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#1
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Radio nederland
15315 KHz from Bonaire booming in like carzy ..
SINPO 5-5-4-5-5 at 2310z FRG 7 and 50 feet of wire in the attic in Piedmont NC Dan AI8O |
#2
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Radio nederland
On Mar 21, 4:11*pm, ai8o wrote:
15315 KHz from Bonaire booming in like carzy .. SINPO 5-5-4-5-5 at 2310z FRG 7 and 50 feet of wire in the attic in Piedmont NC Dan AI8O In Dutch or Spanish, I presume...? Bruce |
#3
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Radio nederland
According to schedule, the antenna from Bonaire is aimed almost due
south (182 or 170 degrees). Which actually is good news because there is always some sort of backwhip in the opposite direction. |
#4
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Radio nederland
On Mar 22, 7:19*pm, SC Dxing wrote:
According to schedule, the antenna from Bonaire is aimed almost due south (182 or 170 degrees). Which actually is good news because there is always some sort of backwhip in the opposite direction. ....right, either straight back or off at some 120 degree or so angle off the rear side. When I lived in Massachusetts 30 years ago - heck, here in California - the Bonaire transmissions do/were ALWAYS pound(ing) in no matter what time of day or night. It makes no difference where the antenna was headed. Bruce |
#5
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Radio nederland
On Mar 22, 11:17*pm, bpnjensen wrote:
On Mar 22, 7:19*pm, SC Dxing wrote: According to schedule, the antenna from Bonaire is aimed almost due south (182 or 170 degrees). Which actually is good news because there is always some sort of backwhip in the opposite direction. ...right, either straight back or off at some 120 degree or so angle off the rear side. *When I lived in Massachusetts 30 years ago - heck, here in California - the Bonaire transmissions do/were ALWAYS pound(ing) in no matter what time of day or night. *It makes no difference where the antenna was headed. Bruce 30 years ago Bonaire also had an AM broadcast on 800KHz. It came in quite well at night all over the East coast. |
#6
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Radio nederland
On Mar 22, 9:56*pm, wrote:
On Mar 22, 11:17*pm, bpnjensen wrote: On Mar 22, 7:19*pm, SC Dxing wrote: According to schedule, the antenna from Bonaire is aimed almost due south (182 or 170 degrees). Which actually is good news because there is always some sort of backwhip in the opposite direction. ...right, either straight back or off at some 120 degree or so angle off the rear side. *When I lived in Massachusetts 30 years ago - heck, here in California - the Bonaire transmissions do/were ALWAYS pound(ing) in no matter what time of day or night. *It makes no difference where the antenna was headed. Bruce *30 years ago Bonaire also had an AM broadcast on 800KHz. It came in quite well at night all over the East coast. So I understood. Never made it to New England though, not really. There was something else nearby on that freq, I cannot remember what. |
#7
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Radio nederland
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#8
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Radio nederland
On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 22:44:52 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen
wrote: On Mar 22, 9:56*pm, wrote: On Mar 22, 11:17*pm, bpnjensen wrote: On Mar 22, 7:19*pm, SC Dxing wrote: According to schedule, the antenna from Bonaire is aimed almost due south (182 or 170 degrees). Which actually is good news because there is always some sort of backwhip in the opposite direction. ...right, either straight back or off at some 120 degree or so angle off the rear side. *When I lived in Massachusetts 30 years ago - heck, here in California - the Bonaire transmissions do/were ALWAYS pound(ing) in no matter what time of day or night. *It makes no difference where the antenna was headed. Bruce *30 years ago Bonaire also had an AM broadcast on 800KHz. It came in quite well at night all over the East coast. So I understood. Never made it to New England though, not really. There was something else nearby on that freq, I cannot remember what. It was the BIG 8 CKLW in Windsor, Ontario. I think they ran more than 50 KW not being regulated by the US. All you could hear in Detroit on 800kHz. In fact, all you had to do was turn up the gain on any amp or PA system and you would hear them. Jim |
#9
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Radio nederland
On Mar 23, 12:25*pm, wrote:
On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 22:44:52 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen wrote: On Mar 22, 9:56 pm, wrote: On Mar 22, 11:17 pm, bpnjensen wrote: On Mar 22, 7:19 pm, SC Dxing wrote: According to schedule, the antenna from Bonaire is aimed almost due south (182 or 170 degrees). Which actually is good news because there is always some sort of backwhip in the opposite direction. ...right, either straight back or off at some 120 degree or so angle off the rear side. When I lived in Massachusetts 30 years ago - heck, here in California - the Bonaire transmissions do/were ALWAYS pound(ing) in no matter what time of day or night. It makes no difference where the antenna was headed. Bruce 30 years ago Bonaire also had an AM broadcast on 800KHz. It came in quite well at night all over the East coast. So I understood. *Never made it to New England though, not really. There was something else nearby on that freq, I cannot remember what. It was the BIG 8 CKLW in Windsor, Ontario. I think they ran more than 50 KW not being regulated by the US. All you could hear in Detroit on 800kHz. In fact, all you had to do was turn up the gain on any amp or PA system and you would hear them. Jim- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Now *that* signal I remember. It was potent in New England. Are they still OTA? |
#10
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Radio nederland
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 12:36:16 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen
wrote: On Mar 23, 12:25*pm, wrote: On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 22:44:52 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen wrote: On Mar 22, 9:56 pm, wrote: On Mar 22, 11:17 pm, bpnjensen wrote: On Mar 22, 7:19 pm, SC Dxing wrote: According to schedule, the antenna from Bonaire is aimed almost due south (182 or 170 degrees). Which actually is good news because there is always some sort of backwhip in the opposite direction. ...right, either straight back or off at some 120 degree or so angle off the rear side. When I lived in Massachusetts 30 years ago - heck, here in California - the Bonaire transmissions do/were ALWAYS pound(ing) in no matter what time of day or night. It makes no difference where the antenna was headed. Bruce 30 years ago Bonaire also had an AM broadcast on 800KHz. It came in quite well at night all over the East coast. So I understood. *Never made it to New England though, not really. There was something else nearby on that freq, I cannot remember what. It was the BIG 8 CKLW in Windsor, Ontario. I think they ran more than 50 KW not being regulated by the US. All you could hear in Detroit on 800kHz. In fact, all you had to do was turn up the gain on any amp or PA system and you would hear them. Jim- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Now *that* signal I remember. It was potent in New England. Are they still OTA? They are on the air at 800kHz, but as a newstalk station. Power is reduced to 50 KW. Still have the CKLW call. They do broadcast from the old CKLW studios with the call CKWW on 580 kHz with an oldies format. They modified the old CKLW jingles to match the call. They even have a few (or at least one) of the old disc jockeys. Charlie O'Brien is still on the air in the morning. Unfortunately, they only run 500 watts but I listen to it in my car as long as I am in range. Jim |
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