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NDXE Shortwave?????
On Sunday, July 2, 1995 2:00:00 AM UTC-5, David allan Boucher wrote:
Does anyone know if anything ever became of this station? This was to be (if I'm correct...) a new shortwave station in the US..... I believe a CP was issued...But we haven't heard anything about it... Does anyone know the story? Let us know! Thanks! - DAVE IN BOSTON - The station was issued a CP but not under NDXE.....the FCC refused to issue that callsign though N is a US prefix (Naval, aircraft and ham radio ops use Nxxxx callsigns). In contrast to other's posts, it was not a scam...but I think the owner intended to make it a US based station....(IE: broadcast for a US audience which is not legal for US SW stations) Chris Former ABC Radio Networks Engineer |
NDXE Shortwave?????
Wow.....responding to a usenet newsgroup post from 1995!!!!
Where were you perusing to find this? wrote in message ... On Sunday, July 2, 1995 2:00:00 AM UTC-5, David allan Boucher wrote: Does anyone know if anything ever became of this station? This was to be (if I'm correct...) a new shortwave station in the US..... I believe a CP was issued...But we haven't heard anything about it... Does anyone know the story? Let us know! Thanks! - DAVE IN BOSTON - The station was issued a CP but not under NDXE.....the FCC refused to issue that callsign though N is a US prefix (Naval, aircraft and ham radio ops use Nxxxx callsigns). In contrast to other's posts, it was not a scam...but I think the owner intended to make it a US based station....(IE: broadcast for a US audience which is not legal for US SW stations) Chris Former ABC Radio Networks Engineer |
NDXE Shortwave?????
In article , "Radio Pro"
wrote: {sniip}[i] think the owner intended to make it a US based station....(IE: broadcast for a US audience which is not legal for US SW stations) Chris Former ABC Radio Networks Engineer Huh?? Tuning across the shortwave bands in the evening with a cheap pocket radio, almost all I hear are obviously American bible thumpers telling you how to live your life and begging you to send money to a U.S. address. Many at least claim to be broadcasting from a "studio" somewhere in the U.S., and many have call-in telephone numbers that also appear to be in the U.S. So is the mere assertion that their intended audience is "international" sufficient to make this legal, or are their transmitters in fact offshore somewhere? Inquiring minds want to know... |
NDXE Shortwave?????
On Thursday, September 19, 2013 4:57:28 PM UTC-4, BakersT wrote:[i]
In article , "Radio Pro" wrote: {sniip} think the owner intended to make it a US based station....(IE: broadcast for a US audience which is not legal for US SW stations) Chris Former ABC Radio Networks Engineer Huh?? Tuning across the shortwave bands in the evening with a cheap pocket radio, almost all I hear are obviously American bible thumpers telling you how to live your life and begging you to send money to a U.S. address. Many at least claim to be broadcasting from a "studio" somewhere in the U.S., and many have call-in telephone numbers that also appear to be in the U.S. So is the mere assertion that their intended audience is "international" sufficient to make this legal, or are their transmitters in fact offshore somewhere? Inquiring minds want to know... Just about all of them are here. It is obvious from the loud signals they bring out. |
You can thank Joe Costello for that. He put WRNO on the air in New Orleans with an alleged "target area" of Europe - beamed right up the Atlantic coast. More recently Al Weiner did the reverse with WBCQ - built it in Maine beaming to Latin America. In both cases they had excellent coverage of the large population centers of the USA.
"Legally" they cannot target a domestic audiance, but it certainly doesn't stop them from doing exactly that. The bible-thumpers you mention above are mostly time-brokered; if you want to get on the air you record a program, buy an hour on their transmitter, and they'll put you on no questions asked. |
NDXE Shortwave?????
On 10/26/2013 12:47 PM, jta wrote:[i]
BakersT;809884 Wrote: In article , "Radio Pro" wrote: {sniip}- think the owner intended to make it a US based station....(IE: broadcast for a US audience which is not legal for US SW stations) Chris Former ABC Radio Networks Engineer - Huh?? Tuning across the shortwave bands in the evening with a cheap pocket radio, almost all I hear are obviously American bible thumpers telling you how to live your life and begging you to send money to a U.S. address. Many at least claim to be broadcasting from a "studio" somewhere in the U.S., and many have call-in telephone numbers that also appear to be in the U.S. So is the mere assertion that their intended audience is "international" sufficient to make this legal, or are their transmitters in fact offshore somewhere? Inquiring minds want to know... You can thank Joe Costello for that. He put WRNO on the air in New Orleans with an alleged "target area" of Europe - beamed right up the Atlantic coast. More recently Al Weiner did the reverse with WBCQ - built it in Maine beaming to Latin America. In both cases they had excellent coverage of the large population centers of the USA. "Legally" they cannot target a domestic audiance, but it certainly doesn't stop them from doing exactly that. The bible-thumpers you mention above are mostly time-brokered; if you want to get on the air you record a program, buy an hour on their transmitter, and they'll put you on no questions asked. The rule is preposterous and was created by the big-money men to prevent anyone of moderate means (by broadcasting standards) from covering a huge part of the country with just one transmitter. The money boys paid big bucks for their 50-kW blowtorches and they hate competition. Kudos to anyone who figures out a way around it! 73, Kevin, WB4AIO. -- http://nationalvanguard.org/ http://kevinalfredstrom.com/ |
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