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#1
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I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC.
If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? |
#2
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On Tue, 02 Jun 2009 04:18:16 masteropie may have written:
I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC. If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? Make sure your wire has "some air". ie, get it out of the confines of your brick or steal-renforced concrete building. Even just a couple of metres out a window will make a big difference if that's the cause. You mau also want to look for local sources of intereference. Walk around the house with your radio and see what devices make the static/noice worse when you get close to them. If you're in an apartment block you obviously can't do anything about your neighbours, which is why getting the antenna outside is important. You can attach the wire to a piece of grounded coax to try and avoid in-house interference. For a good general introduction to listening on Shortwave, get hold of a copy of Passport to World Band Radio - either buy it or borrow from your local library. For a good refernce list of shortwave broadcasts, check out http://www.eibi.de.vu/. Load up the CSV in Excel (or your spreadsheet application of choice) and filter on English and your local region and surrounding regions. Cheers, Paul -- Paul Day http://www.enigma.id.au/ |
#3
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Someone wrote:
I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC. Well, conditions are pretty poor due to low sunspot activity. Best bet is to tune 5.8 to 6.2 MHz and 7.2 to 7.5 MHz in the evenings, 15.0 to 15.5 MHz and 11.5 to 12.1 MHz during daylight hours. And 9.3 to 10.0 MHz most anytime. You should be able to hear Radio Australia very well in english on 9.58 MHz around 7:00 a.m. ET. If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? What is your antenna? Also, radio reception is all about signal to noise ratio. If you have a lot of locally generated noise, it's gonna be tough to hear anything. Art Harris |
#4
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In article ,
Art Harris says... Someone wrote: I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC. Well, conditions are pretty poor due to low sunspot activity. Best bet is to tune 5.8 to 6.2 MHz and 7.2 to 7.5 MHz in the evenings, 15.0 to 15.5 MHz and 11.5 to 12.1 MHz during daylight hours. And 9.3 to 10.0 MHz most anytime. You should be able to hear Radio Australia very well in english on 9.58 MHz around 7:00 a.m. ET. If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? What is your antenna? Also, radio reception is all about signal to noise ratio. If you have a lot of locally generated noise, it's gonna be tough to hear anything. Art Harris Art... The same question from me. I live in San Francisco bay area. I have a Sony 2010. My antenna is a wire connected to my metal gutter. Stopped listening when the BBC stopped broadcasting to US. I'm looking for a reason to listen to SW again but need some help with time/freq of English speaking stations. Any recommendations? thanks elfa |
#5
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elfa wrote:
In article , Art Harris says... Someone wrote: I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC. Well, conditions are pretty poor due to low sunspot activity. Best bet is to tune 5.8 to 6.2 MHz and 7.2 to 7.5 MHz in the evenings, 15.0 to 15.5 MHz and 11.5 to 12.1 MHz during daylight hours. And 9.3 to 10.0 MHz most anytime. You should be able to hear Radio Australia very well in english on 9.58 MHz around 7:00 a.m. ET. If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? What is your antenna? Also, radio reception is all about signal to noise ratio. If you have a lot of locally generated noise, it's gonna be tough to hear anything. Art Harris Art... The same question from me. I live in San Francisco bay area. I have a Sony 2010. My antenna is a wire connected to my metal gutter. Stopped listening when the BBC stopped broadcasting to US. I'm looking for a reason to listen to SW again but need some help with time/freq of English speaking stations. Any recommendations? thanks elfa Monitoring Times magazine has an English broadcasts section t6hat is quite in-depth. Passport to World Band Radio also has listings by time-of-day. |
#6
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In article , dave says...
elfa wrote: In article , Art Harris says... Someone wrote: I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC. Well, conditions are pretty poor due to low sunspot activity. Best bet is to tune 5.8 to 6.2 MHz and 7.2 to 7.5 MHz in the evenings, 15.0 to 15.5 MHz and 11.5 to 12.1 MHz during daylight hours. And 9.3 to 10.0 MHz most anytime. You should be able to hear Radio Australia very well in english on 9.58 MHz around 7:00 a.m. ET. If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? What is your antenna? Also, radio reception is all about signal to noise ratio. If you have a lot of locally generated noise, it's gonna be tough to hear anything. Art Harris Art... The same question from me. I live in San Francisco bay area. I have a Sony 2010. My antenna is a wire connected to my metal gutter. Stopped listening when the BBC stopped broadcasting to US. I'm looking for a reason to listen to SW again but need some help with time/freq of English speaking stations. Any recommendations? thanks elfa Monitoring Times magazine has an English broadcasts section t6hat is quite in-depth. Passport to World Band Radio also has listings by time-of-day. I actually have the '03 edition of Passport. I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions from personal experience. elfa |
#7
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On Jun 4, 2:50*pm, dave wrote:
elfa wrote: In article , Art Harris says... Someone wrote: I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC. Well, conditions are pretty poor due to low sunspot activity. Best bet is to tune 5.8 to 6.2 MHz and 7.2 to 7.5 MHz in the evenings, 15.0 to 15.5 MHz and 11.5 to 12.1 MHz during daylight hours. And 9.3 to 10.0 MHz most anytime. You should be able to hear Radio Australia very well in english on 9.58 MHz around 7:00 a.m. ET. If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? What is your antenna? Also, radio reception is all about signal to noise ratio. If you have a lot of locally generated noise, it's gonna be tough to hear anything. Art Harris Art... The same question from me. *I live in San Francisco bay area. *I have a Sony 2010. *My antenna is a wire connected to my metal gutter. *Stopped listening when the BBC stopped broadcasting to US. I'm looking for a reason to listen to SW again but need some help with time/freq of English speaking stations. Any recommendations? thanks elfa Monitoring Times magazine has an English broadcasts section t6hat is quite in-depth. *Passport to World Band Radio also has listings by time-of-day.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Unfortunately, that is about the only thing MT is good for anymore IMO. |
#9
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![]() elfa wrote: In article , Art Harris says... Someone wrote: I just got my first shortwave radio, a PL-600. I can only pickup about 5 shortwave stations, 2 of which are somewhat clear. I have nothing but static on WBCQ 9330khz, i should get this for sure right? I live close to NYC. Well, conditions are pretty poor due to low sunspot activity. Best bet is to tune 5.8 to 6.2 MHz and 7.2 to 7.5 MHz in the evenings, 15.0 to 15.5 MHz and 11.5 to 12.1 MHz during daylight hours. And 9.3 to 10.0 MHz most anytime. You should be able to hear Radio Australia very well in english on 9.58 MHz around 7:00 a.m. ET. If my radio defective or do i need a bigger antenna? What is your antenna? Also, radio reception is all about signal to noise ratio. If you have a lot of locally generated noise, it's gonna be tough to hear anything. Art Harris Art... The same question from me. I live in San Francisco bay area. I have a Sony 2010. My antenna is a wire connected to my metal gutter. Stopped listening when the BBC stopped broadcasting to US. I'm looking for a reason to listen to SW again but need some help with time/freq of English speaking stations. Any recommendations? http://www.eibispace.de/dx/bc-a09.txt And this: http://www.primetimeshortwave.com/time.txt Though the latter appears to have a bit of a problem at the moment, which will probably get sorted out soon. dxAce Michigan USA |
#10
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elfa wrote:
The same question from me. *I live in San Francisco bay area. *I have a Sony 2010. *My antenna is a wire connected to my metal gutter. *Stopped listening when the BBC stopped broadcasting to US. I'm looking for a reason to listen to SW again but need some help with time/freq of English speaking stations. Yes, it's not as much fun as it used to be, especially with the poor propagation, many long-time SW broadcasters calling it quits, and all the paid religious broadcasts all over the spectrum. I'm on Long Island, so I can't give specific advice as to what's hearable in SF. There are websites that list current english language shortwave broadcasts. http://www.primetimeshortwave.com/ You can still hear BBC, it just takes a little more work. Also Radio Canada, Deutsche Welle, France, Romania, etc. And the ubiquitous China Radio. Art Harris |
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