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Brazil-4915
Tuning 4915 after the WWCR mixing product left I listened for a while to the two
Brazilians on the freq. Heard an ID at 0030 for Radio Anhanguera. I suspect that the other weaker Brazilian is Radio Difusora. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... m II wrote: dxAce wrote: I presume you mean Radio Difusora do Macapá, which is the other Brazilian on 4915. You presumed correctly. Well, your bloated ego just shines... 'You presumed correctly' sure sounds a lot better than 'I was wrong' But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. Well, what is the name of the station? Are they not Radio Difusora? Are they not on or near 4915? Forget about the language lesson, Frackelton, and read my original post. Try to read it for what it was without the intent of giving me a language lesson. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 11:55:30 -0500, dxAce
wrote: David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. Well, what is the name of the station? Are they not Radio Difusora? Are they not on or near 4915? Forget about the language lesson, Frackelton, and read my original post. Try to read it for what it was without the intent of giving me a language lesson. dxAce Michigan USA R. Anhanguera; R. Nacional, Marcapa are the 2 Brazilians in the 2005 Blue Pages. |
Brazil-4915
David wrote: On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 11:55:30 -0500, dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. Well, what is the name of the station? Are they not Radio Difusora? Are they not on or near 4915? Forget about the language lesson, Frackelton, and read my original post. Try to read it for what it was without the intent of giving me a language lesson. dxAce Michigan USA R. Anhanguera; R. Nacional, Marcapa are the 2 Brazilians in the 2005 Blue Pages. Depends on where one looks I suppose (and I rarely trust PWBR anymore). I see many sources that say "Radio Difusora" Do a Google for Radio Difusora Macapá... see what comes up. LMFAO! My big 'crime' was not writing 'Radio Difusora, Macapá' in my original post! dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
dxAce wrote: David wrote: On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 11:55:30 -0500, dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. Well, what is the name of the station? Are they not Radio Difusora? Are they not on or near 4915? Forget about the language lesson, Frackelton, and read my original post. Try to read it for what it was without the intent of giving me a language lesson. dxAce Michigan USA R. Anhanguera; R. Nacional, Marcapa are the 2 Brazilians in the 2005 Blue Pages. Depends on where one looks I suppose (and I rarely trust PWBR anymore). I see many sources that say "Radio Difusora" Do a Google for Radio Difusora Macapá... see what comes up. LMFAO! My big 'crime' was not writing 'Radio Difusora, Macapá' in my original post! Instead, I wind up with a fake Hispanic who's trying to give me language lessons, and then a certifiable 'tard boy who doesn't have a damn clue about anything at all shows up as well! LMFAO dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 12:32:02 -0500, dxAce
wrote: LMFAO! My big 'crime' was not writing 'Radio Difusora, Macapá' in my original post! Instead, I wind up with a fake Hispanic who's trying to give me language lessons, and then a certifiable 'tard boy who doesn't have a damn clue about anything at all shows up as well! LMFAO dxAce Michigan USA Dwardo's OK. A little too fond of his R75 for my taste but quite factually adept overall, especially regarding MW and Latin America. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Tuning 4915 after the WWCR mixing product left I listened for a while to the two Brazilians on the freq. Heard an ID at 0030 for Radio Anhanguera. I suspect that the other weaker Brazilian is Radio Difusora. I presume you mean Radio Difusora do Macapá, which is the other Brazilian on 4915. I presume you mean Radio Difusora de Macapá, rather than Radio Difusora do Macapá. LMFAO dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. Well, what is the name of the station? Are they not Radio Difusora? Are they not on or near 4915? No, the name is Radio Difusora do Macapá. Just as there is no "Voice of" but there is a "Voice of America." Forget about the language lesson, Frackelton, and read my original post. Try to read it for what it was without the intent of giving me a language lesson. Why are you never able to say you are wrong? This is such an obvious faux pas that even you should see it. "Radio Difusora" means "Radio Station" and is not a name specific to one radio station. Radio means radio and Difusora means "sender" and is the equivalent of "emisora" in Spanish. You are so quick to say something nasty about others, but when you make an absolutely stupid error yourself, you accuse others of being wrong. |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David wrote: On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 11:55:30 -0500, dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. Well, what is the name of the station? Are they not Radio Difusora? Are they not on or near 4915? Forget about the language lesson, Frackelton, and read my original post. Try to read it for what it was without the intent of giving me a language lesson. dxAce Michigan USA R. Anhanguera; R. Nacional, Marcapa are the 2 Brazilians in the 2005 Blue Pages. Depends on where one looks I suppose (and I rarely trust PWBR anymore). I see many sources that say "Radio Difusora" Do a Google for Radio Difusora Macapá... see what comes up. LMFAO! My big 'crime' was not writing 'Radio Difusora, Macapá' in my original post! The comma is a WRTVH error that you are perpetuating. The name is Radio Difusora de Macapá. That means, in English, Radio Macapá. Again, slowly, "radio difusora" is a generic term meaning "radio station." No station can be named "radio station" without the actual name of the station appended. |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... Instead, I wind up with a fake Hispanic who's trying to give me language lessons, You could use some lessons, as you royally screwed up here. You, a supposed DXer, do not even know the naming conventions of radio stations in one of the more common SW languages. |
Brazil-4915
"David" wrote in message ... On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 12:32:02 -0500, dxAce wrote: LMFAO! My big 'crime' was not writing 'Radio Difusora, Macapá' in my original post! Instead, I wind up with a fake Hispanic who's trying to give me language lessons, and then a certifiable 'tard boy who doesn't have a damn clue about anything at all shows up as well! LMFAO dxAce Michigan USA Dwardo's OK. A little too fond of his R75 for my taste but quite factually adept overall, especially regarding MW and Latin America. Actually, I only have the R75 at one location. Others have Ten Tec and the R8B. R8 holds up to them very well, though. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... But I wasn't 'wrong' at all, 'tard boy, it's still Radio Difusora, no matter which way one slices or dices it! No, it is not. That is like saying "I heard Radio Station on 1230 AM" in BCB circles. "Radio Difusora" means a radio station, any radio station. Every one of the MW, FM and SW stations in Brasil is a radio difusora, with or without caps. It's like saying you went to see your lawyer, Mr. Esq. All lawyers who are men are "Mr. Esq." so you have not identified anyone. Any DX'er worth his or her salt would have known exactly what I was saying. Yes. I know exactly what you were saying. You said the station was called "radio station" and that applies, at least in Portuguese, to a few thousand AM, FM and SW stations. No DXer worth their salt would make such an obvious mistake and then defend it. Well, what is the name of the station? Are they not Radio Difusora? Are they not on or near 4915? No, the name is Radio Difusora do Macapá. Just as there is no "Voice of" but there is a "Voice of America." Forget about the language lesson, Frackelton, and read my original post. Try to read it for what it was without the intent of giving me a language lesson. Why are you never able to say you are wrong? This is such an obvious faux pas that even you should see it. "Radio Difusora" means "Radio Station" and is not a name specific to one radio station. Radio means radio and Difusora means "sender" and is the equivalent of "emisora" in Spanish. You are so quick to say something nasty about others, but when you make an absolutely stupid error yourself, you accuse others of being wrong. Drop it, 'tard boy. You lose. LMFAO at the fake Hispanic stem. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Tuning 4915 after the WWCR mixing product left I listened for a while to the two Brazilians on the freq. Heard an ID at 0030 for Radio Anhanguera. I suspect that the other weaker Brazilian is Radio Difusora. I presume you mean Radio Difusora do Macapá, which is the other Brazilian on 4915. I presume you mean Radio Difusora de Macapá, rather than Radio Difusora do Macapá. Now you are down to trying to cover your dumb mistake by looking for typing errors. The fact is, without the Macapá, what you posted identifies no station specifically and thousands of them generically. http://www.macapa-ap.com.br/empresas/rdm.htm has a complete history of the station. |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... You are so quick to say something nasty about others, but when you make an absolutely stupid error yourself, you accuse others of being wrong. Drop it, 'tard boy. You lose. This seems to be your modus operandi when caught with your pants down, grinnin' and lookin' stoopid. You reverse the blame and call folks retarded. You are still wrong, and the amazing thing is that someone who egotistically calls themselves a DX ace can make suck a basic, stupid error. It is not like there were few SW outlets in Portuguese. were the error about a station in an African vernacular, it would be understandable and usual. But to see our self-proclaimed "ace" make such a mistake for one of the "DXiest" countries of the world is laughable. LMFAO at the fake Hispanic stem. Hispanic is a culture. I grew up in Latin America, not the US, and am culturally Hispanic. Sorry if that inconveniences you. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Tuning 4915 after the WWCR mixing product left I listened for a while to the two Brazilians on the freq. Heard an ID at 0030 for Radio Anhanguera. I suspect that the other weaker Brazilian is Radio Difusora. I presume you mean Radio Difusora do Macapá, which is the other Brazilian on 4915. I presume you mean Radio Difusora de Macapá, rather than Radio Difusora do Macapá. Now you are down to trying to cover your dumb mistake by looking for typing errors. Typing error? Wasn't an error at all since you've spelled it that way several times. Now quit trying to cover your dumb mistake, Frackelton, and go troll elsewhere. LMFAO at the fake Hispanic, yet again. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... You are so quick to say something nasty about others, but when you make an absolutely stupid error yourself, you accuse others of being wrong. Drop it, 'tard boy. You lose. This seems to be your modus operandi when caught with your pants down, grinnin' and lookin' stoopid. You reverse the blame and call folks retarded. You are still wrong, and the amazing thing is that someone who egotistically calls themselves a DX ace can make suck a basic, stupid error. It is not like there were few SW outlets in Portuguese. were the error about a station in an African vernacular, it would be understandable and usual. But to see our self-proclaimed "ace" make such a mistake for one of the "DXiest" countries of the world is laughable. LMFAO at the fake Hispanic stem. Hispanic is a culture. I grew up in Latin America, not the US, and am culturally Hispanic. Sorry if that inconveniences you. You grew up in the USA, Frackelton, in Cleveland, Ohio. LMFAO at the fake Hispanic stem. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Tuning 4915 after the WWCR mixing product left I listened for a while to the two Brazilians on the freq. Heard an ID at 0030 for Radio Anhanguera. I suspect that the other weaker Brazilian is Radio Difusora. I presume you mean Radio Difusora do Macapá, which is the other Brazilian on 4915. I presume you mean Radio Difusora de Macapá, rather than Radio Difusora do Macapá. Now you are down to trying to cover your dumb mistake by looking for typing errors. The fact is, without the Macapá, what you posted identifies no station specifically and thousands of them generically. http://www.macapa-ap.com.br/empresas/rdm.htm has a complete history of the station. Thanks for the link. I noted in another thread that central and south America reception has been improved for myself lately and was wondering if people in other locations noticed also noticed the same in the 31, 25 and 16 meter bands. I have not been listening to the 60 meter band. I make stupid typo's all the time on Usenet so I see it as no big deal. You correct mistakes with another post and move on. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... Now you are down to trying to cover your dumb mistake by looking for typing errors. Typing error? Wasn't an error at all since you've spelled it that way several times. Now quit trying to cover your dumb mistake, Frackelton, and go troll elsewhere. As I said, it was my typing error. I accept that. Since I was cutting and pasting, it replicated. Mea culpa, mea culpa. And that does nothing to change the fact that you said a station was called "radio station" without a specific to the station name. |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Hispanic is a culture. I grew up in Latin America, not the US, and am culturally Hispanic. Sorry if that inconveniences you. You grew up in the USA, Frackelton, in Cleveland, Ohio. I was 13 when I went to Latin America, and grew up there, in homes where only Spanish was spoken. My high school (except one year) and most of my college was in Latin America, and I have lived nearly all my adult life in Latin America or in Hispanic communities in the US. |
Brazil-4915
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: .. http://www.macapa-ap.com.br/empresas/rdm.htm has a complete history of the station. Thanks for the link. I noted in another thread that central and south America reception has been improved for myself lately and was wondering if people in other locations noticed also noticed the same in the 31, 25 and 16 meter bands. I have not been listening to the 60 meter band. I noticed this when scanning in Prescott, AZ the last few weekends. I still look for the few remaining Ecuadorian and Colombian SW stations. I have noticed a lot more Brazilian Portuguese stations as you mention. I do not get abouve 60 meters, but the lower band ones are very noticable. I only have about a year of experience with this location, so really do not know if this is typical at this time of year or for the location (my yard ends at the Prescott National Forest). I make stupid typo's all the time on Usenet so I see it as no big deal. You correct mistakes with another post and move on. I make lots of mistakes on boards and ng's, and some are just due to speed and some due to not being able to spell in English particularly well. As you say, we move on. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Now you are down to trying to cover your dumb mistake by looking for typing errors. Typing error? Wasn't an error at all since you've spelled it that way several times. Now quit trying to cover your dumb mistake, Frackelton, and go troll elsewhere. As I said, it was my typing error. I accept that. Since I was cutting and pasting, it replicated. Mea culpa, mea culpa. And that does nothing to change the fact that you said a station was called "radio station" without a specific to the station name. And everything you've said, Frackelton, does nothing to change the fact that any DX'er with even one iota of a clue would have been able to discern exactly what I was saying about Radio Difusora being on 4915. LMFAO so hard my sides ache. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Hispanic is a culture. I grew up in Latin America, not the US, and am culturally Hispanic. Sorry if that inconveniences you. You grew up in the USA, Frackelton, in Cleveland, Ohio. I was 13 when I went to Latin America, and grew up there, in homes where only Spanish was spoken. My high school (except one year) and most of my college was in Latin America, and I have lived nearly all my adult life in Latin America or in Hispanic communities in the US. Doesn't read that way to me per: http://www.davidgleason.com/ Guess you better work on that a bit. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: . http://www.macapa-ap.com.br/empresas/rdm.htm has a complete history of the station. Thanks for the link. I noted in another thread that central and south America reception has been improved for myself lately and was wondering if people in other locations noticed also noticed the same in the 31, 25 and 16 meter bands. I have not been listening to the 60 meter band. I noticed this when scanning in Prescott, AZ the last few weekends. I still look for the few remaining Ecuadorian and Colombian SW stations. I have noticed a lot more Brazilian Portuguese stations as you mention. I do not get abouve 60 meters, but the lower band ones are very noticable. I only have about a year of experience with this location, so really do not know if this is typical at this time of year or for the location (my yard ends at the Prescott National Forest). I make stupid typo's all the time on Usenet so I see it as no big deal. You correct mistakes with another post and move on. I make lots of mistakes on boards and ng's, and some are just due to speed and some due to not being able to spell in English particularly well. But you grew up in Cleveland... you worked at radio stations there, etc., etc. LMFAO dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Now you are down to trying to cover your dumb mistake by looking for typing errors. Typing error? Wasn't an error at all since you've spelled it that way several times. Now quit trying to cover your dumb mistake, Frackelton, and go troll elsewhere. As I said, it was my typing error. I accept that. Since I was cutting and pasting, it replicated. Mea culpa, mea culpa. And that does nothing to change the fact that you said a station was called "radio station" without a specific to the station name. And everything you've said, Frackelton, does nothing to change the fact that any DX'er with even one iota of a clue would have been able to discern exactly what I was saying about Radio Difusora being on 4915. And how would you then explain the change of frequency of another radio difusora in Brazil to that frequency? Just because WRTVH says that the specific station in question is th eonly occupant of the frequency does not mean someone else is not there or that WRTVH has not made a mistake... I know they NEVER make mistakes, too. LMFAO so hard my sides ache. As soeone who has followed your snide, misanthropic posts for some time, it does not surprise me that you find humor in trying to divert attention from your own significant errors to the perceived faults of nearly everyone else. At moments, I wish I was Canadian just to not be of the same country as you are. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Hispanic is a culture. I grew up in Latin America, not the US, and am culturally Hispanic. Sorry if that inconveniences you. You grew up in the USA, Frackelton, in Cleveland, Ohio. I was 13 when I went to Latin America, and grew up there, in homes where only Spanish was spoken. My high school (except one year) and most of my college was in Latin America, and I have lived nearly all my adult life in Latin America or in Hispanic communities in the US. Doesn't read that way to me per: Obviously, you do not read very well. Take a look at the pictures from Mexico City... inside the XEW transmitter. |
Brazil-4915
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: . http://www.macapa-ap.com.br/empresas/rdm.htm has a complete history of the station. Thanks for the link. I noted in another thread that central and south America reception has been improved for myself lately and was wondering if people in other locations noticed also noticed the same in the 31, 25 and 16 meter bands. I have not been listening to the 60 meter band. I noticed this when scanning in Prescott, AZ the last few weekends. I still look for the few remaining Ecuadorian and Colombian SW stations. I have noticed a lot more Brazilian Portuguese stations as you mention. I do not get abouve 60 meters, but the lower band ones are very noticable. I only have about a year of experience with this location, so really do not know if this is typical at this time of year or for the location (my yard ends at the Prescott National Forest). I make stupid typo's all the time on Usenet so I see it as no big deal. You correct mistakes with another post and move on. I make lots of mistakes on boards and ng's, and some are just due to speed and some due to not being able to spell in English particularly well. As you say, we move on. Here is a sample of the best translation I could find on the web. Not great but some of it is readable. Alta Vista - Portuguese to English produced a more readable result than Spanish to english. http://www.altavista.com/ Maybe you have a better web solution for language translation? HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS ON The DIFFUSING RADIO OF MACAP With the nesting of Territorial the Executive in 25 of January of 1944, the Government of the Amapá mounts a service of the press and propaganda, destined to the spreading of its program of action and development. In 19 of March of 1945, it circulates the first edition of the Periodical of the Amapá, a composed weekly and printed matter in the workshops of the Official Press. One month before, in 25 of February of 1945, is inaugurated the auto Service of falantes of Macapá, destined to radiate chosen musics, reporter and information of public interest. The presentation of the Service, is made by Pablo Eleutrio Cavalcanti de Albuquerque, paraense and Managing journalist of the Service of the press and Propaganda. The Service of information, created to divulge the acts of the Government of the Territory, becomes the embryo of the Diffusing Radio of Macapá. The sonorous equipment is installed by Mr. Heracildes Macdo, technician of radio of the Panair of Brazil (company of aviation of the time). The studio functions initially in the building of the old intendancy, today used for the Historical Museum of the Amapá, radiating the sound amplified for two possantes loudspeakers, type bugle, located in the Square of the Matrix and the Square of the Baron of the Rio Branco (wide of They are Jose). -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: . http://www.macapa-ap.com.br/empresas/rdm.htm has a complete history of the station. Thanks for the link. I noted in another thread that central and south America reception has been improved for myself lately and was wondering if people in other locations noticed also noticed the same in the 31, 25 and 16 meter bands. I have not been listening to the 60 meter band. I noticed this when scanning in Prescott, AZ the last few weekends. I still look for the few remaining Ecuadorian and Colombian SW stations. I have noticed a lot more Brazilian Portuguese stations as you mention. I do not get abouve 60 meters, but the lower band ones are very noticable. I only have about a year of experience with this location, so really do not know if this is typical at this time of year or for the location (my yard ends at the Prescott National Forest). I make stupid typo's all the time on Usenet so I see it as no big deal. You correct mistakes with another post and move on. I make lots of mistakes on boards and ng's, and some are just due to speed and some due to not being able to spell in English particularly well. But you grew up in Cleveland... you worked at radio stations there, etc., etc. And I left before my 14th birthday, and had spent part time outside the US prior to that (including digs at Tikal for an advanced placement research project). As I said, I did most of High School and college in Mexico, Ecuador and Puerto Rico. My children grew up in Spanish speaking homes, too. And, again, you do not read very well. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Now you are down to trying to cover your dumb mistake by looking for typing errors. Typing error? Wasn't an error at all since you've spelled it that way several times. Now quit trying to cover your dumb mistake, Frackelton, and go troll elsewhere. As I said, it was my typing error. I accept that. Since I was cutting and pasting, it replicated. Mea culpa, mea culpa. And that does nothing to change the fact that you said a station was called "radio station" without a specific to the station name. And everything you've said, Frackelton, does nothing to change the fact that any DX'er with even one iota of a clue would have been able to discern exactly what I was saying about Radio Difusora being on 4915. And how would you then explain the change of frequency of another radio difusora in Brazil to that frequency? Just because WRTVH says that the specific station in question is th eonly occupant of the frequency does not mean someone else is not there or that WRTVH has not made a mistake... I know they NEVER make mistakes, too. In my original post: "I SUSPECT that the other weaker Brazilian is Radio Difusora". Meaning of course, Rádio Difusora de Macapá. It's what is known in English as a 'presumption'. WRTVH? Haven't purchased one in years. LMFAO so hard my sides ache. As soeone who has followed your snide, misanthropic posts for some time, it does not surprise me that you find humor in trying to divert attention from your own significant errors to the perceived faults of nearly everyone else. Significant errors? At moments, I wish I was Canadian just to not be of the same country as you are. Guess you could just haul your lame ass back to Latin America or wherever. LMFAO dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: And that does nothing to change the fact that you said a station was called "radio station" without a specific to the station name. And everything you've said, Frackelton, does nothing to change the fact that any DX'er with even one iota of a clue would have been able to discern exactly what I was saying about Radio Difusora being on 4915. And how would you then explain the change of frequency of another radio difusora in Brazil to that frequency? Just because WRTVH says that the specific station in question is th eonly occupant of the frequency does not mean someone else is not there or that WRTVH has not made a mistake... I know they NEVER make mistakes, too. In my original post: "I SUSPECT that the other weaker Brazilian is Radio Difusora". And that term, sir, applies to every radio station on every band in Brazil. Your statement, in poaraphrase, said, "the other station was a radio station." Duh. Tard boy in action on the home court. Meaning of course, Rádio Difusora de Macapá. It's what is known in English as a 'presumption'. So you persumed that a radio station was a radio station. Globo, Récord, Inconfidencia, Cruzeiro do Sul, Jovem Pan are all "radio difusoras." WRTVH? Haven't purchased one in years. I saupopose when you think you know everything, you would not need reference materials. LMFAO so hard my sides ache. As soeone who has followed your snide, misanthropic posts for some time, it does not surprise me that you find humor in trying to divert attention from your own significant errors to the perceived faults of nearly everyone else. Significant errors? Not naming a radio station would qualifty as a significant error. At moments, I wish I was Canadian just to not be of the same country as you are. Guess you could just haul your lame ass back to Latin America or wherever. I spend months out of every year in Latin America. Maybe that is why I know that a radio station has to have a specific name, and you don't? |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: . http://www.macapa-ap.com.br/empresas/rdm.htm has a complete history of the station. Thanks for the link. I noted in another thread that central and south America reception has been improved for myself lately and was wondering if people in other locations noticed also noticed the same in the 31, 25 and 16 meter bands. I have not been listening to the 60 meter band. I noticed this when scanning in Prescott, AZ the last few weekends. I still look for the few remaining Ecuadorian and Colombian SW stations. I have noticed a lot more Brazilian Portuguese stations as you mention. I do not get abouve 60 meters, but the lower band ones are very noticable. I only have about a year of experience with this location, so really do not know if this is typical at this time of year or for the location (my yard ends at the Prescott National Forest). I make stupid typo's all the time on Usenet so I see it as no big deal. You correct mistakes with another post and move on. I make lots of mistakes on boards and ng's, and some are just due to speed and some due to not being able to spell in English particularly well. But you grew up in Cleveland... you worked at radio stations there, etc., etc. And I left before my 14th birthday, and had spent part time outside the US prior to that (including digs at Tikal for an advanced placement research project). As I said, I did most of High School and college in Mexico, Ecuador and Puerto Rico. You'd better go back and take care of that paper trail. But please, STOP... I'm LMFAO dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: And I left before my 14th birthday, and had spent part time outside the US prior to that (including digs at Tikal for an advanced placement research project). As I said, I did most of High School and college in Mexico, Ecuador and Puerto Rico. You'd better go back and take care of that paper trail. Never heard of a person skipping grades? You are the one with limited reading and math skills. The original 'tard boy. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: And I left before my 14th birthday, and had spent part time outside the US prior to that (including digs at Tikal for an advanced placement research project). As I said, I did most of High School and college in Mexico, Ecuador and Puerto Rico. You'd better go back and take care of that paper trail. Never heard of a person skipping grades? You are the one with limited reading and math skills. Well I can read. Seems as though you were born in 1946. You went to Mexico in 1963, "I was put into an informal exchange program through which I would complete my Junior year in High School in Mexico City". (You'd been in school and working part time in Cleveland area, prior) In 1963 you were around 17, no? dxAce Michigan USA The original 'tard boy. |
Brazil-4915
On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 18:08:49 -0500, dxAce
wrote: David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: And I left before my 14th birthday, and had spent part time outside the US prior to that (including digs at Tikal for an advanced placement research project). As I said, I did most of High School and college in Mexico, Ecuador and Puerto Rico. You'd better go back and take care of that paper trail. Never heard of a person skipping grades? You are the one with limited reading and math skills. Well I can read. Seems as though you were born in 1946. You went to Mexico in 1963, "I was put into an informal exchange program through which I would complete my Junior year in High School in Mexico City". (You'd been in school and working part time in Cleveland area, prior) In 1963 you were around 17, no? dxAce Michigan USA The original 'tard boy. I was an ''intern'' at a 5 KW daytimer in 1963. I remember pulling wire copy for the JFK assasination. I used to go to Mexico with my dad because you could bring in a gallon of booze duty free for each US citizen in the car. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: And I left before my 14th birthday, and had spent part time outside the US prior to that (including digs at Tikal for an advanced placement research project). As I said, I did most of High School and college in Mexico, Ecuador and Puerto Rico. You'd better go back and take care of that paper trail. Never heard of a person skipping grades? You are the one with limited reading and math skills. Well I can read. Seems as though you were born in 1946. You went to Mexico in 1963, "I was put into an informal exchange program through which I would complete my Junior year in High School in Mexico City". (You'd been in school and working part time in Cleveland area, prior) In 1963 you were around 17, no? Actually, 16. And that was my third or fourth time in Latin America. The prior ones were not related to radio, and started with time in Tikal when I was 13 with a team from the University of Pittsburgh. I was 17 when I put my first station on the air. You just keep working on your story. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
SeeingEyeDog wrote: This is a typical Hispanic street machismo circle argument. Common sense is abandoned for circle logic. Trust me, Eduardo (Frackelton) knows very little about street machismo. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 01:03:37 GMT, "David Eduardo"
wrote: "David" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 18:08:49 -0500, dxAce I was an ''intern'' at a 5 KW daytimer in 1963. I remember pulling wire copy for the JFK assasination. I used to go to Mexico with my dad because you could bring in a gallon of booze duty free for each US citizen in the car. I was back in the US briefly when that happened, at a FM in Cleveland. I went to a record store to borrow some classical albums to play between the ABC feeds on that afternoon. As I remember we got permission to rebroadcast KTAR (NBC Radio Network in 1963) late Friday evening. |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: And I left before my 14th birthday, and had spent part time outside the US prior to that (including digs at Tikal for an advanced placement research project). As I said, I did most of High School and college in Mexico, Ecuador and Puerto Rico. You'd better go back and take care of that paper trail. Never heard of a person skipping grades? You are the one with limited reading and math skills. Well I can read. Seems as though you were born in 1946. You went to Mexico in 1963, "I was put into an informal exchange program through which I would complete my Junior year in High School in Mexico City". (You'd been in school and working part time in Cleveland area, prior) In 1963 you were around 17, no? Actually, 16. And that was my third or fourth time in Latin America. The prior ones were not related to radio, and started with time in Tikal when I was 13 with a team from the University of Pittsburgh. I was 17 when I put my first station on the air. Keep working on your story. dxAce Michigan USA |
Brazil-4915
David Eduardo wrote: "David" wrote in message ... On Wed, 15 Feb 2006 18:08:49 -0500, dxAce I was an ''intern'' at a 5 KW daytimer in 1963. I remember pulling wire copy for the JFK assasination. I used to go to Mexico with my dad because you could bring in a gallon of booze duty free for each US citizen in the car. I was back in the US briefly when that happened, at a FM in Cleveland. But wait, weren't you in Mexico? Keep working on that story. dxAce Michigan USA |
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