Saturday, January 03, 2026

Jen's Eclectic Views & Real Deal programming on January 4

 


The Live Stream for Jen's Eclectic Views & Real Deal. will broadcast on Sunday, January 4, 2026.
Programming will be 19:00 - 22:00 UTC


For your contact pleasure

The audio for Jen & GB's Nnew Year's Eve cast for Dec 31, and heard on Unique Radio Australia is up and ready for your listening and downloading.  

 NYE Cast Link.

Happy & Healthy New Year to All.

Jen & GB

Friday, January 02, 2026

Texas Radio Shortwave programming, January 3-4, 2026

 


All times UTC

Featuring - More Music From Roy Orbison
(Program requested and announced by Sheldon Harvey, Quebec, Canada)
Unless otherwise shown, programs are one hour long.

All times UTC

January 3, 2026
Programming via Germany's Shortwave Radio
15:00 - 16:00   6160 to Europe
19:00 - 20:00   3975 to Europe

January 4, 2026
Programming via Germany's Channel 292
13:00 - 14:00  9670 to Europe
23:00 - 00:00  9670 to North America

This schedule is subject to change based on propagation conditions, listener requests for specific Texas artists or music genres, and things beyond our control.

Texas Radio Shortwave is an independent producer of musical and topical shows, usually about Texas.

Programs for Europe and beyond on 3975 and 6160 kHz are relayed from Shortwave Radio in Winsen, Germany, and are transmitted with 1 kW into crossed dipole antennas.

Texas Radio Shortwave uses a version of The Yellow Rose of Texas as its Interval Signal/Signature Song.
Texas Radio Shortwave verifies correct, detailed reception reports by electronic QSL. This includes reports from listeners using remote receivers (SDRs). Texas Radio Shortwave's email is texasradioshortwave@protonmail.com.

Many TRSW programs are archived at www.mixcloud.com/texasradiosw.
Texas Radio Shortwave's Facebook page is www.facebook.com/texasradiosw.
Texas Radio Shortwave's Listeners' Group Facebook page is www.facebook.com/groups/580199276066655/.
(TRSW)



Blog Logs-January 2026

 


Welcome to the January 2026 issue of Blog Logs. Thank you for your emails, logging contributions and following my latest daily tweets on X at: Shortwave Central (Gayle Van Horn W4GVH@QSLRptMT

Have you subscribed to the Shortwave Central YouTube channel? You will find a vast selection 
of videos and audio airchecks, and the Playlist is growing! Join your fellow radio enthusiasts at: https://www.youtube.com/c/ShortwaveCentral 

The Shortwave Central blog brings you the latest from the ever-changing realm of radio. Additional radio information is covered in my Bits & Bytes monthly column in The Spectrum Monitor e-zine at: https://www.thespectrummonitor.com/

Languages as indicated
// denotes station heard on a parallel frequency
*Sign-on Sign-Off*/ frequencies in kHz
Monitoring  Nov 25-Dec 20, 2025

UTC, frequencies kHz 

Mediumwave
Japan
693, NHK 2 Tokyo. 1250-1300. English/Japanese mix reading radio play to time tips and ID at 1300. (Frank Hilton, SC)

Shortwave
Ascension Island
17880, BBC World Service in English to West Africa, 1738-1747. Announcer’s comments on Democracy, Europe, and Australia. (Rudolph Grimm, Brazil)

Bolivia
3310, Radio Mosoj Chasqui, Cotapachi 0107-0115. Quechua comments. SINPO 15421 (Manuel Méndez, Lugo, Spain/BDXC)



Brazil
6010, Rádio Inconfidencia, Belo Horizonte 2131-2147. Portuguese comments to Brazilian pop songs and station ID // 15189.8. SINPO 15422 (Méndez) 

6180, Rádio Nacional da Amazonia, Brasilia 2038-2135. Brazilian music // 11780, and 0734-0806. SINPO 25422 9 Méndez)

9818.6, Rádio 9 de Julho, São Paulo 0734-0755. Portuguese religious songs to religious comments. SINPO 35433 (Méndez).

9818.53/9820 Rádio Nove de Julho, São Paulo, SP, 1752-1758. Announcer’s talk and announcements to station ID. (Grimm)

11780, Rádio Nacional da Amazonia, Brasilia 1913-2140. Brazilian music to ID and additional Portuguese comments (Méndez).Monitored 2043-2049 (Grimm).

Belarus
3940. Music Wave Radio 1815-2033. Russian vocal music and comments. SINPO 25422 (Méndez).



Canada
6070, CFRX Toronto 0715-0743. English program comments to the newscast, Interference from Germany’s Channel 292 on the same frequency. SINPO 12421 (Méndez).

China
4800, Voice of China, Golmud 2113-2130. Chinese comments and vocal music. SINPO 35433 (Méndez).

5945, CNR-1 Voice of China, Beijing. Chinese service 2215-2222. News and commentary to Asian music. (Grimm)

7415, China Radio International, Kashi. English to Europe 2052-2100. Comments from male/female duo to music, time pips and ID at 2100. (Grimm).


7445, China Radio International via Kunming in Serbian to Europe 2112-2117. Sequence of Chinese instrumental music program (Grimm).

9780, PBS Qinghai (tentative) Chinese to China 2243-2250. Announcer talk to typical Chinese music (Grimm).

Clandestine
7530, Voice of Martyrs via Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Korean to North Korea 2102-2112. Announcer’s comments // 7650 kHz. (Grimm).

Colombia
6010, La Voz du tu Conciencia, Lomalinda 0551-0804. Spanish religious text to vocals. Station very weak with interference from Inconfidencais on this frequency (Méndez).

Ecuador
6050,, HCJB. Pinincha 0302-0311. Religious vocals and text in Spanish. SINPO 25422 (Méndez).

France
11830, Deutsche Welle relay via Issoudun, France 1826-1835. Arabic. Station sign-on for final Arabic program. Station ID to reference as the Arabic service. Special programming on Sudan with talk and interviews. // 15275 kHz. (G Van Horn, LA?NLD Twente) YouTube video: https://youtu.be/JNS1rrVtCko

11995, Radio France International via Issoudun. French to Africa 2102-2107. News bulletin, info, commentary, and a report from Beirut, Lebanon. RFI noted on 17620, Fulfulde to West Africa 1732-1738. (Grimm).

Germany
11700, AWR via Nauen. Igbo to Nigeria. Monitored 1938-1945, talk, contact address, “Adventist World Radio’ ID to vocal tune (Grimm).


15275, Deutsche Welle, Nauen, Germany 1903-1915.*. Tune in at 1900 for the last 15 minutes of programming. Arabic programming continues on service to and about Sudan. // 11830 via Issoudun, France relay. ID, station info, contact, and website info. African instrumental music to final sign-off at 1915. (Van Horn) YouTube video: https://youtu.be/3mRMbICbQwY 

3975, Texas Radio Shortwave relay 2000-2100. Sixth Anniversary special programming with signature sign-on tune, The Yellow Rose of Texas, into selected music program. (Van Horn) 

3975, Texas Radio Shortwave relay via ShortwaveRadio, Wisen, Germany 1459-1559. Day # 2 for Seven Days of Christmas of Texas Artist, featuring the music of Stevie Ray Vaughan. Subsequent days featured additional Texas artists: Meatloaf, Buddy Holly, Johnny Winters, Willie Nelson and Roy Orbison. Video of Day # 2 available at: https://youtu.be/KZJL8rxOGa8

Mali
5995, Radio Mali/ORTM, Bamako 0555-0634. French comments yo ID “Ici la Radio Nationale du  Mali.” Additional “Radio Mali” identification to the French program “Au Chant du Coq.” Additional vernacular text, followed by French news and comments. African highlife music. SINPO 35433 (Méndez).

Mexico
6185, Radio Educación Ciudad de México, 0500-0705. Spanish programming, regional Mexican vocals to English easy listening music. Program comments to the additional station ID. SINPO 25323. Audible with fair signal on 6185, 0135-0150 UTC  (Van Horn).

Mongolia
12085, Voice of Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar, *0900-0911. Interval signal to English sign-on and “welcome to the Voice of Mongolia in English.” Newscast to comments and Mongolian songs. (Méndez).

North Korea
3250, KCBS (Korean Central Broadcasting System). Domestic station from North Korea with extended classical and lady’s vocal music selections. Announcer’s station information to national anthem and 1758 sign-off. (Van Horn)  YT video: https://youtu.be/o4kRwoaI_nc

Norway
5895 Radio Northern Star 1830-1856. Station ID to English pop vocals. SINPO 15422 (Méndez).

Philippines
12120, TWR Asia via Bocaue 0031-0040. Sign on interval signal to theme song We’ve a Story to Tell to the Nations. Bible study programming on the book of Galatians. (Van Horn) YT video: https://youtu.be/omizDQwhHZI 

Solomon Islands

5020, SIBC 1155-1204.* Evening English programming from a local DJ with chat, local times checks, music dedication to locals. Evening prayer to a religious message. Sign-off prayer, national anthem, and closing tune. (Van Horn/Kiwi Australia) YT video: 

United Arab Emirates
15215, FEBC Radio Gameylon Tibetan Radio via Al-Dhabbaya relay, 1158-1229.* Interval signal (What a Friend We Have in Jesus) to station ID. Asian instrumental tune, religious format text throughout broadcast. Contact info at 1226 with station ID, P.O. Box reference in India, and email address to web address. Asian instrumental tune, to I.S. repeat and off at 1229. (Van Horn).

Uzbekistan
15210, Bible Voice Broadcasting 1230-1245. Indonesian service sign-on with a religious vocal tune into a religious text. Contact info at 1243, English mention of “you are listening to Bible Voice Broadcasting,” followed by New Market, Ontario, email address (Van Horn).

Vanuatu
7260, Radio Vanuatu, Port Vila 0649-0738. Male/female announcer duo in English/Bislama. Regional music to 0700. Drum signal to newscast. Regional island music and announcer’s comments (Méndez).
5040, Radio Vanuatu  1027-1035. Closing items of news to pop vocal tune. Announcer’s mention of upcoming Bislama news and local time check. Brief religious tune to “good afternoon.” Into  religious text (Van Horn) YT video: https://youtu.be/kP_0d3UgKSk 

Vatican City
11870, Vatican Radio, Sta. Maria di  Galería. French service to West Africa 2050-2059. Comments on the difficulties faced by the African population, with emphasis on the Republic of Congo. Portuguese service from 2100 UTC. (Grimm).


Wednesday, December 31, 2025

January programming from Sender Waldheim

 

Sender Waldheim is back on air with Digital Radio Mondiale (DRM) shortwave broadcasting on 6195 kHz. The transmissions are authorised for ITU Zones 27 and 28. The intended coverage area is Europe around Germany. The authorisation is not programme-specific, allowing Sender Waldheim to relay a variety of programmes and special broadcasts from different partners.

 
Upcoming transmissions
 
All broadcasts are scheduled between 09:00 and 15:00 UTC. Programme relays will be repeated within this time window in various configurations, modes and robustness settings.

6195 kHz 

Friday, 2 January 2026 – SE-TA 2: Special programme – Geburtstagssendung from 4 May 2025
Sunday, 4 January 2026 – welle370: Radiotag (November edition)
Monday, 5 January 2026 – SE-TA 2: Let’s Go Rock ‘n’ Roll
Tuesday, 6 January 2026 – welle370: Radiotag (December edition)
Tuesday, 13 January 2026 – C. M. Obrecht shortwave radio
Tuesday, 20 January 2026 – welle370: Special programme – Kurzwellenmarathon-Sendung

More information on Sender Wallheim and those broadcasting on it at the link
(Mike Barroclough/BDXC)



New Years Day Test Broadcast planned from SM Radio Dessau

 
SM Dessau QSL

SM Radio Dessau will conduct a test transmission on January 1, 2026. The test is scheduled for 1200 UTC on 12060 kHz (100 kW), from the Gavar, Armenia transmitter facility.  

Send your reception reports, including the location where you received the broadcast, plus the date and program details to: maxberger@smradio-dessau.de

Printed QSLs will be sent to listeners who write by mail, including return postage (Germany: €0.95 / other countries: €1.25).

SM Dessau QSL

Postal address for reception reports:

SM Radio Dessau
c/o Max Berger
Saalestraße 44
06846 Dessau
Germany
((FH/Teak Publishing)

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Super New Year's Bash From Jen & GB

 

                                                       Get ready for the Big Countdown !! 

Jen & GB's NYE cast is ready for the super New Year's Eve blast on December 31, 2025, from 22:00 to past 08:00 UTC.

New Year's Eve 2200-2400 Jen's Musical Dance Around the Time Zones by country, with all musical forms. 
0000-0330 GB's New Year's Eve Shindig 2025, including Big Ben Bells.
0330 to 0900 Jen's Musical Dance Around the Time  Zones continued.

Live Stream... 

Also, Jen's Eclectic Views & Real Deal For Sunday, January 4, 2026, 19:00 - 22:00 UTC. 

For your contact pleasure


Happy & Healthy New Year to All !!

Jen & GB & 73's

Radio Andorra slated for special New Year's Eve program

 


A classic favorite, Radio Andorra is scheduled for a New Year's Eve broadcast at 19:00 - 0100 UTC.
French Programming will air on 7515 kHz (100 kW)  to Europe, via Noratus, Armenia. 

A live chat will be opened on our YouTube channel for your comments. at:  
Aqui Radio Andorra: www.aquiradioandorra.com

-Enjoy six hours of dance music from the 1940s to today.  This special broadcast will be from the former staff of Radio Andorra, after a 40+ year absence.

Facebook: 
(FH/Teak Publishing)

Pop Shop Radio presents, New Years Around the World Tour

 
graphics by Gayle Van Horn


Pop Shop Radio begins the New Year's Around the World Tour from New Zealand and travels around the globe and back to Canada.  Tune in and join the tour!  

All times UTC/relays as indicated

December 31, 2025
1700 via Channel 292, Germany 3955/9670

January 1, 2026 New Year's Eve Disco Party 
0300 via Woofferton, UK (250 kW to North America) 9510

January 3, 2026
1400 via Shortwave Gold, Germany 3975/6160
2300 via Channel 292, Germany 3955/9670
 
January 4, 2026
2000 via Shortwave Gold, Germany 3975

January 5, 2026
0200 via WRMI Okechobee, FL 5950
0400 via  WRMI Okechobee, FL 9395

There will be two New Year's e-QSLs
Send your reception report to: radiopopshop@gmail.com

Texas Radio Shortwave New Year's Special

 


Texas Radio Shortwave is up and ready to bring YOU a two-hour 2026 Texas New Year's Special

January 1
1500- 1700 UTC on 3975/6160 to Europe from Germany

This schedule is subject to change based on propagation conditions, listener requests for specific Texas artists or music genres, and things beyond our control.

Texas Radio Shortwave is an independent producer of musical and topical shows, usually about Texas.
Unless otherwise shown, programs are one hour long.

Programs for Europe and beyond on 3975 and 6160 kHz are relayed from Shortwave Radio in Winsen, Germany, and are transmitted with 1 kW into crossed dipole antennas.

Texas Radio Shortwave uses a version of The Yellow Rose of Texas as its Interval Signal/Signature Song.
Texas Radio Shortwave verifies correct, detailed reception reports by electronic QSL. This includes reports from listeners using remote receivers (SDRs). Texas Radio Shortwave's email is texasradioshortwave@protonmail.com.
Many TRSW programs are archived at www.mixcloud.com/texasradiosw.
Texas Radio Shortwave's Facebook page is www.facebook.com/texasradiosw.
Texas Radio Shortwave's Listeners' Group Facebook page is www.facebook.com/groups/580199276066655/.
(TRSW)

Monday, December 29, 2025

WNAM 1280 AM-DX Test, December 30, 31, 2025

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Dec 27, 2025
The Courtesy Program Committee (CPC) of the National Radio Club (NRC) and the International Radio Club of America (IRCA) announces a special DX Test for distant listeners for radio station WNAM on 1280 kHz in Neenah-Menasha,WI

The test is scheduled for Tuesday, December 30th and Wednesday, December 31st starting at Midnight local Central Standard Time through 5:05 AM Central Standard Time (This equates to 0600 to 1105 UTC on 30 December and 31 December).  

This test is scheduled to run for 2 minutes after ABC News at the top-of-the-hour each hour from Midnight to 5am local Central time.  ABC News runs from :00-:03 after the hour.  The DX Test will run from :03-:05 after the hour, each hour of the window.

These test transmissions are being broadcast in conjunction with the final days of broadcast of WNAM.  WNAM is scheduled to cease broadcast operations at 11:59 PM Central Time on December 31st.  These test transmissions are a way to honor the history of WNAM in its service to the community as well as provide an opportunity for DXers to hear WNAM one last time - or possibly the first time!
The test will consist of an assortment of classic station jingles, sweep tones, voice IDs, morse code and

WNAM will be operating at their daytime power/pattern for the duration of the test events.
In addition, listeners/DXers are invited to tune in WNAM’s special 3-hour farewell broadcast on Wednesday, December 31, starting at 9:00 PM Central Standard Time.  This will include a “recreation” of the station’s glory years as “Blue 128” complete with airchecks from previous on-air staff.

RECEPTION REPORTS & QSL REQUESTS
All reception reports will be verified through the station directly with a special QSL that was developed for the occasion. Reception reports along with MP3 recordings or .MP4 video recordings of your reception should be emailed to: 
steve.edwards@cumulus.com.  Please be sure to use the subject line: "WNAM 1280 DX TEST RECEPTION REPORT."

The following are recommendations are in effect in order to expedite processing and receive a QSL verifying your report:

Reports via email only - this is required.   An MP3 file attachment of your reception (best reception) or an MP4 video clip are preferred. While written descriptions will be considered along with the recording, they may not suffice alone for verification.
Reports must be submitted within 30 days of the test.
The report must include your name, location, and return email address, clearly grouped together at the top of the verification request.
Please also include a description of your receiver, antenna, and any interference noted. 
If you use a remote SDR to receive the test, you must clearly indicate that in your verification request. We will only accept one such report per DX'er. You cannot log the test on multiple remote SDRs and request multiple verifications.
The IRCA/NRC CPC would like to thank the owners and staff of WNAM}, Steve Edwards and CPC member Loyd Van Horn for helping to arrange the test.
Good luck to all DXers!

About the CPC
The Courtesy Program Committee (CPC) is a cross-functional group comprised of members of both the National Radio Club (NRC) and the International Radio Club of America (IRCA) for the purpose of coordinating and arranging DX Tests with AM radio stations.  

These DX tests both allow radio stations to conduct valuable equipment tests on their transmitter and audio chain, as well as enable DX hobbyists to receive the testing station from greater distances than would normally be possible.  The CPC membership consists of:  Chairman Les Rayburn, Paul Walker, George Santulli, Joe Miller, and Loyd Van Horn. 

For radio stations interested in coordinating a DX test with the CPC, please visit the following website for more information:  
For more information on the types of content heard during a DX test, the video  "An introduction to DX Tests" is available at DX Central:
Loyd Van Horn
W4LVH - Mandeville, LA
Member:  IRCA/NRC Courtesy Program Committee (CPC)
Founder: DX Central - Because we're all about radio
Twitter:  @DXCentral

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Polish Radio - Polskie Radio

 

Special thanks to Ray Robinson, Dr. Adrian Peterson, and Jeff  White for this week's Wavescan story - the very last one for 2025. Enjoy !

Polskie Radio, available at YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@PolskieradioPL

Jeff: (whatever you want to say!)

You may remember that interval signal, which was used by Polskie Radio as early as the 1920s.  The very first broadcast transmissions in Poland were carried out by the Polish Radio Technical Society beginning on February 1, 1925.  Then, on August 18 of that year, the state-owned national public-service Polish Radio was founded.  And thus, 2025 represents their 100th anniversary.  Regular broadcasts from Warsaw commenced on April 18, 1926.

Before the Second World War, Polish Radio operated one national channel, which from 1931 was broadcast on one of Europe's most powerful longwave transmitters, situated at Raszyn just outside Warsaw.  They also had eight regional medium wave stations:
Kraków from February 15, 1927
Pozna? from April 24, 1927
Katowice from December 4, 1927
Wilno from 15 January 1928
Lwów (then part of Poland, now in Ukraine) from January 15, 1930
?ód? from February 2, 1930
Toru? from January 15, 1935
Baranowicze from July 1, 1938

In 1936, Polish Radio launched the first shortwave broadcasts of brief programs in English and Polish.  Then on March 1, 1937, a second domestic station was opened in Warsaw – known as Warszawa II (Varshava being the Polish pronunciation of Warsaw), and the national channel became Warszawa I from that date.  A ninth regional station was planned for ?uck, but the outbreak of war meant that it never opened.

The invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany led to the complete destruction of the network in September 1939.  However, before Polish Radio went silent for six years, it broadcast significant messages warning Poles about anticipated German attacks.  Here are recordings of some of those messages which were broadcast as the Nazis were on the outskirts of Warsaw.  Listen out for mention of Radio Varshava – Radio Warsaw.

The final broadcast on September 23, 1939 closed with that performance of Chopin’s Nocturne in C-sharp minor by W?adys?aw Szpilman.  Years later in 1945, Szpilman played the same piece for the reopening of the station.

But actually, there was a brief rebirth of Polish Radio in occupied Poland during the Warsaw Uprising, which started on August 1, 1944 – as the Nazis were retreating, but before the Red Army had arrived.  There were two insurgent broadcasting stations during this period:
the first was launched on August 8, 1944 by the Polish Resistance Home Army "B?yskawica",
and the second, Polish Radio, was launched the following day on August 9 1944.

Both stations used the same transmitter and were supported mostly by pre-war Polish Radio employees.  From a week later in mid-August 1944, these transmissions from the uprising radio stations began to be rebroadcast back to Poland on higher power transmitters by the BBC in London.  But, those broadcasts were short lived.  The Uprising only survived for 63 days, and the last programs were heard on October 4, 1944.  The Red Army had paused their advance, which allowed the Nazis to regain control of Warsaw.

But when the Red Army continued their march towards Berlin through the previously Nazi-occupied territory of Poland, they found there were neither radio stations nor radio receivers, because the Nazis had destroyed or confiscated them all.  The first radio station of any kind to come back on the air in Poland was from a railway car near the town of Lublin in eastern Poland, using Soviet Army equipment.  But this was a Russian army station, not a station of Polskie Radio.

But slowly, Polskie Radio was reconstructed with aid from the Soviet Union, which valued radio as a propaganda medium.  The first regional station of Polish Radio to reopen was in Krakow in southern Poland near the Slovakian border, on February 10, 1945.  But, the number of people owning radio receivers after the war was initially very low due both to the Nazi confiscations and also to the fact that in the immediate post-war years, very few radio receivers were even available on the Polish market, and the ones that were, were very expensive.  They were mostly reserved as a luxury for top Party officials and as a reward for those who had advanced the cause of communism in Poland.

Because of the lack of receivers, on March 2, 1945 from a primitive studio in Poznan, a second station started to broadcast via street speakers.  It was officially opened as a radio station on June 3, 1945, but other street speaker stations were also set up.  In Katowice, on March 5, 1945, a 1kW radio station was inaugurated.  And gradually, the network was rebuilt.  But it took until 1949 for the number of listeners in Poland to climb back up to what it had been ten years earlier in 1939, before the war.



A major step for Polish Radio in 1945 was when it was decided to rebuild the longwave mast and radio station in Raszyn, which was critical to regaining national coverage.  The station was relaunched with a 50 kW transmitter donated by the USSR – one they had previously plundered, mind you, in 1939 from Baranowicze, Poland – the last of the pre-War regional stations to be built.  On August 19, 1945, the longwave station in Raszyn was officially re-opened.  Then in 1949, its transmitter was replaced with a new 200 kW unit, and the tallest antenna mast in Europe was installed – 335 metres or 1,100 feet high.  The previous 50 kW transmitter was then kept as a reserve.  A new broadcast center was also erected in Warsaw, equipped with 12 purpose-built studios.


Of course, Polish Radio, and later Polish Radio and Television (PRT), was placed under the control of the Polish Communist Party.  Domestically from 1946-1956, Polish Radio became a propaganda tool for the Polish People’s Republic (PPR).  During that period of reconstruction from the war damage, which was considerable, the Communist Party sought to Stalinize Poland on the model of the USSR, and the brutality of the totalitarian regime at that time was reinforced through propaganda on the domestic broadcasts of Polish Radio.

 

External broadcasts on shortwave also resumed in 1945, and were then designated as Warszawa III.  Programming in Esperanto was introduced in 1959, and by 1975 there were daily half hour or one hour programs in English, Polish, Esperanto, Spanish, French, German, Danish, Swedish, Finnish, Italian and Arabic, with transmissions for Europe, North America, Africa and the Middle East.

 

But, Polish Radio’s outreach to listeners in the United States was especially difficult due to the long distance, weak shortwave signals, and most of all, the lack of a receptive audience.  External radio programs from communist-ruled Poland to North America had almost no listeners among Americans of Polish descent.  Refugee Poles living in the United States and second and third generation Polish-Americans were overwhelmingly hostile toward Poland’s communist government.

 

In 1980, Poland hit the headlines worldwide because of the Solidarity independent trade union movement founded at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk and led by Lech Wałęsa.  In 1983, Lech Wałęsa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, and the union is widely recognized as having played a central role in ending communist rule in Poland.  Poland was the first country in Europe to see the fall of communism, when on June 4, 1989, the first pluralistic elections since 1947 led to the dissolution of the communist government.

 

Soon after the fall of communism in 1989, an agreement was negotiated to establish cooperation between the Voice of America and Polish Radio.  In January 1990, radio listeners in Poland for the first time ever could hear Voice of America bilingual (English-Polish) live newscasts on Polish Radio’s nationwide network, free from any censorship.  This arrangement also marked the first time an Eastern European broadcaster had agreed to use VOA live newscasts.

 

On January 1, 1993, Polskie Radio was officially admitted to full membership of the European Broadcasting Union.

 

But due to budget constraints, shortwave transmissions were steadily reduced between 2007 and 2012, when English language shortwave broadcasts ended.  The following year, broadcasts were heard just twice a day with programming in Polish, Belarusian and Russian, and then on October 27, 2013, all shortwave broadcasting ceased, and Polskie Radio’s External Service became an Internet-only entity.

 

Now, at the end of 2025, external service programming is still being produced in six languages – Belarusian, English, German, Polish, Russian and Ukrainian – and these are broadcast daily via the 75 kW medium wave transmitter of Radio Baltic Waves in neighboring Lithuania on 1386 kHz, as well as on the Internet and via both the Eutelsat and Hotbird satellites at 13°E.  The English programming is also relayed via the World Radio Network, which in turn is sometimes carried by WRMI shortwave in Florida – I’ll let Jeff give you the details of that.

 

Domestically, Polskie Radio, PR, still operates on longwave, now with 1,000 kW on 225 kHz.  There are also four national PR FM networks, 17 regional PR stations, and another six PR channels on DAB+ and Internet only.  And separate from Polskie Radio, there are hundreds of national, regional and local private commercial stations, again on FM and DAB+. 

 Back to you, Jeff.

 Jeff:    Thanks, Ray.  Yes, here at WRMI we do air some transmissions of the Polish Radio external service as part of our relay of the World Radio Network at various times and frequencies that you can find on our website, www.wrmi.net.  While the schedule is subject to change, Polish Radio is currently heard via WRMI daily at 0400 UTC on 7570 and 7780 kHz; at 0800 UTC on 7730 and 15770 kHz; and at 1900 UTC on 9395 kHz.

 My own memories of listening to Polish Radio’s external service on shortwave date back to the early 1970’s when I was living in Indianapolis, where our editor Adrian Peterson lives now.  Polish Radio was quite difficult to hear in Indianapolis back in those days.  The signal was usually quite weak.  But I did listen, and in fact they even answered a few questions from me on their mailbag program.  They were also kind enough to send me a set of Polish language lesson booklets, I remember.

 During that time, Polish Radio’s interval signal was the first few notes of Frederic Chopin’s Revolutionary Etude.  The World Radio TV Handbook even printed the musical score.

 Polish Radio Interval Signal at YouTube: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2FtQ3f2BZY

          

 Little did I think listening to that interval signal back in the 1970’s that some 50 years later I would actually travel to Warsaw and hear the Revolutionary Etude in person.  But as it happened, when my wife and I travelled to the HFCC B25 Conference in Prague this past August, we flew from Miami to Prague on the Polish LOT Airlines, with an overnight stopover in each direction in Warsaw.  While we were there, we took the opportunity to attend a Chopin piano concert at the Museum of the Warsaw Archdiocese in the city’s Old Town, a quaint area with cobblestone streets.  Chopin is the most famous of Polish composers, and the Warsaw airport is even called the Frederic Chopin Airport.   

 Chopin’s Revolutionary Etude played by Ewa Beata Ossowska in Warsaw.  Our short visit to the Polish capital was only long enough to make a quick visit to Warsaw’s Old Town, take in the piano concert, and enjoy a delicious meal of Polish pierogies and other traditional food at a rustic restaurant across the street from the Archdiocese Museum.  A further exploration of Warsaw will have to wait for another trip in the future.  Life is quite interesting for shortwave listeners who often travel to the exotic places they’re listening to, either in person or via their radio receivers.

Weekly Propagation Forecast Bulletins

 Product: Weekly Highlights and Forecasts
:Issued: 2025 Dec 29 0129 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
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Highlights of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 22 - 28 December 2025

Solar activity was at low levels with C-flare activity observed over 22-26 Dec. Solar activity reached high levels on 27 Dec when Region 4325 (S09, L=294, class/area=Dao/100 on 27 Dec) produced an M5.1 flare (R2-Moderate), with Type-II radio sweep (788 km/s), at 27/0150 UTC. Solar activity reached moderate levels on 28 Dec when Region 4325 produced an impulsive M1.3/Sf flare (R1-Minor) at 28/2113 UTC, and Region 4317 (N10, L=09, class/area=Eki/260 on 23 Dec) produced an M4.2/1f flare (R1), with a 300 sfu Tenflare, at 27/2239 UTC. No Earth-directed CMEs were observed during the week, though no coronagraph imagery covering the late 28 Dec flare activity was available at the time of writing. 

No proton events were observed at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit reached high levels each day of the 22-28 Dec period. 

Geomagnetic field activity reached G1 (Minor) storm levels on 22 Dec, with active periods observed on 23-24 Dec, due to positive polarity CH HSS influences. Quiet to unsettled conditions prevailed on 25-28 Dec as positive polarity CH HSS influences slowly diminished. 

Forecast of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 29 December - 24 January 2026

Solar activity is expected to be predominately low through 24 Jan, with C-class flares expected throughout the outlook period. M-class flares (R1-R2/Minor-Moderate) range from a chance to likely at times as active regions evolve and rotate on/off the disk. X-class flares (R3-Strong or greater) range from a slight chance to a chance during periods of enhanced active region complexity. 

No proton events are expected at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is expected to reach high levels on 29-31 Dec, 03-06 and 14-24 Jan. Normal to moderate levels are expected to prevail throughout the remainder of the 29 Dec-24 Jan period. 

Geomagnetic field activity is likely to reach active levels on 01 Jan in response to negative polarity CH HSS influences, and again over 02-04 Jan following the onset of positive polarity CH HSS influences. Periods of active conditions are likely on 09-10 and 12-14 Jan due to negative polarity CH HSS influences. Periods of G1
(Minor) storming are likely on 17-18 Jan, with active conditions likely on 19-20 Jan, associated with positive polarity CH HSS influences. 

:Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt
:Issued: 2025 Dec 29 0130 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
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#      27-day Space Weather Outlook Table
#                Issued 2025-12-29
#
#   UTC      Radio Flux   Planetary   Largest
#  Date       10.7 cm      A Index    Kp Index
2025 Dec 29     185           5          2
2025 Dec 30     175           5          2
2025 Dec 31     170           8          3
2026 Jan 01     165          15          4
2026 Jan 02     160          18          4
2026 Jan 03     160          15          4
2026 Jan 04     155          12          4
2026 Jan 05     150           5          2
2026 Jan 06     155           5          2
2026 Jan 07     140           5          2
2026 Jan 08     130           5          2
2026 Jan 09     125          15          4
2026 Jan 10     120          10          4
2026 Jan 11     120           5          2
2026 Jan 12     120          10          4
2026 Jan 13     120          15          4
2026 Jan 14     115          15          4
2026 Jan 15     120           5          2
2026 Jan 16     120           5          2
2026 Jan 17     125          20          5
2026 Jan 18     135          20          5
2026 Jan 19     145          18          4
2026 Jan 20     155          18          4
2026 Jan 21     165           8          3
2026 Jan 22     165           8          3
2026 Jan 23     175           5          2
2026 Jan 24     175           5          2
(NOAA)

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Texas Radio Shortwave-Christmas Special Day 4-7

 



Texas Radio Shortwave continues their Christmas Specials of Texas artists - don't miss it ! 

All times UTC / relays as indicated

December 28 - Day 4 The Music of Buddy Holly
1500 3975/6160 to Europe - Shortwave Radio

December 29  Day 5 The Music of Johnny Winter
1500 3975/6160 to Europe - Shortwave Radio

December 30 Day 6 The Music Willie Nelson
1500 3975/6160 to Europe - Shortwave Radio

December 31 Day 7 The Music of Roy Orbison
3975/6160 to Europe - Shortwave Radio

This schedule is subject to change based on propagation conditions, listener requests for specific Texas artists or music genres, and things beyond our control.
Texas Radio Shortwave is an independent producer of musical and topical shows, usually about Texas.
Unless otherwise shown, programs are one hour long.

Programs for Europe and beyond on 3975 and 6160 kHz over Shortwave Radio in Winsen, Germany, are transmitted with 1 kW into crossed dipole antennas.
Programs for Europe and beyond on 9670 kHz over Channel 292 in Rohrbach, Germany, are transmitted with 10 kW into a vertical antenna.
Programs for North America and beyond on 9670 kHz over Channel 292 are transmitted with 10 kW into a 10.5 dB gain beam antenna.

Texas Radio Shortwave uses a version of The Yellow Rose of Texas as its Interval Signal/Signature Song.
Texas Radio Shortwave verifies correct, detailed reception reports by electronic QSL. This includes reports from listeners using remote receivers (SDRs). Texas Radio Shortwave's email is texasradioshortwave@protonmail.com.
Many TRSW programs are archived at www.mixcloud.com/texasradiosw.
Texas Radio Shortwave's Facebook page is www.facebook.com/texasradiosw.
(TRSW)

ABC Sydney on Shortwave

 
Sydney, Australia

Thank you to Ray Robinson, Dr Adrian Peterson, and Jeff White for this week's special on ABC Sydney.

Jeff: In the Christmas edition of Wavescan each year, it is our custom to relate the story of a radio station that has some connection with Christmas.  This year we chose a shortwave station that was inaugurated during the Christmas season many years ago – VLI in Sydney, Australia.  Here’s Ray Robinson with that story.

Ray: Thanks, Jeff, and a Merry Christmas to one and all.  For many years, the ABC in Australia employed domestic shortwave transmitters to relay programming to audiences beyond the range of their medium wave signals.  Three 50 kW units were famously located in Alice Springs, Tennant Creek and Katherine to provide complete coverage of the Northern Territory, although in practice the area they serviced was much larger, including parts of Western Australia, Queensland, New South Wales, and South Australia.  We remember the sad decision to close those services on January 31st, 2017.

But we should also remember another similar, although lower-powered, station – VLI –  that once operated from Sydney, New South Wales.  This station was actually the fourth to be designated with the callsign VLI:

The first use of VLI was by the Union Steamship Company of New Zealand for a ship built for them in Scotland called the SS Aorangi.  That ship was deliberately scuttled in the Scapa Flow anchorage in the Orkney Islands off the north coast of Scotland in 1915 to deter enemy submarines from entering the waterway.  Five years later the ship was refloated but soon afterwards sold for scrap in Europe.

The second ship to be given the callsign VLI was the SS Ladywood, which was built in England in 1907.  After World War I, she was also bought by Union Steamship of New Zealand, and in 1919 was renamed the SS Kai-tan-gata.  That ship was later sold to Hong Kong and in 1937 it was destroyed by a fire in the South China Sea while carrying a load of gasoline.

The third usage of the callsign VLI was for a couple of years during World War 2.  Four shortwave transmitters, each rated at 10 kW, were being used to broadcast the programming of Australia Calling from the AWA station in Pennant Hills, Sydney.  The primary callsigns for each of these transmitters were VK2ME, VLK, VLM and VLN.  But from January 1943 to November 1944, the announced callsign was VLI (for the programming), rather than the individual callsigns for each transmitter.  After that, usage of the station at Pennant Hills for Australia Calling / Radio Australia was dropped in favor of Shepparton, Victoria, and the callsign VLI was deleted.
 
So now we come to the fourth usage of the shortwave callsign VLI, and our topic for today.  In November 1948, a small 2 kW transmitter built by STC, Model No 4SU148, was installed in the ABC-PMG radio facility located near Liverpool, a southern suburb of Sydney.

A large radio facility had been established at that location in 1938 to provide medium wave coverage of Australia’s largest metropolis, Sydney.  At the time, two medium wave stations operated from Liverpool:
2FC, on 610 kHz with 10 kW, and
2BL on 740 kHz with 3 kW.

These days, both of those stations operate with 50 kW; although 2FC was moved to 576 kHz and the callsign replaced with the generic 2RN for Radio National, and 2BL was moved to 702 kHz, now carrying the New South Wales State Program.

Other stations have since joined them at Liverpool, including 2JJ, which is now identified as ‘Triple J’ on FM, and 2PB, which carries parliamentary broadcasts and news/talk programming.

But in late 1948, that small 2 kW shortwave transmitter was installed at the same location to provide coverage of coastal areas more than 200 miles north and south of Sydney, where medium wave coverage was poor at the time.  And for this small transmitter, the now vacant callsign VLI was once again assigned.

The long open-wire twin feeder line from the transmitter was supported on short wooden poles all painted a gleaming white, and the antenna system was a half-wave dipole aimed at 20 and 200 degrees.

The first test broadcasts from VLI were observed in November 1948, though no specific announcements identifying the unit were noted.  At the time, PMG personnel took field strength measurements in the two main target areas, north and south of Sydney, and were happy with the results.

The opening ceremony for VLI took place 77 years ago tomorrow, at 8:30 pm on Wednesday, December 22, 1948, with official speeches and messages of welcome.

Initially, two shortwave channels were used,
VLI2 on 6090 kHz during the early morning and evening hours, and
VLI3 on 9500 kHz during the daytime.

On June 1, 1951, the call signs were adjusted to reflect the MHz band used:
VLI2 on 6090 kHz was amended to VLI6, and
VLI3 is now on 9540 kHz and became VLI9.
However, use of the 9 MHz channel was dropped in October 1952, and the transmitter was then used on the 6 MHz channel, 6090 kHz, full-time.

Programming on VLI was a composite relay of both the national and state stations, 2FC and 2BL, and the little transmitter provided reliable service, with coverage well beyond just the coastal areas, for nearly 35 years.  In many respects, its purpose was very similar to the way the CBC in Canada used small 1 kW shortwave transmitters to relay programming from its major stations in cities like Toronto and Vancouver to audiences in the north.

But then quite suddenly and unexpectedly, at 1402 UTC on October 7, 1983, VLI left the air abruptly.  The official cause was said to be the failure of the main transmitting valve.  Soon afterwards, the transmitter was removed, as were the line feed poles and the antenna system.

Over the years, many QSL cards were issued to confirm reception of VLI, but they were always just whatever regular ABC QSL cards were in use at the time.

The small 2 kW shortwave transmitter, VLI, was never replaced, but instead ABC announced that six new medium stations would be installed in the areas previously covered by the shortwave signal.  However, that expectation was never completely fulfilled either.  Instead, over a period of time, several local FM stations were installed in coastal areas previously served by VLI, but of course a lot of territory, particularly inland, is still without coverage to this day.

Back to you, Jeff.
(Ray Robinson/Wavescan)

UK Propagation Report

 

RSGB

RadCom Assistant Editor | December 24, 2025

We have had some solar ups and downs over the past week. A high-speed stream from a large coronal hole has kept the Kp index high at times, plus the solar flux index has been relatively low due to a lack of sunspots.

The coronal hole has been massive, covering from the Sun’s south pole right up to and past the solar equator.

Nevertheless, there has been DX about, including PZ3OZ in Surinam on 80m FT8 and 40m CW, ZS7ANF in Antarctica on 30m CW, and TG9ADM in Guatemala on 10m CW.

Also spotted have been some of the ‘12 Days of Christmas’ stations in the US, including W2R/5 in Arizona on 15m CW.

Let’s take a look at HF propagation over the next two weeks.

According to NOAA, we may be in for a bumpy ride. The Kp index is predicted to rise to six on 30 December and stay high until early January. Meanwhile, at the same time, the SFI is predicted to rise to 170.

The best time for HF may be after 3 January, when the Kp index is predicted to fall to a more reasonable two to three, while the SFI remains in the 150-160 range.

There should be plenty of activity on HF, with the G-QRP club’s Winter Sports running up until 1 January, and a whole range of contests, from the RSGB’s AFS CW Contest from 1300UTC to 1700UTC on 3 January, to the Marconi Club ARI Loano QSO Party from 0700UTC until 2100UTC, also on 3 January.

Keep an eye on www.contestcalendar.com for updates.

We hope you have a happy New Year and look forward to bringing you more HF propagation news in 2026.

VHF and up propagation news from G3YLA and G4BAO:

The Christmas week saw a brief cold easterly around Christmas Day, then milder air returned around the top of the large area of high pressure.

We go through the next week with the high pressure just to the north or west of Britain and this will bring a more northerly flow across the country and, although initially milder, will become much colder again for the second half of next week.

Since it is primarily a high-pressure week, there’s always a chance of Tropo, but not everywhere. It’s suggested you look for regions of cloud and fog for the best paths since it shows there is moisture under the inversion … a good thing for Tropo.

The solar conditions are likely to offer prospects for aurora and since this period is between two meteor showers with the second one, the Quadrantids, peaking on 4 January at the end of the week.

Finally, a note to follow up on last week’s heads-up for mid-winter Sporadic-E. It’s certainly worth checking for digital modes and quite possibly for SSB/CW on 10m and 6m if there are signs of activity.

For EME operators, Moon declination is rising again and path losses are decreasing as we head towards perigee on 2 January, the point where the Moon is closest to Earth. 144 MHz sky noise remains low until 14-18 January.

And that’s all from the propagation team this week.

https://rsgb.org/main/blog/news/gb2rs/propagation-news/2025/12/24/propagation-news-28-december-2025/

(Mike Terry, UK/BDXC)