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On 11/10/2010 1:22 PM, Steve wrote:
On Nov 9, 11:58 pm, "Von wrote: Does shortwave radio still exist in today's time? Do any countries still broadcast to the U.S.? I can get all those countries I listened to in the 1990's on podcasts now on itunes. I wouldn't mind a new shortwave to play around with but... I think the fun factor would fade quickly. It's not old technology, it's really really really old technology. I read Passport to World Band Radio closed shop. Sad but, sign of the times. A lot of people don't use SW radios primarily for listening to AM broadcast stations. Some people like to hunt beacons, monitor military frequencies, listen to aeronautical comms, amateur radio operators, etc. Broadcast listening is only one slice of a large pie. There's a growing number of amateur operators, experimenters really, using the AM mode on shortwave, too. You can find them on 3700-3735 kHz, 3860-3890 kHz, 7285-7295 kHz, and a few other spots too. What's interesting about them is that some are real experimenters and run transmitters with superb fidelity, some sounding better than commercial broadcast stations. With all good wishes, Kevin, WB4AIO. -- http://nationalvanguard.org/ http://kevinalfredstrom.com/ |
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