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#11
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heck, you had the best rock and roll station right beside you. cfl came
in around 9-9:30 at night here. i have to check and see if mom has those radios packed up somewhere. all had the leather case. i have a letter from wcfl they sent me about the song "american pie" bob dearborn wrote. man i feel old. also had a zenith shortwave that had about 20 tubes that lit my room up at night. tall as i was. |
#12
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I don't care what they say.There are NO transistor radios than can match
those old tube radios.Espicially those old wooden cabinet floor model radios,and the sound quality.Bose,y'all haven't learned **** yet!!! cuhulin |
#13
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The earth's magnetic field is weakening, and whatever affects the magnetic
field has a bearing on the condition of the ionosphere. I think the FCC may have changed the power output some stations can use, and the radiation patterns they may use. ~~~~~ God gives peace not war + "Ron Hardin" wrote in message ... WFAN 660 NYC has been like a local at 5:30am in Central Ohio the past few days, and today is barely audible over Cubans and probably a Pittsburgh station (no station ID), which don't seem to be any stronger than usual. It's just that WFAN is really weak. But looking at all the propagation conditions I can find, ie. mag storms (none, in fact unusually quiet) and Xrays (none, quiet), nothing changed from eg. yesterday to today. So what indicator is there that I'm not seeing? -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#14
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![]() From: mongo Newsgroups: rec.radio.shortwave Date: Fri, 04 Feb 2005 12:40:44 -0500 Subject: MW conditions, what changed? hi all. i guess while you are on the subject of mw. i used to pick up wcfl in chicago on one of those little pocket radios every night when i was growing up here (also in central ohio). what year did wcfl quit operations? i went thru a bunch of 9volt batteries come to think of it. Boy does this thread bring back memories. I was in high school in Bangor, Maine, ca. 1960, when I got a shirt-pocket Silvertone 6 transistor radio from Sears for Christmas. My favorite stations for rock music were WKBW, Buffalo, WPTR, Albany I think, WABC, New York, and, of course, WMEX (?), Boston, with "Arnie Ginsberg and the Night Train Show". It was a couple years later that we moved to Florida and I traveled to New Orleans to march in the Mardi Gras parade with my high school band. I was half asleep one night when I was startled by a weird howling noise coming over my radio through the little earplug. Some strange dude named Wolfman Jack! |
#15
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![]() Some strange dude named Wolfman Jack! Del Rio Texas, they bled over on everything on the bottom end of the AM dial. RM~ |
#16
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![]() tianli wrote: But looking at all the propagation conditions I can find, ie. mag storms (none, in fact unusually quiet) and Xrays (none, quiet), nothing changed from eg. yesterday to today. So what indicator is there that I'm not seeing? It is all quite elementary really :-P MW/BCB Propagation Primer http://66.175.38.157/kn4lf8.htm Propagation Outlook: ...the low bands of 160, 120, 90 and 80 meters saw the best propagation conditions since September 2004. Why? Because all of the general guide lines as spelled out by me further down in this outlook were met. http://www.kn4lf.com/kn4lf6.htm |
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