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Total wierdness! That's radio for ya!
Because of Mark Zenier's post, I grabbed my old Sangean 505 portable,
which I haven't used in many months. I couldn't remember if you could use SSB mode in longwave on it or not (you can't). But to my amazement - and this is on the built-in whip, remember - I could hear, faint and scratchy, but recognizable - a transmission on 162kHz LW!! It is not from Europe, I could gather that, it sounded like a typical American "al this" or "all that , all the time" station - very commercial. It faded before I could get an ID. Obviously a fractional wavelength reception of a stronger frequency, but what? That amazed me! Tony |
Tony Meloche schrieb:
Because of Mark Zenier's post, I grabbed my old Sangean 505 portable, which I haven't used in many months. I couldn't remember if you could use SSB mode in longwave on it or not (you can't). But to my amazement - and this is on the built-in whip, remember - I could hear, faint and scratchy, but recognizable - a transmission on 162kHz LW!! It is not from Europe, I could gather that, it sounded like a typical American "al this" or "all that , all the time" station - very commercial. It faded before I could get an ID. Obviously a fractional wavelength reception of a stronger frequency, but what? That amazed me! Might be an image from 1060 or 1070, depending on what the 2nd IF is. Of course a 2nd order IM product from AMBCB may also be possible, but you would have heard two stations at the same time then. Stephan -- Meine Andere Seite: http://stephan.win31.de/ PC#6: i440BX, 1xP3-500E, 512 MiB, 18+80 GB, R9k AGP 64 MiB, 110W This is a SCSI-inside, Legacy-plus, TCPA-free computer :) |
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