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Help! I can't get many shortwave stations!
Hi. I own a new, Sony icf7600GR, delivered yesterday. I am brand new
to shortwave radio. I have printed out the Prime Time Shortwave listings of English speaking shortwave broadcasts to America. After noting the difference between the UTC time and my time, I tried finding broadcasts. Out of approximately 12, I could only get about 3. Is this par for the course? I had the antenna fully extended near my window. I tried the reel antenna but it did not make much of a difference. Can you offer any tips and advice? I'd prefer not to buy an expensive, optional antenna right now, I want to make do with the whip and reel. |
Help! I can't get many shortwave stations!
Bad sun spot activity now. Just wait a while and it will pass.
dead of night wrote: Hi. I own a new, Sony icf7600GR, delivered yesterday. I am brand new to shortwave radio. I have printed out the Prime Time Shortwave listings of English speaking shortwave broadcasts to America. After noting the difference between the UTC time and my time, I tried finding broadcasts. Out of approximately 12, I could only get about 3. Is this par for the course? I had the antenna fully extended near my window. I tried the reel antenna but it did not make much of a difference. Can you offer any tips and advice? I'd prefer not to buy an expensive, optional antenna right now, I want to make do with the whip and reel. |
Help! I can't get many shortwave stations!
Take the radio to a small open field at night and try it out. If ytou
got a big backyard that is good too. I can walk away from the house and get many stations. Maybe you got too much noise around and it is hard to pick out stations. You can try different times too. I like early morning just before the sun comes up too. regards, NEO dead of night wrote: Hi. I own a new, Sony icf7600GR, delivered yesterday. I am brand new to shortwave radio. I have printed out the Prime Time Shortwave listings of English speaking shortwave broadcasts to America. After noting the difference between the UTC time and my time, I tried finding broadcasts. Out of approximately 12, I could only get about 3. Is this par for the course? I had the antenna fully extended near my window. I tried the reel antenna but it did not make much of a difference. Can you offer any tips and advice? I'd prefer not to buy an expensive, optional antenna right now, I want to make do with the whip and reel. |
Help! I can't get many shortwave stations!
Ron Baker, Pluralitas! wrote: "dead of night" wrote in message oups.com... Hi. I own a new, Sony icf7600GR, delivered yesterday. I am brand new to shortwave radio. I have printed out the Prime Time Shortwave listings of English speaking shortwave broadcasts to America. After noting the difference between the UTC time and my time, I tried finding broadcasts. Out of approximately 12, I could only get about 3. Is this par for the course? It doesn't sound unreasonable. I had the antenna fully extended near my window. I tried the reel antenna but it did not make much of a difference. Can you offer any tips and advice? I'd prefer not to buy an expensive, optional antenna right now, I want to make do with the whip and reel. Thanks for the help and replies. I did a little better this morning. I hung the reel antenna outside and tried to fing stations by exclusively using the scanning function. I found it's better to let the radio do the work, do the hunting and scanning. I found many stations, most of them Christian gospel preaching. I will try again tonight. It depends on where you are in America and where the broadcaster is. You might be in a fringe area for a particular broadcaster. And the listings are probably optimistic. SWLing is a little like hunting. I don't know about others but I scan looking for interesting or surprising signals. Signals that are regularly there, i.e. similar to a local AM broadcast aren't that interesting to me. (Although Radio Havana can be good for a laugh.) If you are unsure of your radio or antenna then there are regular signals you can test it against. WWV is regular by design. Depending on where you are and the time of day you should get a good signal on 5 MHz and/or 10 MHz. -- rb |
Help! I can't get many shortwave stations!
On 23 Dec 2006 07:02:14 -0800, "dead of night"
wrote: Ron Baker, Pluralitas! wrote: "dead of night" wrote in message oups.com... Hi. I own a new, Sony icf7600GR, delivered yesterday. I am brand new to shortwave radio. I have printed out the Prime Time Shortwave listings of English speaking shortwave broadcasts to America. After noting the difference between the UTC time and my time, I tried finding broadcasts. Out of approximately 12, I could only get about 3. Is this par for the course? It doesn't sound unreasonable. I had the antenna fully extended near my window. I tried the reel antenna but it did not make much of a difference. Can you offer any tips and advice? I'd prefer not to buy an expensive, optional antenna right now, I want to make do with the whip and reel. Thanks for the help and replies. I did a little better this morning. I hung the reel antenna outside and tried to fing stations by exclusively using the scanning function. I found it's better to let the radio do the work, do the hunting and scanning. I found many stations, most of them Christian gospel preaching. I will try again tonight. I use the 7600 too. I suggest you get about 20 feet of wire (stronger than the stuff that the reel antenna is made of). Attach an alligator clip to one end. Throw the wire out of your window. Either run it along the side of the house/apt. or just let it drop. Attach the alligator clip to your radio's antenna (keep the antenna at its shortest, so no accidents happen where you knock the radio over because of an extended antenna. (Another option is using the reel antenna but taking the plastic reel off the wire.) Do note that you will have to learn to use the attenuator wheel on strong signals. Those gospel stations are domestic US broadcasters. They tend to be easy catches (at least the big powerful ones). If you let us know where you are located, and the stations that you AREN'T able to catch, other 7600 owners can give you feedback on whether those failures are normal or not. That radio just isn't going to pick up local stations in Sumatra or Urumqi. It depends on where you are in America and where the broadcaster is. You might be in a fringe area for a particular broadcaster. And the listings are probably optimistic. SWLing is a little like hunting. I don't know about others but I scan looking for interesting or surprising signals. Signals that are regularly there, i.e. similar to a local AM broadcast aren't that interesting to me. (Although Radio Havana can be good for a laugh.) If you are unsure of your radio or antenna then there are regular signals you can test it against. WWV is regular by design. Depending on where you are and the time of day you should get a good signal on 5 MHz and/or 10 MHz. -- rb -- Col. I.P. Yurin Commissariat of Internal Security Stakhanovite Order of Lenin (1937) Hero of Socialist Labor (1939) |
Help! I can't get many shortwave stations!
Dear "D. of N."
Unfortunately you have picked probably the worst possible time to get started in shortwave radio. We are at, or fast approaching, the "bottom" of the 11-year sunspot cycle. At this point, shortwave reception becomes problematic. Signals can travel farther on the higher frequencies, but these are the frequencies most affected by the presence or absence of sunspots. You will find reception to be generally better in the early mornings and the late afternoons, with nighttime reception to be "iffy." That's not to say, of course, that you can't hear anything at night, just that it will be more chancy until the new sunspot cycle "takes hold," which will occur in just a couple of years. (I should mention to you that sunspots affect the ionosphere which directly affects shortwave reception.) Your whip antenna and/or the accessory reel antenna will work just fine. Try tuning to 6165 kHz at 0000 UTC (7:00 PM EST) and/or at 0100 UTC. Radio Netherlands transmits in English at that time and their programs are always interesting. If you can listen in the afternoons, try 12095 kHz at 1900 UTC (2:00 PM EST) and you should hear the BBC which transmits until 2100 UTC. At that time tune to 11690 kHz and you should hear Deutsche Welle. These two broadcasts will get you started. (This is assuming, of course, that you live in the eastern part of the United States.) Hang in there. And keep trying/scanning the shortwaves whenever you wish. Oftentimes you will hear something totally unexpected and this is one of the joys of the hobby. Best, Joe dead of night wrote: Hi. I own a new, Sony icf7600GR, delivered yesterday. I am brand new to shortwave radio. I have printed out the Prime Time Shortwave listings of English speaking shortwave broadcasts to America. After noting the difference between the UTC time and my time, I tried finding broadcasts. Out of approximately 12, I could only get about 3. Is this par for the course? I had the antenna fully extended near my window. I tried the reel antenna but it did not make much of a difference. Can you offer any tips and advice? I'd prefer not to buy an expensive, optional antenna right now, I want to make do with the whip and reel. |
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