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Old February 1st 07, 02:56 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Question about AM radio interference

A lot of AM stations in my area (East coast) are difficult to hear
because of interference by a Spanish language station.
I was told awhile ago that it was because of a high-wattage station in
Cuba that was broadcasting because the US. was broadcasting to Cuban
listeners.

Does anyone have more information, or is this just another conspiracy
theory?
Thanks.

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Old February 1st 07, 11:11 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
MRe MRe is offline
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Default Question about AM radio interference


"janospetrik" schreef in bericht
ups.com...
A lot of AM stations in my area (East coast) are difficult to hear
because of interference by a Spanish language station.
I was told awhile ago that it was because of a high-wattage station in
Cuba that was broadcasting because the US. was broadcasting to Cuban
listeners.

Does anyone have more information, or is this just another conspiracy
theory?


Reciever? Antenna? exact location?

MRe



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Old February 1st 07, 02:10 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
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Default Question about AM radio interference

janospetrik wrote:

A lot of AM stations in my area (East coast) are difficult to hear
because of interference by a Spanish language station.
I was told awhile ago that it was because of a high-wattage station in
Cuba that was broadcasting because the US. was broadcasting to Cuban
listeners.

Does anyone have more information, or is this just another conspiracy
theory?
Thanks.


There's lots of Cubans at night, when MW band signals aren't attenuated
by collisions in the lower ionosphere. (The sun puts ions there when
the sun is up; charged particles are accelerated by radio waves, and
low frequency waves move them enough to experience collisions, which
dissipates the energy; otherwise they'd just reradiate it back to
the wave and nothing would be lost, in fact this is responsible for
reflection that the wave needs to return to earth, but MW wants it
at a less dense higher altitude to avoid collisions.)

Spanish in the day is from local origins.

--
Ron Hardin


On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.
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Old February 1st 07, 03:08 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Question about AM radio interference

janospetrik wrote:
A lot of AM stations in my area (East coast) are difficult to hear
because of interference by a Spanish language station.
I was told awhile ago that it was because of a high-wattage station in
Cuba that was broadcasting because the US. was broadcasting to Cuban
listeners.

Does anyone have more information, or is this just another conspiracy
theory?


(see Ron Hardin's reply for more useful information)

Which frequencies? During the day, at night, both?

(I think I'm misreading your post, but do you mean many AM stations are
receiving interference from **the same** Spanish-language station? Or
is more than one Spanish-language station involved?) Does this
interference exist every night, or is it much worse some nights than
others? How far up the East Coast are you? (there's a BIG difference
between Fort Pierce and Boston, as far as Cuban interference is concerned)

--
Doug Smith W9WI
Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66
http://www.w9wi.com

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