Showing posts with label longwave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label longwave. Show all posts

Friday, January 05, 2024

A closer look at longwave radio

 


2024 looks to be a critical year for longwave broadcasting in the UK. In the year we celebrate 90 years of transmissions from Droitwich, the BBC has announced its intention to shut this historic transmitter down. The campaign to keep Longwave is still very young and consists essentially of the 13 people on this mailing list, but it is encouraging to see nearly 2500 people already having signed our petition. Please continue to refer anyone who might be interested in signing to www.keeplongwave.co.uk

I'm getting in touch now to let you know our current plan of action:
Plan A: Keep BBC Radio 4 Longwave
We have already contacted the BBC on this issue multiple times and contributed to the Radio 4 Feedback program. Some of those contacted have been sympathetic, but the general view of the BBC is that nobody listens to LW anymore and maintaining the transmitter is a waste of money. They have not provided any evidence for this, and have not been able to produce any listening figures for longwave. Please contact the BBC if you haven't already, to complain about the planned demise of Longwave, and help to prove them wrong! You can contact them quickly and easily here.
It has been heartening to receive messages from listeners in Europe, and as far away as Newfoundland, and it is becoming increasingly clear that the Droitwich transmitter is one of the most important in the world, with a large international audience. This is a point that has not been emphasised to the BBC, and will therefore guide our next stage of campaigning. I am going to contact my MP specifically on the issue of listeners abroad, and suggest to him that it might be worth approaching the Foreign Office to discuss the impact of losing the voice of the BBC in Europe. He is very sympathetic to our cause, and the Droitwich transmitter is inside his constituency.

Plan B: Amateur Longwave
Our Plan B will come into play if it becomes impossible to persuade the BBC and government to retain longwave transmissions. The plan would be to obtain an Ofcom license to broadcast on longwave from an alternative site using an underground aerial, since the costs of maintaining the Droitwich transmitter would be too high. This would keep longwave broadcasting, but we would lose our iconic transmitter, and listeners abroad would no longer be served. Were we forced to choose this option, however, we would need to start a fundraising campaign to set up and maintain transmissions?
If you have any other ideas or suggestions, please do let the group know. Thank you to everyone who has already contributed your comments and suggestions, and for sharing the petition.
Let us enter 2024 with a degree of optimism, even in the midst such troubled times worldwide.

With all best wishes,

Tobias
Dr Tobias Thornes
Campaign to Keep Longwave
tobiastjwt@googlemail.com
(Mike terry/BDXC)
(photo/Wikpedia)

Thursday, August 10, 2023

What's happening with longwave ?


BBC Feedback @BBCR4Feedback on Twitter today:

"Coming up on #BBCR4Feedback - what's happening with longwave? While programs like the Shipping Forecast will be broadcast on FM and 
@BBCSounds after longwave closes in 2024, we've been hearing from the people mourning the end of the trusty transmissions."

Presumably refers to the next edition of Feedback broadcast on Radio 4 at 16.30 BST Friday 11 August, repeated at 20.00 BST Sunday 13 August. Also here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001pfps
(BDXC)

Tuesday, July 04, 2023

Monitoring Mongolia's longwave frequencies

 


July 4, 2023

I am currently watching the Novokuzhnetsk SDR with the intention of observing the Mongolian LW frequencies.

227 came on with a weak signal at 22:06 UTC before falling away two minutes later.

A short time later at 22:10, one or more of the 209 transmitters powered up. This is still visible at 22:16.

The main transmitter on 164 hasn’t shown up at all. From monitoring this particular SDR on a nightly basis for the past two weeks, the 164 seems to suffer from false-starts on power-up, as in it seems to take more than one attempt to get it online as the carrier appears and disappears several times before becoming steady.

So far I have not heard the interval music to signify the start of the day’s broadcasting. This is usually audible at around 22:06 UTC.

MNB has seen my message enquiring about the current status of the LW transmitters but for whatever reason has not replied as of yet.

I will keep observing for the next hour or so and inform you of any updates,
(Conor Burns (2023-07-03)
(Ydun's MW) 
(Mike Terry/BDXC)

Friday, June 09, 2023

QSLing Denmark's longwave station

 


As you may know, Denmark's Kalundborg 243 kHz will close down by the end of this year.

If you listen to the station and write a reception report, you still have the possibility to get a QSL.

Jens Christian Seeberg, a former engineer at the station, has offered to verify your reports. Please be patient as Jens Christian does this on a voluntary basis and also has other things to fill his days with. 
Reports can be sent to jseeberg@post3.tele.dk
Ydun Ritz (2023-06-09)

Station website:

Danish schedule
All times UTC
0445-0500
0500-0505
0700-0800
0800-0805
1045-1100
1100-1145

Friday, March 31, 2023

RTÉ Radio 1 to close longwave services on 14 April

 


RTÉ Radio 1 will cease broadcasting on Long Wave 252 from Friday 14th April 2023.

The station continues to broadcast on FM, on Saorview and Saorsat, along with RTÉ Radio Player and Irish Radioplayer apps.

In the UK, Radio 1 will still be available on Freesat, Sky, and Virgin Media, along with online streaming services such as smart speakers.

The phasing out and closure of the Long Wave service was one of the recommendations of the Future of Media Commission Report which was published by the Government in July 2022. This was part of a wider recommendation aimed at ensuring RTÉ could invest available resources in innovation and digital service. 


Monday, February 27, 2023

RUV Iceland longwave announces upcoming closure

 
The following is from Tom Kamp on the A-DX list (translated from German by TR using Google):

I'm shocked: "RUV 207 kHz is currently broadcasting a loop about the termination of transmissions on this frequency," writes Guido Schotmans in the Benelux DX Club Facebook group. And refers to the following report:


It reads that at 3:11 p.m. today, the RÚV long-wave transmitter on Eidar ended its mission. Now only the message is sent there that the RÚV broadcast on this frequency has been switched off. On Wednesday, the long-wave mast is scheduled to fall on Eidar, the country's third-tallest structure, 218 meters high.

For the time being, it will continue to be broadcast on long wave from Gufuskálar, but VHF will also completely take over the role of security broadcasting there.

RÚV's announcement states that the equipment required to maintain existing masts is very expensive and radios that receive LW are rare.

The change is made in cooperation with the rescue services and civil protection. The development of the VHF transmitter chain at less frequented locations started in 2017 and is progressing well. Transmitters were placed in the highlands, as well as large transmitters in key locations for seafarers. Backup power systems reduce the risk of radio interruptions due to weather and power outages. Over the next two years, the VHF system will be further focused on the longwave transmitter service area in Gufuskálar, which is expected to be decommissioned next year.
(posted by Tom Kamp to A-DX list, 27 February 2023)

Tom later added: VHF certainly means VHF marine radio here.
(BDXC)

Tuesday, March 03, 2020

The Grand Wireless Station at Monte Grande


Another great radio nostalgia story from Wavescan. Thanks to AWR.

      Construction work on the world’s largest wireless station, as it was touted at the time, began a little over one hundred years ago in the year 1918.  However, due to the Great War and its aftermath  over in continental Europe, progress on the work was quite slow.  Initially, the Marconi company in England began the preparatory work, but due to the total size of the completed project, a consortium group including other wireless manufacturing companies was formed.

A combined property of 1200 acres located on the south side of Buenos Aries and 25 miles from the city center was obtained as the location for the Monte Grande longwave wireless station.  Two powerful alternators at 400 kW each were installed, and electricity with 800 kW at 12,500 volts, was fed into the station from the city generating plant. 

The two alternators were capable of transmissions in the longwave spectrum, running from around 18 kHz up to about 72 kHz.  In regular usage, one transmitting alternator was on the air while the other was maintained in standby mode.

The massive antenna system in total was nearly two miles long, and it was formed in the shape of the English capital letter T.  It was supported on ten towers in pairs each 680 ft tall and spaced at nearly a quarter mile apart.  These towers were imported from CTSF in France and from Telefunken in Germany.

The 16 wire aerial system was supported at 200 places by cross wires incorporating the use of a thousand insulators.  The steel cables that supported the aerial wires were installed with insulated rollers, and the aerial wires were weighted at each end with weights at 88 pounds each, thus allowing for compensation in wire lengths due to variations in the local temperature.  There was a complicated double counterpoise system with a buried network of wires, as well as another system of wires, 30 ft above ground level.

The Monte Grande Wireless Station was officially opened in a formal ceremony on Thursday January 24, 1924, in the presence of the president of Argentina, Senor Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear.  Next day, this new and grand wireless station, with the international call letters LPZ, began Morse Code communication with similarly high powered longwave wireless stations in London, Paris, Berlin and New York.

During the early 1920's, the communication scene throughout the world was in transition from wireless to radio, and thus, in 1925, just one year after the opening of the Monte Grande wireless station, two American made RCA shortwave transmitters rated at 20 kW each were installed at the same location.  In this way, voice communication began to take over from communication by Morse Code.

Give six more years (1931), and the two hefty wireless alternators were decommissioned and a bevy of additional shortwave transmitters was installed.  At the beginning of the European War in 1939, several shortwave transmitters were in use at Transradio Monte Grande, ranging in power from 1 kW to 125 kW.   An additional 100 kW transmitter was installed in November of that same year (1939).

Beginning in the mid 1930s, the Monte Grande radio station was often noted in the United States and elsewhere with the broadcast of radio programming.  The transmitters generally in use for the relay of programming from local mediumwave stations were rated at 10 kW and 20 kW.

       Sometimes a shortwave transmitter was in use as a program link from a Buenos Aires mediumwave station to an upcountry mediumwave station, and on other occasions the purpose was for the relay of mediumwave programming for network rebroadcast in the United States as well as for direct reception worldwide. 

      Radio station LSX at Monte Grande was often heard with a program broadcast at 10 kW on 10350 kHz.  This station was recognized and appreciated internationally as a reliable verifier of listener reception reports. In 1970, the official telecommunication concession ended and the Grand Wireless station LPZ-LSX at Monte Grande was closed, and abandoned.  Several other shortwave stations in Argentina took over the various services previously on the air at Monte Grande.

In 2011, the Monte Grande location was declared a Nature Reserve as Laguna de Rocha (Rocky Lagoon), and much of the abandoned radio structure is still in place.  The front of the huge main building still stands intact, though a picture at the back of the building shows nothing but wrecked debris.  Some antenna towers are also still standing.

Two additional radio buildings on the same site are also abandoned, though they are still in good condition.  These two structures were the transmitter buildings for two mediumwave stations, Radio Splendid LR4 currently with 25 kW on 990 kHz, and Radio Excelsior LR5 with likewise currently 60 kW on 910 kHz.

Transradio Receiving Stations
The first receiver station for Transradio Monte Grande in Argentina was located at the outer suburban Villa Elisa, some 20 miles from downtown Buenos Aires, and 25 miles from the transmitter station.  Two flat top multi-wire aerial systems were installed, thus ensuring reception from both Europe and the United States. 

A bank of electrically operated receivers was installed in a specially constructed building.  It was back in 1924 that this receiver station was taken into service, along with the transmitter facility at Monte Grande.  These days, this Transradio property is serving the local community as an Ecological Reserve, a Nature Park.

During the year 1935, a replacement receiver station was installed on a property at suburban San Martin known as the La Dora Farm.  This receiver station was closed in 1970, along with the Monte Grande transmitter site, and since then this property has also been taken over as an Ecological Reserve.

According to information in print in Argentina, all three Transradio properties (transmitter site at Monte Grande, early receiver site at Villa Elisa, subsequent receiver site at San Martin); all, strangely enough, have been taken over by the local communities for public use as Nature Parks.
(AWR-Wavescan/NWS 575-01  Mar 2020)

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

SAQ special programming on UN-Day, October 24

SAQ Grimeton
Join us in celebrating UN Day on October 24 at the World Heritage Grimeton!

This year, hundred years have passed since equal voting rights for men and women were introduced in Sweden. It is a human right that everyone can make their voices heard in fundamental issues and is prerequisite for creating a democratic and peaceful society. On this occasion, we want to raise the power of women in peace issues. Therefore the organization Acting 4 Change, that works with the project wome's empowerment in Casamance in Senegal, is invited to talk about women’s  participation in the peace process from a Senegalese perspective.

During the evening, a peace message is sent with the old long-wave transmitter SAQ and finally we listen to Senegalese rhythms performed by Kilimandiarou. The event is held in the radio station building with free admission. Arrive at the event on time, as there is a limited number of seats.

Program 6 pm – 8 pm
Welcome – CEO Grimeton World Heritage, Camilla Lugnet
Women’s Participation in the Peace Process – Women’s Empowerment in Casamance – President Acting 4 Change, Linda Ohlsson*
The long wave transmitter is started – President Alexander GVV, Jan Steinbach
Peace message sent ** (17.00 UTC)             
Concert with Kilimandiarou Welcome to an evening of signs of community and peace!

* More info about Acting for Change can be found here www.actingforchange.org
The arrangement is made possible with the help of project funds from Varberg Municipality.
More information about the transmission
The transmission is on 17,2 kHz CW.
Startup of the transmitter around 16.30 UTC
Transmission of a message at 17.00 UTC
You can also watch a live video stream of the transmission on www.alexander.n.se.
No QSL-cards will be given this time and no List of Reports will be constructed but we accept shorter Listeners Report to e-mail info@alexander.n.se.
*The world heritage site Grimeton is a living cultural heritage. All transmissions with the long-wave transmitter SAQ are therefore preliminary and may be cancelled with short notice.
The Alexander Association
Grimeton SAQ Veteran Radio Friends
www.alexander.n.se

Friday, September 06, 2019

RTÉ begins maintenance service

Fine Gael
By Hildegarde Naughton TD
4th September 2019 

Works have begun today to help ensure the continuance of RTÉ’s longwave radio service for a minimum of two years, a Fine Gael TD has said.

Deputy Hildegarde Naughton, Chair of the Oireachtas Communications Committee, said: “I have received confirmation from the national broadcaster that works have begun today on elements of the transmission equipment which will help ensure the continuance of the longwave service for a minimum of a further two years.

“The maintenance of long wave radio for the Irish diaspora has been a significant concern to the Committee.

“Earlier this year, RTÉ committed to maintaining the service following engagement with the Committee and I am pleased that listeners abroad can now be assured that service will continue for a minimum of two years.”

Deputy Naughton continued: “While other long term alternative solutions continue to be explored, RTÉ has to undertake significant remedial works on elements of the transmission equipment, mainly the antenna/mast.

“Given the height of the mast this work has to happen now in advance of the winter. To facilitate this essential maintenance, and to ensure the safety of those undertaking the work, service was suspended for a time today and will be suspended again tomorrow, Thursday, from 9.30am until 4.30pm.

“This initial outage is to facilitate the preparatory work for a subsequent, more extensive and essential body of work to maintain this service.

“This larger body of maintenance work will be carried out between Tuesday 10th September and Thursday 17th October.“During both of these times, RTÉ Radio 1 will not be available via LW, however listeners will be advised of the various alternatives available such as listening via apps and television while the usual service is off air.”

Deputy Naughton concluded: “I welcome the efforts being made to continue this service, which serves as an invaluable link between the diaspora and home.

“However I intend to work with the committee to explore other longer term alternative solutions to ensure this service continues in the long term.

https://www.finegael.ie/works-to-maintain-longwave-radio-service-begin-today-naughton/
(BDXC)