On May 25, 5:46 am, wrote:
On 25 May, 13:36, wrote:
On 25 May, 11:02, dxAce wrote:
wrote:
On 24 May, 20:59, Bart Bailey wrote:
In k posted
on Thu, 24 May 2007 18:10:52 +0100, Simon Mason wrote: Begin
but at 2m11s in there is a piano piece
whch I am convinced was the callsign of a radio station.
http://www.swldxer.co.uk/theworkisdone.wma
Can anyone confirm which callsign it was?
How about snipping the relevant section,
instead having to listen to the entire piece,
and provide a link to an mp3,
or just post the dot dash sequence
if you can't be bothered to look it up yourself?
It's OK, I worked it out myself. It uses the old Radio Warsaw
callsign!
http://www.intervalsignals.net/files...adio_c1996.m3u
I don't have a soundcard Simon. Is this a callsign sent in morse using the piano
or is it an interval signal played on the piano?- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
It was technically an interval signal, not a callsign. Sorry for any
misunderstanding caused.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
The song has a piano piece at 2m11s which is the Chopin "Revolutionary
Etude" that was the interval signal for Radio Warsaw.
There was no Morse involved.
Off topic, but does anybody know if Poland is still on the air, and if
so if they broadcast in English or anything besides Polish and Russian
and maybe a few other languages of Eastern Europe? I remember seeing
an entry in Passport a few years ago for a "Radio Polonia" that had a
little bit of English. It was to Europe IIRC, and like other former
Soviet Bloc stations it was hard to hear outside of the target area
due to deteriorating equipment and electricity shortages. I suspect
that the old Soviet built transmitters used by Eastern European
stations are getting pretty rickety by now, over 15 years after the
fall of the USSR, and when they quit for good there's usually no money
to replace them, so the countries usually go silent key permanently.
Then again, the old Russian tx's at Sam Neua in Laos were still
limping along a couple years ago as per an article in Passport, so I
guess anything is possible, but those were very weak. One report at
the time of the Passport article had Sam Neua barely audible in the
South Pacific.