Friday, May 16, 2025

Texas Radio Shortwave Tests for Europe on May 18 and 21

 
earlier QSLfrom Texas Radio Shortwave

On Sunday, May 18, and Wednesday, May 21, we'll test to Europe over Shortwave Radio (shortwaveradio.de).

We want reports comparing the reception of the two frequencies each day and between Sunday and Wednesday, since the broadcasts are at different times.  If you have time, note how Channel 292 is received on 3955 and 6070 kHz.

We'll have a nice QSL for correct reception reports, and maybe some other goodies if you send a really detailed report.




Texas Radio Shortwave
Tests for Europe over Shortwave Radio (shortwaveradio.de)

Month Date (UTC) Time (UTC) Freq (kHz) Target
May 18 1800 3975 & 6160 Eur
21 2000 3975 & 6160 Eur

On Sunday, May 18, and Wednesday, May 21, we'll test to Europe over Shortwave Radio (shortwaveradio.de).

We want reports comparing the reception of the two frequencies each day and between Sunday and Wednesday, since the broadcasts are at different times.  If you have time, note how Channel 292 is received on 3955 and 6070 kHz.

We'll have a nice QSL for correct reception reports, and maybe some other goodies if you send a really detailed report.

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Massive solar flare erupts


 
Strongest solar flare of 2025 erupts from the sun, sparking radio blackouts across Europe, Asia, and the Middle East


X2.7-class eruption from sunspot AR4087 disrupts radio signals as the active region rotates toward Earth, raising the risk of more flares ahead.

The sun roared to life early Tuesday (May 14), unleashing a powerful X-class solar flare from a newly emerging sunspot region AR4087.

The eruption peaked at 4:25 a.m. EDT (0825 GMT), triggering strong R3-level radio blackouts across Europe, Asia and the Middle East — the sunlit side of Earth at the time — as sunspot region 2087 crackles with activity.

Solar flares of this magnitude are uncommon, according to the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). Solar flares are ranked by strength in five classes: A, B, C, M and X, with each step representing a tenfold increase in energy. The recent X flare clocked in at X2.7, placing it at the lower end of the most powerful solar flare class.

Continue reading at:

Radio Marti’ is back on the air....is it reaching Cuba?

 
photo Wikipedia


Radio Marti’ is back on the air. 

Here’s why its signal is likely not reaching Cuba 
By Nora Gámez Torres May 9, 2025 2:26 PM


Despite an earlier announcement that Radio Martí was back on the air following a presidential executive order that suddenly halted the U.S.-funded radio broadcasting to Cuba, its signal is probably not reaching the island because its shortwave transmitters remain silent. Early in March, President Donald Trump issued an executive order mandating that the U.S. Agency for Global Media — the parent agency of Voice of America and the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, which oversees Radio and TV Martí and the online news site Martí Noticias — reduce operations to a minimum. 

All Martí employees and senior management at the Office of Cuba Broadcasting were placed on leave, and the radio station stopped transmitting for the first time in four decades.

Encore classical music from Radio Tumbril

 


Dear Listener,
Regular Broadcast times of Encore By WRMI and Channel 292 are:
02:00 - 03:00 UTC Friday 5850 kHz WRMI to US
20:00 - 21:00 UTC Friday 15770 kHz WRMI to Europe
10:00 - 11:00 UTC Saturday 9670 kHz Channel 292 to Europe
01:00 - 02:00 UTC Sunday 5850 kHz WRMI to US and Canada
19:00 - 20:00 UTC Sunday 3955 kHz Channel 292 to Europe
03:00 - 04:00 UTC Monday 5950 kHz WRMI to the US and Canada
13:00 - 14:00 UTC Tuesday 15770 kHz WRMI to Europe, east coast of US and Iceland. (Sometimes RTTY on the lower sideband. Suggest notch out or use USB.)

Some Things to see on The Encore Website:
The Encore website is www.tumbril.co.uk where you will find:
Important information about funding of Encore - Radio Tumbril.
Up to date transmission times and frequencies.
The playlists for the most recent programmes.
An email link.
Informal reception reports as well as those requesting eQSL cards are welcome.

ENCORE IS A ONE-MAN OPERATION -  PLEASE MAKE A PAYPAL DONATION AND HELP KEEP ENCORE ON THE AIR - Go to - www.tumbril.co.uk

WRMI and Channel 292 are very generous with their air-time but Encore still costs around 100 Dollars/Euros a month to broadcast.
If you can - please send a small contribution to help Encore keep going.

THE DONATION BUTTON is on the homepage of the website - www.tumbril.co.uk - which folks can use if they would like to support Encore.

(Please don't be put off by the POWR security wall when using the PAYPAL button - it is a harmless requirement of WIX the website hosting service.)

THIS FORTNIGHT'S PROGRAMME - First broadcast this FRIDAY 16th May by WRMI at 0200 UTC on 5850, and 2000 UTC on 15770 and then Channel 292 on SATURDAY 17th May at 10:00 UTC on 9670 kHz:
Starts with part of the Concerto for Flute, Harp, and Orchestra by Mozart, some Tango inspired music from Argentina, and an example of music for high Baroque trumpet by J S Endler.
After that an arrangement for piano quartet of The Sea and the Seagulls from Rachmaninoff, and some film score by Caroline Shaw.
The last piece is the first movement of Borodin's Quartet No. 2.

(This bulletin is sent by Bcc to the many hundreds of listeners who have been in contact with Encore over the last nearly six years of broadcasting Encore.)

Brice Avery - Encore - Radio Tumbril - www.tumbril.co.uk
GMØTLY

BBC producers request to listener's

 

The WRTH has received a request from the producers of the annual BBC Antarctic Midwinter Broadcast (Boffin Media), asking the shortwave community if anybody has any recordings of pre-2005 BBC Antarctic broadcasts (or knows of any e.g. archived on a website)

The BBC does not have any recordings in their archive from before 2005 (the 70th anniversary of BBC Antarctic broadcasts is this year as the first BBC broadcast to Antarctica was in 1955 - re my 2021 article in Communication https://bdxc.org.uk/antarctic.pdf )

(The producer is Richard Hollingham at Boffin Media - email to info@boffinmedia.co.uk [info at boffinmedia.co.uk] marked for his attention if you have any old pre-2005 recordings)
(Alan Pennngton/BDXC) 

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Radio Free Asia Burmese language service closes permanently

 

The Radio Free Asia (RFA) Burmese language service officially announced its closure on Friday, marking a significant loss for independent journalism in Myanmar where press freedom is already severely restricted by the regime, which seized power in a 2021 military coup.

“A diverse media landscape is especially crucial during this period of military rule. This is very sad news,” a journalist from Myanmar now working in Chiang Mai, Thailand told DVB on the condition of anonymity. An unknown number of independent Myanmar news agencies relocated to Thailand in 2021, where they now operate from exile.

The RFA shutdown follows U.S. President Donald Trump’s executive order issued on March 14, which led to a notice of funding termination for the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM). It oversees several outlets, including Voice of America (VOA), Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), and RFA.

“We inform you that due to funding uncertainties, the RFA Burmese Service will cease operations. We sincerely thank our audience for their years of trust and support,” Kyaw Kyaw Aung, the head of RFA Burmese language service, shared in a social media post on Friday.

Additional text at: 
https://english.dvb.no/radio-free-asia-burmese-language-service-closes-permanently-myanmar-media-struggle-with-us-funding-cuts/

Radio Brod (“Radio Boat”): Freedom of Speech in the Adriatic

 
photo via Radio Museum

A special thank you to Ray Robinson and Jeff White for sharing this week's Wavescan script

Jeff: Offshore radio broadcasting from international waters has most frequently been associated with radio stations in the North Sea that broadcast pop and rock music, such as Radio Caroline or Radio Veronica.  But then in 1993 came Radio Brod (“Radio Boat” in Croatian).  In the middle of the worst armed conflict in Europe since the Second World War, a completely different radio station appeared off the coast of the former Yugoslavia, primarily transmitting messages of peace and understanding from the ship ‘Droit de Parole’ throughout the war-torn region.  It was a station that has now largely been forgotten, although its importance, even three decades later, is hard to overstate.  Here’s Ray Robinson in Los Angeles to tell us what happened.

Ray: Thanks, Jeff.  And I must first start by saying that we are once again indebted to contributor Dr. Martin van der Ven in Germany who has researched this topic extensively and shared some of his recordings of the station.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the “Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia” broke apart into its six constituent republics in 1991:  Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia, Slovenia and Montenegro.  Within each of these, individual religious and ethnic groups were claiming larger shares of territory and political dominance.  This led to the Balkan (or, Bosnian) War, which lasted a decade.  Long-suppressed national and religious identities collided.  Conflicts between Serbs (predominantly Orthodox), Croats (predominantly Catholic) and Bosnians (predominantly Muslim) escalated into violent clashes in which ethnic cleansing, systematic expulsions and massive human rights violations were the order of the day.

Countless ceasefire negotiations failed, and almost all major cities and towns in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina were destroyed by ground fighting and air strikes.  Huge numbers of people in the region were killed or left homeless.  
Communication infrastructure almost completely collapsed, and of course the first casualty of war is truth.  The only independent and unfiltered sources of information that remained were the Voice of America, BBC, Deutsche Welle and Radio France Internationale, which all broadcast programs in the Serbo-Croatian language.
Many Yugoslavian journalists suffered from a repressive working climate in their homeland and emigrated to Paris.  Together, they came up with the idea of creating an independent non-commercial offshore radio station, and they founded a non-profit organization called Droit de Parole (‘Freedom of Speech’).  In December 1992, the European Commission became the organization’s primary donor, allocating 1.2 million ECU (the forerunner of the Euro) for the project.

The journalists then set about finding a suitable ship.  Radio Caroline's broadcasting ship 'Ross Revenge', which was then in Dover Harbour, was considered, but the British Department of Transport would not give their approval.  But at the end of February 1993, reports began to appear in French newspapers that a new broadcasting ship was being equipped in Marseille.

The ship the station had leased was originally called the Fort Reliance, built in 1985 by Appledore Ferguson Shipbuilders Ltd in the port of Glasgow as a supply ship.  She was converted into a radio ship at Quay 114 of the Bassin d'Arenc in Marseille, where a 92 foot high antenna mast was installed.  This supported an A-shaped aerial, rigged from the bow, up to the top of the mast, and down to the stern.  

The ship was then also renamed Droit de Parole.  The daily rent of the ship and crew was 55,500 French francs (or about US$7,400 ~ over $220,000 per month), which crazily, the journalists agreed to pay.  And that didn’t include the cost of diesel, food and other supplies, or the salaries for the journalists on board and on land.  I suspect the owners of the ship saw a potential gravy train, and seized the opportunity.

The French Foreign Ministry refused permission to fly the French flag, citing as an excuse the security of French peacekeepers in the Balkans.  So, the Droit de Parole was then registered in Kingstown, the capital of the island state of St.  Vincent and the Grenadines.

The Droit de Parole set sail from Marseille on March 31, 1993, destined for the international waters of the Adriatic Sea between Bari, Italy and Dubrovnik, Croatia.  The ship had a 50 kW medium wave transmitter, previously used by Sud Radio in Andorra, that had been donated to the project by Telediffusion France (TDF).  It also had a 10 kW FM transmitter.
Test broadcasts, identifying as Radio Brod, began on April 7, 1993 at 11:00 p.m., on 720 kHz (417 m) medium wave and 97.8 MHz FM.  Official broadcasts around the clock began on June 1, 1993.


Radio Brod


The ship was not anchored, but continued to sail up and down the Adriatic for safety reasons.  Her exact position, between 17 and 18 degrees east and around 42 degrees north in the Adriatic, changed constantly and the course was kept secret.

Two studios had been built on board the Droit de Parole in a large container on the deck - a broadcast studio and a production studio - as well as two editing rooms.  The journalists communicated with their contacts in the former Yugoslavia and other countries via an Inmarsat satellite system as well as marine radio, cell phones and a direct radio link.  Supplies were tendered out from Bari, Italy.

The number of employees on board fluctuated and was usually between 15 and 20 people from a wide range of professional groups - always at least seven to eight journalists, plus sound engineers, music editors, translators and technical staff.
The Radio Brod team included respected and well-known journalists - Roman Catholics, Orthodox Christians and Muslims – from Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia, Montenegro and Macedonia.  In addition on land, there was its own, extensive network of independent, often anonymous or secret correspondents, which comprised around 50 employees and extended across all the former Yugoslav republics.  Some of the correspondents reported at great risk to their lives.  Using satellite phones, they were able to conduct interviews with people live on board.  Daily connections were made to Zagreb, Belgrade, Sarajevo, Mostar, Split, Banja Luka and many other places.

Radio Brod aimed to provide verified and accurate news to an audience caught in the maelstrom of war propaganda.  But nevertheless, their editorial balance inevitably leaned to the left, with an anti-nationalistic bias.  The station’s main evening news program was broadcast at 9:30 p.m. and included information from all six republics of the former Yugoslavia.  News headlines were broadcast every hour.  There were also three in depth news programs every day in the morning, afternoon and evening.  The language used – Serbian, Croatian or Bosnian – depended in part on the content of the reports.  In addition, news was broadcast twice daily in English and French, mainly for members of the United Nations UNPROFOR force in the region.

When not broadcasting news, the station played rap, soul, acid jazz, techno, and rock music:  with nine hundred records in their luggage - some donated by record companies - the station offered many 15 to 35 year olds what they would otherwise never hear.  1,000 more CD’s were later donated by French radio.

In June 1993, the European Commission allocated a further 1.0 million ECU to the Radio Brod project.  Financial support was also received from:
Danielle Mitterand's foundation, France Liberties,
the general director of UNESCO, Federico Mayor Zaragoza,
and various press groups in the USA, including the Washington Post, and the New York Times.

Under pressure from Serbia, the government of St. Vincent and the Grenadines withdrew the registration for Droit de Parole on June 28, 1993.  Radio Brod was therefore forced to stop broadcasting, and two days later the radio ship sailed to the Italian port of Bari.  Eventually, letters of support from the United Nations and the European Commission made Saint Vincent reconsider, and the Caribbean state renewed the registration.  On July 29, 1993, the ship resumed 24-hour operations.  Their signature jingle with cries of seagulls and a fog horn was heard, followed by a song by The Clash (“Lover’s Rock”).  Radio Brod was broadcasting again.


But in spite of having a 50 kW transmitter, the reception area for the station was fairly limited by the geography of the Balkans.  It had a strong signal along the Dalmatian coast, of course, and could often be heard playing in bars and cafés there.  But inland, the signal was absorbed by the central mountain ranges, and was very weak in the main centers of power – Belgrade and Zagreb – as well as in Serbia and large parts of inland Croatia.

 Radio Netherlands’ "Media Network" programme on Thursday 9th September 1993 carried a special feature on the media in the former Yugoslavia.  Among the reports, presenter Jonathan Marks played a recording of Radio Brod, made in Belgrade, commenting "as you can hear, Radio Brod's signal on 720 kHz medium wave is so weak in Belgrade, it has little or no impact in Serbia, though its FM signal is reportedly quite loud and clear in parts of Montenegro".

 However, at night, the station was well heard throughout Europe, especially when other stations on 720 kHz had closed down.  Indeed, Dr. Martin van der Ven, whose research led to this article, remembers listening to Radio Brod in northern Germany between 2 and 5 a.m. in the spring and summer of 1993 using a loop antenna.  He says it was a pretty good signal.  

One of the editors on board, then 30-year-old Bosnian-Muslim Mirna Imamović had been trapped in Sarajevo, until she managed to escape.  On the radio ship she ran the program “Desperately Seeking” with messages from refugees.  This meant that family and friends who lived in refugee camps across Europe and listened to the program were able to find the whereabouts of their loved ones - sometimes even reuniting.  Imamović said that the real significance of this opportunity was only understood when a thank you letter arrived, in which a man from Trebinje in Bosnia-Herzegovina reported that thanks to Radio Brod, he had found his orphaned grandchildren in a Danish refugee camp.

 And indeed, Imamović’s own mother, still in Sarajevo, only came to know that Mirna was safe by hearing her voice on the radio.  Her mother then managed to get a letter to her - a Serbian friend took it to Belgrade, then mailed it to Mirna's brother in Moscow, who faxed it to the number listed in Radio Brod broadcasts.  So, she knew the value of her programmes from personal experience.  Until then, she didn't even know if her own mother was still alive.

 The ship’s captain, Frenchman Thierry Lafabrie , admitted that “Technically, we’re a pirate radio station, but the laws are inadequate.  We are doing the right thing."

 But, Radio Brod was very expensive to operate, and at the end of 1993 it was learned that their employees had not been paid for three months.  The Paris-based Droit de Parole foundation, citing lack of funds, said it could no longer pay editors' salaries regularly.  And then, due to the perceived financial mis-management at Droit de Parole, the European Commission decided in January 1994 not to extend any further funding for Radio Brod.  As a result, the project lost its most important financial backer and, after the equivalent of more than US$6 million had been poured into it, the station had to finally switch off the transmitters at midnight on February 28, 1994.  It was the end of a unique experiment, which had lasted for only eleven months.  Sadly, they became victims of their own poor stewardship of the public funds with which they had been entrusted, and which could and should have lasted for years longer.

 The floating radio station hadn't moved any mountains, and the Balkan War continued for many years afterwards.  Some of the Radio Brod journalists continued their careers in the editorial offices of the South Slavic service of Radio Free Europe and in the BBC’s editorial offices, focusing on the former Yugoslav republics.

 They were proud to have worked for the station which sought open dialogue between the various ethnic and religious groups.  They had helped desperate people to become reunited with their families, or at least to learn that their relatives were still alive and well.  And it was their achievement through Radio Brod to have provided comfort and understanding for a short time to a war-torn population.

 Back to you, Jeff.

 


Update on UK longwave

 
U.K.   Longwave 198 kHz closure. Energy companies are still stating that the Radio Teleswitch Service will end on 30 June 2025 when the longwave transmissions are due to close. This date was also mentioned by the BBC a while ago for the end of the Radio 4 longwave service, although as far as I am aware no closure announcements have been broadcast recently.

TalkSport closed seven of its medium wave transmitters on 8 April.

1053 kHz Southwick; Rusthall; Stockton on Tees
1071 kHz Mansfield
1089 kHz Lisnagarvey
1107 kHz Duxhurst; Lydd

Nick Rank observed Clipstone 1071 kHz went off around 0800 UT.
Andrew Tett reports Southwick (Brighton) on 1053 kHz and Duxhurst on
1107 kHz went off around 1030 UT.

This leaves Talksport with 11 active transmitters as follows
1053 kHz Droitwich; Postwick
1071 kHz Wrekenton
1089 kHz Brookmans Park; Westerglen; Moorside Edge; Washford; Dartford T.
1107 kHz Boston; Fareham; Wallasey.
(MW & LW News by Dave Kenny-UK; via 'Communication' magazine May 2025;
BrDXC-UK groups io)
(WWDXC Top Nx 1617/10 May 2025)

Gander Volmet to end on June 12, 2025

 


CANADA   Gander Volmet. The schedule for Volmet transmissions from Gander Radio is at xx20 and xx50 minutes past each hour on 3485, 6604, 10051, and 13270 kHz - all in upper sideband. Heard with a weak but clear fair signal this morning (8 May) on 13270 kHz USB from 0950 s/on to close at 0959 UT.
(Dave Kenny-UK, BrDXC-UK groups.io; May 8)

Hi, unfortunately, Gander Volmet's transmissions will soon come to an end.


Air Traffic Services (ATC/FSS). Decommissioning of VOLMET Service provided by the Gander International Flight Service Station - Gander, NL, Canada.

NAV CANADA, the country's provider of civil air navigation services, conducted a review of the requirement for In-flight Meteorological Information (VOLMET) Service provided by the International Flight Service Station (IFSS) at Gander, Newfoundland and Labrador.

The review determined that the removal of the VOLMET service will not have a material impact on stakeholders and would not be a material change to the services provided by NAV CANADA to the aircraft transiting the Gander Oceanic Control Area (OCA).

Aviation technology has evolved to allow suitably equipped aircraft to acquire the required meteorological information directly from alternate sources. This has alleviated the need for pilots to monitor a scheduled VOLMET broadcast on a high frequency (HF) radio.

Aircraft not equipped to receive meteorological information via alternate means may continue to request necessary weather updates from Gander IFSS via the North Atlantic (NAT) family of HF frequencies.

This change will take effect on 12 June 2025 at 0901Z Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The appropriate aeronautical publications will be amended.

For further information, please contact:
NAV CANADA
Customer and Stakeholder Services
151 Slater Street
Ottawa, ON  K1P 5H3  Canada
Phone: 1-800-876-4693

(via Franck Baste F4LKC, BrDXC-UK groups.io; May 8)
WWDXC Top Nx 1617/10 May 2025)

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Radio Onda testing on shortwave

 


Radio Magazine is reporting that Radio Onda has started tests on 6140 kHz via Luxembourg. 
(nothing heard when checked here at 1800 - dk)

Translated from French:
LUXEMBOURG: It's the return of the short waves to the historic transmitter centre of Junglinster. The transmitter of the Belgian station Radio Onda has just been put into service at 6140 kHz and is doing its first tests with a power of 1000 W.
A great success for the station of the Brazilian community in Belgium that will be able to cover Europe, in addition to its broadcast on the dab+ 12b of the Brussels region.
The association has always wanted to broadcast in short air from Belgium.
Having received no follow-up to their applications for a Belgian licence, they had turned to the Netherlands in recent years.
A licence had been granted to them immediately by the Dutch authorities, but the broadcasting from that country has, over the years, been too heavy for the station.
Eventually, they turned to Luxembourg, where the minister delegated to the Prime Minister, in charge of Media and Connectivity, Elisabeth Margue, quickly granted them a licence.
The installation was made possible thanks to the amateur radios of Broadcasting Center Europe, which are installed at the same site.
Radio Onda programs are sent from studios that are installed in a Belgian railway station located in the Brussels district of Laeken.
Radio Onda, Bockstael Station, Avenue Émile Bockstael, 1020 Brussels. (Radio Magazine 13 May)
(Dave Kenny/BDXC)

Steve Herman & the Voice of America – “The Hard Edge of Soft Power”

 



In this episode, we speak with Steve Herman, Chief National Correspondent for Voice of America (VOA) and former White House Bureau Chief, about the unprecedented shutdown of VOA in March 2025 after 83 years of continuous broadcasting. Herman explains how VOA served as America’s “soft power,” reaching 340 million people weekly through 49 language services and operating on a modest $250 million budget (equivalent to “two fighter jets”). He details VOA’s mission to provide accurate, balanced news to people living under authoritarian regimes or in regions lacking robust media infrastructure. We discuss the legal battles between VOA staff and their parent agency, with Herman arguing the shutdown violates Congressional intent and the VOA Charter. He shares insights on VOA’s importance in global diplomacy, its “firewall” ensuring editorial independence, and the concerning proposal to replace VOA content with One America News programming. Herman urges listeners to support the #SaveVOA campaign and contact their Congressional representatives to help restore this vital American institution.

For additional information,links, and resources, go to: https://signalstrength.org/podcast/steve-herman-voice-of-america/ 

A nostalgic look at Wavescan's feature on TWR Bonaire

 
TWR Bonaire from the Caribbean Netherlands

TWR with Superpower on Bonaire

The government administration on Curacao Island had been very gracious and very generous to TWR, and the same courteous attitude was again demonstrated towards TWR by the government administration on the nearby island of Bonaire. In fact, a total of one square mile of island territory was made available for TWR usage.

The studio and office building were erected near the west coast, a little north of the main town of Kralendijk, directly opposite the tourist hotel, Hotel Bonaire. The transmitter building was erected likewise near the west coast of the island, half way between Kralendijk and the southern tip of the island, right against the tidal salt flats with their Pink Flamingos.

The first transmitter on the air at TWR Bonaire was the Continental 500 kW on 800 kHz. This massive transmitter was inaugurated at 1:00 am on Thursday, August 13, 1964, as the highest powered mediumwave transmitter in the Western Hemisphere.

Electrical power came from their own generators, two 16 cylinder diesels with Westinghouse generators, each one weighing 45 tons, providing at a total power output of 3.2 megawatts. The programming came from the studio site via an FM program link, and over a period of time, programming in generally five languages was broadcast; English, Spanish, Portuguese, French and German.

One important daily program on mediumwave was a local marine weather forecast, at 20 minutes past each hour. Then too, Radio Netherlands from Hilversum in Holland took out a regular program relay over TWR superpower mediumwave during the years 1965 to 1977, a total of twelve and a half years.

Six months after the TWR mediumwave and shortwave complex was taken into regular service, an official opening ceremony was conducted at the Studio & Office Building complex on February 25, 1965. Her Royal Highness, Crown Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands, was the official guest, and she honored TWR during the occasion of this, her official visit to the Netherlands Antilles.

In June 1972, a new antenna system was installed on the 24 acre transmitter site, with a main tower surrounded by four smaller towers in a parasitic arrangement. The well-known Arthur Cushen in Invercargill, New Zealand reported a nicely enhanced signal from the superpower mediumwave station on 800 kHz in the Caribbean.

In 1987, after a total of nearly twenty three years of on air service, the original 500 kW Continental transmitter was removed and replaced by another unit of similar power. However, this newly installed unit was a used transmitter, manufactured by BBC in Switzerland and previously on air with Capital Radio in the Transkei republic in southern Africa for just a few years. Still superpower at 500 kW though, and still on 800 kHz.

photo via TWR Bonaire

Shortwave transmissions on TWR Bonaire ended six years later on June 30, 1993, though the super power mediumwave unit continued in regular service. Then four years later again (1997), a 50 kW Omnitronix from North Wales in Pennsylvania was installed. As an economy move, the new 50 kW was in use during the day and the 500 kW was on the air at night.

Then a further two years later (1999), a 100 kW Nautel from Nova Scotia in Canada was installed as an economy replacement for the 500 kW BBC unit that had previously been on the air in southern Africa. We are informed that the BBC unit was shipped overseas, but where to? That's an interesting question. However, that was the end of superpower on Bonaire, at least temporarily.

According to James O'Neal, writing in the May 9 (2018) issue of Radio World in the United States, TWR on Bonaire procured a new 440 kW mediumwave transmitter, again from Nautel in Nova Scotia, Canada; and Kintronic in New York modified the existing antenna system. The electronic equipment was shipped to Bonaire in eight crates at a total weight of two tons.

This brand new highly efficient superpower mediumwave transmitter at a total cost of $4 million was dedicated in a special ceremony on January 30 earlier this year (2018). Yes, TWR is back again, as the superpower mediumwave giant in the Western Hemisphere, with 440 kW on 800 kHz.
(Wavescan N496/26 August 2018)

TWR Bonaire broadcast on 800 kHz (450 kW) 
(UTC)
0000-0330; 0830-1000
1000-1130
2330-0000
(WRTH 2025)

On the Shortwave Podcast-Part 1

 


James Salmon from the BDXC news group has informed DXers of the following:

"Not sure if this has been posted before but have just read about a new(ish) programme about SW broadcasting - it's good! Thanks to Fred Moe for bringing this to our attention!"


Season Two of On the Media’s Peabody-winning series The Divided Dial is the untold story of shortwave radio: the way-less-listened to but way-farther-reaching cousin of AM and FM radio. The medium was once heralded as a utopian, international, and instantaneous mass communication tool — a sort of internet-before-the-internet. But like the internet, it also took a turn for the chaotic. And like AM and FM talk radio, it also went hard to the right, with extremists and cults still finding a home on the shortwaves 
 
EPISODE 1:
You know AM and FM radio. But did you know that there is a whole other world of radio surrounding us at all times? It’s called shortwave — and, thanks to a quirk of science that lets broadcasters bounce radio waves off of the ionosphere, it can reach thousands of miles, penetrating rough terrain and geopolitical boundaries. How did this instantaneous, global, mass communication tool — a sort of internet-before-the-internet — go from a utopian experiment in international connection to a hardened tool of information warfare and propaganda?
 
Starts with Katie Thornton visiting David Goren and tuning around shortwave, then a history of radio broadcasting from it's inception and the start of shortwave broadcasting right through to 1980's concentrating on US broadcasting. Lots of audio snippets of US shortwave broadcasters and shortwave stations targeting the US, the WW2 and Cold War sections I found particularly well covered.
 
Available for streaming or download at
 
 (Mike Barraclough, UK/BDXC)

Pop Shop Radio, May schedules

 


In addition to our regular mix of hits, misses, and everything in between, here's a list of upcoming Pop Shop Radio specials


14 May to 19 May: Salute to Eurovision 1975: complete with classic interval signals and IDs from broadcasters of the participating countries
11 June to 16 June: British Beat before the Beatles: 1950s British pop.

Times and frequencies:
WRMI
0100 UT Monday (9 PM ET Sunday) 5950 khz
0300 UT Monday (8 PM PT Sunday) 3955 khz (subject to change)
Channel 292
1600 UT Wednesday 3955 and 9670 khz
2200 UT Saturday 3955 and 9670 khz 
Shortwave Gold
1300 UT Saturday 6160 khz
1900 UT Sunday 3975 khz

Tony Pavick
Pop Shop Radio
Hope BC Canada

Monday, May 12, 2025

Afghanistan reactivates on mediumwave

 
Afghanistan    
The mediumwave transmitter at Kandahar has been reactivated on 864 kHz according to various reports. Radio 'Voice of Sharia' is being set up in a border province to "prevent propaganda by enemies" the RTA director stated at its inauguration.
(BBC monitoring 9 April; via <mediumwavfe.info>  via 'Communication' magazine May 2025; BrDXC-UK groups io)

Read additional information at: 

Ffrom archive:  Taliban change the Radio Afghanistan name to 'Voice of Sharia'.Taliban take over radio station 

Here in India, we catch the 6100 kHz. But it is inactive. But news sources said they are broadcasting only on FM. They stopped to play the film songs. In the meantime Radio Afghanistan official website was also
under construction. More details are awaited from the monitoring people.




(Jaisakthivel, Ardic DXC, Chennai-IND, HCDX Aug 15, 2021 )
(WWDXC-Top News 1617/10 May 2025)

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Radio Romania International schedule updates

 
Radio Romania Intl QSL


Radio Romania has changed many of its frequencies again. According to their website, this is because of a malfunction at the Tiganesti site:

"A malfunction has been recorded at one of the transmitters in Tiganesti, and we will temporarily be broadcasting on different frequencies." (dated 4 May 2025) The German section adds that the replacement transmitter is not capable of transmitting in DRM mode, while the Spanish section identifies the malfunctioning transmitter as BD 300-2 and the replacement transmitter as BD 300-1.

The new frequencies had been registered with HFCC from the beginning of the A-25 season but had been unused so far. The same had happened for parts of the previous season.

English broadcasts:

Western Europe
0530-0600 9750
1100-1200 17630
1700-1800 15180
2030-2100 17580
2200-2300 9740

Africa
1100-1200 17860

North America, East coast
2030-2100 17580
0000-0100 9550

North America, West coast
0300-0400 11620

Japan
2200-2300 15170

Note: No DRM, none of the registered frequencies for Australia are currently in use

GERMAN
0600-0630 11620
1400-1500 13740
1800-1900 11750

SPANISH to South America (no mention of other targets, not affected?)
2200-2300 15200 (new time!)

The websites of other language services did not show this notice, but may just as well be affected.

73!
Eike

(Eiki Bierwirth HCDX)
(BDXC)

Weekly Propagation Forecast Bulletins

 Product: Weekly Highlights and Forecasts
:Issued: 2025 May 12 0245 UTC
# Prepared by the US Dept. of Commerce, NOAA, Space Weather Prediction Center
# Product description and SWPC web contact www.swpc.noaa.gov/content/subscription-services
#
#                Weekly Highlights and Forecasts
#
Highlights of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 05 - 11 May 2025



Solar activity reached moderate levels in the final minutes of 11 May following an M-class event that peaked after the turn of the UT day. Solar activty was low the remainder of the time (05-10 May) leading up to that event. Region 4079 (N08, L=240, class/area=Ekc/1250 on 06 May) was responsible for what ended up being an M1.9 flare that peaked at 12/0001 UTC. This region was also responsible for 54 C-class events during the week, most of which were sub C5 level. Region 4082 (S11, L=180, class/area=Dac/140 on 06 May) contributed a pair of C7.0 flares at 08/1141 and 08/1500 UTC respectively, as well as several other low level C-class flares. No significant Earth-directed CMEs were noted during the period. 

No proton events were observed at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit was at high levels on 06-09 May, and moderate levels on 10-11 May. 

Geomagnetic field activity was at quiet to unsettled levels on 07 May, quiet to active levels on 06 and 08-10 May, and active to minor storm levels on 05 and 11 May. The increased activity was likely associated with negative polarity CH HSS influence. 

Forecast of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 12 May - 07 June 2025

Solar activity is expected to be predominantly low through the outlook period, with varying chances for M-class flare activity. 

No proton events are expected at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is expected to be at moderate levels from 06-28 May and again on 06-07 Jun. High levels are expected from 29 May to 05 Jun as CH HSS influences increase during this time. 

Geomagnetic field activity is anticipated to reach minor storm levels on 28 May - 01 Jun under negative polarity CH HSS influences. Active levels are likely on 13 May, and again on 02 Jun and 06 Jun. Mostly unsettled levels are likely on 12, 14, and 18-21 May, as well as 02 and 05 Jun. Quiet levels are expected on 15-17, and 22-26 May. 

:Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt
:Issued: 2025 May 12 0245 UTC
# Prepared by the US Dept. of Commerce, NOAA, Space Weather Prediction Center
# Product description and SWPC web contact www.swpc.noaa.gov/content/subscription-services
#
#      27-day Space Weather Outlook Table
#                Issued 2025-05-12
#
#   UTC      Radio Flux   Planetary   Largest
#  Date       10.7 cm      A Index    Kp Index
2025 May 12     125           8          5
2025 May 13     120          12          4
2025 May 14     120          10          3
2025 May 15     115           5          2
2025 May 16     115           5          2
2025 May 17     115           5          2
2025 May 18     115           8          3
2025 May 19     120          10          4
2025 May 20     125           8          3
2025 May 21     125           8          3
2025 May 22     125           6          2
2025 May 23     130           6          2
2025 May 24     130           6          2
2025 May 25     130           5          2
2025 May 26     135           5          2
2025 May 27     140           8          3
2025 May 28     140          25          5
2025 May 29     140          30          5
2025 May 30     140          20          5
2025 May 31     140          20          5
2025 Jun 01     145          20          5
2025 Jun 02     145          12          4
2025 Jun 03     145           8          3
2025 Jun 04     145          10          4
2025 Jun 05     140          12          4
2025 Jun 06     130          10          4
2025 Jun 07     125          10          4
(NOAA)

Friday, May 09, 2025

Mother's Day special program from Unique Radio Australia

 


For Sunday May 11th Mother's Day Past, Present, Future  & Part 2 The Mothers and Daughters of the Real Deal. 18-22plus.
The show is dedicated to My Mom and all the Moms, Past, Present Future. On Unique Radio Australia, Live Stream.


In two parts first my traditional & non traditional music, all forms, then my all Real Deal a La Fem.
The mothers who influenced the daughters to make their brand of "noise" then the daughters of real deal R & R, girl groups and other yummy up Rock-in bands through to the new She-Punk artists.

Plus our live chat room is open for you in
click on connect, then web chat Please put in the following:
For nick: name or like me radionutresss
Then next line channel, that's the following:
#eyeradiojd
and you are in the room.

For correspondence please use the email address,


Jen in The (Suffragette) Rad.
Happy Mother's Day
For The Past, Present, & Future MOMS.
73" 33"
& 88''s
to all