[HCDX] Shortwave radio still packs an audible thrill
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[HCDX] Shortwave radio still packs an audible thrill



Shortwave radio still packs an audible thrill
 http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSTRE50D6JF20090114
 
By ReutersJanuary 16, 2009
 
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Somewhere on a lonely mountaintop on a starry 
night, or maybe in an apartment on a bustling city block, someone is 
channeling the whole world onto a mobile device. It's not a phone; it's a 
shortwave radio.

A staple form of broadcasting in many parts of the world since the 1920s 
and 1930s -- shortwave in North America has been mostly a hobby for 
decades.

Now that the Internet is a fixture in many homes in the United States and 
Canada, there are few practical reasons to buy a shortwave radio. 
Thousands of stations that once were available only on the shortwave band 
are online.

Shortwave also is distinctly old fashioned, cast against the shadow of the 
annual Consumer Electronics Show, which was held in Las Vegas earlier 
this month. The mother of gargantuan gadget fests featured shortwave radio 
makers, but the action these days revolves around digital audio devices.

The contrast is stark: iPods and satellite radios are slim and pocket-sized, 
while shortwaves are throwbacks, typically as square as a textbook and just 
as serious looking.

So why bother with shortwave?

It's easy and cheap -- and fun. You can hear and learn things that you would 
never find even if you work your search engine like a mule. From Swaziland 
to Paris to Havana, shortwave broadcasters can surprise an adventurous 
listener more than any MP3 playlist.

"You tune carefully, twist the radio from side to side, and there's still a bit of 
a 'Hey, I made this happen!' sort of thing," said Harold Cones, retired 
chairman of the biology and chemistry department at Christopher Newport 
University in Newport News, Virginia.

It's also magic. Shortwave radio enthusiasts acknowledge the thrill -- the 
romance, in a way -- of going out at night and snaring news, music, odd 
bleeps, religious zealots and other broadcasts from the wild sea of 
frequencies in the sky.

In aural terms, the Internet wins. Shortwave by nature sounds dirty: Its 
signals whoosh from clouds of static and are subject to the whims of 
sunspots and atmospheric disturbances.

But when you hear voices over the noise and squeal, and realize you are 
hearing Mongolia, live, there is a warmth and a human connection that are 
hard to find on the Web.

Shortwave also can deliver news faster than you might find it online, and in 
places where your other devices don't work, said Ian McFarland, a former 
host and writer at Radio Canada International.

"It's more portable than a computer, especially if you ... don't have a laptop 
and you don't happen to have a hot spot on your favorite beach," he said. 
Batteries also keep them going a long time when the power goes out.

On a serious note, shortwave stations often resist many government 
attempts to jam them.

"Shortwave is unfettered by intermediaries so it's pretty much always there," 
said Lawrence Magne, publisher of the Passport to World Band Radio 
(http://www.passband.com).

GETTING STARTED

You can find shortwave radios at a variety of Web retail and auction shops 
like Amazon, Universal Radio, The Shortwave Store, Grove Enterprises or 
even National Public Radio.

Bob Grove, at Grove Enterprises in Brasstown, North Carolina, also offers a 
handy beginner's guide (http://tinyurl.com/8rq3bt).

You could drop thousands of dollars on a radio, but units such as the Eton 
E100 (http://tinyurl.com/8x5q9o) generally range from $50 to $250. A 
perfectly serviceable radio sells for as little as $30, but more expensive 
models are better at pulling in fainter signals.

Listening is best an hour before and after sunrise and sunset -- and away 
from urban areas -- because of atmospheric conditions and because many 
broadcasters in distant lands are gearing up their broadcasts.

Try searching for distant shortwave signals, identify the station, write to them 
and get a "QSL Card," the broadcaster's acknowledgment that you made 
contact.

For die hards, listening to shortwave can make hours go by in a dream. For 
others, its an acquired taste -- Bob Grove said his wife is "partially tolerant."

"I've had radio equipment in my car in the past, and I have learned not to 
turn it all on when we were going on a date somewhere."

(To find a partial English-language list of what's on shortwave, try 
RadioShack (http://tinyurl.com/6texnw) or C.Crane (http://tinyurl.com/yjfcrq)).

(Reporting by Robert MacMillan; editing by Richard Chang)
Please read and distribute this 15 year research article 
http://tinyurl.com/5vzg7e 

Please read my article on SINPO at http://tinyurl.com/yt7qjd
________________________
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http://zliangas.blogspot.com  (radio tech , gadgets, grk ethics)
http://zlgr.stumbleupon.com  (my social 'bookmarks' )
http://zlgr.multiply.com (radio monitoring site plus audio clips ) MAIN SITE 
http://www.youtube.com/zach0gr     some videos 
http://www.worldisround.com/articles/302315/ (Litohoro) 321199/Tinos 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/zachgr    pictures upload 
http://www.geocities.com/zliangas
http://www.myspace.com/310100806
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=770974854
http://del.icio.us/gr_geek1
........
Zacharias Liangas , Thessaloniki Greece 
greekdx @ otenet dot gr  ---  
Pesawat penerima: ICOM R75 , Lowe HF150 , Degen 1102,1103,108,
Tecsun PL200/550, Chibo c300/c979, Yupi 7000 
Antenna: 16m hor, 2x16 m V invert, 1m australian loop 

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