IV-EDXCV-2014: Comenzó la cuenta regresiva...!!!

IV-EDXCV-2014: Comenzó la cuenta regresiva...!!!
Diseño del Afiche: Yimber Gaviria, Cali, Colombia.

martes, 6 de noviembre de 2012

DIEXISTAS ACTIVOS...y sus informaciones DX´s


* ZAMBIA. 13590, Nov 6 at 0637, ``Clap Yo Hands``, good signal with gospel rock, then hyper DJ, texting number, Bible verse set to rap. Typical format of 1Africa, CVC. It`s virtually the OSOB, with only one very weak signal upward on this band. There have been reports that CVC would close down its SW service to Africa completely, but not yet: 

``The sad news came from one RADIO AFRICA - CVC INTERNATIONAL: CVC Media is a new season. We stop all our HF broadcasts to promote the new platform. Due to changes in the use of media in Africa, would require more space for the rapidly growing digital broadcasts (Shukhrat Rakhmatullaev, open_dx via midxb Oct 23 via BCDX 27 Oct via DXLD)

``B-12 of CVC International, 1 Africa via LUS=Lusaka:
English to West Africa and Nigeria
0600-2200 on 13590 LUS 100 kW / 315 deg
(DX Re Mix News, Bulgaria, 01 November via DXLD)``

So 13590 is their only frequency remaining. Much harder to hear here in the daytime: Nov 6 at 1453, very poor carrier vs much stronger RTTY circa 13592 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGE`

Robert Wilkner6 de noviembre de 2012 19:42

4810t. Peru, Radio Logos 2340 with music. No ID but format consistent with previous broadcasts

To: qsl@rfa.org
> Subject: RFA to relaunch Automated Reception Report System

> Dear friends: RFA will soon relaunch our automated reception report 
> system at http://techweb.rfa.org. The new design provides many bug fixes 
> and helps streamline submission of your reception reports. Please see 
> the attached PDF for details.

> You received this email as you have expressed interest in our 
> programming and QSL cards in the past; please let us know if you prefer 
> to be dropped from our distribution list.

> Best wishes from all of us at RFA. Thx AJ

> AJ Janitschek
> Radio Free Asia
> 2025 M Street, NW
> Washington DC 20036
> United States of America
> +1 (202)530-4999
Williams López
Apartado Postal: 763
Barquisimeto, Estado Lara
Venezuela



  
> Date: Tue, 6 Nov 2012 20:45:51 +0100
> Subject: 9450 khz and special test of a digital text....
> From: themightykbc@gmail.com
> To:
>
> The Mighty KBC will test to the USA on Sunday 11 November 2012 00.00 -
> 02.00 UTC on 9450 kHz!
>
> Please join the Mighty KBC for a test of a digital text sent via a
> shortwave broadcast transmitter. This will take place during the next
> transmission to North America, Sunday 0000-0200 UTC, at approximately
> 0130 and just before the end of the broadcast at 0200.
>
> All you need is a basic shortwave receiver (no SSB mode is necessary),
> and a basic personal computer. Using a patch cord, you will feed the
> audio out of the earphone jack (or line out) of your radio into the
> microphone jack of your PC. If you don't have a patch cord, you can
> try placing the speaker of your radio close to the built-in microphone
> of a laptop PC.
>
> You will also need software. There are several freeware or shareware
> programs used by the amateur radio community that decode digital text
> modes. One is FLDIGI, available from http://www.w1hkj.com .
>
> After installing FLDIGI, pull down the Configure menu, then click
> Sound Card, and select the soundcard your PC is using.
>
> You might also have to adjust your audio settings. In Windows 7, left
> click twice on the speaker icon in the lower right of PC display, then
> click Options, then click Properties, then click Recording, then click
> the input that works. Other operating systems will have different
> procedures. A good way to test your audio settings is to try to decode
> the radio amateurs using the PSK31 mode on 14070 kHz.
>
> For the test digital text transmissions on Sunday, The Mighty KBC will
> be using the QPSK125 mode. On your software, your cursor should be
> centered on 1500 Hertz, where you will see the "waterfall" of the
> QPSK125 signal. You can decode the transmission while you receive it,
> or record the transmission and decode from the recording. The latter
> will give you more opportunities to perfect the technique.
>
> The test to be transmitted will be a formatted html file. Copy it from
> to (and including) , and paste it to a text editor (such
> as Notepad in Windows). Save the file, using any file name, with the
> suffix .htm or .html. Then open the file in any web browser. If all
> goes well, this might be the first time you receive a shortwave radio
> broadcast in color!
>
> In the future, an app will be developed to make this process simpler!
>
>
> If you want to be removed from our mailing list, please let me know.
Williams López
Apartado Postal: 763
Barquisimeto, Estado Lara
Venezuela

Reenvío información de interés

Rafael R.


The Mighty KBC Trucker Radio http://www.kbcradio.eu/ [1] goes
digital. No idea what will be sent but maybe nice to check out. I just
received this message from them

73, Ary

The Mighty KBC will test to
the USA on Sunday 11 November 2012 00.00 - 02.00 UTC on 9450 kHz!

Please join the Mighty KBC for a test of a digital text sent via a
shortwave broadcast transmitter. This will take place during the next
transmission to North America, Sunday 0000-0200 UTC, at approximately
0130 and just before the end of the broadcast at 0200.

All you need is
a basic shortwave receiver (no SSB mode is necessary), and a basic
personal computer. Using a patch cord, you will feed the audio out of
the earphone jack (or line out) of your radio into the microphone jack
of your PC. If you don't have a patch cord, you can try placing the
speaker of your radio close to the built-in microphone of a laptop PC.

You will also need software. There are several freeware or shareware
programs used by the amateur radio community that decode digital text
modes. One is FLDIGI, available from http://www.w1hkj.com/ .

After
installing FLDIGI, pull down the Configure menu, then click Sound Card,
and select the soundcard your PC is using.

You might also have to
adjust your audio settings. In Windows 7, left click twice on the
speaker icon in the lower right of PC display, then click Options, then
click Properties, then click Recording, then click the input that works.
Other operating systems will have different procedures. A good way to
test your audio settings is to try to decode the radio amateurs using
the PSK31 mode on 14070 kHz.

For the test digital text transmissions
on Sunday, The Mighty KBC will be using the QPSK125 mode. On your
software, your cursor should be centered on 1500 Hertz, where you will
see the "waterfall" of the QPSK125 signal. You can decode the
transmission while you receive it, or record the transmission and decode
from the recording. The latter will give you more opportunities to
perfect the technique.

The test to be transmitted will be a formatted
html file. Copy it from to (and including) , and paste it
to a text editor (such as Notepad in Windows). Save the file, using any
file name, with the suffix .htm or .html. Then open the file in any web
browser. If all goes well, this might be the first time you receive a
shortwave radio broadcast in color!

Links:
------
[1]
http://www.kbcradio.eu/

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

RAFAEL RODRIGUEZ" rafaelcoldx@yahoo.com


Mark Coady6 de noviembre de 2012 16:22
I just received this via e-mail from the Mighty KBC:

The Mighty KBC will test to the USA on Sunday 11 November 2012 00.00 -
02.00 UTC on 9450 kHz!

Please join the Mighty KBC for a test of a digital text sent via a
shortwave broadcast transmitter. This will take place during the next
transmission to North America, Sunday 0000-0200 UTC, at approximately
0130 and just before the end of the broadcast at 0200.

All you need is a basic shortwave receiver (no SSB mode is necessary),
and a basic personal computer. Using a patch cord, you will feed the
audio out of the earphone jack (or line out) of your radio into the
microphone jack of your PC. If you don't have a patch cord, you can
try placing the speaker of your radio close to the built-in microphone
of a laptop PC.

You will also need software. There are several freeware or shareware
programs used by the amateur radio community that decode digital text
modes. One is FLDIGI, available from http://www.w1hkj.com/ .

After installing FLDIGI, pull down the Configure menu, then click
Sound Card, and select the soundcard your PC is using.

You might also have to adjust your audio settings. In Windows 7, left
click twice on the speaker icon in the lower right of PC display, then
click Options, then click Properties, then click Recording, then click
the input that works. Other operating systems will have different
procedures. A good way to test your audio settings is to try to decode
the radio amateurs using the PSK31 mode on 14070 kHz.

For the test digital text transmissions on Sunday, The Mighty KBC will
be using the QPSK125 mode. On your software, your cursor should be
centered on 1500 Hertz, where you will see the "waterfall" of the
QPSK125 signal. You can decode the transmission while you receive it,
or record the transmission and decode from the recording. The latter
will give you more opportunities to perfect the technique.

The test to be transmitted will be a formatted html file. Copy it from
to (and including) , and paste it to a text editor (such
as Notepad in Windows). Save the file, using any file name, with the
suffix .htm or .html. Then open the file in any web browser. If all
goes well, this might be the first time you receive a shortwave radio
broadcast in color!

In the future, an app will be developed to make this process simpler!
Dino Bloise6 de noviembre de 2012 16:08
Escuchas de Manuel Méndez
Lugo, España

Escuchas en Friol
Sony ICF SW 7600 G, antena de cable, 10 metros

BRASIL
11830, Radio Daquí, Goiania, 0952-1017, 04-11, canciones brasileñas,
locutor, anuncios comerciales, identificación: "A Radio Daquí". 14321.
(Méndez)

15190, Radio Inconfidencia, Belo Horizonte, 0950-1120, 04-11, canciones
brasileñas, entre las 1000 y las 1100 eclipsada por China Radio
International, a las 1100 locutor, comentarios, portugués, canciones
brasileñas. 23322. (Méndez)

DJIBOUTI, 4780, Radio TV Djibouti, Arta, 1634-1640, 04-11, música
vernácula. 24322. (Méndez)

INDIA
4800, AIR, Hyderabad, 1632-1634, 04-11, música hindú. Interferencia de
China en la misma frecuencia. 24222. (Méndez)

4810, AIR, Bhopal, 1635-1638, música hindú. 14321. (Méndez)

4840, AIR, Mumbai, 1631-1633, 04-11, música hindú. 24322. (Méndez)

4910, AIR, Jaipur, 1636-1640, 04-11, música hindú . 24322. (Méndez)

4920, AIR, Chennai, 1628-1631, 04-11, música hindú, interferencia de
China en la misma frecuencia. 22322. (Méndez)

5010, AIR, Thiruvananthapuram, 1625-1628, 04-11, música hindú 24322.
(Méndez)

MALI, 9635, Radio Mali, Bamako, 0945-1020, 04-11, canciones en
vernáculo, locutor, comentarios, identificación: "La radio national du
Mali". 24322. (Méndez)

MONGOLIA, 12085, Voice of Mongolia, 1030-1038, 04-11, locutora, inglés,
identificación: "Voice of Mongolia", comentarios, canciones en mongol.
23322. (Méndez)
Rob Wagner6 de noviembre de 2012 0:33
Greetings from Mount Evelyn AUS:

7200 SUDAN. R. Omdurman, Al Aitahab. Noted at 1915 in Arabic with a telephone talk-back program. Strong carrier but the audio level appeared to be down somewhat, accompanied by a low-level hum. Monitored on-and-off right through to s/off at 2101 after a short ID.

11735 TANZANIA. VO Tanzania-Zanzibar, Dole. Weak and fluttery with the antenna pre-amp on when first tuned in at 1940, featuring long local chant-style songs and Swahili anncts. Interestingly, signal improved considerably within 10 minutes and became quite respectable by 1950.

Rob VK3BVW

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