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In article ,
running dogg wrote: I noticed that Radio Havana's 6000 freq was subject to loud pops and abrupt changes in signal level tonight around 0400. 9820 was not affected, but was too weak to listen to. The loud popping followed by rapid oscillation in signal level made Cuba impossible to listen to. Did anybody else notice this? Could this have been thunderstorms in the northeast? How about thunderstorms or power supply problems at the transmitter site? Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
#3
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Telamon wrote:
In article , (Mark Zenier) wrote: In article , running dogg wrote: I noticed that Radio Havana's 6000 freq was subject to loud pops and abrupt changes in signal level tonight around 0400. 9820 was not affected, but was too weak to listen to. The loud popping followed by rapid oscillation in signal level made Cuba impossible to listen to. Did anybody else notice this? Could this have been thunderstorms in the northeast? How about thunderstorms or power supply problems at the transmitter site? Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) They also have audio problems. They are at times under-modulated, over modulated and splattering adjacent frequencies, missing the high end audio or just plain distorted. The defective audio changes with program content and the transmitter being used so appears to be related to both. I bet that their equipment is the SAME STUFF that was installed by the USSR in the early 60s when Cuba first went communist. It is old, and it is likely close to failing. The former Soviet Bloc is full of old, half-dead former propaganda blowtorches that now broadcast various paid programming and Russian domestic stuff at half the original power. Considering Cuba's dire circumstances, such as concrete buildings that are held up solely by wood beam props, it wouldn't surprise me if the Cubans were cannibalizing dead tx's to keep the living ones going, like they do in Laos. |
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