Thursday, February 27, 2025

Weekend broadcasts on the que

 

RET World Service (Radio Emma Toc) returns to SW with VOLA programme

Happy to let you know that our first SW programme for quite a few years will be transmitted this Saturday by our good friends at Scandinavian Weekend Radio!

We then will be on again on Sunday via the mighty WRMI Radio Miami International, & then later in March we appear again on Radio Channel 292. 

From April we will be returning to our 'World Service' format, but for March we have a 60 minute music based show 'VOLA' loosely inspired by the original Voice Of Loving Awareness from the North Sea which finally succumbed to the waves 45 years ago in March 1980. 

Click here for times & frequencies- www.volaonair.com - & for a little background to the programme. I hope you can join me & we will be issuing eQSL's as in the past. As always - your emails, comments & involvement are welcome! 

Best wishes from - Jim
(RET World Service on Facebook, 25 Feb)

WRMI - 9395kHz
Sundays throughout March - 19:00 EST / 00:00 UTC (Monday)

Scandinavian Weekend Radio - 6170kHz + 11690kHz + 1602kHz + 94.90MHz
Sat. 1st March - 15:00 UTC / 17:00 local time

Channel 292 - 9670khz
Sunday 9th March - 12:00 UTC / 13:00 CET 
Saturday 22nd March - 10:00 UTC / 11:00 CET 
You can also hear us online on our RET / Radio Emma Toc Mixcloud page - click on the player on website www.volaonair.com
(www.volaonair.com)
(Alan Pennington/BDXC)

Akashvani Jagdalpur mediumwave off the air

 
via Wikimedia

For mediumwave enthusiasts

Regret to inform that the MW tower of Akashvani Jagdalpur in Chhattisgarh state has fallen down on 21 Feb 2025 afternoon in heavy winds. Hence, there is no transmission of 756 kHz in AM mode and 747 kHz in DRM mode with a 100 kW transmitter. According to press reports the tower was 168 meters high and 48 years old. The transmission is now only on 100.1 MHz with 100 watts.
(Jose Jacob, VU2JOS/National Institute of Amateur Radio 
Hyderabad-500082, India)


Additional report:

India: Strong winds felled the mast of Akashvani Jagdalpur (Chhattisgarh) on February 21, 2025. This means that the medium wave broadcasts of the 100 kW transmitter on 756 kHz (AM) and 747 kHz (DRM) are cancelled until further notice. According to press reports, the 168 m mast was 48 years old. This would mean that it was the original mast from which All India Radio Jagdalpur began in 1977. The original 20 kW transmitter (2x10 kW) was replaced in 1997 by an Indian made 100 kW transmitter (BEL HMB-104) and this in 2017 by a DRM-compatible 100 kW transmitter from Nautel (NX100). Currently, there are only FM broadcasts with a very limited range on 100.1 MHz (100 watts). (Jose Jacob DX-India/Dr Hansjörg Biener)
 

Radio Pilipinas monitoring update

 


Rumen Pankov reported (16 Feb) that he had heard Radio Pilipinas at 1730-2030 UTC over the previous three days on 9925, 12120 and 15190 kHz via Tinang in Tagalog (Filipino) / English.
So with an extra hour 1930-2030 to previously scheduled.

I tuned in yesterday (26 Feb) and, yes, the 1730 broadcast is still on air until 2030 UTC. Very good reception on 12120 kHz and 15190 kHz, especially at first (9925 kHz much weaker here).

They still announced just 1730-1930, together with the frequencies, at sign on though. Aanyone noticed if their 0200-0330 transmission has also been lengthened?

73 Alan

(Alan Pennington/BDXC)

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

The Pre-Communist Shortwave Radio Scene in Shanghai

Special thank you to Ray Robinson and Jeff White for sharing the latest script from Wavescan program.

Jeff: In 1987, a movie was released with the title ‘Empire of the Sun’.  You may have seen it.  The movie tells the story of a young British boy who grows up in pre-War Shanghai, and then endures captivity by the Japanese.  Shanghai was a very interesting international city in those days, and Ray Robinson has been looking into the radio broadcasting scene there.  Ray?

Ray: Thanks, Jeff.  During the pre-World War II period, the city of Shanghai in China was indeed an important international city.  These days it is listed as the world's largest city, with a population now in 2025 in excess of 30 million people.  However, the beginnings of Shanghai go back more than a thousand years when it was just a small trading center.

After the Opium War in 1842, Britain was granted trading rights in Shanghai.  Soon afterwards, other European powers and America were also granted the same trading privileges in Shanghai, with each country being given its own territory, a ‘concession’, in an area to the north of the city.  One of the initial purposes of the concessions was to confine foreigners to an area of their own, but under the terms of the Treaty of Nanking, the western citizens in Shanghai were also granted extraterritoriality, basically equivalent to what we recognize today as diplomatic immunity from the jurisdiction of local law.  In 1854, the U.K., France and USA created the Shanghai Municipal Council to serve all their interests, but in 1862 the French concession dropped out of the arrangement.  The following year, in 1863, the British and American concessions merged to form the Shanghai International Settlement, which eventually expanded to contain residential areas for England, Germany, Italy, America and Japan.

Shanghai thus truly became an international city, and by the 1930’s, 14 foreign powers had entered into treaty relations with China, and their nationals also became part of the administration of the settlement – all except the French, who continued to remain separate.  In 1925, the area occupied by the International Settlement was just under nine square miles, with over 1 million people living there.

In the movie Jeff mentioned, ‘Empire of the Sun’, it showed that in parts of the British residential area, the streets and housing looked very similar to southern England, and if you didn’t know you were in China, you could be forgiven for thinking you were in an upscale neighborhood of Surrey or Buckinghamshire, except that, as well as the upper middle class people who lived there, the houses had Chinese servants inside.


When radio stations were first established in Shanghai, each of the foreign concessions within the Shanghai International Settlement established its own station, though mostly with Chinese callsigns.  Many of these stations were heard throughout the world on shortwave.

A few struggling experimental stations with irregular callsigns were launched on medium wave by commercial enterprises in the Chinese area of Shanghai in the mid-1920’s, but most of them failed soon afterwards.  More substantial medium wave stations began to appear on the radio dial in the early 1930’s, and these were all licensed with callsigns in the X series.

The first shortwave station in Shanghai was launched in 1931 on exactly 5000 kHz and given the regular callsign XCTE.  But, like the Chinese medium wave stations, this shortwave station also disappeared soon afterwards.

Japanese forces first invaded China and occupied Shanghai in 1937 – widely considered to be the start of the Second World War in Asia.  However, each of the foreign concessions in Shanghai was permitted to retain its area of influence and to continue its regular activities, at least for a while.  American Marines prevented Japanese patrols from entering the International Settlement in 1938, but early that year, the Japanese occupation forces did take over a medium wave station previously owned by a Japanese merchant in Shanghai.  This was station XQHA, with 250 watts on 580 kHz.


During the Pacific War, there were five different and important international shortwave stations located in Shanghai, all owned and operated by different nations.  
Early in 1939, station XMHA was installed in the American concession in Shanghai with its identification announcement as “The Call of the Orient.”  Then, early in 1942, this station was taken over by the Japanese, although it retained the same call sign and identification announcements, XMHA and “The Call of the Orient.”  This station was monitored frequently by Arthur Cushen in New Zealand for news and information of interest to the South Pacific.

Early in 1940, a station with the call sign XGRS was installed in the German concession in Shanghai.  It is presumed that XGRS stood for “German Radio Station.” Programming from this station was violently anti-British, and it carried significant news and information from both Germany and Japan.

At the same time as the Germans were installing XGRS in 1940, the Italians also erected a station in their concession with the call sign XIRS; and likewise, it is presumed that XIRS stood for “Italian Radio Station.”

In their separate concession in the mid-1930’s, the French erected a medium wave station (some years before the hostilities broke out in Europe), and this station identified with a French call sign, FFZ, rather than a Chinese call sign.  Then, early in 1940, they added a 400 watt shortwave unit.  When the Nazi occupation of France took place in June 1940, this station became the Asian voice of the Vichy government.

Again as depicted in the movie ‘Empire of the Sun’, the Shanghai International Settlement came to an abrupt end in December 1941 when Japanese troops stormed in immediately following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

For a period of a year or so, a clandestine shortwave station in Shanghai, presumed to be operated by the Japanese, purported to be located “somewhere in India.”  This station used the on-air identifications of “The Voice of Free India” and “The Voice of Indian Independence,” and it was first noted in New Zealand in March 1942.  The station was heard frequently with two channels in parallel.  Towards the end of the same year, programming was revamped and the station then identified as “The Voice of the Indian Independence League.”  With India under British rule at the time, it is very likely the purpose of the station was to foment unrest in India and draw British forces away from their attacks on the Japanese in Burma, Malaya and elsewhere.

When peace was declared in Europe, in May 1945, Japan took over the German station in Shanghai and gave it a new call sign, XGOO.  When the war in the Pacific ended in August 1945, the station went silent, until the Chinese took control of it in the November, and again gave it a new call sign, this time XORA.  And, this 5 kW crystal-controlled transmitter was the only shortwave station that remained on the air in Shanghai after the war, up until the Communist Revolution in 1949.

Thus for at least half a dozen decisive years around the middle of the last century, many of the major powers involved in the conflict in Europe and Asia were represented on the shortwave scene in Shanghai.

Back to you, Jeff.
(Wavescan)


Monday, February 24, 2025

Weekly Propagation Forecast Bulletins

 Product: Weekly Highlights and Forecasts
:Issued: 2025 Feb 24 0214 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 17 - 23 February 2025



Solar activity was at low levels on 18-20 and 22 Feb, moderate levels on 17 and 21 Feb, and reached high levels on 23 Feb. In total, seven M-class flares (R1-Minor) were observed, ranging from M1.0 to M4.9, and one X-class (R3-Strong) flare. Contributing regions were 3992 (S06, L=246, class/area Eai/090 on 17 Feb), 3998 (S14, L=114, class/area Ekc/290 on 23 Feb), 4000 (N17, L=105, class/area Dai/180 on 22 Feb), and 4001 (N24, L=176, class/area Dai/050 on 23 Feb). The sole X flare was an X2.0 from Region 4001 at 23/1927 UTC. 

No proton events were observed at geosynchronous orbit.

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit reached high levels on 17-18 Feb due to persistent negative polarity CH influence, and was at normal to moderate levels on 19-23 Feb. 

Geomagnetic field activity reached G1 (Minor) storm levels on 18-19 Feb, and saw an isolated active period on 20 Feb, due to persistent negative polarity CH influence. Conditions were at quiet to unsettled levels 21-23 Feb as CH effects dissipated. 

Forecast of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 24 February - 22 March 2025

Solar activity is expected to range from low to moderate levels throughout the period. R1-R2 (Minor-Moderate) activity is possible at different points throughout the period as active regions grow, evolve, return from the far-side of the Sun. There is a slight chance for R3 or greater events if any of the active regions develop additional complex magnetic structures. 

There is a slight chance for S1 (Minor) or greater proton events, pending the development and activity of the active regions. 

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit is expected to be at normal to moderate levels from 24 Feb-09 Mar and 19-22 Mar. From 10-18 Mar, high levels are likely as recurrent negative polarity coronal holes are expected to move into geoeffective positions. 

Geomagnetic field activity is expected to be at quiet to unsettled levels on 24 Feb-06 Mar with periodic, weak CH influences. Unsettled to active levels, with isolated G1 (Minor) storming conditions are likely from 07-18 Mar as recurrent negative polarity CHs are expected to be in a geoeffective position. A return to mostly quiet conditions is expected on 19-22 Mar as the CHs move out of a favorable position. 

:Product: 27-day Space Weather Outlook Table 27DO.txt
:Issued: 2025 Feb 24 0214 UTC
# Prepared by the US Dept. of Commerce, NOAA, Space Weather Prediction Center
# Product description and SWPC web contact www.swpc.noaa.gov/content/subscription-services
#
#      27-day Space Weather Outlook Table
#                Issued 2025-02-24
#
#   UTC      Radio Flux   Planetary   Largest
#  Date       10.7 cm      A Index    Kp Index
2025 Feb 24     210           8          3
2025 Feb 25     210           8          3
2025 Feb 26     210           6          2
2025 Feb 27     200          10          3
2025 Feb 28     195          12          4
2025 Mar 01     195          10          3
2025 Mar 02     190           8          3
2025 Mar 03     190           5          2
2025 Mar 04     190           5          2
2025 Mar 05     190           5          2
2025 Mar 06     185           5          2
2025 Mar 07     180          10          3
2025 Mar 08     170          10          3
2025 Mar 09     160          25          5
2025 Mar 10     155          15          3
2025 Mar 11     160          15          3
2025 Mar 12     170          25          5
2025 Mar 13     180          30          5
2025 Mar 14     185          30          5
2025 Mar 15     185          20          4
2025 Mar 16     185          18          4
2025 Mar 17     180          15          3
2025 Mar 18     180          20          4
2025 Mar 19     185           8          3
2025 Mar 20     190           5          2
2025 Mar 21     195           5          2
2025 Mar 22     200           5          2
(NOAA)

Sunday, February 23, 2025

NHK Japan is slated to end QSLing in March 2025

 
NHK Japan QSL featuring Mt Fiji

NHK World-Japan, has been issuing colorful verification cards to listeners for decades. The station's recent announcement on the future of QSLing announced,

"Please be advised that we have decided to stop issuing the Verification Cards. The cards will be sent for confirmation on broadcasts up to March 20, 2025.

Thank you for your understanding and continued support. You can continue to submit your comments and requests to English language services through our website at: https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/
Your feedback will be used to improve our broadcasts and services."

NHK Japan QSL featuring rice fields 



Saturday, February 22, 2025

WRMI technical update

 

 

 

Important Notice: 

On Thursday, February 20, Florida Power and Light Company will be connecting new transformers for WRMI.  This is the end of a months-long process to replace the station's original transformers, which date from the late 1970's. 

The new transformers have been installed, and this should provide more reliable electrical power and fewer power outages.  However, on February 20 FP&L will have to remove the old transformers using a crane, and then connect the new transformers to us. 

This is a lengthy process requiring a lot of equipment and personnel, so they told us to expect to be without power from approximately 1300-2200 UTC.  During this time we will be off the air on all frequencies, except possibly 7730 kHz and our 9955 kHz live stream (www.wrmi.net). 

We will return to the air on all frequencies as soon as the work is finished.  Thanks for your understanding.

(WRMI FB)

 

Friday, February 21, 2025

Shortwave Radiogram, Program 390

 

Hello friends,

Here in northern Virginia, we have just endured two days of high temperatures below freezing. This is unusual for us, but typical for many of you living farther north. Tomorrow, our typical winter weather, reaching above freezing during the day, returns. And by Sunday, hints of spring.

Producing this week's Shortwave Radiogram has been much easier than last week. I am getting more used to the software that runs under Windows 11. The programs that I use primarily are Fldigi (of course), Audacity, UltraEdit, MS Paint, and Snipping Tool. 

I still have to find solutions for a few quirks in Windows 11. Firefox windows and even instances of Fldigi will disappear, not to be found in the Task Bar or anywhere else. I know the Firefox windows are running because if they have audio (eg a KiwiSDR), I can hear it. I can access some of the hidden Firefox pages by using Firefox History. Frequent trips to Task Manager are required to clean up all those hidden but running apps and pages. 

And Audacity will claim that there is insufficient memory to paste a small segment of audio. So I have to save the Audacity file to a wav file and build on to that.  Sorry to bore you with these details!

Please note that the Saturday 2300-2330 UTC transmission is now (or at least least week was) on three frequencies: 7570, 7780 and 9455 kHz, all from WRMI Florida.  The 9455 transmitter seems especially to offer DX opportunities.

A video of last week's Shortwave Radiogram (program 390) is provided by Scott in Ontario (Wednesday 1330 UTC). Mark maintains the audio archive in the UK.  @CadiereGerald contributes this IQ audio file of the Friday 0530 UTC show. The analysis is provided by Roger in Germany.

Here is the lineup for Shortwave Radiogram, program 390, 21-26 February 2025, in MFSK modes as noted:

 1:44  MFSK32: Program preview
 2:55  MFSK32: Why we think planet Theia existed
 6:31  MFSK64: Test of new geothermal technology in Germany*
12:56  MFSK64: This week's images*
28:23  MFSK32: Closing announcements

* with image(s)

Please send reception reports to radiogram@verizon.net


Twitter: @SWRadiogram or https://twitter.com/swradiogram 

(visit during the weekend to see listeners’ results)



THE SHORTWAVE RADIOGRAM TRANSMISSION SCHEDULE IS IN THE IMAGE IMMEDIATELY BELOW. IF THE IMAGE DOES NOT DISPLAY FULL WIDTH, CLICK ON IT. 

Other Shortwave broadcast programs that include digital text and images include The Mighty KBC, Pop Shop Radio and Radio North Europe International (RNEI). Links to these fine broadcasts, with schedules, are posted here.
 
Thanks for your reception reports!

Kim

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

U.K. Propagation Update, February 21

 

RSGB
GB2RS News Team
February 21, 2025

It seems we were a little over-ambitious in suggesting that last week would be better for HF propagation. It looked like we would avoid coronal mass ejections and see the Kp index fall to lower levels.

Unfortunately, the Sun had other ideas and a fast-moving solar stream, often moving faster than 500 km/s, had a south-pointing Bz, which coupled more easily with Earth and sent the Kp index up to four or more.

So even by Wednesday 19 February the Kp index was hitting five.

But it seems that the geomagnetic disturbance merely lowered the MUF from around 40-45MHz to 31-32MHz, so it barely affected HF propagation.

At the time of writing there had only been one M-class solar flare in the past five days, but more than 50 minor C-class events. There were no Earth-directed CMEs.

Nevertheless, there was DX to be had with the standout stations being the V73WW DXpedition to Majuro Atoll on the Marshall Islands, TI1RRC Costa Rica, and 5N9DTG in Nigeria. Upcoming DX next week includes OX3LX (Greenland), Dave G4BUO as 5W0UO (Samoa), TO3Z (Guadeloupe), 4S7SPG (Sri
Lanka) and FS/VA3QSL (St Martin).

Next week, NOAA predicts that the week commencing the 23 February could see the solar flux index starting at 170, but then rising to 195-200 as the week progresses. Geomagnetic conditions are predicted to start quietly, with a Kp index of two, but then become unsettled by the 27 to
29 February, with a maximum predicted Kp index of five.

If this scenario does pan out then we may expect the best HF conditions to occur at the beginning of next week, from the 23 to 26 February.

As always, keep an eye on solarham.com for day-to-day solar news, and perhaps monitor PSKreporter, the Reverse Beacon Network and DX Clusters for digital, CW and SSB HF propagation updates.

VHF and up :

The current spell of unsettled weather seems likely to continue through to the end of next week. There will also be significant windy weather at times. It is therefore not a particularly good period for Tropo, or big antennas for that matter.

This leaves us with rain scatter on the GHz bands and some of these scattering regions will be large areas affecting the whole of the country as active weather fronts pass by, rather than more isolated and harder-to-follow showers which often provide our rain scatter.

Meteor scatter is still within its quieter period with no major showers and better chances coming from random meteor activity, which tends to peak in the hours before dawn.

Recent solar activity has provided some weak auroral conditions on many days.  As usual, check for high values of the Kp index as a good indicator, or even listen for a watery tone on the LF bands. Ultimately you will need to see the Kp index going to at least five to make it worth checking for auroral signals on VHF.

We are still in the dormant period for Sporadic-E propagation, which is a shame in view of the powerful jet streams likely during this stormy weather. These would produce good Es prospects in the main summer season, but weaker Es at low VHF are still a possibility despite being out of season.

Moon declination is at minimum today, Sunday 23 February, and path losses are decreasing as the Moon moves closer to Earth as it heads to perigee on Saturday 1 March. 144MHz sky noise goes high this weekend, beginning Saturday 22 February.

(Mike Terry, UK/BDXC)

Encore classical music from Radio Tumbril

 
Dear Listener,
Regular Broadcast times of Encore By WRMI and Channel 292 are:
02:00 - 03:00 UTC Friday 5850 kHz WRMI to US
20:00 - 21:00 UTC Friday 15770 kHz WRMI to Europe
11:00 - 12:00 UTC Saturday 9670 kHz Channel 292 to Europe
01:00 - 02:00 UTC Sunday 5850 kHz WRMI to US and Canada
18:00 - 19:00 UTC Sunday 3955 kHz Channel 292 to Europe
03:00 - 04:00 UTC Monday 5950 kHz WRMI to the US and Canada
13:00 - 14:00 UTC Tuesday 15770 kHz WRMI to Europe, east coast of US and Iceland. (Sometimes RTTY on the lower sideband. Suggest notch out or use USB.)

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

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

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

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

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

THIS FORTNIGHT'S PROGRAMME - First broadcast this FRIDAY 21st February by WRMI at 0200 UTC on 5850, and 2000 UTC on 15770 and then Channel 292 on SATURDAY 22nd February at 11:00 UTC on 9670 kHz:
Starts with part of a trumpet concerto by Johann Hummel, some of Mendelssohn's String Octet, and a wind band piece from contemporary US composer David Holsinger.
After that - The Woman with the Alabaster Box, a piece for voices by Arvo Pärt, and the chamber piece, Siegfried Idyll by Richard Wagner.
The programme ends with part of La Mer by Debussy.

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

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

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Radio Öömrang slated for February 21 broadcast

 


Radio Öömrang in 2025

Every year on February 21, since 2006, Amrum amateur radio operator Arjan Koelzow, has aired an annual broadcast of Radio Öömrang (Radio Amrum) from the North Frisian Island on the German North Sea coast. The special broadcast is aired on the island’s holiday of Bikebrånen and targeted to the descendants of North Frisian immigrants in North America.

Programming is in the local Frisian dialect, Standard German, and English, and tentatively scheduled in 2025 on 15215 (500 kW) at 1600-1700 UTC, relayed from Issoudun, Franc,  brokered by Media Broadcast in Cologne, Germany, and confirmed from sources. 

Radio Öömrang does not verify reception reports, but you can direct programming details to qsl@shortwave@media-broadcast.com or to: Media Broadcast GmbH, Order Management & Backoffice, Erna-Scheffler, Strasse 1, 51103 Cologne, Germany. 

For a sampling of archived audio and video airchecks, consult the Shortwave Central YouTube channel. 
(Gayle Van Horn/TSM-Feb. 2025)

YouTube videos at Shortwave Central YouTube channel: