Bob,
Grand Turk is dead-on at 120. Or maybe a bit farther away in Puerto Rico?
How about this, just nulled a Wobbler on 910, dew east, just as a couple other DXers reported earlier.
Here's an idea... With Project ELF/Sanguine shut down, the Wobbler is the new submarine communications system! Hence the changing bearings as the boats lurk the waters off our east coast. Just kidding...before someone thinks I'm serious.
I have to admit, the more info collected on this phenomenon, the less it seems is known. But that won't stop me collecting!
W. Curt Deegan
Boca Raton, (South East) Florida
-------Original Message-------
>My next target was obvious, the Wobbler. I had a good wobble going on
930 to work with. Assuming a Cuban station as the source, >the Radio
Reloj 10kW outlet in Ciego de Avila was the likely culprit. I expected
to find the null at something like 160-170 degrees as I >ran repeatedly
through aiming and re-aiming.. No doubt about it, that Wobbler is at
about 120 degrees from here. That's more toward >the Bahamas, well
north of the entire island of Cuba.
>
>Maybe all radio actually comes from the Bahamas and we're all just
being fooled.
>
>
>W. Curt Deegan
>Boca Raton, (South East) Florida
120 degrees? Grand Turk Island???
- Bob
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