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#1
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Anyone here into BCB DX-ing as their main interest please ?
"M" "Find solutions, not fault." |
#2
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Anyone here into BCB DX-ing as their main interest please ?
"M" Meeeeee ! I believe there are others as well. jw wb9uai milwaukee Icom R71a, Palstar R-30, Kenwood R-1000 |
#3
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![]() J999w wrote: Anyone here into BCB DX-ing as their main interest please ? "M" Meeeeee ! I believe there are others as well. jw I have always done it in tandem with SWDX, though about 70% of the time, I'm listening to SW. Tony ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#4
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Anyone here into BCB DX-ing as their main interest please ?
Sure... it WAS great until all those Latino stations began cluttering up the band---not to mention the overmodulation products from their transmitters! Is it true that WSM has been sold out to some Mexican interest? RG |
#5
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![]() M wrote: Anyone here into BCB DX-ing as their main interest please ? "M" "Find solutions, not fault." I have been BCB DXing since 1985. LOVE it -- 73 and Best of DX Shawn Axelrod Visit the AMANDX DX site with info for the new or experienced listener: http://www.angelfire.com/mb/amandx/index.html REMEMBER ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN HEAR FOREVER |
#6
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I got started in BCB DX in the late 1960's as a pre-teen and it continues to
be a favorite. But I absolutely agree with RadioGuy in that the Mexican stations are trashing up the band. What's also changed over the years, making station identification more difficult, is the syndication of talk shows. You just don't find much local content when tuning the band to use as an aid in ID'ing a station. Don't know if anybody else has noticed that over the last decade or so. 73's Craig "M" wrote in message news:3ALTb.11021$Ii2.5287@lakeread03... Anyone here into BCB DX-ing as their main interest please ? "M" "Find solutions, not fault." |
#7
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Craig (WB6LZV) wrote:
I got started in BCB DX in the late 1960's as a pre-teen and it continues to be a favorite. But I absolutely agree with RadioGuy in that the Mexican stations are trashing up the band. What's also changed over the years, making station identification more difficult, is the syndication of talk shows. You just don't find much local content when tuning the band to use as an aid in ID'ing a station. Don't know if anybody else has noticed that over the last decade or so. I rather appreciate Mexican stations. (I probably DX FM more than I do AM) They tend to have clear and frequent IDs, which is far more than you can say for most U.S. (and especially Canadian!) stations. Sure, you do have to take the effort to learn a bit of Spanish but at least on FM I've found it well worthwhile. They also seem much better (on average) at selling local advertising with which you can identify a station. The big problem on AM is that they're shuffling frequencies like crazy down there; a printed Mexican AM station guide may not be of much value for long... -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
#8
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DS,
Better some Mexican-Latino AM Stations with local 'original' content: Then 60 USofA AM Stations all carrying Art Bell / George Noore "Coast-to-Coast-AM" all night long. jm2cw ~ RHF .. .. = = = Doug Smith W9WI = = = wrote in message ... Craig (WB6LZV) wrote: I got started in BCB DX in the late 1960's as a pre-teen and it continues to be a favorite. But I absolutely agree with RadioGuy in that the Mexican stations are trashing up the band. What's also changed over the years, making station identification more difficult, is the syndication of talk shows. You just don't find much local content when tuning the band to use as an aid in ID'ing a station. Don't know if anybody else has noticed that over the last decade or so. I rather appreciate Mexican stations. (I probably DX FM more than I do AM) They tend to have clear and frequent IDs, which is far more than you can say for most U.S. (and especially Canadian!) stations. Sure, you do have to take the effort to learn a bit of Spanish but at least on FM I've found it well worthwhile. They also seem much better (on average) at selling local advertising with which you can identify a station. The big problem on AM is that they're shuffling frequencies like crazy down there; a printed Mexican AM station guide may not be of much value for long... |
#9
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![]() "Craig (WB6LZV)" wrote: I got started in BCB DX in the late 1960's as a pre-teen and it continues to be a favorite. But I absolutely agree with RadioGuy in that the Mexican stations are trashing up the band. What's also changed over the years, making station identification more difficult, is the syndication of talk shows. You just don't find much local content when tuning the band to use as an aid in ID'ing a station. Don't know if anybody else has noticed that over the last decade or so. 73's Craig I began BCB DX in the early sixties, and what *I* miss most is that back then, any and all stations identified *at least* every fifteen minutes, and most more often than that. Today, I get more clues about location from the local commercials than anything else, and I have heard some (usually talk radio, as you imply) that ID only once an hour, best as I can tell. Tony ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#10
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You just don't find much local content when tuning the band to use as an aid
in ID'ing a station. Don't know if anybody else has noticed that over the last decade or so. When I made a 2000-mile sentimental road trip just before Xmas 2001, I took all US highways (no Interstates). I also listened to just AM radio. And I know what you mean. There was at least one local content station, though. It was in Louisiana. Hearing "Jingle Bells" sung in French-Acadian was a hoot. Bill, K5BY No speaka ze Cajun |