Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "hma" wrote in message ... SNIP It looks very interesting. That was local time in the state of Washington right? I wonder what time this was in Indonesia or better your time in UTC. This way we can all try to log some of it. Hi HMA, dxAce is correct-- the loggings were in UTC, which is the accepted time format for loggings on shortwave (and usually mediumwave, too, though Eastern Standard Time is sometimes referenced for MW). You can imagine the confusion among DXers in different locations if the reports were stated in various local time zones. So, long ago UTC (or GMT for the true-blue British among us-- same thing) was chosen as the reference point. UTC is truly the "starting point" for time zones around the world; every zone is referenced as either plus or minus hours from it. All the major shortwave stations give their programming times in UTC also for the same reason, though many will also give the local times in the target areas (where the audience lives). For the record, the Indonesian stations I heard this morning were noted around dawn my local time (currently 6:30am Pacific Daylight Time). This equals 1330 UTC. If it had been local time, these tropical band signals would not have been audible in North America because it would be early afternoon at the receiver. regards, Guy |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Tropical Storm Charley | Shortwave |