-----------------------------------------------------------------------
THE FOUR WINDS ON LINE - Copyright Part 3 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Year 4 Number 79 - Rome, 1 February 1999 HONDURAS- New name of the 4930.6 San Pedro Sula station is actually Ebenezer 12-20, R. Costenya (Henrik Klemetz, DX Window) I.e. the biblical name; spelling it with an A was my mistake, and pronunciation the same as the hypothesized "Evenecer" (Hauser / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21) IRAN- [non]. I am fluent in
Persian, I am originally from Iran. That Persian (Farsi) service of Radio WWCR
calls itself Radio Porseh. That means Questions. In exact translation it
is RADIO QUESTION INTERNATIONAL (P. Mohazzabi, Jan 21, WORLD OF RADIO 974 COM /
GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28) --- No reception of this here since, 1100
Fri/Sat on 12160, just not propagating as a rule. Sometimes fades in by
1245 as Sat Jan 23, when the publicized London Radio Service show has NOT been
appearing. It appears it was my mistake to put the Kurdish version on
Tuesday instead of Thursday; taking another look at the WWCR schedule. In
context along with M/W/F entries, which T means Tuesday and which means
Thursday is obvious, but not when out of context (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO
974 COM / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
IRELAND- R. Ozone International
tests to North America checked Jan 16-17; zilch at 2330-0130 on 5770. At
0847* heard closing 5770 to move to "6196.6" but actually on 6195.67
variable plus/minus .05. Host with strong Dublin accent described himself
as being "knackered"; had used 6880 until 0145, and would stay
on here until 0945. Yep, he was knackered alright but yet it was blatantly
obvious throughout all the bleary talk that he was a mild-mannered warm
ol' aging rocker who had an armful of decent vintage LPs that he wanted to
share. You could only hear this kind of radio out of love not money.
Finally...Mr. Ozone's p-mail drop, mentioned often enough in the
broadcast, is in the UK, but my guess is that this particular well-known
old stalwart of the pirate waves has not much to fear from the Irish
authorities. -Mr. Ozone, c/o 55 D Chester Road, London North 19 5DF,
England. (Finbarr O'Driscoll, Ireland, REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
KOREA, SOUTH- Some notes from
RKI's Murtiwave Feedback Jan 24, 1137 via RCI 9650--which was pounding in,
unlike previous winters with lower solar flux: This is the "Year of
Architecture," so that's the theme of RKI QSL cards issued both for SW and
internet "reception" reports. The first of several designs is
issued in February. Also said the Skelton (not Skeleton, Esther has learnt)
relay as of Jan 25 has definitely moved from 3975 to 3980, including French at
2100-2200; but a listener warns that IRRS is on 3980 (Glenn Hauser, REVIEW OF
INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
LUXEMBOURG-[non]. The Jan MNO
schedule shows The 208 Sound [208 refers to R. Lux's old metric wavelength]: for
one hour each at: Tue 1500, Wed 1700, Thu 1500, Sat 1000, Sun 1300 (REVIEW
OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-06, Jan 28) ---
Two of the MNO frequencies in use at most of these times, continue to clash with
previous occupants, and nobody seems to care: 17630 with Gabon, 21550 with
Chile, making them useless for MNO here. MNO has 21550 0700-1900; 17630
0700-1600. So try 9915 0700-1600, 13660 0800-1200, 13645 1200-1400, 13680
1400-1600, 6185 1600-1800, 3965 1700-1900. All these are for Europe or Africa;
The 208 Sound is not scheduled at any hour when MNO is broadcasting to NAm
(2000-0600) (Glenn Hauser, OK, from sked via Wolfgang Bueschel / GH SHORTWAVE/DX
REPORT 99-06, Jan 28)
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES- RN's
Bonaire relay keeps having annoying problems. UT Thu Jan 14 at 0100 on 9845 and
6165, was running fill music and apology for loss of feed from Hilversum.
Then, UT Fri Jan 22 during Media Network 0053+ 9845 had a pronounced audio
echo, running roughly one second or 5-7 words behind the original. This delay is
too long to be accounted for by long- path dual propagation, and certainly
seemed to be coming out of the same Bonaire transmitter. Neither the original
nor the echo was in sync with //6165, but this was probably a malfunxion
of the built-in delay system which keep 6165 and 9845 (or any two Bonaire
frequencies) from modulation peaks at the same instant in order to even out
power consumption. Thanks to George Thurman for tipping us in both
instances (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan
28)
ROMANIA - RRI's morning
broadcast was again at listenable level Fri Jan 22; at 1322 Letterbox giving out
some general-information Romanian websites, 1327 into The Skylark, nice folk
music - but frequency 17805 was actually around 17806.3 with het against
something more accurate; //17745.0 whilst the two 19mb frequencies, 15335 and
15390 were quite weak and fluttery. The Romanian home service on 17850 had
the usual internal noise sounding like self-inflicted jamming. Jan 28 recheck at
1325 it was around 17806.2 (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
TONGA - [et al.] Actually,
Banana bushes will continue to grow for several years after bearing fruit but
will never bear again. so, an antenna strung to a banana bush will last for a
few years. (Rev. Kenneth D. MacHarg, Miami Rescue Mission via Hauser) I trust
this will climax this vital thread in our reports ;) (Hauser / GH SHORTWAVE/DX
REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
UNITED KINGDOM- Swingeing cuts
to the BBC's World Service - including closure of its German and Czech
operations - will be announced next month, according to secret documents
obtained by The Observer. The biggest operational reductions in the service's
history, forming part of a 'three-year plan' to cut £20 million from
the budget and costing 100 jobs, will provoke an outcry from politicians -
especially given moves to greater European integration - and a battle in
the BBC itself. Supporters of the World Service savaged the plan to pull
out of Germany and slash broadcasts in Hungarian, Thai, Russian and Arabic,
accusing the service of retreating from its historic mission to provide
objective news to the widest possible global audience. Reducing investment in
the Arabic service was particularly condemned as short-sighted, given
continued instability in the Middle East. John Tusa, a former managing director
of the service, said: 'These plans amount to a major retreat on all
fronts. There has never been a series of voluntary cuts in World Service
language services. The World Service is doing the Treasury's job for it.' The
proposals have been drawn up by Mark Byford, the service's chief
executive, and Foreign Office officials in a attempt to cover a £ 20m
shortfall in government support. An internal timetable indicates the plan will
be presented to the BBC's board of governors on Thursday, to Foreign Secretary
Robin Cook on Friday and to the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee
on 3 February. Twenty-nine staff are to lose their jobs in the German section,
which produces 24 hours of programmes a week, 17 in the Czech section and 50 in
other slimmed-down services. The World Service failed to secure the funds needed
to keep front-line broadcasting operations while investing in new media. Last
year it asked the Foreign and Commonwealth Office for an increase of £65m
over the years 1999-2002, but received only £ 44m. The internal documents
hint at further economies in the pipeline, with talk of a 2.5 per cent cut
in the annual budget .A World Service spokeswoman said last night that
discussions were taking place with the Foreign Office but no final decisions had
been taken. Speculation that the German service was to close, or that other
services, including the Arabic and Hungarian operations, were to be slimmed down
were inaccurate. 'The three-year plan is a key development to secure the
position of the World Service as the world's premier broadcaster,' she said. A
BBC spokesman said: 'The settlement with the Foreign Office increased World
Service funding, but less than the World Service wished. Priorities are being
established.' (Richard Thomas Sunday January 17, 1999 The Observer Via John
Figliozzi, USA)
USA- The pirate operating on
1710 has also operated on 1630 and 1650. It operated on 1630 until it was
occupied and later on 1650 until this clear channel was occupied. This operator
then chose 1710 to settle on. When reception is good they seem to have
very good audio. The X band list I saw on one of the websites confirms my
suspcion. They are reported to be operating near Peoria IL. This operator did
not want to be chased off the X-band by US domestic stations (Artie
Bigley, Jan 14, REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING and WORLD OF RADIO 973 / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
USA- AFRTS/AFN is again much
more active on its three USB relay frequencies lately--often heard on two
or three of them at once, 4278.5, 6458.5 and 12689.5. I continue to suspect
6458.5 may not be at Key West, but Puerto Rico instead (Glenn Hauser, OK,
WORLD OF RADIO 973 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
USA- On Jan 19 at 0700,
"High Adventure Radio" was co-channel BBC on 5975, both about equal
strength. High Adventure Radio continued with gospel huxters in English
after BBC signed off at 0800. (Ivan Grishin, Ont., WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28) --- We can only hope that KVOH on 5975 is a
punchup error for 9975. I recall that some other US station--WYFR? was
previously using 5975 after 0800 (Hauser) Once again this morning, Jan 22, I
heard HAM on 5975 co-channel BBC at 0730-0800, with HAM coming out on top. Like
you, I hope that is just a typo for 9975. But we can always tune in 6175 (Ivan
Grishin, Oshawa, WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan
28)
USA- WOR on WBCQ: Don't you
believe that VOA CW has moved from Wed 2200 to Sun 2100 as PanIview reports; it
was never VOA CW on Wed but that other DX program, which stays put. They
also have WEWN confused with WSHB on 9385. BTW, if this should reach the
guys at PanIview, please correct my address--Box 1684, not 1634 Glenn Hauser,
Enid OK 73702 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
YUGOSLAVIA - R. Yugoslavia
announces on its WWWeb page < www.beograd.com/radioyu> new
programs in Italian language. No details on fqys and times. I suggest to
check on the following usual fqys: 6100, 7230, 11800, 6195. ( Casali, Gallerati,
Serra, Italy)
ZIMBABWE- ZBC Radio 4 reactivated on 5012. Jan 23 0335-0415+. Tune-in to Afro pops. US pops. Vern talk. Occasional English anmts. Many "Radio 4" IDs. Drums at 0400 and vern talk. Appears to replace 4828 / 3396 as nothing heard on these. Good to very good signal. ZBC also heard on 3306 but with separate program and much weaker (Brian Alexander, PA via Hauser / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-06, Jan 28) ------------------------ DX PROGRAMS ------------------------------ Hi everyone, Have just published a web-site as per the URL below. It brings together resources both for people DXing the South Pacific as well as useful information for DXers in the South Pacific. The focus is on MW, SW, pirate and LW though FM will be added later as will personal pages... would appreciate any comments...Join me for the "South Pacific DX Report" on Radio New Zealand International, HCJB, AWR, and NZ's Radio Reading Service - ZLXA. Full details available from the South Pacific DX Resource web-site: < www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Galaxy/3216 > (Paul Ormandy, New Zealand ) WORLD OF RADIO MASTER SKED,
SHORTWAVE ONLY, as of Jan 28, 1999, Days and Times Strictly UTC. For complete
details on all our broadcasts and publications see <http://www.angelfire.com/ok/worldofradio>
WORLD OF RADIO presents the latest news about radio monitoring, primarily
but not limited to shortwave. THU 2130 WWCR 9475 --- FRI 1930 RFPI 15049,
21460-USB --- SAT 0330 RFPI 6975 --- SAT 1130 RFPI 6975 --- SAT 1800
RFPI 15049, 21460-USB --- SUN 0200 RFPI 6975, 15049, 21460-USB --- SUN
0330 WWCR 5070 --- SUN 0730 WWCR 5070 --- SUN 1000 RFPI 6975 --- SUN 1030 WWCR
5070 --- SUN 2300 RFPI 15049, 21460- USB --- MON 0600 WWCR 3210 --- MON 0700
RFPI 6975 --- MON 1500 RFPI 15049, 21460-USB [irregular] --- TUE 1330 WWCR
15685 --- TUE 1900 RFPI 15049, 21460-USB --- WED 0300 RFPI 6975 --- WED 2200
WBCQ 7415. You are invited to be a regular weekly listener!
G-----------------------------------------------------------------------
THE FOUR WINDS ON LINE - Copyright Part 3 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Year 4 Number 79 - Rome, 1 February 1999 HONDURAS- New name of the 4930.6 San Pedro Sula station is actually Ebenezer 12-20, R. Costenya (Henrik Klemetz, DX Window) I.e. the biblical name; spelling it with an A was my mistake, and pronunciation the same as the hypothesized "Evenecer" (Hauser / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21) IRAN- [non]. I am fluent in
Persian, I am originally from Iran. That Persian (Farsi) service of Radio WWCR
calls itself Radio Porseh. That means Questions. In exact translation it
is RADIO QUESTION INTERNATIONAL (P. Mohazzabi, Jan 21, WORLD OF RADIO 974 COM /
GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28) --- No reception of this here since, 1100
Fri/Sat on 12160, just not propagating as a rule. Sometimes fades in by
1245 as Sat Jan 23, when the publicized London Radio Service show has NOT been
appearing. It appears it was my mistake to put the Kurdish version on
Tuesday instead of Thursday; taking another look at the WWCR schedule. In
context along with M/W/F entries, which T means Tuesday and which means
Thursday is obvious, but not when out of context (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO
974 COM / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
IRELAND- R. Ozone International
tests to North America checked Jan 16-17; zilch at 2330-0130 on 5770. At
0847* heard closing 5770 to move to "6196.6" but actually on 6195.67
variable plus/minus .05. Host with strong Dublin accent described himself
as being "knackered"; had used 6880 until 0145, and would stay
on here until 0945. Yep, he was knackered alright but yet it was blatantly
obvious throughout all the bleary talk that he was a mild-mannered warm
ol' aging rocker who had an armful of decent vintage LPs that he wanted to
share. You could only hear this kind of radio out of love not money.
Finally...Mr. Ozone's p-mail drop, mentioned often enough in the
broadcast, is in the UK, but my guess is that this particular well-known
old stalwart of the pirate waves has not much to fear from the Irish
authorities. -Mr. Ozone, c/o 55 D Chester Road, London North 19 5DF,
England. (Finbarr O'Driscoll, Ireland, REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
KOREA, SOUTH- Some notes from
RKI's Murtiwave Feedback Jan 24, 1137 via RCI 9650--which was pounding in,
unlike previous winters with lower solar flux: This is the "Year of
Architecture," so that's the theme of RKI QSL cards issued both for SW and
internet "reception" reports. The first of several designs is
issued in February. Also said the Skelton (not Skeleton, Esther has learnt)
relay as of Jan 25 has definitely moved from 3975 to 3980, including French at
2100-2200; but a listener warns that IRRS is on 3980 (Glenn Hauser, REVIEW OF
INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
LUXEMBOURG-[non]. The Jan MNO
schedule shows The 208 Sound [208 refers to R. Lux's old metric wavelength]: for
one hour each at: Tue 1500, Wed 1700, Thu 1500, Sat 1000, Sun 1300 (REVIEW
OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-06, Jan 28) ---
Two of the MNO frequencies in use at most of these times, continue to clash with
previous occupants, and nobody seems to care: 17630 with Gabon, 21550 with
Chile, making them useless for MNO here. MNO has 21550 0700-1900; 17630
0700-1600. So try 9915 0700-1600, 13660 0800-1200, 13645 1200-1400, 13680
1400-1600, 6185 1600-1800, 3965 1700-1900. All these are for Europe or Africa;
The 208 Sound is not scheduled at any hour when MNO is broadcasting to NAm
(2000-0600) (Glenn Hauser, OK, from sked via Wolfgang Bueschel / GH SHORTWAVE/DX
REPORT 99-06, Jan 28)
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES- RN's
Bonaire relay keeps having annoying problems. UT Thu Jan 14 at 0100 on 9845 and
6165, was running fill music and apology for loss of feed from Hilversum.
Then, UT Fri Jan 22 during Media Network 0053+ 9845 had a pronounced audio
echo, running roughly one second or 5-7 words behind the original. This delay is
too long to be accounted for by long- path dual propagation, and certainly
seemed to be coming out of the same Bonaire transmitter. Neither the original
nor the echo was in sync with //6165, but this was probably a malfunxion
of the built-in delay system which keep 6165 and 9845 (or any two Bonaire
frequencies) from modulation peaks at the same instant in order to even out
power consumption. Thanks to George Thurman for tipping us in both
instances (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan
28)
ROMANIA - RRI's morning
broadcast was again at listenable level Fri Jan 22; at 1322 Letterbox giving out
some general-information Romanian websites, 1327 into The Skylark, nice folk
music - but frequency 17805 was actually around 17806.3 with het against
something more accurate; //17745.0 whilst the two 19mb frequencies, 15335 and
15390 were quite weak and fluttery. The Romanian home service on 17850 had
the usual internal noise sounding like self-inflicted jamming. Jan 28 recheck at
1325 it was around 17806.2 (Glenn Hauser, WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
TONGA - [et al.] Actually,
Banana bushes will continue to grow for several years after bearing fruit but
will never bear again. so, an antenna strung to a banana bush will last for a
few years. (Rev. Kenneth D. MacHarg, Miami Rescue Mission via Hauser) I trust
this will climax this vital thread in our reports ;) (Hauser / GH SHORTWAVE/DX
REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
UNITED KINGDOM- Swingeing cuts
to the BBC's World Service - including closure of its German and Czech
operations - will be announced next month, according to secret documents
obtained by The Observer. The biggest operational reductions in the service's
history, forming part of a 'three-year plan' to cut £20 million from
the budget and costing 100 jobs, will provoke an outcry from politicians -
especially given moves to greater European integration - and a battle in
the BBC itself. Supporters of the World Service savaged the plan to pull
out of Germany and slash broadcasts in Hungarian, Thai, Russian and Arabic,
accusing the service of retreating from its historic mission to provide
objective news to the widest possible global audience. Reducing investment in
the Arabic service was particularly condemned as short-sighted, given
continued instability in the Middle East. John Tusa, a former managing director
of the service, said: 'These plans amount to a major retreat on all
fronts. There has never been a series of voluntary cuts in World Service
language services. The World Service is doing the Treasury's job for it.' The
proposals have been drawn up by Mark Byford, the service's chief
executive, and Foreign Office officials in a attempt to cover a £ 20m
shortfall in government support. An internal timetable indicates the plan will
be presented to the BBC's board of governors on Thursday, to Foreign Secretary
Robin Cook on Friday and to the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee
on 3 February. Twenty-nine staff are to lose their jobs in the German section,
which produces 24 hours of programmes a week, 17 in the Czech section and 50 in
other slimmed-down services. The World Service failed to secure the funds needed
to keep front-line broadcasting operations while investing in new media. Last
year it asked the Foreign and Commonwealth Office for an increase of £65m
over the years 1999-2002, but received only £ 44m. The internal documents
hint at further economies in the pipeline, with talk of a 2.5 per cent cut
in the annual budget .A World Service spokeswoman said last night that
discussions were taking place with the Foreign Office but no final decisions had
been taken. Speculation that the German service was to close, or that other
services, including the Arabic and Hungarian operations, were to be slimmed down
were inaccurate. 'The three-year plan is a key development to secure the
position of the World Service as the world's premier broadcaster,' she said. A
BBC spokesman said: 'The settlement with the Foreign Office increased World
Service funding, but less than the World Service wished. Priorities are being
established.' (Richard Thomas Sunday January 17, 1999 The Observer Via John
Figliozzi, USA)
USA- The pirate operating on
1710 has also operated on 1630 and 1650. It operated on 1630 until it was
occupied and later on 1650 until this clear channel was occupied. This operator
then chose 1710 to settle on. When reception is good they seem to have
very good audio. The X band list I saw on one of the websites confirms my
suspcion. They are reported to be operating near Peoria IL. This operator did
not want to be chased off the X-band by US domestic stations (Artie
Bigley, Jan 14, REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING and WORLD OF RADIO 973 / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
USA- AFRTS/AFN is again much
more active on its three USB relay frequencies lately--often heard on two
or three of them at once, 4278.5, 6458.5 and 12689.5. I continue to suspect
6458.5 may not be at Key West, but Puerto Rico instead (Glenn Hauser, OK,
WORLD OF RADIO 973 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-04, Jan 21)
USA- On Jan 19 at 0700,
"High Adventure Radio" was co-channel BBC on 5975, both about equal
strength. High Adventure Radio continued with gospel huxters in English
after BBC signed off at 0800. (Ivan Grishin, Ont., WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH
SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28) --- We can only hope that KVOH on 5975 is a
punchup error for 9975. I recall that some other US station--WYFR? was
previously using 5975 after 0800 (Hauser) Once again this morning, Jan 22, I
heard HAM on 5975 co-channel BBC at 0730-0800, with HAM coming out on top. Like
you, I hope that is just a typo for 9975. But we can always tune in 6175 (Ivan
Grishin, Oshawa, WORLD OF RADIO 974 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan
28)
USA- WOR on WBCQ: Don't you
believe that VOA CW has moved from Wed 2200 to Sun 2100 as PanIview reports; it
was never VOA CW on Wed but that other DX program, which stays put. They
also have WEWN confused with WSHB on 9385. BTW, if this should reach the
guys at PanIview, please correct my address--Box 1684, not 1634 Glenn Hauser,
Enid OK 73702 / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-05, Jan 28)
YUGOSLAVIA - R. Yugoslavia
announces on its WWWeb page < www.beograd.com/radioyu> new
programs in Italian language. No details on fqys and times. I suggest to
check on the following usual fqys: 6100, 7230, 11800, 6195. ( Casali, Gallerati,
Serra, Italy)
ZIMBABWE- ZBC Radio 4 reactivated on 5012. Jan 23 0335-0415+. Tune-in to Afro pops. US pops. Vern talk. Occasional English anmts. Many "Radio 4" IDs. Drums at 0400 and vern talk. Appears to replace 4828 / 3396 as nothing heard on these. Good to very good signal. ZBC also heard on 3306 but with separate program and much weaker (Brian Alexander, PA via Hauser / GH SHORTWAVE/DX REPORT 99-06, Jan 28) ------------------------ DX PROGRAMS ------------------------------ Hi everyone, Have just published a web-site as per the URL below. It brings together resources both for people DXing the South Pacific as well as useful information for DXers in the South Pacific. The focus is on MW, SW, pirate and LW though FM will be added later as will personal pages... would appreciate any comments...Join me for the "South Pacific DX Report" on Radio New Zealand International, HCJB, AWR, and NZ's Radio Reading Service - ZLXA. Full details available from the South Pacific DX Resource web-site: < www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Galaxy/3216 > (Paul Ormandy, New Zealand ) WORLD OF RADIO MASTER SKED,
SHORTWAVE ONLY, as of Jan 28, 1999, Days and Times Strictly UTC. For complete
details on all our broadcasts and publications see <http://www.angelfire.com/ok/worldofradio>
WORLD OF RADIO presents the latest news about radio monitoring, primarily
but not limited to shortwave. THU 2130 WWCR 9475 --- FRI 1930 RFPI 15049,
21460-USB --- SAT 0330 RFPI 6975 --- SAT 1130 RFPI 6975 --- SAT 1800
RFPI 15049, 21460-USB --- SUN 0200 RFPI 6975, 15049, 21460-USB --- SUN
0330 WWCR 5070 --- SUN 0730 WWCR 5070 --- SUN 1000 RFPI 6975 --- SUN 1030 WWCR
5070 --- SUN 2300 RFPI 15049, 21460- USB --- MON 0600 WWCR 3210 --- MON 0700
RFPI 6975 --- MON 1500 RFPI 15049, 21460-USB [irregular] --- TUE 1330 WWCR
15685 --- TUE 1900 RFPI 15049, 21460-USB --- WED 0300 RFPI 6975 --- WED 2200
WBCQ 7415. You are invited to be a regular weekly listener! Glenn
Hauser
### |