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On 12/29/09 16:36 , SX-25 wrote:
Ric... I'm in Wisconsin too (near the U.P.) and having a ball with shortwave. Don't listen to the baloney that the "golden days of shortwave are gone." Several shortwave stations have went on the air this past year and numerous are expanding their coverage. There is still a lot there but you'll need more than a telescopic whip to do it. Telescopic whips NEVER were much of a performer. Alligator clip a longwire...any length more than 20 feet and see what you get. Everybody seems to have bought into the "if it's digital it is an outstandinga piece of gear" crap. A lot of digital SW receivers are just as deaf as their earlier ancestors which needed more than a bicycle spoke as an antenna. You need to capture RF with something more than a whip. Mr. Mendleson's explanation was the most accurate. We're in a period of horrific sunspot inactivity and all the bands are dead. As for hams, there's plenty of action from 3500 to 4000 kc with the 3500-3600 loaded every night with CW. By the way, I can decode digital modes with my lowly little Grundig Yacht Boy 400PE although the audio is, well, like most things of the cell phone era are on music and voice; so I use old stuff. Good luck and...enjoy... WPE9GHF I spend my getaway time in the North Woods, about 45 minutes south of Rhinelander. I've gotten some pretty decent catches with my Grunding Sat 650 Professional. Not the tightest IF in the world, but tremendous audio. And out in the middle of the woods the noise floor is astonishingly low, so there are some opportunities for deep DX you don't find down here in the big city. The bands aren't as full as they were when WNYW was pounding the ether. But there's still plenty out there to hunt down and savor. Some pretty intense political discussions, too. A unique perspective on the World stage. |
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