*
For the latest schedule from Moyabi, please refer to the Africa on
Shortwave document on the BDXC web site -
www.bdxc.org.uk - Articles
Index.
The Moyabi Story - compiled by Tony Rogers - August 2006. (comments/
corrections to
) © British DX Club 2006. This article
may only reproduced with full credit to the author and British DX Club
- www.bdxc.org.uk