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#1
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It's coming in fairly well on the East Coast at 0309 utc.
Steve |
#2
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wrote:
It's coming in fairly well on the East Coast at 0309 utc. Steve Heard in California with S8 signal level from 0350 to 0356 sign off. African music and a monologue by a man with an African accent, the content of which I couldn't make out. Passport says that this signal is meant for East Africa from Meyerton, South Africa, in English. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#3
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#4
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Am listening to it again tonight. Right now (0343 utc) they're playing
that old song "Midnight Train to Georgia" by Gladys Knight. |
#5
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![]() starman wrote: clvrmnky wrote: On 09/03/2005 10:10 PM, wrote: The best reception for me was more like 1400 hours, or so. I don't what it is, but my daytime reception is fantastic lately. -- cm The earth happens to be (a coincidence) closest to the sun during winter in the northern hemisphere. This means the ionosphere receives the most radiation during daytime which makes it support propagation better, especially the higher frequencies. Well yes, but then generally the lower frequencies suffer. Unfortunately, during the summer when the lower frequencies actually propagate a bit better we are then plagued by thunderstorm static. Can't win! dxAce Michigan USA |
#6
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On 10/03/2005 8:33 PM, starman wrote:
clvrmnky wrote: On 09/03/2005 10:10 PM, wrote: The best reception for me was more like 1400 hours, or so. I don't what it is, but my daytime reception is fantastic lately. -- cm The earth happens to be (a coincidence) closest to the sun during winter in the northern hemisphere. This means the ionosphere receives the most radiation during daytime which makes it support propagation better, especially the higher frequencies. The opposite happens in the northern summer when the earth is farthest from the sun. This is why summer propagation in the north is not so good in the daytime. True, but I was referring to the lower frequencies (e.g., the 7390 kHz that is the subject of the OP) which typically suffer during daytime hours. Generally, I'm finding even lower, directed at West Africa transmissions are coming in quite strongly for me in Eastern North America. When first got my radio I just got noise around 30M during the day, or maybe just local Hams on SSB. I have been experimenting with different antennas, so maybe it's been this way all winter, and one of my experiments is working better for me. |
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