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Friday, February 11, 2022

Shortwave Radiogram, weekend schedule

 

Hello friends,

Thank you if you tuned in and decoded last weekend's Ukrainian text, even, if like most of us you have no Ukrainian.

The highlight was a 100% decode of the Ukrainian text as received by an SDR in Ukraine. This demonstrates that, if the internet is not available for any reason, text-via-radio can be a substitute, in a variety of alphabets.

Hello friends,

Thank you if you tuned in and decoded last weekend's Ukrainian text, even, if like most of us you have no Ukrainian.

The highlight was a 100% decode of the Ukrainian text as received by an SDR in Ukraine. This demonstrates that, if the internet is not available for any reason, text-via-radio can be a substitute, in a variety of alphabets.

The difficult task is to convince international media organizations that still have shortwave transmitters not to be too hasty in dismantling those transmitters.

Videos of last weekend's Shortwave Radiogram (program 242) are provided by Scott in Ontario (Saturday 1330 UTC), 2010DFS in Japan and DX Sphere in Washington state (first reception!) (both Sunday 0800 UTC on 5850 kHz), and Sig Segfault on Long Island, New York (Sunday 2330 UTC). The audio archive is maintained by Mark in the UK. An analysis is prepared by Roger in Germany.

Here is the lineup for Shortwave Radiogram, program 243, 11-13 February 2022, in MFSK modes as noted:
 
 1:41  MFSK32: Program preview
 2:47  MFSK32: New chairperson at Radio Taiwan International*
 7:19  MFSK64: Swiss solutions for space junk
12:00  MFSK64: This week's images*
28:10  MFSK32: Closing announcements

* with image(s)

Please send reception reports to radiogram@verizon.net

And visit http://swradiogram.net

Twitter: @SWRadiogram or https://twitter.com/swradiogram (visit during the weekend to see listeners' results)

Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/567099476753304

Shortwave Radiogram Gateway Wiki https://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/Shortwave_Radiogram_Gateway 

Shortwave Radiogram Transmission Schedule
UTC Day UTC Time Frequency Transmitter
Saturday  0330-0400 UTC 9265 kHz  WINB Pennsylvania
Saturday  1330-1400 UTC 15770 kHz WRMI Florida
Sunday  0800-0830 UTC 5850 kHz  7730 kHz WRMI Florida
Sunday 2330-2400 UTC 7780 kHz  WRMI Florida
Tuesday 1530-1600 UTC 9955 kHz  WRMI Florida

The Mighty KBC transmits to North America Sundays at 0000-0200 UTC (Saturday 7-9 pm EST) on 5960 kHz, via Germany. A minute of MFSK is at about 0130 UTC.  Reports to Eric: themightykbc@gmail.com . See also http://www.kbcradio.eu/ and https://www.facebook.com/TheMightyKbc/. 

“This is a Music Show” Most of the show is a music show, but the host transmits some MFSK-64 text and image near the end of the broadcast.  It’s transmitted on WRMI, Thursdays at 0200-0300 UTC on 5850 kHz (Wednesday evening in the Americas). Also look for a waterfall ID at the beginning of the show. thisisamusicshow@gmail.com  www.twitter.com/ThisIsAMusicSho/    @ThisIsAMusicSho  https://thisisamusicshow.com

Pop Shop Radio from British Columbia, Canada, includes "a whole variety of pop music, such as records from the 1960s and 1970s that were played on Top-40 radio stations not only in North America but also on offshore radio and stations like Radio Luxembourg." The programs now include some MFSK32 text and an image. Schedule: Via Channel 292 in Germany: Wednesdays 1600-1700 UTC on 3955 and 6070 kHz. Saturdays 2200-2300 UTC on 3955 and 6070  kHz (except 6070 first Saturday of the month 2300-2400 UTC). Via WRMI Florida: Mondays 0200-0300 UTC (Sunday evening in the Americas) on 5950 kHz. Website: popshopradio.ca. Twitter: @popshopradio1  Email: radiopopshop@gmail.com.

New York and Pennsylvania NBEMS nets. Most weekends, as KD9XB, I check in to the New York NBEMS (Narrow Band Emergency Messaging Software) net Saturday at 1200 UTC on 3584 kHz USB and the Pennsylvania NBEMS net Sunday at 1230 UTC on 3583 kHz USB. Check-ins are usually in Thor 22, and messages are in MFSK32. Messages generally use the Flmsg add-on to Fldigi. If you are a radio amateur in eastern North America, feel free to check in. Outside the region, use an SDR in the eastern USA to tune in and decode. You do not need Flmsg to check in, and most of the messages can be read without Flmsg. If you can decode the net, send me an email to radiogram@verizon.net , or tweet to @SWRadiogram, and I will let them know you are tuned in. USEast NBEMS Net: Please also note the USEast NBEMS Net, Thursdays 0000 UTC (Wednesdays 7 pm EST) on 3536 kHz USB.
 
Thanks for your reception reports
Kim

Kim Andrew Elliott, KD9XB
Producer and Presenter
Shortwave Radiogram
Reporting on international broadcasting at https://twitter.com/kaedotcom