Saturday, June 13, 2020

From the Isle of Music & Uncle Bill's Melting Pot schedules, June 14-20



From the Isle of Music, June 14-20:
This week, a timba fiesta. Wil Campa helps us present his new album Nuevo Zapato, then El Noro helps us present his new album El Espejo.

The broadcasts take place:
For Eastern Europe but audible well beyond the target area in most of the Eastern Hemisphere (including parts of East Asia and Oceania) with 100kW, Sunday 1500-1600 UTC on SpaceLine, 9400 kHz, from Sofia, Bulgaria (1800-1900 MSK)  If you don't have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to an uplink from a listening radio in the Netherlands during the broadcast at
http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/?tune=9400am 

For the Americas and parts of Europe, Tuesday 0000-0100 on WBCQ, 7490 kHz from Monticello, ME, USA (Monday 8-9PM EDT in the US).  If you don't have a shortwave or are out of range, you can listen to a live stream from the WBCQ website here (choose 7490): http://www.wbcq.com/?page_id=7 

For Europe and sometimes beyond, Tuesday 1900-2000 UTC and Saturday 1200-1300 UTC on Channel 292, 6070 KHz from Rohrbach, Germany. If you don't have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to uplinks from various web SDRs in Europe.  Our Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/fromtheisleofmusic/ 
Our Patreon page is https://www.patreon.com/tilford 

Uncle Bill's Melting Pot, June 14 and 16: 
Episode 169 honors National Accordion Awareness Month with accordion music from different countries. Uncle Bill owns six of those, so if you come to mock, stay to cheer....

The transmissions take place:
Sundays 2200-2300 (6:00PM -7:00PM EDT) on WBCQ The Planet 7490 kHz from the US to the Americas and parts of Europe . If you don't have a shortwave or are out of range, you can listen to a live stream from the WBCQ website here (choose 7490): http://www.wbcq.com/?page_id=7 

Tuesdays 2000-2100 UTC on Channel 292, 6070 KHz from Rohrbach, Germany for Europe.
If you don't have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to an uplink from different web SDRs in Europe  including a live uplink from a listening radio in the Netherlands at http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/?tune=6070am 
Our Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/UncleBillsMeltingPot/ 
Our Patreon page is https://www.patreon.com/tilford
William "Bill" Tilford, Owner/Producer
Tilford Productions, LLC

Friday, June 12, 2020

Shortwave Radiogram, weekend schedules

Hello friends,

Well, today I had a haircut. Removed what seemed to be ten pounds of hair from my head. It feels much better! Things are slowly returning to normal. I hope you are doing well.

Last week reception was good or at least adequate in most parts of the world. Remember, if we get at least a 90% decode of the MFSK32, we can declare success.

A video of last weekend's Shortwave Radiogram (program 155) is provided by Scott in Ontario (Friday 1300 UTC). The audio archive is maintained by Mark in the UK. Analysis is prepared by Roger in Germany.

This weekend's show is in the usual MFSK32 and MFSK64, with nine images (1 x MSK32 and 8 x MFSK64) .

Here is the lineup for Shortwave Radiogram, program 156,  11-14 June 2020, in MFSK modes as noted:

 1:46  MFSK32: Program preview
 2:55  Long-lost dragon lizard rediscovered*
10:08  MFSK64: Method to extract CO2 from atmosphere, make fuel*
14:38  This week's images*
27:59  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
Friday 1500-1530 UTC 15750 kHz DRM WINB Pennsylvania
Saturday 0230-0300 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

The Mighty KBC transmits to North America Sundays at 0000-0200 UTC (Saturday 8-10 EDT) on 9925 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 text and images in various modes near the end of the broadcast. It’s transmitted on WRMI, Thursdays at 0200-0300 UTC on 5850 kHz (Wednesday evening in the Americas) and a new time also on WRMI, Wednesdays at 2100-2200 UTC on 7780 kHz (aimed towards Europe) . Also look for a waterfall ID at the beginning of the show. thisisamusicshow@gmail.com .  www.twitter.com/ThisIsAMusicSho/ @ThisIsAMusicSho

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 1200 UTC on 3583 kHz USB (with out-of-state check-ins now starting at 1130 UTC). 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, Wednesdays 2300 UTC (7 pm EDT) 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





Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Australian Shortwave Callsign VLS

The legend of Hinemoa was passed on from generation to generation, long before any migrants from Europe settled on the islands of New Zealand, the Land of the Long White Cloud.  Princess Hinemoa was the pretty daughter of a Maori Great Chieftain, and she had fallen in love with handsome Prince Tutanekai, the son of a local Maori Chief. 

Princess Hinemoa lived near the water front of Lake Rotorua a large inland lake, and Prince Tutanekai lived on Mokaia Island in the center of the lake.  The hidden romance, forbidden by local custom, became well known, and the canoes at the water front were protected, so that Hinemoa could not paddle out to the island.

However one night, Princess Hinemoa clad herself with dry, empty Calabash Gourds, and she swam out to the island, guided in the darkness by the music that Tutanekai was playing on his own home made flute.  She arrived at the island, met her handsome prince; and like all good European legends, this Maori couple in New Zealand lived happily ever after.   

Named in honor of this princess, the small New Zealand coastal vessel, Hinemoa, just 542 tons and only 207 feet long, was built in the Scott shipyards in Greenock Scotland in 1875.  At the beginning of World War 1 (1914), the Hinemoa was listed with wireless apparatus operating under the New Zealand callsign (as it was at the time) VLS.  Due to new international radio regulations, all radio callsigns in New Zealand beginning with VL were changed to ZL on January 1, 1929, and thus the little ship NZGSS Hinemoa dropped the callsign VLS and received a new callsign.

The Australian usage of the shortwave callsign VLS was taken up by the AWA shortwave station in Pennant Hills, near Sydney and it was in use during the 1920s and 1930s for the Trawler Communication Service in both voice and Morse Code for the ships that plied along eastern coastal waters.  In addition, the long distance communication service from Pennant Hills was registered under the callsign VIS, though sometimes this was erroneously identified as VLS, due to the similarity in callsigns. 

During the year 1933, Donald Mackay, leader for the Mackey Aerial Survey Expedition in Central Australia, took mobile wireless equipment for use on the ground and in the air.  It is understood that the callsign that he used while at Docker Creek on the border between Northern and Western Australia, was VLS.

Interestingly a total of five different shortwave locations, in use by the ABC Home Service in Australia and the international service of Radio Australia, have all operated under the callsign VLS.  We look at each of these occasions in chronological order.

Soon after the end of World War II, the ABC in Australia began assessing their radio coverage throughout the continent and they observed that mediumwave coverage in the heavily populated coastal areas north and south of Sydney was insufficient.  It was determined that it would be more economical to provide a radio service to these areas on shortwave from one single location, rather than to install a network of several medium powered mediumwave stations.

The chosen location for this new shortwave station was on the western and southern edge of Sydney, just beyond suburban Liverpool.  This was already the location for all of the mediumwave transmitters that carry the two program services, ABC National and ABC Local, for coverage of Australia’s largest city. 

Interestingly, during the planning for the new 2 kW shortwave transmitter, the evidence suggests that the suggested callsign would be VLS, with the S obviously standing for Sydney.  However, when the transmitter was installed and taken into regular service in December 1948, an even more logical callsign was granted; VLI with the LI indicating Liverpool.

Twenty years later (1960s and 1970s), another well established ABC/Radio Australia shortwave station was already on the air at Lyndhurst in Victoria with programming beamed to the Great Outback, the Pacific and South East Asia.  During each summer season, one of the 10 kW transmitters at Lyndhurst was placed into service for the broadcast of live commentaries on the ever popular sport, cricket. 

The Lyndhurst transmitter that beamed the cricket commentaries to New Zealand and the Pacific was given the unannounced callsign VLS.  Then for example during the next decade in December 1980, a 10 kW transmitter at the larger shortwave station at Shepparton also in Victoria, took over the VLS cricket broadcast for New Zealand and the Pacific.

A new and temporary shortwave facility was installed for Radio Australia at Brandon near Townsville in Queensland in 1989.  The original intent was ultimately for a much larger station, and initially only three transmitters at 10 kW each we installed.  However, only two antenna systems were erected, and thus only two transmitters could be activated at any one time. 

The third transmitter, which was originally intended to carry its own separate programming, thus operated instead as a fill in for the other two.  That third transmitter was originally allocated the callsign VLS.

During the 1990s, one of the 250 kW transmitters at the Darwin relay station of Radio Australia was allocated the line callsign S, as in VLS, as a program service to Asia and beyond.  Back at that time, Radio Australia was issuing QSLs in the form of a Form Letter, and the verification text gave the callsign as VLS.

And for the final application of the Australian shortwave callsign VLS, we mention the shortwave Aeradio station that carries aviation communications with passenger aircraft in the vicinity of the Kingsford Smith Airport at Mascot, Sydney.   Several shortwave transmitters have been in use at this location during the past half century and more, and they are rated at 3 kW, 5 kW and 10 kW.  QSL cards from Sydney Aeradio and also Sydney Volmet, identify this station under the callsign VLS.
(AWR-Wavescan/NWS 558)

Tuesday, June 09, 2020

The Radio Scene and the Overloaded Telephone Exchange

2BL (now 702 ABC Sydney) Outside Broadcast Van, 1934

The oldest medium wave radio broadcasting station in Australia is the almost one hundred year old ABC regional station 2BL Sydney with its 50 kW transmitter on 702 kHz at the outer suburban location of Liverpool.  In anticipation of the inauguration of the new radio broadcasting station in Sydney, test broadcasts began in October back in the year 1923 from a 10 watt amateur station 2HP at suburban Neutral Bay.

This low powered amateur transmitter was then installed on the top of the Smith’s Weekly/Guardian Newspaper Building in Philip Street Sydney where additional test broadcasts began on October 19 (1923).  These test broadcasts were heard by avid listeners all over eastern Australia, right up in North Queensland and right down in the island of Tasmania.  During the first three days of these test broadcasts, all seven of the newspaper’s telephone lines were jammed continually with calls from appreciative listeners. 

Down in Melbourne is the popular commercial station 3AW which traces its earliest origins back to the year 1932.  On February 22, that station was inaugurated with 300 watts on 1425 kHz, a split frequency during the era when it was more important to measure a station’s position on the radio dial in metres rather than in kilocycles.  The letters AW in the callsign were derived from three or four different sources that were associated with the ownership of the station; Allans Music Store, Williamson Theatre, Argus newspaper, and even perhaps AWA radio manufactory.

During the 1930s, radio station 3AW utilized a low power shortwave transmitter in the range of 5 metres for outside broadcasts.  These days radio station 3AW operates with 5 kW on 693 kHz.
Two years after station 3AW was inaugurated, they conducted a radio competition (1934) which required a telephone response.  For several days their telephone lines were bogged down with 3,000 phone calls that were cued up at the PMG manual exchange at the GPO in Melbourne city.

The English word orange is applied to a sweet juicy fruit that is grown widely around the world.  This same word also identifies a color, the same color as the skin of the orange fruit.  In addition, the word Orange is also the name of a regional city in the Australian state of New South Wales.  This regional city was named in honor of Prince William of Orange who subsequently became King William 2 of the Netherlands.

On October 31, 1935, a new commercial radio broadcasting station in Orange was officially inaugurated by the Post Master General, the Honorable Alexander MacLachlan.  The Orange station was 2GZ, which had been projected initially under the callsign 2GX.

At the time, Alexander MacLachlan was in the town of Sale in Victoria where he was participating in the opening ceremonies of another new radio station, a new government ABC station 3GI.  He participated in the opening of commercial 2GZ by landline, a distance of some 500 miles. 

During the following year (1936), station 2GZ with its 2 kW on 990 kHz announced that listeners could phone in for a free copy of their 2GZ Magazine which presented the story of how a radio station operates.  So many listeners phoned in that their telephone system was jammed for several weeks. 

Mediumwave station 2GZ is no longer on the air.  In 1996, they transferred to the FM Band 2, and their mediumwave frequency was taken over by station 2EL, which operates as a relay station for 2SM in Sydney.

Radio station 2MO in Gunnedah began as an amateur radio broadcasting station way back in the year 1923.  During the 1930s, this station developed a very popular program under the title, Songs of the Prairie; in fact this program was so popular that it was distributed throughout Australia via the telephone system so that other radio stations could also broadcast it to their own audiences.  In fact, it was noted that the telephone girls at the manual telephone exchanges throughout Australia would also listen to this radio program while on duty at their switchboards.

In 1964, the Sydney station 2UW announced over the air that they were dropping the broadcast of soap opera serials.  As a result, the station was flooded with some 50,000 telephone calls from listeners who objected, and wanted the serials re-instated.

In 1952, station 2LM in Lismore made an appeal over the air for the benefit of two children who lost their parents in a car accident.  So many listeners responded that the telephone system in this country city was overloaded, and literally, it blew up.

All of these interesting radio and telephone stories are based upon information in the excellent book on Australian Radio History by Dr. Bruce Carty, together with additional research information.  Dr Carty has made his extensive research available for free on the internet.  Just search for Carty Radio History Australia.

Our next interesting story along these lines will tell of another overloaded telephone system that also blew up.  The Invasion of the Asian Sea Monster!
(AWR Wavescan/NWS 588)

Monday, June 08, 2020

Weekly Propagation Forecast Bulletins


Product: Weekly Highlights and Forecasts
:Issued: 2020 Jun 08 0136 UTC
# Prepared by the US Dept. of Commerce, NOAA, Space Weather Prediction Center
# Product description and SWPCc web contact www.swpc.noaa.gov/content/subscription-services
#
#                Weekly Highlights and Forecasts
#
Highlights of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 01 - 07 June 2020

Solar activity was at very low levels with numerous B-class flares observed from new Region 2765 (S24, L=116, class/area Cao/130 on 05 Jun). This reverse polarity region was mostly stable since it rotated onto the disk on 03 Jun. No Earth-directed CMEs were observed during the period.

No proton events were observed at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit was at normal to moderate levels through the period.

Geomagnetic field activity was at mostly quiet levels, with some isolated unsettled periods late on 01 Jun through early 02 Jun. A nominal solar wind environment was prevalent with wind speeds that were ranging from 300-400 km/s, total field (Bt) 5 nT or less and the Bz component mostly neutral.

Solar wind parameters became enhanced after midday on 07 Jun. Wind speeds increased to near 475 km/s, Bt reached a maximum of 13 nT and Bz reached a maximum southward extent of -8 nT. A suspected weak, positive polarity CH HSS resulted in this enhanced wind environment. The geomagnetic field reacted with unsettled to active conditions the last half of 07 Jun.

Forecast of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 08 June - 04 July 2020

Solar activity is expected to be at mostly very low levels. A slight chance of low level activity exists through 15 Jun while Region 2765 remains on the visible disk. Very low levels will then persist  through 28 Jun. Old Region 2765 (S24, L=116) is expected to return after 28 Jun with a possible increase in low level flare activity to a slight chance.

No proton events are expected at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is expected to be at normal to moderate levels through the outlook period.

Geomagnetic field activity is expected to be at unsettled to isolated active levels on 08 Jun due to the influence from a weak, positive polarity CH HSS. From 09 Jun to 04 Jul, mostly on quiet levels that are anticipated.

Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt
:Issued: 2020 Jun 08 0137 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 2020-06-08
#
#   UTC      Radio Flux   Planetary   Largest
#  Date       10.7 cm      A Index    Kp Index
2020 Jun 08      72          12          4
2020 Jun 09      72           5          2
2020 Jun 10      72           5          2
2020 Jun 11      72           5          2
2020 Jun 12      72           5          2
2020 Jun 13      72           5          2
2020 Jun 14      72           5          2
2020 Jun 15      70           5          2
2020 Jun 16      70           5          2
2020 Jun 17      68           5          2
2020 Jun 18      68           5          2
2020 Jun 19      68           5          2
2020 Jun 20      68           5          2
2020 Jun 21      68           5          2
2020 Jun 22      68           5          2
2020 Jun 23      68           5          2
2020 Jun 24      68           5          2
2020 Jun 25      70           5          2
2020 Jun 26      70           5          2
2020 Jun 27      72           5          2
2020 Jun 28      72           5          2
2020 Jun 29      72           5          2
2020 Jun 30      72           5          2
2020 Jul 01      72           5          2
2020 Jul 02      72           5          2
2020 Jul 03      72           5          2
2020 Jul 04      72           8          3
(NOAA)

Sunday, June 07, 2020

From the Isle of Music & Uncle Bill's Melting Pot schedules


From the Isle of Music, June 7-13
This week, special guest Rodrigo García helps us present Ceda el Paso's innovative new jazz fusion album Te estoy llamando. In the second half, we listen to part of a new tribute to Orquesta Aragon's 80 years by Maraca, Orquesta Aragón and others.

The broadcasts take place:
For Eastern Europe but audible well beyond the target area in most of the Eastern Hemisphere (including parts of East Asia and Oceania) with 100kW, Sunday 1500-1600 UTC on SpaceLine, 9400 kHz, from Sofia, Bulgaria (1800-1900 MSK)
If you don't have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to an uplink from a listening radio in the Netherlands during the broadcast at
http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/?tune=9400am 

For the Americas and parts of Europe, Tuesday 0000-0100 on WBCQ, 7490 KHz from Monticello, ME, USA (Monday 8-9PM EST in the US).
If you don't have a shortwave or are out of range, you can listen to a live stream from the WBCQ website here (choose 7490): http://www.wbcq.com/?page_id=7 

For Europe and sometimes beyond, Tuesday 1900-2000 UTC and Saturday 1200-1300 UTC on Channel 292, 6070 KHz from Rohrbach, Germany.
If you don't have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to uplinks from various websdrs in Europe.
Our Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/fromtheisleofmusic/ 
Our Patreon page is https://www.patreon.com/tilford 

Uncle Bill's Melting Pot, June 7 and 9
Episode 168 honors guitarist and cofounder of Malo, Jorge Santana, who passed away in May, with an hour of music from Malo's early recordings.

The transmissions take place:
Sundays 2200-2300 (6:00PM -7:00PM Eastern US) on WBCQ The Planet 7490 kHz from the US to the Americas and parts of Europe
If you don't have a shortwave or are out of range, you can listen to a live stream from the WBCQ website here (choose 7490): http://www.wbcq.com/?page_id=7 

Tuesdays 2000-2100 UTC on Channel 292, 6070 kHz from Rohrbach, Germany for Europe.
If you don't have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to an uplink from different web SDRs in Europe
including a live uplink from a listening radio in the Netherlands at http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/?tune=6070am 
Our Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/UncleBillsMeltingPot/ 
Our Patreon page is https://www.patreon.com/tilford 
William "Bill" Tilford, Owner/Producer
Tilford Productions, LLC

Saturday, June 06, 2020

Shortwave Radiogram, weekend schedule


Hello friends,

Last weekend, there were a few examples of the Olivia modes, especially 64-2000, surviving conditions where MFSK32 showed errors. You can listen to and decode from one example posted here -- WINB as received in South Australia.

Videos of last weekend's Shortwave Radiogram (program 154) are provided by Scott in Ontario (Saturday 1330 UTC) and Ralf in Germany (Sunday 2330 UTC).  The audio archive is maintained by Mark in the UK. Analysis is prepared by Roger in Germany.

This weekend's show is in the usual MFSK32 and MFSK64, with nine images (one MFKS32 and eight MFSK64).

Here is the lineup for Shortwave Radiogram, program, 4-7 June 2020, in MFSK modes as noted:

 1:42  MFSK32: Program preview
 2:47  A record year for maple syrup in Canada*
 8:16  MFSK64: North Koreans learn sarcasm from K-dramas*
15:48  This week's images*
28:37  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 0230-0300 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

The Mighty KBC transmits to North America Sundays at 0000-0200 UTC (Saturday 8-10 EDT) on 9925 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 text and images in various modes near the end of the broadcast. It’s transmitted on WRMI, Thursdays at 0200-0300 UTC on 5850 kHz (Wednesday evening in the Americas) and a new time also on WRMI, Wednesdays at 2100-2200 UTC on 7780 kHz (aimed towards Europe) . Also look for a waterfall ID at the beginning of the show. thisisamusicshow@gmail.com .  www.twitter.com/ThisIsAMusicSho/ @ThisIsAMusicSho

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 1200 UTC on 3583 kHz USB (with out-of-state check-ins now starting at 1130 UTC). 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, Wednesdays 2300 UTC (7 pm EDT) 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

Friday, June 05, 2020

The Land of the White Tiger: The Radio Scene in the Indian State of West Bengal



            The Indian state of West Bengal is located against the eastern edge of the Indian sub-continent.  This state is long and generally narrow, and it stretches 500 miles from the mangrove swamps in the sundarbans.  The rare White Tiger is occasionally glimpsed in the sundarban swamps, though several are in captivity in the zoo at New Delhi.
            At the time of partition in 1947, the Hindu areas of west Bengal were absorbed into the newly independent Indian empire, and the Moslem areas of east Bengal became the eastern wing of the new Pakistan.  In a subsequent war between India and Pakistan (1971), East Pakistan became the independent and mostly densely populated nation of Bangladesh.
            The Indian state of West Bengal as it is today is made up of three almost separate sections with as it were a narrow isthmus joining the separate sections.  The main southern section is 150 miles wide and 200 miles long, with the huge city of Calcutta/Kolkata as its center of population.
            The middle section of West Bengal is just a hundred miles wide at the most and two hundred miles long, and it is joined near Pakur to the middle section by a corridor just a couple of miles wide.  The northern section is maybe fifty miles long and a hundred miles wide and it is joined near Bidhan Nagar to the middle section by the Siliguri Corridor just ten miles wide.
            It is stated that during the Middle Ages in Europe, Bengal was a major world trading nation and it was often referred to by the Europeans as the richest country in the world.  That was the reason why William Carey, who is honored as the world’s most successful Christian missionary, chose to begin his ministry in Bengal.
            A major tourist attraction in West Bengal is the quaint railway train that runs on a narrow gauge line from near Siliguri, through Kurseong, up to Darjeeling at the foot of the Himalayas.  This tortuous 55 mile long railway line was constructed during the late 1800s, and together with all of the tourist stops, it is a half a day journey through rugged mountain scenery.
            Radio broadcasting was introduced into West Bengal just on one hundred years ago when a 500 watt Marconi transmitter was imported from England and used for a public demonstration in Calcutta on 375 kHz under the callsign 2BZ.  The first shortwave transmitter in West Bengal was a 700 watt unit that was installed with the AIR station VUC at Cossipore, an old suburban area of north Calcutta in 1932. 

All India Radio Kurseong
            However, in our program today we are taking a look at  the shortwave and mediumwave radio scene in the country areas of West Bengal, beyond the regions associated with the capital city Calcutta/Kolkata.  Traditional shortwave/mediumwave stations have been installed in only two cities in the country areas of this Indian state, both right up in the very north.
            The city of Kurseong is located in the northern section of West Bengal, just half a dozen miles from the border with Nepal, and less than a dozen miles from the border with Sikkim.  Kurseong was in earlier times a part of the separate kingdom of Sikkim and it was taken over by the British as a summer hill station during the colonial era.  This mountainous area enjoys a pleasant climate throughout the year.
            The city name Kurseong in the regional language refers to the locally grown Little White Orchid Flower, though more prolific these days are the tea garden estates, all 78 of them in the Kurseong area.  The city population is listed at around 42,000.
            The first radio broadcasting station in Kurseong was a shortwave facility, due to the fact that shortwave coverage in the high hills and huge valleys provides better propagation than mediumwave or FM.  The studios were installed in the Mehta Club Building which is located a little down hill from the towers and transmitters at the top of the tourist venue Eagle’s Craig. 
            The first shortwave transmitter was a temporary 2 kW unit that was taken into service on June 2, 1962.  Programming was from Delhi and Calcutta as relayed off air from AIR Calcutta on shortwave, three hundred miles distant.  Among the languages heard from AIR Kurseong were English, Hindi and Nepali, as well as the national languages in Sikkim, Bhutan and Tibet. 
            Six months later a new 20 kW shortwave transmitter was installed and this replaced the original smaller unit.  The larger transmitter, an American made Gates Model HF20BX, was activated in January 1963. 
            The original intent for this transmitter was for installation at Trivandrum in Kerala, South India, but due to rising international tension in the northern border areas at the time, it was quickly diverted for installation at Kurseong.  Back then, there was no AIR radio station in Kurseong.
            Thirty two years later, the 20 kW transmitter was now old and it needed replacing.  A 50 kW Indian made BEL transmitter Model HHB144 from Bangalore was thus installed and it was taken into service in 1995.
            However a score of years later, this transmitter also was getting old and there were times when it malfunctioned and it was on the air at reduced power, or even off the air altogether.  In fact just a year ago (July 30, 2019) AIR Kurseong shortwave was officially decommissioned.
            However since then, AIR headquarters in Delhi has reversed that decision and instead, a new 50 kW analog transmitter will be installed in the transmitter building at Kurseong in the northern areas of this Indian state of West Bengal.  This is a most welcome move that is the reverse of what is happening in some other parts of the world.  Perhaps this new shortwave unit will be activated some time next year.
            Not so well known though is that there was also a mediumwave transmitter located in Kurseong, a 1 kW unit on 1440 kHz with programming intended for the local area, much of which was on relay from AIR Kolkata.  AIR Kurseong mediumwave was on the air for about 17 years, all within this 21st century. 

All India Radio Siliguri
            The northern regional city of Siliguri with its ¾ million population is also located in the foothills of the mighty Himalayas in the northernmost section of the Indian state of West Bengal.  Siliguri lies just a dozen miles south of Kurseong and just half a dozen miles from the northernmost border with Bangladesh.  The area is noted for its abundance of wild life, including 243 different bird species.
            The first radio station in Siliguri was activated late in the year 1963, with 20 kW on 1560 kHz.  This AIR transmitter was installed two miles out of town on Sevoke Road, State Highway 10, which runs northward towards Sikkim.
            The operating frequency for AIR Siliguri was subsequently changed to 700 kHz, and later again, to 711 kHz.  Then some 30 years ago, two transmitters at 100 kW each were installed, and these days  this station can run in the analog mode or the digital mode.
(AWR-Wavescan/NWS 589) 

Wednesday, June 03, 2020

Overcomer Ministry acquires WWCR transmitter # 4



As of June 1 WWCR (World Wide Christian Radio) transmitter # 4, has now been sold to Brother
Stair owner of the Overcomer Ministry, for a 24 hour schedule, except for three hours it was already committed to other programs.

USA 
WWCR- transmitter # 4

All times UTC
1200-2000 on  9980 WCR 100 kW / 090 deg to CeAm English Daily
2000-2100 on  9980 WCR 100 kW / 090 deg to CeAm English Sat/Sun
2100-2400 on  9980 WCR 100 kW / 090 deg to CeAm English Daily 
0000-0200 on  7520 WCR 100 kW / 090 deg to CeAm English Daily 
0200-0400 on  5890 WCR 100 kW / 090 deg to CeAm English Sun/Mon
0400-1200 on  5890 WCR 100 kW / 090 deg to CeAm English Daily
(DXB 03 Jun 2020)

Overcomer Ministry:https://overcomerministry.org/

Freedom Synergy Radio - New Program on WRMI



WRMI began broadcasting a new program called FreedomSynergy Radio, from May 25, 2020. The program, which is in English and Spanish, and advocates for Taiwan, Republic of China.

Freedom Synergy Radio broadcast on WRMI at 0130-0230 UTC Tues-Sat on 5800 kHz beamed primarily to the Caribbean and on WRMI's Internet stream.

It also is aired at 1400-1500 UT Monday-Friday only on the Internet stream, which can be heard at  www.wrmi.net  and on popular radio streaming services such as TuneIn, Streema and Radio.Garden.

Reception reports are welcome and will be answered with a WRMI QSL card by regular mail. Reports can be sent to  info@wrmi.net  or they can be submitted online on our web page, at www.wrmi.net

They can also be sent by regular postal mail to:
WRMI, P
P.O.Box 526852
Miami, Florida, 33152 USA.
(via WRMI - Radio Miami International, May 25)

You can find more information about Freedom Synergy Radio on their website at: http://www.freedomsynergy.world
(WWDXC/02 Jun 2020)

Czech Radio is 97 years old

One of the traditions holyly observed by Czech Radio during the celebration of the beginning of constant broadcasting is the holding of the Open Day. This time, however, listeners cannot enter the
buildings of the Czech main public radio station due to an epidemic.

To observe the tradition, at least partially, we are helped by modern technology.

On the Czech Radio website we offer a virtual tour of the radio studios, also looking at the radio exhibition  Virtualni Den otevienych dveri Ceskeho rozhlasu 2020 at:
https://www.radio.cz/en/rubrika/fotografija/cheshskomu-radio-97-let

QSL cards
https://www.radio.cz/de/static/qsl/qsl-karten

https://img.radio.cz/5moZEKQtFfRB2x9vVHeyGuzzuVE=/fit-
in/1800x1800/1366717512__pictures/qsl/2013/qsl_18kveten2013.jpg
(Dmitry Kutuzov-Ryazan-RUS, "deneb-radio-dx"
via RUSdx #1082 via wwdxc BC-DX TopNews May 24)

Nikola Tesla.
Mural in the Cathedral Church of the Holy Transfiguration of the Lord (Saborna cvkva Preobrazenja Gospodnjeg) in Trebinje, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Blog: https://rusdx.blogspot.com/2020/05/blog-post_22.html
(Ruslan Slavutsky, Moskovskaya oblas;
via RUSdx #1082 via wwdxc BC-DX TopNews May 24)
(WDXC-Top Nx 1427-02 Jun 2020)

USAGM eyes the future of distribution



An analysis of the future of distribution: The next frontier in delivering publicly funded global media
by Kate Neeper
Deputy Director of Strategy, Office of Policy and Research
June 2, 2020

The networks of the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) serve more than 100 countries all over the world in 61 languages. Our target markets have one important thing in common: They do not have fully free media environments. Beyond that key requirement, our markets differ in significant ways, posing enormous challenges in delivering news and programming to intended audiences. To serve audiences on the media platforms they prefer, USAGM and our networks use technologies developed and popularized over the course of at least 100 years.

Additional story at: https://www.usagm.gov/2020/06/02/an-analysis-of-the-future-of-distribution-the-next-frontier-in-delivering-publicly-funded-global-media/https://www.usagm.gov/2020/06/02/an-analysis-of-the-future-of-distribution-the-next-frontier-in-delivering-publicly-funded-global-media/

Scandinavian Weekend Radio schedule, June 5-6



Finland
Edition # 236 - June 5-6, 2020

All times UTC

2100 Fri-2100 Saturday. New live broadcasts 0700-1500 and 1800-2100 Saturday

English/Finnish - 0.1 kW
2100-0900 on 6170 VIR
2100-0900 on 11690 VIR
0900-1300 on 6170 VIR
0900-1300 on 11720 VIR
1300-1600 on 5980 VIR
1300-1600 on 11720 VIR
1600-2100 on 6170 VIR
1600-2100 on 11720 VIR
(NASWA/DX Bulgaria)

Tuesday, June 02, 2020

Rebroadcast of WBCQ's Big Broadcast of 2020 At Later Hour + Extra Frequency


For late-nighters, 6160 has been punching into Europe at nite but it still isn't certain how far...

Rebroadcast of WBCQ's Big Broadcast of 2020 At Later Hour + Extra Frequency

Due to popular demand,  of WBCQ's Big Broadcast  2020, will be rebroadcast on Thursday, June 4 from 10pm to 11pm EDT (0200-0300 UTC Friday, June 5) on three frequencies: 5130, 6160 and 7490 kHz. 

This later hour should make the program more accessible to those listeners down south and out west who were unable to bring in 5130 and 7490kHz, during daylight hours the first time, and as a special bonus, we are adding 6160 kHz as a sort of test drive for music programs, so even if you caught the broadcast the first time around, please try us out on 6160 this time and let us know how it did in your area. 6160 has been punching into Europe at night if you happen to be awake then. 

Whether you had bad propagation last time, were away from the radio searching for toilet paper or just want a second helping, come shake off those COVID-19 blues with an hour of great music from Area 51, Marion's Attic, Uncle Bill's Melting Pot, From the Isle of Music, beHAVior Night and the Lost Discs Radio Show.

The hosts thank Allan and Angela Weiner for donating the airtime and The Overcomer Ministry for granting us TOM's regularly-scheduled time slot for this event.
William "Bill" Tilford, Owner/Producer
William "Bill" Tilford, Owner/Producer
Tilford Productions, LLC
email: bill@tilfordproductions.com
Website: www.tilfordproductions.com

Monday, June 01, 2020

Blog Logs

All times UTC / frequencies in kilohertz (kHz) SDR units as indicated // parallel frequency

Algeria
Radio Algerienne. Signal on 5940 kHz with just barely audio threshold including // 5930. Able to discerne Arabic programming. Nice catch for this time of the day at my QTH. Arabic for Quran service on 9655 (SIO 433) // 9510 (222) (AirSpyHF+Discovery) Radio Algerienne 11985 (SIO 333) // 12060 (222) with Quran. (Qatar SDR) http://www.radioalgerie.dz


Brazil
Radio Nacional da Amazonia, 11780 kHz, Portuguese. Band scanning, heard from 1540. Great signal, plenty of ID's with frequency quote. Program promos, clear IDs and frequency quote repeat. Salsa and Braz pops. Extra station info with ID/frequency at 1600.Special music program from 1603,  featuring vintage instrumentals from the 1940's. Nice catch for this time of the day. (Air Spy HF+Discovery) http://www.ebc.com.br

Clandestine
Iran International TV via Armenia relay. Fair signal on 6270 kHz at 1815 tune-in. Announcer's Farsi text to various program segments. Sound of Hope (Xi Wang Zhi Sheng) in Cantonese/Chinese via Taiwan on 12190. AQnnouncer's religious format to background piano hymn music from 1620.  Additional vocal hymns, SIO 333. Chinese Firedrake noted on 11745 from 1845 with Saudi Arabia's Itha Huna Al Azm in Arabic underneath. Firedrake dominates the frequency. (AirSpyHF+Discovery)

Radio Ndarason Internationale 12050, 1915-1935. Woofferton, UK relay, targeted to Chad. African ethnic vocals to reporter's phone-in info including his reference to the station. Topics about Africa. Interviews and conversations in listed Kanuri language to 1923. African ethnic vocals to lady's complete ID at 1925. African pop style vocals at 1926. Very nice signal, easy to follow at 444 SIO. (AirspyHF+Discovery) http://www.ndarason.com

Cuba
Radio Habana Cuba, 15140 kHz. Tune-in 1750 with traditional Cuban music. male/female announcer duo with station infor, and ID into station interval signal/station ID in Spanish/English. Additional station info/freqs at 1800. Spanish heard 11760 kHz from 1730 and 2050 recheck. Signal was noted intermittently on and off up to brief Cuban music I.S. at 2058. "Esta es Radio Habana Cuba." into station frequency/meter band. Items on Cuba. Parallel programming on 5040 (232) 13740 (444) 9640 (SIO 434) 15370 (434). No signal on scheduled 11850, 15110, 15630 kHz. Cuba's Radio Rebelde 5025 kHz at 2105. (SIO 333)with Spanish programming. http://www.radiorebelde.cu (AirspyHF+Discovery)

Cuban Number Station HMO1 11530 from 1830-1845. YL's Spanish five-digit number after raft signal. Same on 11635 from 1800 tune-in. (AirspyHF+Discovery)

India
All India Radio, 11560 kHz (Banglalore). Just barely audible at 322 SIO. Dari service of lady's Asian music vocals. Schedule 1400-1415. Intermittent program pauses for announcement, noted  amid the music program. Announcer's station info 1415, as programming continued, despite listed 1415 sign-off. Considerably better on 11560 recheck on subsequent days with 434 SIO. http://allindiaradio.gov.in/


Indonesia
Tentative log as Voice of Indonesia 4750, 1855. Lady's Indonesian musical vocals to 1858. Announcement to instrumental melody and 1901 fanfare to male's news script of news format at 1901. Fair-poor signal.Noted on 3325 kHz male reading script, interspersed with lady as with 4750 format. May have been parallel but very poor. (Bandung, Indonesia SDR) http://www.voinews.id

Kuwait
Radio Kuwait-Classical Arab Music program, 1269 kHz. Tentative as station from 1905 tune-in. Continuous Arabic music with fair-poor signal as SIO 322.Radio Kuwait Quran program in Arabic from 1700 on 630 kHz to 1759. Program ID 1800, followed by music vocals. Main Program in Arabic on 540, no sign of // 1134 kHz. Radio Kuwait Quran on 630 kHz 1900-2000; Main Program in Arabic from 1910 tune-in on 540 // 1134 kHz (434) (Qatar SDR) http://www.media.gov.kw/

Mali
ORTM Radio Mali 5995. Tune-in 1925 with S5 signal, next day same at 2015. African highlife vocals in ethnic language to 2023. Male's voice-over, likely same language. Fair-good signal quality on second log SIO 333. Schedule to 0000. English news 1850-1900, 1900-1910, and Saturday 1905-1920. (Johannesburg, South Africa SDR) http://www.ortm.ml

Nigeria
Voice of Nigeria 11770 kHz, 1930-2005. Fulfulde listed service as male reading script at tune-in, followed by male/female conversations about Nigeria which included phone calls. Good signal, no fading at SIO 434. Recheck 2002 during newscript covering Nigeria. Flute/drum fanfare between segments.(Air Spy HF+ Discovery).https://www.von.gov.ng/


Oman
Radio Sultanate of Oman. No signal observed for a few days, recovering for a gang busters strength on medium wave. Arabic from 1900 on 576, 603, 639, 1278. (SDR Qatar) http://part.gov.com

Philippines
Radio Pilipinas 9960 kHz (SIO 433) 1830-1930. Good to discover this station did not leave  shortwave, as other hobby press had reported earlier. Tune in at 1830 (actual program begins 1730) with Filipino programming. Mix of English throughout conversations, and talk about the Philippines. Heard on // 12120 (SIO 333) and 15190 (343) kHz.(Philippine SDR)

Saudi Arabia
SBA Call of Islam 594 // 783 (very poor). Arabic text from 1805 tune-in. Schedule listed to 0000. Call of Islam recheck 1850-1900 on 594, 783 and 1422 kHz. Conditions considerably better than in past days. Radio Saudi General Program 1805 in Arabic just barely there on 9555, better with  the // Arabic music on 9870 kHz. Radio Saudi on 9555 kHz at 2215-2230. Two males trade Arabic conversations to 2300. (SIO 434) // 9870 (SIO 433). Radio Saudi in Arabic on 15205, from 1620 tune-in. (SIO 434) SBA Saudi Radio International 9675-Turkish service. Reading script to 2000. Presumed newscript 2000-schedule runs to 2057. Dreadful signal for SBA Radio Saudi General Program at 2005 on 9555 // 9870 in Arabic. SBA Quran 1900 on 531, 567, 576, 567, 630 (SIO 444), 657, 765, 792, 855, 873, 936, 1512 kHz. (Air Spy HF+Discovery). http://www.sba.sa/

United States
Monitoring stations under USAGM (U.S. Agency for Global Media). Radio Marti 11860 kHz. Cuban jamming present from 1730. Spanish text barely heard under the mess, on jamming on // 11930, 13605. Subsequent checks the next day with no jamming present from 1605 tune-in. Voice of America 13630 from 1735 in Portuguese. No sign of // 17655 kHz.(AirspyHF+-Discovery) VOA Deewa Radio on 12035 from 1300-1900 in Pashto. Radio Free Asia in Chinese via Kuwait relay on 11745, from 1820 tune-in. Traditional Asian instrumentals to text (SIO 333). http://www.usagm.gov

EWTN/WEWN 12050 from 1610 tune-in. Spanish text to Spanish religious pop vocals. (SIO 434). WWCR on 12160 with similar format playing old religious hymn from 1615. English service schedule runs to 1900. (Air Spy HF+Discovery) http://www.ewtn.com http://www.wwcr.com 
(QSLs/Gayle Van Horn Collection)

Weekly Propagation Forecast Bulletins



Product: Weekly Highlights and Forecasts
:Issued: 2020 Jun 01 0138 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 25 - 31 May 2020

Solar activity reached moderate levels on 29 May due to an M1.1 flare at 0724 UTC from an unnumbered region beyond the northeast limb. This region also produced a C9.3 flare at 29/1046 UTC. Both flares were believed to cause CMEs off the eastern limb. However, no the Earth directed
CMEs were observed in LASCO coronagraph imagery. Very low activity was observed for the remainder of the summary period.

No proton events were observed at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit was at normal background levels.

Geomagnetic field activity was quiet to unsettled for the period. There was possible CME influence on 30 May. The IMF was enhanced to a peak of 14 nT near 30/0500 UTC, while the Bz component reached a maximum southward deflection of -13 nT at 30/0520 UTC. However, the geomagnetic field only managed unsettled levels.

Forecast of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 01 June - 27 June 2020

Solar activity is expected to be very low for the period.

No proton events are expected at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is expected to be at normal to moderate levels for the forecast period.

Geomagnetic field activity is expected to be at mostly quiet levels for the period.

Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt
:Issued: 2020 May 25 0124 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 2020-05-25
#
#   UTC      Radio Flux   Planetary   Largest
#  Date       10.7 cm      A Index    Kp Index
2020 May 25      70           5          2
2020 May 26      70           5          2
2020 May 27      70           5          2
2020 May 28      70           5          2
2020 May 29      70           5          2
2020 May 30      70           5          2
2020 May 31      70           5          2
2020 Jun 01      70           5          2
2020 Jun 02      70           5          2
2020 Jun 03      70           5          2
2020 Jun 04      70           5          2
2020 Jun 05      70           5          2
2020 Jun 06      70           5          2
2020 Jun 07      70           5          2
2020 Jun 08      70           5          2
2020 Jun 09      70           5          2
2020 Jun 10      70           5          2
2020 Jun 11      70           5          2
2020 Jun 12      70           5          2
2020 Jun 13      70           5          2
2020 Jun 14      70           5          2
2020 Jun 15      70           5          2
2020 Jun 16      70           5          2
2020 Jun 17      70           5          2
2020 Jun 18      70           5          2
2020 Jun 19      70           5          2
2020 Jun 20      70           5          2
(NOAA)

Sunday, May 31, 2020

Discount Postage for Postal QSLing



DID you miss out on last month's MEGA SAVING DEALS??? or...need more??

Here's Your Chance!!

Let's....DO IT AGAIN!!!!

Forever Stamp Special - - - NOW THRU JUNE 30, 2020

500 Forever Stamps in booklets - $236
   NOW UNTIL JUNE 30th : $230 ppd.   = 84% of FV

1,000 Forever Stamps in booklets - $462 + $5 shipping
   NOW UNTIL JUNE 30th:  $451 + $5 shipping   =  82% of FV

2,000 Forever Stamps in booklets or rolls - $915 + $5 shipping
   NOW UNTIL JUNE 30th:  $880 + $5 shipping   =  80% of FV

5,000 Forever Stamps in rolls - $2225 + $10 shipping
   NOW UNTIL JUNE 30th:  $2145 + $10 shipping  =  78% of FV

Buy Now, $$$Save$$$ BIG!

Stay healthy and Happy!

Happy Mailing,

William Plum
12 Glenn Rd.
Flemington, NJ 08822

908 788-1020


Friday, May 29, 2020

From the Isle of Music & Uncle Bill's Melting Pot schedules, May 31-June 6


From the Isle of Music, May 31-June 6: 
This week, we enjoy a Cuban dance party with four new releases from the Bis Music label. Special guest Ricardo Oropesa will be with us for part of the program.

The broadcasts take place:
For Eastern Europe but audible well beyond the target area in most of the Eastern Hemisphere (including parts of East Asia and Oceania) with 100kW, Sunday 1500-1600 UTC on SpaceLine, 9400 kHz, from Sofia, Bulgaria (1800-1900 MSK)
If you don’t have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to an uplink from a listening radio in the Netherlands during the broadcast at
http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/?tune=9400am

For the Americas and parts of Europe, Tuesday 0000-0100 on WBCQ, 7490 KHz from Monticello, ME, USA (Monday 8-9PM EST in the US).
If you don’t have a shortwave or are out of range, you can listen to a live stream from the WBCQ website here (choose 7490): http://www.wbcq.com/?page_id=7

For Europe and sometimes beyond, Tuesday 1900-2000 UTC and Saturday 1200-1300 UTC on Channel 292, 6070 KHz from Rohrbach, Germany.
If you don’t have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to uplinks from various websdrs in Europe.
The Facebook page for the program is https://www.facebook.com/fromtheisleofmusic/
The Patreon page for the program is https://www.patreon.com/tilford

Uncle Bill’s Melting Pot, May 31 and June 2: 
In the first half of episode 167, Egyptian orchestral and Iraqi oud music. In the second half, our monthly Radio Balcony segment has special guests and new music including Jesse Charbonnier from the USA, César Rodríguez from Colombia, Ramiro Pinheiro from Spain and Nic Bennett from the UK.

The transmissions take place:
Sundays 2200-2300 (6:00PM -7:00PM Eastern US) on WBCQ The Planet 7490 kHz from the US to the Americas and parts of Europe
If you don’t have a shortwave or are out of range, you can listen to a live stream from the WBCQ website here (choose 7490): http://www.wbcq.com/?page_id=7

Tuesdays 2000-2100 UTC on Channel 292, 6070 KHz from Rohrbach, Germany for Europe.
If you don’t have a shortwave radio or are out of range, you can listen live to an uplink from different web SDRs in Europe including a live uplink from a listening radio in the Netherlands at http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/?tune=6070am
The Facebook page for the program is https://www.facebook.com/UncleBillsMeltingPot/
The Patreon page for the program is https://www.patreon.com/tilford

A second test broadcast of both programs will take place on 7440 kHz from Germany to rule out a bad day during the first test on Friday, May 29 from 1600-1800 UTC.

William "Bill" Tilford, Owner/Producer
Tilford Productions, LLC

Shortwave Radiogram, weekend schedule

Hello friends,

I am not sure if I saw any advantage in last weekend's Thor22 over our usual MFSK32, and not much over the much faster MFSK64. On my PC, the Thor22 performed poorly via WINB, but well via WRMI. There is something peculiar about WINB's audio. The RSID's don't work (for me, anyway) and now the Thor22 doesn't, either. But, via WINB, the MFSK modes are OK, and, for the most part, so are the images. It's fun to try to solve these mysteries.

Another anomaly last weekend was the absence of 5850 kHz during the Sunday 0800-0830 UTC broadcast (7780 kHz was on the air). During a storm, one of the poles (like telephone poles) at WRMI that hold the transmission lines between the transmitter and the antenna fell to the ground. The amazing crew at WRMI replaced that pole the next day.

Videos of last weekend's Shortwave Radiogram (program 153) are provided by Scott in Ontario (Friday 1300 UTC) and by 2010DFS in Japan (Sunday 0800 UTC on 7730 kHz, with more of this amazing reception and decode through co-channel interference). The audio archive is maintained by Mark in the UK. Analysis is prepared by Roger in Germany.

This weekend, we will experiment with three speeds of Olivia, all 2000 Hz wide. These modes often work well when reception conditions are poor, so let's hope for bad reception this weekend. (And that pretty much guarantees good reception this weekend.)  I don't know the official speeds of these Olivia modes, but I think they are about 24 wpm for Olivia 64-2000, 40 wpm for Olivia 32-2000 and 80 wpm for 16-2000. Slow. If reception is good, you can make it more challenging by using you old, cheap shortwave portable with the broken whip antenna.

After the Olivia, we'll have time for seven images in the MFSK64 mode.

Here is the lineup for Shortwave Radiogram, program 154, 28-31 May 2020, in modes as noted:
 1:49  MFSK32: Program preview
 3:16  Olivia 64-2000: Recyclable rubber polymer, part 1**
 6:52  Olivia 32-2000: Part 2**
11:05  Olivia 16-2000: Part 3**
15:43  MFSK64: This week's images*
28:20  MFSK32: Closing announcements

* with images

** Turn off Fldigi squelch (SQL). Use bandwidth wide enough for
these 2000-Hz-wide modes, i.e. at least 2.5 kHz for SSB, 5 kHz
for AM.

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 0230-0300 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

The Mighty KBC transmits to North America Sundays at 0000-0200 UTC (Saturday 8-10 EDT) on 9925 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 text and images in various modes near the end of the broadcast. It’s transmitted on WRMI, Thursdays at 0200-0300 UTC on 5850 kHz (Wednesday evening in the Americas) and a new time also on WRMI, Wednesdays at 2100-2200 UTC on 7780 kHz (aimed towards Europe) . Also look for a waterfall ID at the beginning of the show. thisisamusicshow@gmail.com .  www.twitter.com/ThisIsAMusicSho/ @ThisIsAMusicSho

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 1200 UTC on 3583 kHz USB (with out-of-state check-ins now starting at 1130 UTC). 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, Wednesdays 2300 UTC (7 pm EDT) 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