Re: [IRCA] First Anniversary of Ultralight Radio Boom-- November 20
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Re: [IRCA] First Anniversary of Ultralight Radio Boom-- November 20



Gary - the ultralight thing is all your fault, and I couldn't be happier about it. MW DX'ing has needed a shot in the arm for a very long time, and ultralights are it. Anyone can afford an ultralight and they are readily available. It doesn't get any better than that. My thanks to you and the others who have contributed so much time and energy in promoting ultralight DX.

73

----- Original Message -----
Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2008 20:24:35 EST
From: D1028Gary@xxxxxxx
Subject: [IRCA] First Anniversary of Ultralight Radio Boom-- November
20
To: irca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, ultralightdx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Hello Guys,

    With the Ultralight radio niche hobby now being  enjoyed throughout
North America, Europe and many other areas of the world, some enthusiasts may be curious how this whole craziness started. It actually started on November 20, 2007 with some startling TP receptions on a humble SRF-59, but was fueled by some amazing coincidences that gave the movement a massive surge within
just a month.

On November 19, 2007, I was shopping for a Christmas present to give my son, Danny, an introduction to the joys of AM-DXing (which I experienced as a kid, with a transistor radio). At the local Fred Meyer store, I picked out an analog Sony Walkman, the SRF-59, which looked a lot like the portables I
used in the early 60's.  Upon returning  home to ensure the radio worked
properly, I gave it a quick test on AM and FM. Everything worked OK-- but there
was something very unusual  about the AM performance.  A tiny, cheap
transistor portable like this wasn't supposed to be receiving California stations around noontime here in western Washington, 500 miles to the north. This SRF-59 was a real shocker! Feeling somewhat guilty, I asked Danny if Daddy could get him another present instead of this one. To my relief, he quickly agreed.

    The daytime DX on this SRF-59 was astonishing, but  even more stunning
was the complete freedom from image reception, and almost complete freedom from spurious signals. On an $18 portable? What was going on here? Why hadn't
anyone else in the AM-DXing hobby  reported the outstanding performance of
this tiny wonder?

    But the big shocker was yet to come.  Just  after local midnight on
November 20, a couple of Japanese TP stations (JOIB-747 and JOAK-594) made a decent appearance on this tiny SRF-59, completely transforming my casual AM-DXing
attitude.  This was  revolutionary!  Other AM-DXers had to experience this
excitement.

    Upon getting up after reduced sleep (a common  malady affecting TP
chasers), I excitedly attempted to send a report of the new SRF-59's performance to the IRCA list reflector. But probably due to lack of concentration, the
email was sent to Colin  Newell (of DXer.Ca) instead.  This "mistake" was
actually one of the major reasons the Ultralight Radio boom got started, because Colin's support for the ULR concept (and his encouragement of a formal SRF-59
review) helped spread the  Boom throughout North America.

A formal SRF-59 review posted on DXer.Ca caused such a run on SRF-59's (in December) that even Amazon.com had trouble filling orders at times. To show appreciation for Colin's support, various free SRF-59 samples were sent to Canadians, including one to Rob Ross, who used it to log over 300 stations in 30 days in January. In early December, the SRF-59 Boom was in full swing,
and pocket radio DXing was catching on like  wildfire (with SRF-M37V's and
DT-200VX units also popular).  Also in early  December, Kevin Schanilec
suggested that we designate a name for this new form of AM-DXing, and by consensus, Kevin's suggestion of "Ultralight Radio" was chosen. By late December, the Boom was the talk of AM-DXing circles, and established DXer John Bryant was showing interest (along with many others). A new AM-DXing phenomena had begun, which with John's organizational talents, became the established, exciting niche hobby that we enjoy today. Thanks to all who contributed, and "Happy
Birthday"  to all Ultralight Radio enthusiasts!

    73 and Best Wishes,
    Gary  DeBock

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