10 October 1994
10 October 1994
10 October 1994
+ Radio UNTAC:
+
+
Model R20
Interceptor/Bug Detector
AM Communications lnterceptor8
The R20 is a compact RF signal
strength detector with a 1Osegment
bargraph display. There is also an
audio output from the detector that is
processed for constant volume for
use with ear phone.
The audio output is useful for room
sweeps where in close proximity to a
transmitter a quieting effect can be
heard due to detector saturation.
~---~.--
..
,....~
....,...
v i iu._-.'-i ''-'~
't1~:'.
1-800-327-5912
Fax 305-771-2052
CONTENTS
Vol.13, No.10
October 1994
Ambitious New
Technologies
DEPARTMENTS
Letters .................................................... 4
Communications .................................... 6
Utility World ......................................... 32
Nightwatch
Kit Building
The Realistic PR0-2035 is the replacement for the now-discontinued PR0-2006"perhaps the most successful scanner of all
time," says Bob Grove. How does it stack up
against its predecessor? Very well, according
to the review on page 98.
Decoding AGARS
Dip Meters
Winterizing
Groundplane Antennas
permission.
Owners
Bob and Judy Grove
Publisher
Bob Grove, WA4PYQ
Editor
Rachel Baughn, KE40PD
Art Director
John Bailey
Advertising Svcs.
Beth Leinbach
(704) 389-4007
Business Manager
Kelly Davis
Satellite TV
KKN Stations-Gone?
Editorial Staff
Frequency Manager ... Gayle Von Horn
Frequency Monitors ... B.W. Bollin
... David Datko
Program Manager ... Jim Frimmel
Beginner's Corner ... T.J. Arey, WB2GHA
Plane Talk ... Jeon Boker, KIN9DD
Computers and Radio ... John Catalano
Below 500 kHz ... Kevin Corey, WB2QMY
Experimenter's Wkshp ... Bill Cheek
DeMow's Workbench ... Doug DeMow, Wl FB
American Bondscon ... Joe Eisenberg, WAOWRI
Federal File ... John Fulford, WA4VPY
Digital Digest ... Bob Evans
Hom DX Tips ... Rob Gerardi, N9LAG
SW Broadcasting ... Glenn Houser
High Seas ... Jomes R. Hoy
Scanning Report .. . Bob Koy
On the Hom Bonds ... Ike Kerschner, N31K
r.
~
11
11
f LY
~
~~THAT ANTENNA IS Too SMALL To WORK"
There's one in c\'flY crowd-one tlut pushes the limirs and proves the
skeptic, wrong. The ll'orld sailed inro a Ill'\\' era of d1SCO\Tt; ll'ith Columbus.
The\Vrighr brothers propelled us in10 till' age o(air travel. AEA advances into
tla r.1nks ot' these distinguished pioneers with rhc lsol oop 10-30 Hr
;mtcnna-a JS" loop antenna \\'ith low-;111glc perfo rmance that is bc1rrr than
m:my fidl-size HF antennas.
One lsol oop I0-30 HF pioncffoffr rs this: "Hig-gun DXm will tel l you
nothing 1ha1 small can work. The~ will continue to tell rou this afm you work
a couplc hundred counrrics with it. Ignore them. In 24 momhs. I ha\'C worked
21 J counrrit'S and confinned 198...
The reason you grr such :1 big pcrfonnancc in .1 small package is rhe
efficiency of the lsoloop 10-30 HF: it 's 72% 01120111. rising
to 9(1% on IOm. The main loop se1ws as an inductor. tuned
wirh a IO.CXJO volt variable capacitor. Frequency range is
10 MHz ro 30 MHz with conti m1011s cnvcragr. The unique
UJ
L E T
E R
Overcoming Hardships
Doug Chandler's picture and letter
of last July inspired an informal contest
which challenged readers to send in a
photo and/or list of accumulated radio
equipment and memorabilia. Doug, who
hails from St. George, Utah, was both
the inspiration for and the winner of the
contest. Doug has been operating his
shack under significant hardships, so it
is perhaps appropriate that his prize
commemorates a radio station which
operated in exi le during World War II.
Two Dutch first-cover stamps-a prize
donation from Radio Nederland-<leal
with Radio Oranje, and are affixed to an
envelope bearing an Oranje banner made
from the o rigin al rubbe r s tamp
Doug says, "It should be obvious
that most of my half-finished projects
arc still half finished. I took the pictures
two days before I went to the hamfcst in
Flagstaff, AZ- right before I tore it Doug Chandler's "prize-wi1111ing" shack.
apart in an attempt to simplify it and
drag a bunch of it to the ham fest to sell.
(three were given away at last year's MT
I wound up in total confusion, and took nothConvention). I hope they don't mind if the
ing to Flagstaff-in fac t, I wound up buying
remaining stamped envelope is displayed on
more junk! Ah, the classic symptoms of
the lobby wall at Grove Enterprises as a part
addiction ... " I regret the list of equipment
of radio history.
contained in this IOx 10 room is too long to
print. I hope he never has to get out of bed in
Unfinished Business
a hurry!
Jack S ulli van's article on "Military Low
Doug contends with a local AM transmitBand" mentioned the existence of a Bibliogting tower, a 69,000 volt power line in the
raphy in the text, which was inadvertently
front yard, and power company data transomitted. Here is his "Bibliography and Sugmiss ions, not to mention the radios themgested Furthe r Reading":
selves and the interaction between antennas
in hi s little room (no outside antennas are
Directory ofNorth American Military A viatio11 Communications (HF/VHF/UHF) - Secallowed). Doug's hopes for moving were
raised when hegotajobofferas a live-in careond Edition. Four regional volumes list many
taker-until he discovered the housi ng was a
low-band channels used by military aircraft;
metal trailer!
Monitoring the Military, by Darryl Symington;
Top Secret Registry by CRB Research. All
Well, Doug, we hopethecxampleofRadio
three references are carri ed by Grove EnterOranje will give you luck and hope for better
days to come !
prises.
Richard Amirau lt of Malden, MassachuMonitoring Times wishes to thank Radio
Nederland again for coming up with such a
setts, in addition to writing to congratulate
creative and meaningful gift uniquely suited
Monitoring Times on its great new look, had
to the monitoring community, and for allowanother clarification to the above article. He
ing us to give them as prizes on their behalf
refers to the statement on subaudible tones in
which Sulli van said, "Receiver squelch opens
only when thi s tone is present on the signal
being received, thus eliminating interference
from non-military radio systems and other
sources."
Richard says, "The first half of that statement is true; the last half is not. It is a common
misconception that having a rece iver
sque lched to a "subaudible tone" will e liminate interference from stations other than
those wi th which you wish to communicate. It
will only stop you from hearing them. If, for
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
De Bate Goes On
Who made the better vintage receiver:
McMurdo or Scott? Thomas Pe ters of
McAllen, Texas, offers: "I wi ll provide schematics of, say, a Silver Masterpiece Five and
its conte mporary Scott Philharmonic so that
you can judge which might be the better
performer." Mike Greene of Brookeville,
Maryland, maintains, ' 'The debate over which
radio is better is a matter of listener's taste.
These sets were the best money could buy,
offered by two exceptional men!"
Both knowledgeable gentlemen have corrections to make to the history given in
August's "Radio Reflections." First, T homas
Peters says, "All evidence suggests that Masterpiece receivers were used on the Byrd
expedition solely for entertainment receivers
rather than for primary communications."
Second, with regard to manufacturing,
Thomas Peters says that author Robertson has
it reversed: "At no time during the days of
McMurdo Silver, Inc., did he ever possess an
RCA license, which was an absolute necessity to be a manufacturer of receivers at this
time period. E.H. Scott did have the paperwork and was a manufacturer rather than a
marketer like Silver. As a matter of fact, in
1932134, McMurdo Silver not only had his
radios manufactured by Howard, his mailing
address was actually in the Howard plant on
Belmont Ave nue in Chicago!"
r- ~OMMUNICATIONS
. . ELECTRONICS INC.
Emergency Operations Center
NewFCCRulesMeanlastBuyi,ng
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sions. Supplies ofscanners that are capable of being
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Auto Store Auto Recording Reception counter
Frequency step resolution 5, 12.5, 25 & 50 Kllz.
Size: 10-1/2" Wide x H/2" Deep x H/8" High
Fre,,_.cy Cot'et'oge:
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54.000 71.995 Milz. (WFM), 72.000 75.995 Miiz. (NFM),
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400.000 - 511.995 Miiz. (NFM), 512.000 549.995 Miiz. (WFM)
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Auto Recording -This feature lets you record channel acti\ity
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optional CfCSS ToM Board (Continuous Tone Control Squelch
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Great Deals on
Bearcat Scanners
Bearcat 8500XLT-J base/mobile $369.95
Bearcat 890XLTJ base/ mobile .. $244.95
Bearcat 2500XLT-J handheld$339.95
Sportcat 150-J handheld ............. $199.95
Bearcat 760XLT-J base/mobile .. $199.95
Bearcat 700A-J info mobile ........ $149.95
Bearcat 560XLAJ base/mobile .... $84.95
Bearcat 220XLTJ handheld ....... $229.95
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( CB/GMRS Radios J
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JCOM AIJ7000J super wideband dlsa>ne type ani<nna ............... S99.95
Grundlg Sattlllt 700.J poruble with 512 mtm0ry !AC adapL -S389.9S
Grundig Yacht Boy 400.J dlgllal portable shom.'tve .................. $199.95
Grundlg Yach Boy 230.J portable shortwave ................................ Sl39.9S
Sangean ATS202-) uhra compact 20 memory shortwave ............... S79.9S
Sangean ATS6o6J uhra compact 45 memory shortwave ............. $149.95
Sangean ATS6o6P) shortwa\'e with antenn & AC adpler ....... SI69.95
Sangean ATS800-J portable 20 memory shortwave ........................ S69.9S
Sangean ATS803AJ portable whh SSB reception a AC adpltr. SI 59.95
Sangean ATSSOS.J portble 45 meaoory shortwave ...................... SI S9.9S
Sangean ATSSIS.J portable wt1hou1 asseue reconler ................. Sl89.9S
Sangean ATS818CS.) wtth asseue reronler .................................. $209.95
Sangean ANT6o.J poruble shortw2YC antenna ................................. s9.95
(Weather St'~-ic).,1-\~!.' )
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~~~~5~rv1~,~~~e~ in'1~~6"Cii-~j;:e;:::::~~::s~~rn
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Communications Electronics Inc.
Emergency Operations Center
P.O. Box 1045, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48 I<J6. 1045 U.S.A.
For Information call 313996-8888 or FAX 313-6638888
COMMUNICATIONS
FalseAlann
A recent proposal by Congress to amend
Section 9 of T itle 18 (wiretap law) has created
a flurry of concern among scanner devotees.
Essentially, the amendment would address
the "fraudulent alteration of commercial mobile radio instruments."
Of concern to legislators, however, is not
scanners; it is the growing problem of cellular
telephone fraud-cloning phones for free service. Scanners are not even addressed in the
proposal.
Family Radio
Radio Shack has petitioned the FCC to
establish a new unlicensed, low-powered twoway radio service. The new service is to be
called T he Family Radio Service and it is
designed to serve the day-to-day and emergency needs of families and public service
organizations. Power levels will be 500 milli watt.
So far Tandy has tested the service in
Dallas/Ft. Worth and at Walt Disney World in
Orlando, Florida. Operation would be on
GMRS channels, including seven previously
unassigned channels.
T he proposal is being opposed by proponents of GMRS, on the basis that GMRS was
intended to be such a personal radio service,
and the licensing process helps keep it so by
excluding-though not always withsuccesscommercial use.
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Cannibalized Peace
The Wakh news agency in Manama reports
that Israeli peace activist Abie Nathan has
donated the transmitting equipment from his
now defunct Voice of Peace to the Voice of
Palestine. The Voice of Peace operated from a
boat, but ceased operations after a peace agreement was reached between the Palestinians
and Israelis.
According to Basim Abu Samayyah, director of the Voice of Palestine, the equipment is
worth some 100,000 dollars. It will be transferred to Gaza where it will be used to produce
radio programs, in addition to the Jericho
radio station.
Tough Deal
The Voice ofAmerica has reportedly agreed
to a most unusual set of tenns in exchange for
use of the VOA relay facilities in Rhodes and
Kavala. In addition to a payment of one million dollars a year, according to a report on
Radio Netherlands, Greece will be allowed to
cut off any VOA programs it deems offensive.
Under the 10 year agreement, the Greek government can interrupt broadcasts if, in their
words, they are "an affront to national interest." Already the Voice of Greece gets airtime
on VOA transmitters as part of the arrangement. Obviously some shrewd dealmaking
going on here.
Special Deal
Q: When can an RF device be operated in
the United States if it doesn't have FCC equipment authorization? A: When a manufacturer
is showing a new product at the Consumer
Electronics Show (CES).
Right now, the rules permit only limited
operation of non-approved products and pro-
COMMUNICATIONS
hibits any operation of the devices. However,
under a new Petition for Rulemaking initiated
by the Electronic Industries Association (EIA),
manufacturers wi ll be able to show and operate new, non-type accepted devices at the
EIA-sponsored CES show. Supposedly, all
that would be required is "conspicuous notice" that the devices cannot be sold until it
meets FCC approval.
SHOCKING MANUALS!
Attention, Shuttlebugs!
Put at note on your
calendar to set the
VCR to the Discovery Channel November 13th. Discovery is
premiering a two-hour
be hind-the -scen es
look a t the Space
Shuttle and the people
behind it, from launch
to landing, from the
first female astronaut
piloting the shuttle to the person who oversees the plumbing.
The program will air Nov 13, 9-11 pm (ET/
PT) and midnight-2am (ET/PT), repeated Nov
19, 20, and 26th. Check local listings for
times. Also watch for articles on the Space
Shuttle in the Nov/Dec issue ofSatellite Times,
including an eye-witness account of a launch
from MTs editor, Rachel Baughn.
"Communications" is written by Larry Miller
from information provided by the following
staff of reporters. David R. Alpert, New York,
NY; Don Bishop, Overland Park, KS ; David
Chapchuk, Scranton, PA; Bob Coburn,
Londonderry, NH; Bob Grove, Brasstown, NC;
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WORLDCOM TECHNOLOGY
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
Register Now!
Enjoy accomodations at the Atlanta Airport Hilton and
receive the special nightly rate of only $71 (a 50%
savings off the regular $140 rate) which includes the
following:
-+Same rate single or double!
-+Free parking!
-+Complimentary airport shuttle!
-+Baggage check-out for Delta!
: .: -
Registration open
Tours of Delta Maintenance, Museum, Radio Room and Dispatch
Exhibits and Listening Post open.
International Broadcast Forum with host IAN MC FARLAND and panelists Tom Rodgers,
International Radio Satellite Corporation; Dr. Bill Prichard, W.L. Prichard Co. of Bethesda,
MD; Kim Elliott, VOA/USIA; Larry Magna, Passport to Wor1dband Radio;Kar1 Miosga,
Managing Director World Radio Network, London, England.
SATURDAY
8AM-2:30
8:45 - 3
9AM- 9:30
9:45-10:45
11-12
3-4
4:15-5:15
7-9
9:30-?
Registration open
Exhibits open
Welcome by Bob Grove
SEMINARS
Future of Satellite
What Do Those
Federal
Broadcasting
S/W Specs Mean?
Monitoring
Ken Reitz
Larry Magna
John Fulford
Rumblings in the
Digital Monitoring
Antennas:
Basement (Below SOOkHz) Modes & Equipment
Fact and Fiction
Kevin Carey
Bob Evans
Bob Grove
TYRO, the Ideal
Pirates & Morel
Shortwave Intrigue
Set-up -Ken Reitz
George Zeller
Larry Van Horn
Home Reception of
AM/FMfTV
Monitoring
INMARSAT
Broadcast DXing
the Military
John Wilson
Joe Eisenberg
Larry Van Horn
Banquet guest speaker IAN MC FARLAND
Bug Hunt John Fulford and Friends
GREAT PRIZES!
Scanning for
Beginners
Skip Arey
Shortwave for
Beginners
Skip Arey
f1lll1W
7 R100 from ICOM
1 R71 ODA from ICOM
2 R71A from ICOM
15 Jackets from ICOM
1 NTR-1 from JPS
1 ASAPS Software from Jacques d'Avlgnon
Frequency Counters from Optoelectronics
Sangean MS103 from Christian Science Monitor
1 SP200 from Grove Enterprises
1 PR150 Preselector from Lowe
2 Scan Cat Pros from Computer Aided Tech.
2 Copycats from Computer Aided Tech.
$$$$ In lcom discount coupons
plus shirts and hats from ICOMt
SUNDAY
9-10AM
Aero UHFNHF/HF
Jean Baker
10:15-11:15
11:30-12:30
12:45-1:15
CLOSING
Weather Reception
on HF FAX & SATS
Jacques D'Avlgnon
Linking Technologies
Bii/Grove
Radio-related
Computer S/W
John Catalano
Surveillance
Techniques
John Fulford
All About Scanners
Bob Grove
Spy Number Stations
John Fulford
Mfg. Sugg .
Retail price
$5,509
$1,617
$2,558
$1, 125
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REGISTER NOW!
Monitoring Times
(800) 438-8155
PO Box 98
Brasstown, NC 28902
(704) 837-9200 (questions)
(704) 837-2216 (fax)
( ) Visa/MC/Discover
Card#: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
Exp. Date: _ _ _ _ __
Signature:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
(1)
(1)
...
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THE HIGH-FLYING
DALLAS COWBOYS, THAT IS.
HERE'S HOW KVIL RADIO
COVERS THE TWO-TIME
DEFENDING SUPERBOWL
CHAMPS.
10
MONITORING TIMES
October I 994
"Hold 0 11 to the @#$%A&* BALL! " Dallas coach Barry Switzer shouts at a fumbling
runner.
Well, it's live radio. After a short pause,
KVIL color announcer Dale Hansen says,
"Now how much would you pay for a stadium
seat that would let you hear that?"
It's all beamed from the individual parabolic mikes on frequencies within TV c hannels 68 or 69 (see sidebar). UHF receivers in
the pressbox road racks pick up the parab
signals and they are mi xed into the show with
the announcer mikes. An RF receiver fo r the
referee's VHF wireless microphone also has
its place in the pressbox rack.
Why all the wireless gear? Strike speed!
Mike S impson and his crew actually ride with
the Cowboys on the team c harter flight. " If
we had to strike (pull up) cables all over the
field, we' d never get out of here in time to
catch the plane, .. he admits. "With RF gear,
we can be out before some of the fans!"
Of course , there is a down side to RF in
remote production and that is interference.
Everybody a nd his cousin are using wire less
mikes, IFB 's a nd intercoms now. It seems the
only ones who we ren' t wireless at the Cowboys-Falcons game I attended were the
coaches! Somebody has to keep trac k of it all;
Mike' s traffic cop of the airwaves is Jay
Wallace. His RF coordinator role can bea real
hai r-puller.
"Actually, frequency coordination
is impossible," he says. "You never
know who is going to show up somewhere in the stadium, right before the
game and tum o n someth ing that 's on
one of your channels ." Jay has to be
ready to react and find a new c hannel
quickly. With an RF analyzer, you
would be able to watch a mini forest of
spikes grow up j ust before game time.
Any scanner buff out in the parking Jot
could have a mobi le feast, switchi ng
from referees, to s ideline intervie ws,
to smashing helmets .
For even greate r setup speed, the
Blimp Frequencies
Blimp Frequencies
Airport/londing site
Goodyeor Public Relotions
Blimp & ground crew
Goodyeor Aerospoce net
Remote to low enforcement
Goodyear Aerospace net
Remote lo low enforcement
Operations/ sports event
123.050
123.200
123.250
132.000
151.620
151.625
153.320
167.5625
460.025
460.050
462.225
465.025
465.9125
465.9375
465.9625
lliO,;;...iil..:~i.ui.,,;,l,.uils
Parabolic mike in hand, Alan Stieberg zeroes in on the field generals during the
game.
October 1994
MONITORING TIME!:
11
\
CONSOU
IO KVll-i'M 1150
ea..--
STltfO~ <
;:;::__J~---~
'<
~~
~
'lfttff
~=
'-+-==-'f"";
mllEOh..do
n-<Y
--
L_r=:
'"""
bl::!!...!X.----0 Mb
-v
~l
Rendered by: 9IIl Orove
............. 174.4
.. .. .... .. .. .
.............
... .. ........
175.0
180.6
183.0
184.0
Parabolic mikes
Ch
05
12
14
16
25
30
37
40
41
42
47
794.625
801.500
795 .750
802.000
797 .125
803.750
804.625
805.000
799.1 25
805.250
799.875
MONITORING TIMES
184.4
185.4
187.8
194.0
195.8
Louisiana
Shreveport ......... KFLO ...... ... .. 1300 AM
Monroe ..... ..... ... KMLB .......... 1440 AM
Arkansas
Washington,
Minneapolis, Seattle ... ..
San Francisco ..... .. ......
Cleveland, Miami ,
San Diego
............ .
Indianapolis ......... ....
Buffalo, Denver .. ..........
October 1994
Other
Newark, DE ....... WNRK .. ...... l 260 AM
Honolulu,HI .... ... . KGU ...... ... .. .. . 760 AM
Ulysses, KS ... .. .. . KFXX ....... ... l 06.7 AM
KVLY .. ........ . 1420 AM
Clinton , Ml .. .. .... . WSLI .... .. ....... 930 AM
Jopli n, MO ... ..... KWAS .. .... ... 1230 AM
LasVegas,NV ... .. KENO ......... 1460 AM
Erwin, TN .... ..... . WXIS .. ... ..... l 03. 9 FM
Scranton, PA .. .... WILK .. ...... ... .. 980 AM
Va Beach, VA .... WGH .... ...... 1310 AM
Spokane, WA .. .. . KTRW ... .. .... ... 970 AM
Martinsburg,WV WRNR ........ ... 7 40 AM
High-tech helmets
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
13
''B
By Jeffrey Heyman
14
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
KAMPUCHEA
(Cambodia)
lltil! ,,.. . .
ii:ll - - .'
_ .. ,,,,.
_...
:...
...... ~
~
!
,'
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..
---..
The mommg program team in Broadcast Studio 2: (from right) program director,
Jeffrey Heyman; announcer Kim Kolthida; technicians, Roy Neaphally and
Chamroim. Photo courtesy of tlze United Nations.
week, over the next year the station grew
enormously in stature, credibility and popularity. Those fi rst simple programs, which
incl uded basic primers on the democratic
process, were taped using crude techniques.
The tapes were then driven across 25 ki lometers of dusty road each day to a Phillips I 20
kW transmitter at the government" s Steung
Meanchey radio faci lity outside Phno m Penh
for broadcast.
Soon the In fo/Ed production fac ility was
to become a full-n edged station. Just over $3
mi ll ion were spent to construct stud ios. outfit
" news rooms," and undertake the difficu lt
task of installing rural transmitters. T hese
October I 994
MONITORING TIMES
JS
16
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Buddhist monks come to Radio UNTAC to guard the station against evil spirits. The
author (third from right), as head of the studios, assisted the monks during the
ceremony. Photo by the author.
the government-run radio and television network whi ch broadcast to various parts of the
country on a sporadic schedul e. Several factions had weak radio stat ions. The Royalist
Party ran a 24-hour FM stati on from Prince
Ranariddh 's bedroom. It could only be heard
in a few neighborhoods around Phnom Penh,
however. The Khmer Rouge 's clandestine
radio station. which transmitted on shortwave from somewhere near the Thai border,
could occasionally be heard in the capital.
With a range of programs that included
everything from serious informational productions to traditional and popular music
shows, and with a reliability exemplified by
exact, on-the-hour ti me announcements. Radio UNTAC drew an ever-growing and loyal
audience. Most people in Cambodia could
not afford radios. Groups would gather together in the market place to listen to Radio
UNT AC tapes which had been copied by the
thousands and distributed across the country.
Nearly a half-million portable radios, and
countless batteries, were donated by the Japanese government and several Japanese companies. Soon $3 radios started to nood the
markets. They were snapped up nearly as
quickly as they arri ved. In spiteoflhe fact that
the average income of Cambodians was less
than $20 a month. one could sec the tiny red
radios pressed against the ears of merchants,
soldiers. cyclo-pousse drivers. and government functionaries everywhere.
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Responsive Programming
Early on, the international staff produced
news and political fea tures, including several
d ial ogue-style programs. Using theatrical
scripting and folk themes found in Cambodian li terature, these programs sought to make
the idea of electoral process familiar to people
in all parts of the country. The Khmer staff
produced programs about culture, economy,
s oc ie ty. health. educatio n. agricu lture,
women' s issues and industry.
O ne of the most popular features at Radio
UNT AC became the Letters f rom Listeners
program, whi ch was broadcast daily. Listeners were in vited to send in their comments
and their questions about any issue concerning UNTAC. the democratic process, and
what cou ld be expected lo happen after the
election. Soon the station was swamped with
letters.
People asked how to vote. should 1 tell
my boss or my husband who I will vote for?"
Some of the over 25 members of the Ghanaian Battalion (Ghanbatt), the United
Nations troops who provided 24-hour military guard at Radio UNTAC, in front of
the Radio Complex i11 Phnom Penh. Photo courtesy of the United Nations.
18
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
received over 85 calls in three hours-extraordinary , given that almost no one had
access to telephones. Within a month, however, a monsoon lightning strike put the
station's telephone equipment and the call-in
program out of service, to the di smay of
listeners, but to the relief of the government.
In all of its programs, the radio station
explained the work of UNT AC. One of the
biggest concerns in the country then, as it still
is, was the tens of millions of active land
mines planted across the country. The Radio
UNTAC produced eleven Mine Awareness
programs, which were later used for field
training courses. Thirty-minute Radio
UNT AC programs were also broadcast during prime time over the popular Khmer-language short-wave service of VOA.
One of Radio UNTAC's top priorities
was to provide unbiased support for the political campaign. In doing so, Radio UNTAC
offered a daily program, Equal Access, Equal
Time, for the political parties to express their
views to the public. Members of the twenty
parties either came to record a five-minute
message or provided the station with a tape
outlining their particular platform. All were
searched upon arriving at the complex, and
many weapons had to be left with the military
guards. Radio UNTAC was the only free
tribune for the twenty political parties during
the election campaign. The program provided something of a counter-balance to the
two main political parties which each had
their own radio station and other media outlets.
people the results as they were being antion would not be intimidated. A hasty meetnounced at the noon and 7:00 pm press briefing between a government army commander
ings each day. Radio UNT AC simultaneously
and a United Nations battalion leader was
trans lated into Khmer the words and figures
held on the street in front of the station.
However, the tense encounter produced no
that the mission's spokesman, Eric Falt, anassurances. In the end, a tank and two arnounced, feeding it to the station via a cellular
telephone link.
mored personnel carriers were seen near the
Everyone in the country was glued to the
complex, but no attack came.
radio-farming fami lies in outlying villages
Throughout thi s two-day period of anxias much as political officials headquartered
ety, none of Radio UNTAC' s broadcasts were
in colonial-era villas in Phno m Penh. All
curtailed, even though prime minister continrelied on Radio UNTAC' s live broadcasts to
ued his campaign to stop the station from
provide them with the election results. These
broadcasting. He proclaimed that the live
election reports were "inflaming" the Camlive broadcasts ensured that no party, especially those that monopolized the country' s
bodian people and that he could no longer
media outlets, could claim an edge over anprotect the station from a popular upri sing
other party or announce themselves falsely as
against it.
the victor.
"There was a great demand to demonstrate against Radio UNTAC at its station,
When it learned that the first tabulations
had its party, the Cambodian People's Party
but," the leader bragged, "it was prevented."
Ominously he continued, " Now if Radio
(CPP), behind, the government grew angry at
Radio UNTAC's li ve reports. Hun Sen, at
UNTAC wants to become like gasoline pourleast by one eye-witness account, shot all
ing on the fire, please go ahead." It was hard
three radios in his offices with a pistol when
to tell to what demonstration the prime minhe heard the fi rst reports. Shortly thereafter,
ister referred, since people remained glued to
their radios as election results continued to be
threats deemed cred ible to "blow up" the
station, as well as overt demands that it go off
broadcast. Villages and city streets were nearly
the ai r, were received. Other inte lligence indeserted during the twice daily live broaddicated that a government attack on the stacasts.
tion might take place just
prior to the second night's
live election results coverage.
Tensions rose, as reports we re rece ived of
"tanks" being ordered to
surround the station. The
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Defiantly, the station
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MONITORING TIMES
19
Young and tired offighting, at the coronation ceremony of King Sillwnouk, some of
the nearly 2,000 Khmer Rouge troops who defected to the newly-unified Cambodian
army after the elections and establishment of the country's new constitution, hold a
portrait of the King. In interrogations after their defections, many of these troops
said that Radio UNTAC very much influenced them to leave the Khmer Rouge.
Mission Accomplished
Voting had been carried out in all twenLyone provinces in Cambodia. Dcspilc heavy
monsoon rains, threats of violence and banditry, people cast their ballots al 1400 fixed
polling stations. or through the 200 mobile
polling teams operating in remote areas of the
country. Stories were told of people without
limbs strugg ling along for mi les in order to
vote, of Khmer Rouge soldiers arri ving at
polling stations without their standard-issue
AK-47s and B-40 rocket launchers to cast
their secret ballots. Security. provided by UN
military and civi lian police components, was
tight at polling stations. With the exception of
a few mi nor incidents, the only security problem at the polls was how to accommodate the
overwhelming crowds of excited vo1ers.
A total of 4,267, 192 Cambodians cast
their ballots. Thal fig ure represented 89.5%
of registered voters in the country. The Special Representati ve of the Secretary-General.
Yasushi Akashi , declared the election free
and fair. The Cambodian people had voted in
overwhelmi ng numbers for peace, resulting
in an unli kely coalition government. The
Royalist Party, Front 1111i 11a1io11al pour 1111
Cambodge independam, nellfre. /J(1c(fiq11e et
cooperatif (known by the French acronym
20
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
An Unexpected Audience
defected , when asked what made him surrender simply replied, "Tired of fighting; listened to situation on UNT AC Radio."
Other Khmer Rouge soldiers in the village of Sok Sann said they li stened to Radio
UNTAC every day, although civ ili ans and
soldiers alike in Khmer Rouge-controlled
zones were ordered to only li sten to Khmer
Rouge radio. Two Khmer Rouge Commanders told the UN military component that listening to Radio UNTAC greatly infl uenced
their decisions to defect with their men. They
said that they realized the elections were free
and fair and that peace was returning to Cambodia.
British journalist William Shawcross (author of Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the
Destruction ofCambodia, published by Simon
and Schuster) summed up the role of Information and Education in the peace process:
"The experience in Cambodia proves that
radio can be crucial to a peace-keeping operation."
Several Khmer Rouge generals, who decided to join the new national army , stated
that they were expecting to receive orders to
destroy polling stations around the country .
When an UNT AC military interrogator asked
one of the generals what the Khmer Rouge
did during the election, he answered, "We all
stayed home and listened to Radio UNT AC!"
One of the generals said that they did not
attack any polling places because they knew
they were not strong enough.
There may have been another fac tor, however.
The story of the radio station is an optimistic lesson for fu ture peace-keeping missions. Its success, however. must also be
credited to the people of Cambodia who listened with tolerance and decided for themse lves what was right. In spite of Khmer
Rouge threats and horrific memories, they
went out to vote their dreams for a peaceful
future. The United Nations mandate in Cambodia-one that seemed nearly impossible at
times-was completed when the democratically elected constituent assembly adopted a
constitution.
Radio UNT AC, for all that it did to further
the peace process and to heal the wounds of a
country so torn by confl ict, went off the air on
September 22, 1993, the day before Norodom
Sihanouk was crowned King.
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October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
21
True Stories
False Leads
Over the years there has been an avalanc he of possibilities about number stations
put forth by the monitoring community. and
each one seems more improbable than its
predecessor. One theory pointed the fi nger at
Site A is closing and will be consolidated with the three other sites of the Warrenton
Training Center. (Photo courtesy of Lawrence Emerson, Faquier Citizen)
22
MONITORING TIMES
Oclober 1994
time. His theory, therefore: UPS is responsible for the worldwide number stations networks to pass information on cargo arrival
and departure !
The projected possibilities have run the
gamut over the last few years, but the general
consensus of monitors worldwide is far more
sinister tha n any of the theories yet mentioned. The most wide ly held belief is that
number station trans missions are communications fro m the world of espionage, and the
broadcasts are intended for "James Bond
007" agents in the fi eld.
Numerous indi viduals over the years have
queried various U.S. government agenc ies
using the Freedom ofln formation Act (FO LA)
for information on number station broadcasts. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),
National Security Agency (NSA), Department of State, Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and even the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU) in Geneva,
to mention a few, have all routinely denied
any knowledge of such transmissions. However, other inquirers have been told that the
information they have requested "may be
classified ." Such contradictions are commonplace when dealing with the world of number
broadcasts.
T o complicate an already contradictory
picture of the numbers world. one only has to
look as far as the NSA. This agency has a
worldwide network of monitoring stations to
listen in on every possible type a nd mode of
communication, yet they claim to not even
know that these shortwave powerhouses even
exist. Let's get real, fo lks!
Buildings comprise the majority of Site B, the largest of the sites. Antennas below,
left, are also located on the grounds of this station. (Photos courtesy of LAwrence
Emerson, Faquier Citizen)
time that at least one of these stations was
transmitting from t11e United States. The transmitter broadcasting 4-digit numbers in Spanish on 9074kHz was di scovered in Warrenton,
Virginia (See Monitoring Times. April, 1984).
A nother4-digit Spanish nu mbersite transmitting on 4670 kHz was discovered along
the Florida space coast as di sclosed in the
June 1988 issue of MT. In each of these cases,
the number stations were operat ing under
U.S. govern me nt auspices on U.S. governme nt land.
Back in January oftbis year, 1 received an
unmarked, plai n white e nve lope with some
HF freq uency in fo rmation inside. The letter was sent anonymous ly, but it was quite obvious from what was wri tte n that
thi s indi vi dual was ve ry
knowledgeable.
Most of the frequencies
mentioned in the letter used
the upper or lower sideband
modes. Two of the freq uencies on this li st grabbed my
immediate attention: 5812 kHz
AM and 6840 kHz AM. These
frequenc ies were identified as
" In tel" channe ls Echo and
Golf. Most numbe r buffs will
recog ni ze these two frequen-
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23
Sites C and D of the Warrenton Training Center are the source of State Dept. station
KKNSO and also of the 4-digit Spanish spy/drug i11tellige11ce munber broadcasts. Site
Dis shown above.
cics as Spanish female 4-digit number channels. But. here's the kicker: the list of frequencies was identified as coming from the
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24
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
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MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
A glimpse of Station C antennas from behind the clzian link fence. The photo has
been manipulated for impact.
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MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Software Mastery
As part of the introductory offer. Optoelectronics is providing the OptoScan software free with the purchase of the OS456.
Though the OptoScan software has man y
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October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
29
TABLE 1
Waro{Wor~
.,,
HRJA-Tegucigalpa, Honduras
(All programs transmitted on 15675 kHl)
Lo Vaz del Veterono ........................ 0000-0100 Mon
Rodiogroliode lo Tronsiciim ............. 00000030 Tue-Sun
Rumbo a lo Libertod ........................ 0030-0130 Wed-Sun
Lo Voz del Educodor Cubano Libre.... 1900-2000 Tue/ Fri
Radio Roquero ................................ 21002130 Sot
Rodiogrolio de lo Tronsiciim ............. 2230-2300 Doi~
Un Solo Pueblo ................................ 2300-2330 Thu/ Sun
Pueblo Libre ................................... 2330-0000 Mon-Wed/Fri/Sol
WHRl-Noblesville, IN
IUTC)
30
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Targeting Television
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~----7i_h_e_H_F_C_o_m_m_u_n_ic_a_tio_n_s_Sp_ec_tru_m_
Larry Van Hom, NSFPW
erbrand Diebels (editor of Holland's SC-MAC Airlift magazine) and your editor have a question for Utility World
readers. What unit of the USAF is using the callsign
"Nightwatch" and also the "Nightwatch" number units such as
Nightwatch OJ, 02, 03 and 04?
Recently, Gerbrand heard two aircraft (Megaphone and Abdicate)
working "Flash" message traffic (RTIY) with the Croughton Air
Base Global HF System (GHFS) station, that was being relayed to
Nightwatch on another frequency. This was happening on 13247.0
and 1821 8.0 kHz. (Military monitors should make note ofthat 18 MHz
frequency.). Later in the day , these two aircraft worked Nightwatch
on 11255.0 using lower side band (LSB).
In recent months I have had numerous reports of thi s callsign
series, and one thing is becoming obvious: although this callsign is a
tactical callsign, it is static in nature and is being heard on a regular
basis by military monitors in both North America and Europe.
My personal belief is that theseNightwatch callsigns are part of the
U.S. Strategic Command's (USSTRATCOM) airborne command
post system. Since the disestablishment of Strategic Air Command
(SAC), the old SAC system of U.S. Air Force flying command posts
has slowly evolved into a new system that reflects the major players
in USSTRATCOM-the Air Force and Navy. This new command
system consists of USAF aircraft and U.S. Navy E-6 TACAMOTake Charge and Move Out-aircraft.
The Night watch callsign was first heard on STRATCOM channels
in March of this year. Since then, they have been heard on a variety of
STRATCOM frequencies. Our conclusions: Night watch 01 /02/03/04
are probably aircraft and Night watch is a ground station.
Most of the theories regarding the identity of these callsigns have
revolved around the E-4B code name "Nightwatch"-National Emergency Airborne Command Post (NEACP) aircraft attached to the 1st
ACCS based at Offutt AFB, NE. However, given the limited amount
of flying that the E-4Bs are currently doing, I don't think that these
callsigns represent the E-4B flee t of four aircraft. Here is my best
guess regarding this series of callsigns:
Nightwatch: USSTRATCOM Headquarters, Offutt AFB, NE
This station always appears to be the Net Control Station (NCS) of the
STRA TCOM nets on which they have been heard. The callsign has been
reported on the foll owing frequencies: 2035.0. 4742.0, 5700.0, 6730.0, 6735.0,
68 12.0, 90 17.0, 9023.0, 9057.0, 11226.0. 11 243.0, 11255.0, 11408.0, 13217.0,
and 18218.0.
32
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
system; the callsign has been heard on the following frequencies: 6730.0,
9017.0, 11176.0, 11226.0, I 1243.0 and 11408 .0
Rwanda
Rwanda relie fflights are now in full operation. Flights into Goma
and Kigali are using the callsign "Reach### RW" and their tankers
"Reach### T' (the numbers used by the tankers correspond with the
numbers used by the airlift receiving aircraft). The coordination of
these refueling operations is done on 6750.0 kHz and occasionally on
11218.0 kHz. Information such as rendezvous times, flight levels and
air refueling UHF frequencies are passed on these frequencies.
There are several HF frequencies being used at the Goma airport,
but only 4472.0 kHz has been confirmed. Their UHF frequency is
313.800 MHz and 138.700 MHz has been noted on VHF.
Haiti
In Europe, several HF frequencies have been heard, used by ships
and aircraft enforcing the Haitian blockade: 4090.0, 4735.0, 6735.0,
6815.6, 8967.0, and 12382.7 kHz.
Northern Iraq
Thanks to a Cable News Network (CNN) news item on Operation
Provide Comfort, SC-MAC has been able to learn the identity of the
following callsigns:
'Cougar' is the callsign of the USAF E-3B Airborne Warning and
Control System (AWACS) aircraft operati ng from the Incirlik Air
Base in Turkey monitoring the ' No-Fly' zone over northern Iraq
(Operation Provide Comfort).
'Duke ' is the common call sign used by the commander US Army
Europe (USAEUR) on board the A WACS flights. Sometimes you
can hear 'Cougar' requesting phone patches on GHFS frequencies
on behalf of 'Duke'. No rmally 'Duke' is used by USAEUR
operations in Heidelberg or the aircraft on which he is flying.
'Maddog' is a command post (CP) at Incirlik and 'Chevy Ops ' is the
operations department of the AW ACS detachment from the
552nd AW ACS squadron, home based at Tinker AFB, Oklahoma.
The frequencies used by ' Maddog' and 'Chevy Ops' are 8173.0
and 11117.0 kHz. I would like to thank SC-MAC for updating us on
these trouble spots and their associated communications.
5492.0
6230.0
Thanks to SC-MAC and Jeff for keeping all our lists up to date on
the ever-changing Mystic Star system designators.
6230.0
6734.0
Some weird data pulses, resembling pocket bursts, ore being heard here
in North America during the evening hours; they ore opporen~y coming
from the Gulf of Mexico. At this point ii is unknown what these pulses ore.
'Airbridge' frequency for Sarajevo airport in Bosnia. One callsign,
'Reddoq.' is o USAF station (possible aircrott?J that monitors air routes
into and out of the a irport. The UN on the ground al Soravejo uses the
call sign 'Airbridge'.
Used by the USAF Forward Air Control units in Germany. Collsigns heard
include: Binary, Jerrymon, Jerrymon Bose, Shouter and Shouter Bose.
Some of the USAF Europe control and reporting post coll signs: Maroon,
Morpho, Galley and Biform. Other frequencies used include: 4789.0,
4830.0, 5440.0 a nd 8085.0. On these frequencies you can hear the
Forward Air Controllers brief missions, and mentions of aircrott callsigns,
coordinates, and UHF frequencies.
Mott Anderson in Richmond, KY, hos identified a previously listed pot luck
unknown heard on 6230.0. One intercept noted here hod Roider working
Raider Bose in USB . Matt said he immediately recognized the collsigns as
belonging_to the Morine Corps aviation squadron, VMGR-352 in El Toro,
CA. They Ay the KC 130 tanker aircratt. Nice selection of a HF frequency,
guys. Semper-Fi.
Boulmeris the Royal Novy sector operations, control, and reporting center
for the northern United Kingdom. Neatishead covers the south. On HF
these stations practice coordination with ships, but sometimes you con
hear Royal Air Force (RAF) aircratt, NATO AWACS, and RAF Nimrod
oircrott. Other frequencies used by Boulmerand Neatishead for off.shore
coordination include:
2838.030 26.03039.03046.03112.03116.03117.03126.03435.0
3467.0 3499.0 3882.0 3885.0 3893.0 3916.0 3935.0 3939.0 4463.0
4464.0 4484.0 4707.0 4709.0 4710.0 4711 .0 4717.04719 .0 4730.0
4731 .04739.04749.0 4763.0 4822.04B45.05014.05095.05130.0
5287.0 5447.0 5450.0 5462.0 5470.0 5654.0 5685.0 5686.0 5690.0
5717.05721 .05729.05747.06681.06686.06690.06693.06697.0
6725.06851 .0 6755.0 6757.0 6760.0 6765.0 8790.0 8975.0 8984.0
8988.0 8997.0 9014.0 9022.0 10194.0 10210.0 11172.0 11178.0
11212.0 13205.0 13234.0 18013.0
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
33
4602.0
4735.0
AM
ARO
Amplitude Modulation
Synchronous transmission
and automatic repetition
teleprinter
Single channel ARO
AROE3
teleprinter system
AROM2
Multiplex teleprinter
system with two data
channels
CAMSLANT Communications Area
Master Station, Atlantic
CAMS PAC Communications Area
Master Station, Pacific
Comm(s) Communication(s)
ca
General call for any station
cw
Continuous Wave (Morse
Code)
DECCA
70 130 kHz CW
radionavigation system
EAM
Emergency Action
Message
ETA
Estimated Time of Arrival
FEC
Forward error correction
teleprinter system
FEC-A
One-way traffic FEC
teleprinter system
HF
High Frequency
IAG
Institute of Applied
Geophysics
ID
LDOC
Identification
Long Distance Operational
Control
Mars
Military Affiliate Radio
System
Meleo
Meteorology
MFA
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
m/v
Motor Vessel
Packet
Digital mode based on AX25 computer protocol
PIAB
Presse- und
lnformationsamt der
Bundesregierung
POL-ARO Polish diplomatic ARO
teleprinter system
Radioteletype
RITT
SAM
Special Air Mission
SELCAL
Selective calling
SWEDARQ Adaptive Swedish
diplomatic simplex ARO
teleprinter system
SI TOR-A
Simplex teleprinting over
radio, Mode A
Unid
Unidentified
U.S.
United States
USAF
U.S. Air Force
Upper Side Band
use
XINHUA
New China News Agency
4742.0
5293.0
5417.1
5574.0
5626.0
5643.0
5667.0
5732.0
6125.0
6683.0
6717.0
6728.0
6735.0
6738.0
All frequenc ies in kilohertz (kHz), all times in UTC. All voice
transmissions in English 1111/ess otherwise noted.
6797.0
50.000
60.000
70.458
75.000
77.500
84.550
85 720
11 2.733
114.293
115.552
126.825
128.580
129.100
1794.0
1905.0
4015.0
4426.0
4592.0
4601.0
34
MONITORING TIMES
October I 994
6815.6
7330.0
7910.0
7919.5
8026.0
8031.0
8047.0
8143.0
8495.0
8530.0
8560.0
8687.5
8861 .0
8942.0
8967.0
8989.0
9003.0
9014.0
9017.0
9023.0
9043.5
Irish military stations CWE. CWR and XVOV working A using SITOR-A at
2142. (Boender-Neth)
U.S. Navy FT network noted here in USB al 2357. (Jeff Haverlah-Houston.
TX)
Nightwatch working MacDill in USB at 0355. "We're going to shut down HF
data for the night...Sorry about the problems tonight." (David HowdenLancaster. PA)
U.S. Navy 'FT' net with 14 plus players. FT had bad ping pong problems,
requested stations to switch to Pink Floyd, if that didn't work try Def
Leppard and Eagles as last resort. In USB at 0658. I haven't heard the FT
net on this frequency before. (Howden-PA) Neither have I, David-Larry.
Heard same at 0226. (Bob Lewallyn-The Woodlands, TX)
Spanish female 5digit number station in AM at 0317 (Fri). Modulation was
muffled, delivery was a little erratic, definitely not machine generated
speech. (Lewallyn TX)
San Francisco Radio working Express 15 in USB at 1154. (Levine-CA)
Tokyo working Delta 74 at 11 09 and Honolulu wothing Cathay 880 at 1340
in USB. (Levine-CA)
Honolulu Radio working Hawaii 466 in USB at 1355. (Levine-CA)
Honolulu Radio working American 126 in USB at 1342.(Levine-CA)
Shado(w) 91 calling Plantation with message in USB at 0023. (HaverlahTX)
Defiance working unid station in use at 1325. Sounded like the Coast
Guard to me, interesting choice of frequencies. (L.Van Horn-NC)
SAM 201 working SAM 204 in USB at 1424. These guys on at same time
as SAM 200 on 11243.0. (Haverlah-TX)
SAM 28000working Andrews on F-875 in USB at (Jeffrey Jones-Tracy, CA)
Andrews working 974 in USB at 0426. (Haverlah-TX)
Jake working Jake Control at 1616 in USB. Also heard Jake 12 and Jake 13
calling Jake Control. (HaverlahTX)
Lajes working Nightwatch in USB at 0400, moved to 8967 and was
wondering ii anyone had contact with SOM that evening. (Howden-PA}
Offutt with an EAM broadcast directed to USS Ohio consisting of common
preamble of the week "52 ...", but not 26 characters long, only 20 characters
in length. (Haverlah-TX) That is a very interesting log Jeff; first time I have
heard of such an EAM broadcast -Larry.
Number station, add ress: 430. 1ocount, 1o dashes, count 135 then 5-digit
groups in AM with parallel 5716 at 2100. (Boender-Neth) What language,
Ary-Larry?
U.S. Coast Guard FC net noted here at 0149. (L.Van Horn-NC)
Black Ink working Nightwatch 01 on S307 in USB at 1238, also using S301
(not found), 9017 and 6730. (Haverlah-TX)
Cape Radio working Liberty Star, moved here from 10780.0 with Freedom
Star in USB at 1300. (Don Strock-Hemlock. Ml)
Oilpump calling Staffcar for radio check in USB at 0113. (Jones-CA)
Andrews working Air Force 1 on primary F-290, signal check, transfer to
backup F-965 in USB. (Justin Stanley-Kansas City, MO) Make sure you
include times with your logs Stan-Larry.
Tropical calling Lightning for radio check in USB at 2334. Heard last month
on 16077.0. (Jones-CA)
Andrews working AF1 with signal check on F-752 in LSB/USB at 0149.
(Jones-CA)
Czech female 5digit number station in USB at 0800. (Boender-Neth)
C-Single letter HF marker Moscow. Russia. with continuous CW marker at
2321. (Jack Dix-Yonkers. NY)
IAR-Rome Radio. Italy, with CW traffic list at 0857. (Boender-Neth)
Number station, 10 pulses plus 7983 5973 3751 followed by hiccup where
only the 3 was heard then 7083 5073 3751 in USB at 1330. It looks like
someone entered the wrong figures and made a last minute correction.
(Boender-Neth)
UGC-Noted wilh DE CW marker at 2354. (Dix-NY) I believe this one might
be ST. Petersburg Radio, Russia-Larry
Spingbok 202 working SAL Radio. Cape Verde Islands, for SELCAL check
(FMAQ) and position report in USB at 0715. (Robin Hood-UK)
Lufthansa 789 working Singapore Radio in USB at 1530.(HoodUK)
Overtone working Boomtown via Lajes in USB at 0024. (LewallynTX)
Andrews working 970 on self-IDed F-500 in USB at 0131 . (Haverlah-TX)
Amman. Jordan, LDOC working unid aircraft for SELCAL check in USB at
0150. (Jones-CA) Nice catch, Jeff-Larry.
Gemini 38 working Raymond 7 in USB at 2310. (Haverlah-TX)
Nightwatch 02 working Nightwatch 01 for landing weather at 0225 in USB.
(Jones-CA)
Roll Call working Edmonton Military in USB at 1446. (HaverlahTX}
Detox working Aviation for computer configuration. Asked "Do you have
Gold Wing HF net configuration on your computer?" in USB 0415. (JonesCA)
9101.0
9266.0
9320.0
9932.0
9958.0
10002.0
10125.0
10270.0
10281 .2
10307.0
10314.0
10365.0
10400.2
10408.6
10415.0
10583.0
10584.0
10798.0
10854.0
10871.8
10871 .9
11048.0
11 053.0
11053.5
111 23.5
111 33.0
11176.0
111 78.0
11220.0
11 229.0
11 292.0
11 342.0
11453.0
11460.0
11466.0
12193.0
12350.0
13241 .0
13247.0
13288.0
13354.0
13825.0
14460.0
1501 1.0
15038.0
16030.0
16982.5
17015.8
17096.0
18060.0
18300.0
18331.0
18735.0
AFB). Aircraft was Alenia/Chrysler C27 Spartan with air conditioning and
pressurization problems. They agreed aircraft could keep flying fora couple
of days without repairs if they remained below 10,000 feet. Alb rook now
uses this frequency for more lengthy phone patch traffic when 11176 gets
a log jam during the day. (Lewallyn-TX)
Honolulu Radio working Northwest 924, United 186, United 188. United
822. United 1 and Leisure World 1556 in USB at 0045. (Levine-CA)
Honolulu Radio working Leisure World 1112 in USB at 01t5. (Levine-CA)
Andrews working SAM 28000 on F-194 in USB at 0100. (Jones-CA)
GYU-Royal Navy Gibraltar with 75 baud RTIY RY/Foxes at 2050. (BoenderNeth)
Andrews working 173? reporting Air Force 1 ETA on secondary F-732 in
USB. (Stanley-MO)
Inequity entering net with Nightwatch 01. Pertormed Parkhill voice check
at 1547. Advised that Remedial was relay to Audio Kit on Wl 13. Inequity
and Audio Kit were heard getting working frequencies for Nightwatch 01
(X211 primary and W1 13 secondary) from Andrews on 15015 at 1543.
(Lewaltyn-TX)
Radio Moscow International feeder broadcast in USB at 0910. (BoenderNeth)
HKMA called by KOAT in CW at 1420. (Dix-NY) Anybody have any ideas on
this one? I have been chasing these two stations for severalyears now with
no positive results yet-Larry.
C-Single letter HF marker Moscow. Russia, with continuous CW marker at
2110. (Dix-NY)
VPS80-Cape D'Aguilar Radio. Hong Kong, with CW CO marker at 2323.
(Dix-NY)
MFA Warsaw, Poland, calling NH with messages in Polish using POL-ARO
at 1335. (Boender-Neth)
OMZ88-MFA Prague with IDand RVs and diplomatic bulletin 112 (in Czech)
using 100 baud RTIY at 0811. Note that the 'OM' internalional call block is
now allocated to the Slovak Republic, but MFA Prague is still using DMZ.
(Hood-UK)
SAM 28000 working Andrews on F-551 in USB at 2323. (Jones-CA)
Naval comm station with recorded message for station ID and receiver
alignment in USB at 04 15. (Jones-CA)
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October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
35
r~DtD~-----7i_h_e_Wc_o_rl_CJ_Ab_oVi_e_3-:-0-:-M:-:-:
H
=z
1
~- -
Bob Kay, c/o MT, P.O. Box 98, Brasstown, N.C. 28902
Finding Frequencies
Airborne Frequencies
36
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Treasure Hunt
Interest in monitoring and d ispl aying sub-audible tones is at an alltime high. Scanner buffs fro m coast to coast have di scovered that
Police
Police
Police
Police
Police
Police
State Police
42.30
42.20
42.24
42.58
42.64
42.68
856.9625
857.2125
857.2375
857.4375
857.4625
857.4875
..... Detectives
..... Traffic
..... Traffic
..... Speed enforcement
..... Speed enforcement
..... Speed enforecment
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"lrresistable" BiH Cheek
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857.7125
857.9375
857.9625
858.2125
858.2375
858.4375
858.4625
858.4875
858.7125
858.9375
858.9625
Remy Eisenson
Now
95
"A giant uooertaking... authoritative" Monitoring T11118! "You can"t miss!" ASG
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111
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i:: 1 "'"
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<tJ-2!11-2'J57 tl'ditoriall
October 1994
.\1kl$.Vh1ks.llL C\addtr
:\ IOldtcck ,fa nttil. orrnll tollfn.'l.
\II
r
I
.
," l~l'I I l'al"<'
37
(continued}
155. 175 ... Search & rescue
155.235 ... El Paso search & rescue
453.50 ..... Airport security
462.975 ... Pol ice
Our final stop is the home of Ralph Fellows, where we' II walk off
some of those calories. Ralph lives in San Bernardino, California,
and here are his favorite frequencies.
Moumain, Public Safey
866.6875
867.3375
867.8375
868. 11 25
868.6875
Phone Parch
856.825
858.525
858.775
866. 1875
867.1125
38
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
911 Banc/its
When a man called 91 1 in Glendale, California, to ask fo r
directions to a particular street, the dispatcher politely explained how
to get there.
Ten minutes later, the same dispatcher received a call from a
women who reported th at her father had lost his wa llet and house
keys. After confirming where the man li ved, the dispatcher remembered that she had just given directions to the same street. Becoming
suspicious, the dispatcher sent a patrol car to the home of the person
who had lost their keys and wallet. Two suspects were apprehended
after they tried to un lock a door that was dead bolled fro m the inside.
(News clipping from Dispatch Monthly.)
National
Scanning
Report
But don't take our word for it. Check it out
19376
Now
1-800-968-7795
DRAKE
T ~ ~)
BEGINNER'S CORNER
Kit Building
Uh, Uncle Skip, I thought you were going to talk about kits.
I am! Brace yourself fo r the segue; it's a doozy.
Whenever radi o fo lks gather at conventions, after all the organi zed
stuff is fi nished , late at night, some of us with more than a few rings
around our trun ks begin to wax nostalgic. We will remember old
radios, o ld QSOs, old hobby publicatio ns. If it's old and gone we will
put in overtime lamenti ng its passing. We even remember old companies. If you want to get a bunch of seasoned radio freaks to go all misty
eyed late at night, just whisper one single word:
HEATHKIT!!!
Steely eyed fo lks hardened by years o f battling static crashes and
propagation wi ll develop noticeable lumps in their throats as they
remember DX- I 00s, SB-303s Bento n Harbor Lunch Boxes, and
radios named for Native American tribes. I'd toss in my teddy bear to
snuggle with my old HW-8.
What made all these radios and accessories so memorable was they
came in kit form. Nothing in the entire radio hobby compares to using
a piece of equipment you put together yourself. And the biggest
surprise of all was discovering that putting together an electronic
device was not all that hard once you learned a few basic assembly
techniques.
Many radio hobbyists in the sixties, seventies and most of the
eighties attempted at least one Heathkit project. These fo lks are easy
to recognize at radio get togethe rs. They all have one or two soldering
iron scars on their fingers. If you want to gel their attention, all you
have to do is show them a cupcake pan (more on this later). The Heath
40
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
There are just too many old timers addicted to the smell of burning
solder and too many newcomers curious about kit building, however,
for things to stay quiet for any length of ti me. If you g lance through
the pages of j ust about any radio hobby magazine you are bound to
find a few compani es that are producing kits aimed at the radio
hobbyist. Kits for receive rs, transmitters, frequency converters,
active antennas, power supplies and test equipment are popping up all
over the place. Many of these projects are inexpensive and j ust the
thing to get a beginner rolling down the road to radio building bliss.
If you check the s ide-bar, you will be clued in to a list o f ki t dealers
who will supply you with your first project. Incidentally, as you
peruse these folks' catalogs, you will probably notice that many of
these kits are geared toward getting started in amateur radio. Nothing
creates the incentive to pass your ham ticket quite like having a
transcei ver project three quarters done.
Tooling Around
You don' t need to have a ton of tools to get into kit building. The
basics should keep you going for a long time. Start out with a pair of
needle nosed plie rs, a pair of diagonal cutte rs, a couple of screwdri vers and a small set of hex nut drivers. Most folks have these tools
around the house just to keep body and soul together.
All you need to add to get into kit building is a 25 or 30 watt
soldering pencil, some rosin core solder and a heat sink to protect
delicate parts when soldering (although the need le-nose pliers will
work in a pinch if you have someone to hold them while you are
soldering). If you need to purchase tools, remember, quality tools
cost a bit more but they will last forever if you take good care of them.
After all, you don't want your carefully sorted components spilled all
over your work surface because it's your significant other's tum to
bring refreshments to the PTA meeting.
';~J--:~.
~ : '
DXRadio Supply
Box 360
Wagontown, PA 19376
1610273-7823
S&S Engineering
14102 Brown Road
Smithburg, MD 21783
301-416-0661
624 Kits
171 Springlake [)rive
Spartanburg, .~f ~9392
Ten Tee
1185 Dolly Parton Plwy
Sevierville, TN 37862
l 6154537172
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
41
SHORT
Av{~dAo ASTING
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
hrta:f
rta:pof
.f tOetb-.Cttfli
DX Listening Digest
More broadcasting information by country compiled
by Glenn Hauser
MONITORING TIMES
43
SOUTH AFRICA VOA now via Meyerton, Sat. & Sun . 1600-1 700 on
3970, Mon.-Fri. 1800- 1900 on 4985 , English to Africa; first time for VOA
on tropical band? (RNMN) Well, Ukraine relayed them on 4940 (gh)
SUDAN (see last month) R. Omdurman heard irregularly in July o n
9370 (M ike Osborn, BDXC Communication) By August, English at 18001900 o n 9200 but not daily, so maybe sometimes on other frequencies
(Edwin Southwell , England) 9200 ex-9 165, also in French 1700 (Eugene
Gebrcurs, RVI Radio World via Bilschel, Cline, Mauer) Also Arabic
be fore 1700 (Achim Bruckner, Germany, DSWCI SW News)
SWITZERLAND See Sept; SR I in Portuguese at I030- I 045 on 11 640
ct al, is not for Timor, but Brazil (gh) Is unofficial, simulcasting satellite
feed for placement (Walter Funkhauser, SRI, RNMN)
SYRIA Syrian Arab Republic R., Main Program, as expected fo r
winter time from Oct. I, in Arabic: 0559-1700 on 15095, 12085; includes
program for Golan Heights Sat. 1445- 1600, and Palestine broadcast daily
1630- 1730 (BBCM)
THAILAND BBC WS to build its eighth relay station in northern
Thailand, 4 x 250 kW and two aerial systems operational within three
years. towards China. Indian subcontinent (BBC Worldwide) 300 rai of
land in Nakhon Sawan Province, western Thailand , total cost 12.3
megapounds; Britain pays Thailand 5 megapounds; English and I 0 other
languages but Thai not allowed, 20-year agreement, expected on air before
1996 (V. of Free Asia via BBCM) To replace Hong Kong, 250 km N of
Bang kok, 14 curtains, main beams centered on
280 and 45 degrees (lmernational Broadcast
magazine via Bilschel) Though heard at I 325l 330 on 6764.9 USB, Bangkok Meteorological
Radio announced official schedule o n 6765 as:
0000-0200, 0300-0500, 0600-0800, 0900-1 I00,
1200- 1300, 1600-1700, 1800-2000. 22002300-weather in Thai and English (Takayuki
Inoue Nozaki , Relampago DX Logging via Play-DX) Radio Thailand
began via VOA-Udom Aug. 11. English: 0000-0030 o n 9690 to S. Africa;
0030-0 IOOon l 5370 toE. N. America; 0300-0330on 15370 to W. N. Am. ;
1900-2000 on 9700 to Scandinavia; 2030-2045 on 9700 to Britain. Other
lang uages: 0 I 00-0200 and 0330-0430 on 15370; 1100-1130 on 7245;
1130- 1200 on 6040; 1200-1230 on 11 805 ; 1300-1400 on 11845. 18001900 on 9690, 2000-2030 and 2045-2115 on 9700 (via Dan Ferguson,
VO A, Usenet via George Thurman) Best here at 1300- 1400 is 11845, but
o nly English heard is "HSK9" ID between languages; shou ld do morning
broadcast to us instead of evening-15370 sometimes audibl e, fluttery.
Better yet, insist on using VOA US sites (gh, OK)
UK 0 GB A NI 8 BC WS and Red Cross have launched Radio Unk ,
in Croatian and Serbian , to help refugees, separated families get in contact.
Suns. 1930-2000 on 1296, 5875, 6 125. 9825, 9915, 11680 (BBCWS via
BDXC) Now 2030?
US A VOA revived Spanish o n SW calls itself "Voa-Sat," at 01000 200, 1200-1 300 but terminated the weekday 1700 and 2130 broadcasts
(gh & Vodenik)
On short notice, KGEI, Redwood City, CA, closed down at the end of
July. Financial support for the Latin American service had declined and
FEBC could no longer justify it; their mai n target is, of course the Far East.
O n hi s final broadcasts, Pastor Jose Holowaty announced he was organizing OCRA-Opcraci6n Cristiana de Radiodifusi6n Americana, hoping to
raise $40K per month to continue his ministry via satellite o r some other
SW fac ility; fax himat home: 415-347-6320,orwriteJosc, P.O. Box 0927,
San Carlos, CA 94070. KGEI had been o n the air since 1939, lately using
I 5280 from 2200, 96 l S from 0300 (gh) ELW A, Liberia, may get the
vintage KGEI SO kW transmitter, and FEBC may move the 250 to
Phili ppines (RNMN) Within two weeks, transmitters, antennas, towers,
dis mantled and sold to d iffe rent buyers in the world (Adrian Peterson, via
To m Sundstrom, SWL-List via DXPL) Area surrounding KGEI is heavily
contaminated with PCBs (Robert Fortner, Intersearch, Vancouver conference via Walter Salmaniw, DXO)
If you' re reading this after Sept. 27, WYFR 's Harold Camping was
wrong about the World endingjust now. Tentati ve W-94 schedule shows
WYFR using lowest possible frequ encies pioneered by other stations,
both toward Europe: 58 1Oat 2000-2300, 5825 at 1845-2 l 45 (gh)Camping' s
"divine numerics" are refuted in detail by G. Richard Fisher. reviewing
Camping' s vanity-published book, in The Quarterly Journal of Personal
Freedom Outreach, P.O. Box 26062, St. Louis, MO 631 36 ( via Larry
Sites, Holysmoke via J. J. Hitt, via Jeff Miller. SW Echo, via Geo rge
Thurman) Annual gi ving to Family Radio is up 20% this year to $ 12
million (AP via Doylestown Intelligencer vi a John Schmid )
WRMI, 9955, added Ernst Zundel, Nazi prog ramming Sat in English,
Sun in German, both at 1900- 1930. Due to unrest in Cuba, La Voz de la
Fundaci6n doubled WRMI airtime not only at 0200-0500 but also at 11001400 except local Sundays. See also HONDURAS (gh)
Expect WCSN to change officially to WVHA in Nov. or Dec.
WCSN' s final W-94 schedule, presumably meant for WVHA programming o nl y, depends on day of week: Mon., Wed. , Fri. 2300 on 7465, 0400
on 5850, I IOOon l 1695 , I 300on I 5665, 150001121670, 1700011 17612.5,
2000on 11 695. Not onl y frequencies, but some targets and azimuths differ
on Sun., Tue. , Thu. , Sat.: 2300 on 7465, 0400 on 5850, 1100 on 11695,
1600 on I 5665, 1800 o n 9930. 2000 on 5850.
MonirorRadio Intemational's new Leuerbox host is Lisa Dale(WSHB,
via Pete Costello via George Thurman) Moved to :49 past the hour
weekdays, " I 0 before the hour," reduced to onl y 3 minutes and repeated
all day (gh) Daily news progams updated thrice
weekl y at 0900, 1600, 2000, the last repeated over
and over until 0900 next day (Jim Moats, OH)
Another time to hear Owlaw f or Peace,
Willie Nelson & Friends is Wed. 2300011 WRNO
7355 (Diane Mauer & gh) Latino USA apparently
gone thi s and other days from WR NO (gh)
KC BI Denton, Texas has been renamed
KAIJ (Jerry Berg, NU via NA SWA Journal ) Tried to confi rm one nig ht
at 0300,on 98 1S, but no legal ID despite pauses/music in World University
Network programming for the purpose- FC C should cite such infractions: try at 0200 frequency shift (gh)
Until Oct. 30, KVOH is registered: 0 000-0 700 on 9785: from Oct. 30
it may use 9785 or 741 S at 0000-0800; and entire season 1200-0300 on
17775 (GJ&A) Only one transmitter, so it may switch from l 7 to9 or7 any
time between 0000 and 0300 (gh)
WWCR program host Tom Donahue (America's Town Fo n1111) went
to jail in Mansfi eld, TX, appealing and claiming he is innocent, but no
longer doing his show. (via Adam Lock, WWC R) Donahue was convicted
on 32 counts of racketeering and fraud (James Latham, RFPI )
FCC hiked spectrum usage fee imposed on SW stations from $35 to
$45 per frequency hour, blaming cost of li ving (George McClintock ,
WWCR)
WHRI , W-94 simpli fies its schedule: toward Europe, 2200(or as early
as 2000)-1 500on 7315, IS00-2200on 13760; toward S. America. 18001000 on 9495 (alternate 15545 at 2100-2300) , 1000-1 300 on 9850, 13001800 on 15 105 (GJ&A)
WINS , W-94: 1600- 1900 on 1571 5 62 , 1900-2400 on 11 9 15 62 ,
0000-1100 11 950 242 (GJ&A)
VENEZUELA R. Caracas R. is not on 25705 or any S W frequency
(Winter Denyite Monges, BDXC)
VIETNAM VOV H'M ong Service: 0430-0600, 1100-1 330. 22002330 on 6166v, 5033v (BBC M)
ZAMBIA Deregulation allows pri vate SW. and Christi an Voice has
CP, target Dec. 1, with I 00-kW Continental, "shower servi ce" vertical
incidence antenna covering 1500-km radius; site is 8000-acrc farm, 35 km
from Lusaka where also building Bible college, med center: mainl y in
English, some programs produced in UK, wi ll be stronger domestic
service than the national station, and further plans are for ex ternal service
to North and South Africa ; plenty of power, near generating station.
Besides Christian programming, also with health , news and sport (RNMN)
Until the n ext, Best of DX and 73 de Glenn!
llWRMI
44
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
...B
roadcast Loggings
,,.
Goy~
. -.-,e-\/,-an_H_o_m_ _ _
..._.._..._...._...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,,j[l]!Jf!'f\!fffiJl!!\Jll~l~
Thanks to our contributors - Have you sent in YOUR logs?
Send to Gayle Van Horn, do Monitoring Times.
English broadcast unless othenvise noted.
0000 UTC on 13760
NORTH KOREA: Radio Pyongyang. Editorial on atomic energy agencies.
North Korea concerned over apparent nuclear waste being dumped by
Japan in North Korean waters. Listeners letters, schedule and anthem to
0047'. (Steve Hunter, Drexel Hill, PA) Station heard on 13760 at 1300. (Jim
Moats, Ravenna, OH)
0000 UTC on 6175
UNITED KINGDOM: BBC. Good Books show featuring a great sea novel,
The Riddle of the Sea. (Hunter PA) Newsdesk noted on 12095 at 0358.
(Moats, OH) BBC Canadian relay heard on 9515 at 1515. (Bob Fraser,
Cohasset, MA; Leroy Long, Edmond, OK; Douglas Carn, Phoenix, AZ)
0008 UTC on 9540
SPAIN: Radio Exterior de Espaa. Newscast, Africa and Asian topics. News
on restoration projects in Madrid, and feature on a popular Spanish rock
group. (Alex R. Johnson, Atlanta, GA) Station monitored on 9540 at 0100
0130. (Long, OK; Carn, AZ)
0020 UTC on 3300
GUATEMALA: Radio Cultural. Religious programming. Additional Guate
malans monitored: Radio Tezulutian on 4835 at 0305, Radio Kekchl on
4845 to 0305, Radio Buenas Nuevas on 4799 to 0330. (Sam Wright,
Biloxi, MS)
0109 UTC on 9885
SWITZERLAND: Swiss Radio Intl. Interview, European politics // 6135.
Recent politics in Mexico. Program News Net weekly headlines. (Frank
Hillton, Charleston, SC)
0116 UTC on 9955
USA: Radio Miami Intl. Interesting travelogue on the Philippines, noting
Spanish history and attractions. ID at O120 with frequency and QSL address.
DX news covered by Fidel's jammer at 0127. (Charlie Patterson, Mobile, AL;
Hunter, PA)
0130 UTC on 11645
GREECE: Voice of Greece. Station ID to English newscast and national
weather update. (Moats, OH; Long, OK) VOG audible at 0721 on 9425,
15650 kHz. (Giovanni Serra, Rome, Italy; Long, OK)
0155 UTC on 5040
COLOMBIA: La Voz de Yopal. Spanish. U.S. pops to ad jingles. Regional
updates to station promotionals. (Tom Banks, Dallas, TX)
0155 UTC on 9735
PARAGUAY: Radio Nacional de Paraguay. Spanish. Paraguayan music to
frequency station IDs. Good signal most evenings. (Hunter, PA)
0200 UTC on 9475
EGYPT: Radio Cairo. Time pips to ID. Frequency quote, no mention of JI
11600. Program preview into Egyptian music and feature. Usual poor audio.
(Banks, TX)
0250 UTC on 4825
PERU: La Voz de la Selva. Spanish. Local info at tune-in. Pop vocals to
0300 ID. Announcer chat to promo, ID/frequency quote and sign-off anthem
at 0309. Peru's Radio Ancash at 1000 on 4991. Morning show included
chat, commercial and ballads. (Wright. MS)
0632 UTC on 6015
BELGIUM: Radio Vlaanderen Intl. National news, weather forecast. Pop
tunes to ID. DX program Radio World audible on II 9925. (Serra, Italy)
Brussels Calling monitored on 15545 at 1300. (Moats, OH)
0800 UTC on 15445
FINLAND: Radio Finland. Time signal pips at tune-In. Station ID to news.
Classic music bridge to feature. Studying in Finnish heard on II 17800.
(Serra, IT)
1026 UTC on 6160
CANADA: CKZN St. John's, Newfoundland. Labrador Mornings, sports
report to pop music. Talk on events In Happy Valley, Newfoundland. Signal
should improve dramatically during winter months. (Hunter, PA)
1040 UTC on 3280
ECUADOR: La Voz del Napo. Spanish. Ecuadorian flute music at tune-In.
Fair signal for ID/promo and public service promos. Ecuador's Radio Centro
on 3289 at 1050 with morning show. (Brian Bagwell, St. Louis, MO)
1102 UTC on 21600
GERMANY: Deutsche Welle. World news to station ID. Feature on com
poser Orlando DI Lasso audible on 17860, 17800, 17765, 15410, 17715.
(Serra, IT)
1105 UTC on 4753.4
INDONESIA: (SULAWESI) RRlUjung Padang. Indonesian. Lady announcer
with news and talk. Pop vocal s audible to 1136. (Bagwell, MO)
1105 UTC on 3315
ADMIRAL TY ISLANDS: Radio Manus. Fair signal for morning religious
service and hymns. New Guinea's Radio Western Highland heard at 1120
on 3375: (Bagwell, MO)
1110 UTC on 4874.6
INDONESIA: (IRIAN JAYA) RRlSorong. Indonesian. WOW! Signal reading
of S91 60's era classic pops to lady DJ's talk and music. ID breaks tor pop
lndo tunes. Fanfare twice to intro ID and news at 1200. Signal fade by 1205.
(Wright, MS)
1200 UTC on 9675
PAPUA NEW GUINEA: NBC. Nat'I news to forecast. Port Moresby time
check at "3 past 10 Into vocals. Music and PNG sports update. On
rechecks, this station audible up to 15501 Very quiet conditions for a solar
flux rating of 71, resulted In very good Asia/Pacific signals. Recheck the
next morning bagged following PNG frequencies. 11101140: 3345, 3315,
3275, 3305, 3355, 3375, 3395, 4890/9675. (GVH/NC)
1220 UTC on 15009
.
VIETNAM: Voice of Vietnam. Vietnamese. Lady announcer presenting
haunting Asian music. Station info to 1220. English service 1230 with
sign-on ID/frequency quote, and program preview. National and world news
headlines to editorial. Sign-off routine at 1256, followed by French service
sign-on with ID/frequencies and newscast. (GVH/NC)
1315 UTC on 15165
SAUDI ARABIA: BSKSA. Arabic. Holy Koran presentation and music
audible to 1505. // 17880, 15280 not heard. Additional BS KS A programming
noted at 1318 on 15175 (very good signal!) and// 15060 with male/ female
announcer duo. Features, news, IDs and talks on Riyad. Holy Koran noted
also on 11965 at 1504.(GVH/NC)
1315 UTC on 9625
CANADA: CBC, Northern Quebec Serv. Good Morning Quebec Saturday
morning program. Country music to regional forecast. Station's programming monitored 14001800. (Hunter, PA)
1443 UTC on 17695
FRANCE: Radio France Intl. Listener pen pal data from British accented DJ.
Current affairs trivia contest to French pop vocals. ID with frequency quote,
audible on// 15530, 12015, 17795 at 1605 with African news and updates.
(Robert Camey, San Angelo, TX)
1445 UTC on 17595
MOROCCO: RTV Marocaine. Sunday English programming, with good
signal! Featuring on world wide affairs through eyes of the United Nations.
Today's locus on China. Station promo to ID and instrumental. French
service commencing at 1500, with ID and international news. (Garland J.
Thomas, Cleveland, OH)
1610 UTC on 15675
PAKISTAN: Radio Pakistan. National news to commentary. Regional music
and time check. Discussion on upcoming conference In Muslim state, and
update on national economy. (J.P. Conrow, Ft. Payne, AL)
1710 UTC on 11990
KUWAIT: Radio Kuwait. Arabic. World news and features to English service
at 1800. Time pips, ID, local Kuwait tim e into program preview. (Banks, TX)
Kuwait monitored this frequency 20002100. (Hunter, PA) (Thomas, OH)
1812 UTC on 15180
RUSSIA: Radlostanslya Tlkhly Okean. Tentative logging from this station In
Vladivostok. Russian lady with teX1 and music. Noted also on// 11870. No
slgnof// 11985, 15530, 21480. Radio Iraq Intl in Arabic under 15180. (GVH/
NC)
1930 UTC on 15290
RUSSIA: Radio Moscow Intl. Music program, Melodies of Love. Music at
Your Request heard on 11675 at 2030. (Fraser, MA)
2019 UTC on 9575
MOROCCO: Radio Medi Un. French. International newscast to Arabic
vocals at 2025. French pop tunes presented by DJ format. (GVH/NC)
VOA' Morocco relay heard on 17895 at 1730. (Fraser, MA)
2033 UTC on 15095
SYRIA: Radio Damascus. Arabic music to ID at 2035. Feature on Arabic
music and leading national musician. Bothersome audio buzz present
during national headlines. Arabic service commencing at 2103. No //12095
freq. (John Harrison, Chicago, IL)
2202 UTC on 9445
TURKEY: Voice of Turkey. Turkish Press Review to station ID. News on
international music festival, audible on// 11710, 7185. (Serra, IT)
2250 UTC on 4915
GHANA: GBC. Vernaculars. Regional music to DJ chatter. Reggae rhythms
to 2300. "GBC" ID to pop vocals on a local Saturday night. Noted station at
2326 on 3366, with classic hits from Eric Clapton. (Patterson, AL)
2335 UTC on 5075
COLOMBIA: Caracol. Correspondents phone-In report during national
news. Caracol promo, Bogota time check and political news update. Station
jingles and ID at 0005. (Carney, TX)
2350 UTC on 4930
HONDURAS: Radio International. Spanish. Romantic ballad to 2355.
Local time check and ID with jingle. Frequency quote with station promo.
Local ads and vocal music. Honduran HRET, noted on 4960.8 with fair
signal. Religious programming to hymn and announcer talk. (Conrow, AL)
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
4S
_Th_e_G
__S_L_~_epo_rt
____________()iM@8.iiiillCJGayle Van Hom
HONGKONG
ANTARCTICA
ZHF 44-Faraday Station, 9106 USB. Full data
station QSL, full data prepared QSL, and personal letter signed by Simon Townshend. Photo
of station and description of station duties included. Received in 399 days for an English
utility report; Station address: British Antarctic
Survey, Faraday Antarctic Station, High Cross,
Madingley Rd., Cambridge, United Kingdom
CBE OET. (Steve McDonald, Port Coquitlam,
BC Canada)
BANGLADESH
Radio Bangladesh, 15255 kHz. Full data "Tribute to Martyrs" card signed by Md. Ramizuddin
Bhuiya-Senior Engineer, and station schedule.
Received in 888 days (198 after follow-up report via Bangladesh Embassy in U.S.) QSL
received from DXer in Germany who received
my QSL and I received his! Station address:
Research & Receiving Centre, NBA , Radio
Dhaka, 121 Kazi Nazrul Islam Ave., Dhaka1000, Bangladesh. (Mike Hardester, Jacksonville, NC)
BULGARIA
Radio Bulgaria, 9700 kHz. Full data QSL card
unsigned. Stickers, schedule, and personal note
included. Received in 199 days for an English
report. Station address: 4 Dragan Tsankov Blvd.,
Sofia, Bulgaria. (FAX: 650-560-871-061).
(LeRoy Long, Edmond, OK)
CHINA
Xinjiang PBS Urumchi, 4735 kHz. Partial data
QSLlettersigned by Zhao Ji-shu. Used Chinese
postage stamps and postcards included. Received in 223 days for an English report, cassette, used U.S. stamps, and one U.S. dollar.
Station address: People's Broadcasting Station
of Xinchiang, Urumchi, Xinjiang 830044,
People's Republic ofChina. (Charlie Washburn,
North Perry, ME)
DOMINICA
DBS Radio 595, 595. Date/frequency form letter, signed by Fred White, AG-Chief Technician. Received in 153 days (22 after follow-up
report), AM report, I !RC, mint stamps, and
address label.Station address: Dominican Broadcasting Corp., Victoria St., Roseau, Commonwealth of Dominica. (Hardester, NC)
ITALY
Italian Radio Relay Service (IRRS), 7125 kHz.
Full data "downtown Milan" card unsigned. Card
was numbered # 9372, mailed in Switzerland.
Received in 481 days for an English report and one
U.S. dollar. Station address: P.O. Box 10980, I20110 Milan, Italy. (Washburn, ME)
NONDIRECTIONAL BEACONS
YPP, 303 kHz-Lac Mauser, Quebec. Full data
QSL verified. Received in 31 days for an English
utility report and mint stamps. Beacon was commissioned 1211411993. QSL address used: Transport Canada, Technicial Services, 4900 Yonge
St .. Suite 300, Willowdale, Ontario M2N 6A5.
Additional reports should go to: Transport Canada,
P.O. Box 5000, Montreal Intl Airport, Dorval, PQ
Canada H4Y IBO. (Hank Holbrook, Dunkirk,
MD)
GCT, 518 kHz-Guthrie, Iowa. Full data prepared
QSL card signed by Cary R. Walthan-Clerk. Data
sheet on airport included. Received in I 0 days for
an English utility report and mint stamps. Station
address: City of Guthrie Center, 102North1st St.,
Box 100, Guthrie, IA 50115. (Holbrook, MD)
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
SHIP TRAFFIC
MONTRACHET-KlMH, 4119 kHz (Tanker).
Full data prepared QSL card signed by Bud
Pratt-Radio Officer. QSL stamped with ship's
seal and personal letter included. Friendly phone
call received from Mr. Pratt. Received in 76
days foran English utility report, one U.S. dollar
(returned) and a self-addressed-envelope. Ship
address: c/oCrest Tankers, 8182 Maryland Ave.,
P.O. Box 11533, St. Louis, MO 61305-3721.
(Russ Hill, Oak Park, Ml)
MAGNOLIA ACE-3EVP8, I 56.65 MHz (Pure
Car Carrier). Full data letter and photo of ship.
Received in 22 days for an English utility report
and mint stamps. Ship address: Williams, Diamond & Co., 180 Howard St., 3rd Aoor, San
Francisco, CA 94105. (Holbrook, MA)
STAR ALABAMA-ELPG3 , 156.65 MHz
(Gearbulk). Full data prepared QSL card verified. Received in 26 days for an English utility
report and one U.S. dollar. Ship address: c/o
E.B. Communications (Great Britain) Ltd., 20
Imperial Way, Croydon, CR04RR United Kingdom. (Holbrook, MD)
UNITED STATES
JB, 384 kHz-Lumberton, North Carolina. Full
data QSL letter signed with illegible signature.
Received in 19 days for an English utility report
and mint stamps. Station address: Lumberton
Municipal Airport, Lumberton/Roberson Airport
Commission, Airport Blvd., Lumberton, NC
28358. (Holbrook, MD)
WEWN, 13615 kHz. Full data postcard unsigned, letter from V. Phillips-Frequency Manager, and station schedule. Received in 28 days
for an English report. Station address: P.O. Box
100234, Birmingham, AL 35210. (Gerry
LeStrange, East Brunswick, NJ)
POlAND
SPB28-Szczecin, Poland, 2829.5 kHz. Full data
46
Eastern and Pacific Times are already converted to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) at the top o f each page. The rule is: convert your local time
to 24-hour format; add (during Daylight Savings Time) 4, 5, 6 or 7 hours for
Eastern, Central, Mountain or Pacific Time, respectively.
Note that all dates, as well as times, are in UTC; for example, the BBC's
John Dunn Show" (0030 UTC Sunday) will be heard on Saturday evening
(8:30 pm Eastern, 5:30 PM Pacific) in North America , not on Sunday.
2:
Some selected programs appear on the lower half of the page for prime
listening hours-space does not permit 24-hour listings except for the
"Newsline" listing, which begins on the next page.
Occasionally program listings will be followed by "See X 0000." This
information indicates that the prog ram is a rerun, and refe rs to a previous
summary of the program's content. The letter stands for a day of the week,
as indicated below, and the four digits represent a time in UTC.
S: Sunday
T: Tuesday
H: Thursday A: Saturday
M: Monday
W: Wednesday F: Friday
3:
Look at the page which corresponds to the time you will be listening.
Comprehensive frequency information for English broadcasts can be found
at the top half of the page . All frequencies are in kHz.
The frequency listing uses the same day codes as the program listings;
if a broadcast is not daily, those day codes will appear before the station
4:
Not all stations can be heard and none all the time on all frequencies.
To help you find the most promising frequency, we've included information on
the target area of each broadcast. Frequencies beamed toward your area will
generally be easier to hear than those beamed elsewhere, even though the
latter will often still be audible. Every frequency is followed by one of these
target codes:
am: The Americas
as: Asia
na: North America
au: Australia
ca: Central America
pa: Pacific
sa: South America
va: various
eu: Europe
do: domestic broadcast
al: Africa
om: omnidirectional
me: Middle East
Consult the propagation charts. To further help you find the right
frequency, we've included charts at the back of this section which take into
account conditions affecting the audibility of shortwave broadcasts. Simply
pick out the region in which you live and find the chart for the region in which
the station you want to hear is located. The chart indicates the optimum
frequencies for a given time in UTC.
Oclober 1994
MONITORING TIMES
47
.. .
'
MT Monitoring Team
Gayle Van Horn, Frequency Manager
North Carolina
Dave Datko
B.W. Battin
California
New Mexico
Texas
Jacques d'Avignon
Propagation Forecasts
Ontario, Canada
newsline
"Newsline" is your guide to news broadcasts on the air. All broadcasts are world news reports unless followed by an asterisk, which
means the broadcast is primarily national news. All broadcasts are daily unless othetwise noted by the day codes.
0000 lJTC
(l!:QQ E!M EDT, ~;Q2 eM e1:m
BBC
CBC Northern Quebec Service
China Radio lnt'I
Monitor Radio lnt'I [T-FJ
Radio Australia
Radio Havana Cuba [T-SJ
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [M-AJ
Radio Prague
Radio Thailand
Radio Yugoslavia (M-AJ
Spanish National Radio
Voice of America (am)
Radio Korea
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [MAJ
Radio Norway lnt'I [MJ
Radio Prague
Radio Tashkent
Radio Ukraine lnt'I
Spanish National Radio
Swiss Radio lnt'I
Voice of America (am)
Voice of Indonesia
011 0
Radio Australia [MF]
Radio Havana Cuba (SfT-F]
Radio Japan [A]
0003
0130
Radio Pyongyang
0009
sec
0010
Radio Havana Cuba [T-sr
Voice of America (ca) [T-AJ
0030
HCJB
Radio Havana Cuba [T-A)
Radio Moscow
Radio Nacional de Venezuela
[T-S)
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [MF]
Radio Sweden (T-AJ
Radio T hailand
Radio Vlaanderen lnt'I
Voice of America (am) [T-S]
(Special English)
Voice of America (as) (Special
English)
0050
RAI Italy
0055
Vatican Radio [S-W-F]
0100 UTC
(!!:QQ l!M El2I, li:!!Q l!M l!t!D
All India Radio
BBC
CBC Northern Quebec Service
ISfT-F)
Deutsche Welle
FEBC (Philippines)
Monitor Radio lnt'I (T-F]
A Slovakia lnt'I [A)"
A Slovakia lnt'I [SfT-F)
Radio Australia
Radio Canada lnt'I
Radio Havana Cuba [T-S)
Radio Japan
48
MONITORING TIMES
0145
BBC (ca) [T-A]
0155
Voice of Indonesia
0200 lJTC
U Q;Q2 l!M Et!I. Z;Q!! l!M l!llll
BBC ("Newsdesk")
CBC Northern Quebec Service
(M-A]
Christian Science Sentinel [A]
Deutsche Welle
Monitor Radio lnt'I (T-F]
Radio Australia
Radio Budapest lnt'I
Radio Canada lnt'I
Radio Havana Cuba [T-S]
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [M-AJ
Radio Romania lnt'I
Voice of America (am) [T-AJ
Voice of America (as)
Voice of Myanmar (Burma)
WINB[TAJ
WWCR #3 (T-A)
0230
Radio Havana Cuba [TAJ
Radio Moscow
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
Radio Pakistan
Radio Portugal lnt'I [T-A)
Radio Sweden [T-A]
Radio Tirana
0300 UT C
(ll;QQ l!M Et!I. l!;QQ l!M l!llll
BBC
CBC Northern Quebec Service
China Radio lnt'I
Deutsche Welle
HCJB
KVOH (T-A]
Monitor Radio lnt'I [T-F)
Radio Australia
Radio Havana Cuba [T-SJ
Radio Japan
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [M-AJ
Radio Prague
Radio Thailand
Voice of America (al) [A-SJ
Voice of America (at) [M-F]"
WHAi #2 (TAJ
WINB[TA)
WWCR #1 [T-S)
WWCR #3 [T-A)
Radio Cairo
Radio Phillpinas [M-A]
0330
0431
Channel Africa [T/H/F]
0340
Radio Cairo
Radio Nepal
0355
Voice of Greece
Radio Japan
October 1994
0425
RAI Italy
0430
0210
0410
Radio Havana Cuba [T-s]
0320
0310
Radio Havana Cuba [SfTF]
0530
0555
0409
0315
0403
0411
sec
0510
Radio Pyongyang
0309
0303
0215
0203
BBC ("Newsdesk")
BBC (at)
CBC Northern Quebec Service
Channel Africa
China Radio lnt'I
Christian Science Sentinel [A)
Deutsche Welle
Monitor Radio lnt'I (T-F]
Radio Australia
Radio Canada lnt'I
Radio Havana Cuba (T-S]
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I (AJ
Radio New Zealand lnt'I (MFJ
Radio Romania lnt'I
Radio Tanzania
Radio Ukraine lnt'I
Swiss Radio lnt'I
Voice of America (at)
Voice of Turkey
WHAi #2 [T-H/A)
WINB [M-AJ
WYFR (Satellite Network) [T-SJ
BBC (al)'
Radio Budapest lnt'I
Radio Dubai
Radio Havana Cuba [T-A)
Radio Japan [A]"
Radio Nacional de Venezuela
[T-S)
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
Radio Prague
Radio Sweden [T-A)
0400 lJTC
(l2;Q2 AM EDT, 9;Q2 e M eim
0440
BBC (at) [A-M]"
0445
BBC (al) (T-F]
Radio Yerevan
0500 lJTC
(l ;!!!! AM Et!I. l !!;Q2 l!M l!t!D
BBC ("Newshour")
CBC Northern Quebec Service
Channel Africa
Christian Science Sentinel [SJ
Deutsche Welle
HCJB
0600 UTC
(2;!!!! AM EDT, 11 :!!!! l!M l!llll
BBC
BBC (at) [AS)"
BBC (at) [M F]
Channel Africa
Deutsche Welle
Monitor Radio lnt'I [T-F]
Radio Australia
Radio Havana Cuba
Radio Japan
Radio Korea
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I
Swiss Radio lnt'I
Swiss Radio lnt'I (eu)
Vatican Radio (TIF]
Voice of America (at) [A-SJ
Voice of America (at) [MF]
Voice of America (me)
Voice of Kenya
Voice of Malaysia
WINB[T-A)
WWCR #1 [S-H)
0603
Radio Pyongyang
0609
sec
0610
Radio Havana Cuba [S/T-F]'
0627
BBC (at) [M-F]'
0630
Channel Africa[]
Radio Austria lnt'I [T-SJ
Radio Havana Cuba (TAJ
Radio Japan [AJ'
Radio Moscow
Vatican Radio (HJ
Voice of Nigeria [M-FJ
0632
Radio Romania lnt'I
0640
Vatican Radio [T)
0645
Radio Romania lnt' I
Voice of Nigeria (M-F]'
0655
Voice of Med. {Malta) (MF]
1171111 VIC
(3;11!1 AM EDT, 12;1111 AM fill)
BBC
Monitor Radio lnl'I [T-FJ
Papua New Guinea
Radio Australia
Radio Ghana
Radio Japan
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I (M-F]'
Radio Prague
Vatican Radio [MAJ
Voice of Myanmar (Burma)
0703
Radio Pyongyang
Voice of Free China
0705
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [M-F)'
0710
Radio Australia [M-F]'
0730
BBC (al) [AJ'
HCJB
Radio Austria lnt'I [TSJ
Radio Japan [AJ'
Radio Moscow (MAJ
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
Radio Pakistan
Radio Prague
Radio Vlaanderen lnl'I
0745
Radio Finland
0750
[AJ
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [M FJ'
0755
Radio Japan
Voice of Med. (Malta) [MFJ
0800 VIC
(~ill!! AM El2I. l ill!! AM e12n
BBC
Christian Science Sentinel (T/F]
KNLS
Monitor Radio lnt'I [TFJ
Radio Australia
Radio Korea
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnl'I
Radio Pakistan
Voice of Indonesia [A-HJ
Voice of Malaysia
0803
Radio Pyongyang
0810
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [M-F]'
0830
R Slovakia lnt'I
Radio Austria lnt'I
Radio Moscow
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
0855
Voice of Indonesia (A-HJ
0900 lJTC
(5;!111 AM El2I, 2;1111 AM
BBC
China Radio lnt'I
Christian Science Sentinel (T/F]
Deutsche Welle
Monitor Radio lnt'I [MF]
Papua New Guinea [MJ'
Radio Australia
Radio Finland
Radio Japan
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [M-F]
Swiss Radio lnt'I
0909
China Radio lnt'I'
0930
FEBC (Philippines)
Radio Japan (AJ'
Radio Moscow
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
Radio Yerevan [SJ
0940
Voice of Greece
0945
Deulsche Welle [MF)'
0955
Radio Japan
em
1000 VIC
1240
Voice of Greece
1258
Africa No. 1 {Gabon)
1300 lJTC
October 1994
Radio Cameroon
Radio Canada lnt'I [SJ
Radio France lnt'I
Radio Ghana
Radio Japan
Radio Jordan [AJ
Radio Korea
Radio Moscow
Radio Vlaanderen lnt'I [MAJ
Voice of America (as)
Voice of Israel (S-HJ
WWCR #1 [M-F]
1409
China Radio lnt'I'
1410
Radio Japan [MF]'
1415
Radio Nepal
1424
HCJB [M-F]
1430
FEBC {Philippines)
Radio Austria lnt'I
Radio Finland
Radio Moscow
Radio Nacional de Venezuela
[MAJ
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
Radio Romania lnl'I [TSJ
ATM Morocco [SJ
Voice of Myanmar (Burma)
WYFR (Satellite Network) (MF]
1431
Radio France lnt'I [T)'
Radio Romania lnl'I (MJ
1435
Voice of Greece
1440
FEBC {Philippines) (SF]'
1445
BBC {as) [MF] {Special
English)
Voice of Myanmar (Burma)
1450
Ail India Radio
1455
All India Radio
Radio Japan (AJ
Voice of Med. (Malta) [M-FJ
1500 VIC
MONITORING TIMES
49
1509
China Radio lnt'I'
1510
Radio Japan [MFJ'
1525
BBC (af) [S]'
Radio Ventas (TF]
1530
All India Radio
Deutsche Welle (MFJ'
FEBC (Philippines)
Radio Austria int'I
Radio Japan [AJ'
Radio Moscow
Radio Nethertands lnt'I
Radio Portugal lnt'I [M-F]
Voice of Nigeria [M-HJ
1540
Radio Ventas [A-MJ
1550
Voice of Med. (Malta) [F]
Radio Japan [AJ
Radio Ventas [AMJ
Voice of Med. (Malta) [MHJ
1600 llTC
so
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
1855
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [MHJ'
1857
BBC (af) [M-F]'
1900 llTC
(3;!2!2 fM ECH. 12;!2!2 fM ecm
All India Radio [WJ
BBC
China Radio lnt'I
Christian Science Sentinel [AJ
Deutsche Welle
HCJB
Monitor Radio lnt'I [M-FJ
Radio Australia
Radio Japan
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I
Radio Portugal lnt'I [M-F]
Radio Romania lnt'I [TSJ
Radio Thailand
Radio Tirana
Radio Vlaanderen int'l
Spanish National Radio
Swiss Radio lnt'I (eu)
Voice of America (al)
WHAi #1 [MF]
WINB[M-F]
WWCR#3
1901
Radio Romania lnt'I [MJ
1909
China Radio lnt'I'
1910
All India Radio [WJ
Radio Australia [M-FJ'
1930
BBC (al) [SJ'
Deutsche Welle [T-FJ'
Radio J apan [AJ'
Radio Moscow [A-SJ
Radio Netherlands lnt'I
1933
Deutsche Welle [MJ'
1935
RAI Italy
2000 llTC
2010
Radio New Zealand lnt'I [S-H]'
Voice of Israel [WJ'
2025
RAI Italy
2030
HCJB
Polish Radio [A-SJ
Polish Radio [M-FJ'
Radio Canada lnt'I
Radio Korea
Radio Moscow
Radio Sweden [MF]
Radio Thailand
Radio Yugoslavia
2045
All India Radio [AJ
Radio Yerevan
2055
Voice of Indonesia [MJ
2100 UTC
2200 llTC
{;QQ fM EDT, ;J;QQ fM ecm
All India Radio
BBC
China Radio lnt'I
Christian Science Sentinel [AJ
Monitor Radio lnt'I [M-F]
Radio Australia
Radio Budapest lnt'I
Radio Bulgaria
Radio Canada lnt'I
Radio Havana Cuba [M-AJ
Radio Korea
Radio Moscow
Radio New Zealand lnt'I
Radio Prague
Radio Ukraine lnt'I
Radio Vlaanderen lnt'I [MFJ
RAI Italy
Voice of America (as)
2203
Voice of Free China
2209
China Radio lnt'I'
2215
All India Radio [M/W/F]
Radio Cairo
2230
Radio Canada lnt'I [A-SJ
Radio Havana Cuba [M-F]'
Radio Moscow
Radio Sweden [MF]
Radio Yerevan
Voice of America (as) (Special
English)
Voice of Israel
2240
Radio Cairo
Voice of Greece [S-FJ
2242
Voice of Israel [HJ'
2300 llTC
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City
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MT
_-,
0000 UTC
8:00 PM EDT
5:00 PM PDT
'
FREQUENCIES
0000-0100
Australia, Radio
00000100vl
00000100vl
00000100 vl
0000-0045
00000015
0000-0100 vi
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
00000100
0000-0100
00000100
0000-0100 vi
0000-0100
0000-0027
0000-0045
0000-0100 vi
00000100
0000-0100 vi
0000-0100 vi
00000030
0000-0100
00000050
0000-0100 mtwhfa
00000100vl
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0030 mtwhfa
0000-0100
1185Sas
17750as
4835do
5025do
4910do
9700na
11940as
962Sdo
GOOSdo
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
9780na
7385am
6010na
7345na
9705as
712Seu
9960me
5980do
4950do
6020na
9700pa
11335na
11980as
9675do
15450as
5940na
9685na
11750na
15410na
17890as
9580na
9540na
11955as
13605as
1374Sas
11 720na
11 715na
9400am
13700na
9485na
11745as
17800as
7160do
6165na
1511Spa
13760na
7295na
9750na
11790na
15425na
21625as
11870na
0000-0100
0000-0100
Thailand, Radio
Ukraine, R Ukraine Intl
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0030
0000-0100
15030am
15110as
1514Sas
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100 vi
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
0000-0100
00000100
0030-0100
0030-0100
0030-0100
0030-0100
0030-0100
0030-0100
0050-0100
15130na
9480na
9765na
12050na
16190as
9530as
11685na
15290na
17570as
9655as
728Sna
12030na
5965as
9580as
12095sa
13740na
1559Sam
9785am
17510as
7535na
731Sam
5995am
7405am
11580am
1518Sas
17765as
985Saf
742Sna
7315am
11 950am
7490na
735Sam
5810am
GOBSna
9580pa
13745as
15415as
17860pa
974Sam
7100na
6020na
12025as
GOOSas
6065sa
9725na
11905as
9685na 9860na
11720na
15180na 15580na
5975na 6175na 7325na
9590na 9915na 11750sa
15260sa 15310as 15360as
9430ca
6130am
9455am
11695am
15205am
17820as
7215au
9770au
11760as
15290as
9410eu
9985sa
9775am
15120am
17735as
13595na
7435am
13845am
9660pa
13755as
15510as
11855as
15240pa
17750as
13605as
15365pa
17795pa
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundavs
0000
~n~l~
#2: University Network. See S 0000.
0005 Radio Thailand: News in Perspective. See S 0005.
0010 Radio Australia: Network Asia. See S 2330.
0015 BBC: Music Feature. Top Scores. See S 0445.
0030 BBC: In Praise of God. Weekly programme of worship and
meditation.
0030 Radio Australia: International Report. Overseas and local
correspondents analyze regional and global issues and
events.
DON' T MISS OUT ON THE OVERNIGHT ACTION 11
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52
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
0045
0048
0051
Tuesdays
0000
0005
0010
0015
0030
0040
0048
Wednesdays
0000
0005
0010
0015
0030
0040
0045
0048
Thursdays
0000
0005
0010
0015
0030
0040
0048
Fridays
0000 Radio Bulgaria: Today. See S 1315.
0000 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
0005 Radio Thailand: News in Perspective. See S 0005.
001 O Radio Australia: Network Asia. See S 2330.
0015 BBC: Music Review. News and views from the world of
music.
0015 Radio Bulgaria: Lifestyle. A look at everyday life in Bulgaria.
0030 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
0040 Radio Thailand: News in Perspective. See S 0005.
Saturdays
0000 Radio Bulgaria: Today. See S 1315.
0000 WWCR #2: University Network. See S0000.
0005 Radio Thailand: News in Perspective. See S0005.
001 O Radio Australia: Feedback. See S 041 o.
0015 BBC: Music Fealure. Sharp Talents. Interviews with live
young musicians on the "cutting edge" of modern music.
0015 Radio Bulgaria: Folk Studio. See M 0500.
0030 BBC: From the Weeklies. Review of the British weekly press.
0030 Radio Australia: Indian Pacific. Peter Mares with news and
analysis from across the Pacific and Asia.
0030 Radio Bulgaria: Radio Bulgaria Calling. See M 0515.
0040 Radio Thailand: News in Perspective. See S 0005.
0045 BBC: The Leaming World. See M 0615.
Hauser's Highlights
Australia R. Australia Feedback
answers questions about Australia
and SW, Fri. 2210, Sat. 0010,
0210, Sun. 0410, 0610, 0810.
Features at the E. N . Am. peak
listening time of 1130 on 9580,
9860, etc.: Sun., Fine Music
Australia; Mon., Innovations;
Tue., Arts Australia; Wed.,
Science File; T hu., Couchman conversation; Fri., Parliament
Program; Sat., Business Weekly
(via Larry Russell, MI, W.O.R.)
0100 UTC
9:00 PM EDT
6:00 PM PDT
FREQUENCIES
0100-0200
Australia, Radio
0100-0200 vi
0100-0200vl
0100-0200vl
0100-0200 vi
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0127
0100-0200
0100-0150
0100-0200 m
0100-0130
Ot00-0200
0100-0130
0100-0200vl
0100-0110
0100-0200
0100-0130
0100-0200
0100-0125
0100-0200
0100-0130 m
0100-0200 vi
0100-0200
0100-0200
9580pa
13755as
15510as
17880as
4835do
5025do
4910do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
6120na
11940na
7385am
6010na
7345na
9745am
21455am
6040na
9565na
3300do
6025na
9675as
7100na
7125eu
9725na
5960na
11910as
7116as
9860as
6020na
9700pa
9560ca
9675do
15450as
5940na
7295na
9535na
9755na
11845na
940Qam 15030am
13700na
9485na
11925am 12005am 17490am
6085na
9700na
6120na 6145na
11740na 11865na
9835na
11752as
9022na
11910na
11800na
9680as
15195as
1184Qas 11860as
17810as 17845as
12025as
6165na 9840na
15115pa
11925na
7165na
9530na
7180na
9685na
7205na
9750me
0100-0200
0100-0130
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0130
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200 vi
0100-0200
0100-0200
01 00-0200
0100-0200
0100-0200
0100-0130
0130-0145
0130-0200
0130-0150
0130-0200
0130-0200 twhfa
0130-0200
0140-0200
Sweden, Radio
Vatican Stale, Vatican R
9765me
11805na
16190na
9465as
5930na
7550eu
9540na
6005as
5885am
9655as
5965as
7325na
11750sa
15360as
13740na
7510na
17775am
17510as
7535na
5995na
9445na
15120am
21550as
9855af
7425na
7315am
11950am
7490na
7355am
5810am
6065na
7190eu
9580na
9655na
9380na
986Qas
9400na
9705na
9695au
7335as
15425as
9885am
6175na
9590na
15260sa
7160as
9915sa
15310as
9430ca
6130am 7205as
7405am
9775am 11580am 11705as
15205am 15250as 17740as
13710na
13595na
7435am
9505na
7250eu
11840na
9870na
9420na
12025as
9555na
11840na
11695as
9650as
13845am
15440na
9715eu 9740eu
13730na
11645na
9570na
9600na
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundavs
0100
Mondays
0100 BBC (as): Health Matters. Keeps track of new developments
in the world of medical science. as well as ways of keeping
fit.
0100 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
0101 BBC: Features. The Path 10 Power. Every country has its
prescribed path to the top-or so it seems.
(3rd,10th,17th.24th). Peter Warlock (30th). A portrait of an
extraordinary English composer who was born 100 years
ago this month.
0115 BBC (as): The Farming World. Reports on new
developments from around the world.
0120 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
0125 Radio Australia: Network Asia. See S 2330.
0130 BBC: Feature:A Letter from Nikolina Gora
(3rd,10th,17th.24th). Jo Durden-Smith reports weekly from
the co-op village where the Russian elite live.
0145 BBC: Music Features. Composers' Journeys
(3rd.10th, 17th.24th). Travel Diaries. Woods, Guts and Brass
(31st). Michael Oliver talks to the makers of musical
instruments.
Tuesdavs
0100
Wednesdays
0100
0105
0120
0125
0130
0130
0145
0145
Thursdavs
0100
0105
0120
0125
0130
0130
0140
0145
0145
Fridavs
0100
0105
0120
0125
0130
0130
0145
0145
Saturdavs
New Titl es
SCRAMBLING NEWS
1552 Hertel Ave # 123. Buffalo NY 142 16
Voice/FAX/BBS 716-87 4-2088
CODs are OK Adel SG
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
53
. I
0200 UTC
: . .
10:00 PM EDT
7:00 PM PDT
FREQUENCIES
0200-0300 twhfa
0200-0300
Argentina, RAE
Australia, Radio
0200-0300 vi
0200-0300 vi
0200-0300 vi
0200-0300 vi
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0230
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0250
0200-0300 as
0200-0300 vi
0200-0230 mtwhfa
0200-0300 smtwh
0200-0230
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300 vi
0200-0300
0200-0300
11710na
11880pa
15415as
17795pa
4835do
5025do
4910do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
6120na
11940am
7385am
6010na
9745am
9475na
7285as
11945as
13720as
7125eu
4935do
7295do
7185do
9860as
9700pa
9675do
6155na
11940na
5940na
9620na
11665na
15425na
13605as
15510as
17860pa
9535am
15240pa 15365pa
17715as 17750as
17880as
9755na
9615as
12045as
9690as
15185as
12025as
15115pa
9510na
9570na
0200-0300
0200-0300
Thailand, Radio
United Kingdom.BBC London
0200-0230 vi
0200-0300
0200-0230
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0230 twhfa
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0300
0200-0245
0215-0255
0230-0257
0230-0300
0230-0300 s
0230-0245
6005as
5950na
11860as
9655as
5975na
7235me
11750sa
17790as
9815am
75103m
17775am
17510as
5850na
5995am
11580am
7115as
11705as
7465am
7425na
7315am
11950am
7490na
7355am
5810am
6065na
15440na
5005do
9580na
5970na
4935do
7290as
0230-0300
0250-0300
Sweden, Radio
Vatican State, Vatican R
6155na
6095na
11845na
9400am 15030am
9820na
12005am 17490am
9580as
11965as
0200-0300
0200-0300
11830na
7205af
7295na 9530na
9685af
9695af
9765na
11805na 12050as 15410na
17570as 17655au 21625na
9720as
9680na
15345as
11905as
6175na
9410eu
11955me
15425as
9765au
11740ca
6195me 7155me
96303f
9915am
15260sa 15360as
13740am
9430ca
6130am
151 20am
7205as
15250as
7405am 9775am
15205am
7651as 974Das
17740as 21550as
13595na
5935am
9505na
7435am
7165do
11840na
9835na 11910na
15190as
21730as
9850na
7305na
17705as
17725as
9605na
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
0200 wWCR #2: University Network. See S 0000.
0210 Radio Australia: Charting Australia. See S 0010.
0230 BBC: Features. Pig! (2nd). A profile of the pig, both in the
sty and on the dish. Ataturk: The Man and the Myth (9th).
Examing the legacy of the man who built modern Turkey.
Creeds, Councils and Controversies (16th.23rd.30th).
Documentaries exploring the significant aspects ol Turkey's
religious past and present.
0230 Radio Australia: Correspondents' Report. See S 0030.
0250 Vatican Radio: With Heart and Mind.
0259 Vatican Radio: Vatican On-the-Air.
0248
0250
0256
Fridays
Saturdays
0200
0200
0210
0230
0230
0250
Mondays
0200 WWtR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
0210 Radio Australia: Network Asia. See S 2330.
0230 BBC: Composer of the Month. Light opera composers are
featured during October.
0230 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
0248 Radio Australia: Network Asia/Finance. See M 0048.
0250 Vatican Radio: Catholic Writers.
Tuesdays
0200
0210
0230
0230
0248
0250
Wednesdays
0200 WWCR #2: University Network. See S 0000.
0210 Radio Australia: Network Asia. See S 2330.
0230 BBC: Andy Kershaw's World of Music. Recordings of
diverse music from around the world.
0230 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
0248 Radio Australia: Network Asi:i!Finance. See M 0048.
0250 Vatican Radio: The Rome Report.
Thursdays
0200
0210
0230
54
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
FREQUENCIES
0300-0400
Australia, Radio
0300-0400 vi
0300-0400 vi
0300-0400 vi
0300-0400
0300-0400 vi
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400 vi
0300-0400
0300-0327
0300-0400
0300-0330
0300-0350
0300-0400
0300-0400 vi
0300-0400
0300-0330
0300-0400
0300-0400 s
0300-0400 smtwh
0300-0325
0300-0400
0300-0350
0300-0400 vi
0300-0400
Japan. NHK/Radio
Kenya, Kenya BC Corp
Lebanon, Wings of Hope
Malaysia, RTM Radio 4
Netherlands, Radio
New Zealand. R NZ Intl
North Korea, R Pyongyang
Papua New Guinea, NBC
Russia, Radio Moscow Intl
11880pa
15365pa
17750as
4835do
5025do
4910do
6010do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
9690na
7385am
5055do
6010na
5930na
9745am
9475na
6045na
9535na
3300do
7125eu
5960am
15325am
11885na
4935do
9960me
7295do
9860as
9700pa
6522eu
9675do
5940na
9685na
11665as
13615na
15410na
17605as
13605pa
15415as
17795pa
1365Qas 15240pa
15510as 17715as
17860pa 17880as
11715na
15030am
9780na
9400am
9820na
7345na
12005am
6045na
9640na
6085na
9650na
0300-0400
0300-0350
0300-0400vl
0300-0400
Thailand. Radio
Turlcey, Voice of
Uganda, Radio
Ukraine. R Ukraine Intl
03000330
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0310
0315-0330 sh
0315-0345
0330-0357
0330-0400
0330-0400
0330-0400
0330-0357
0340-0350
0345-0400
Greece, Voice of
Tajikistan, Radio
6120na
9680as
11875am 5210am
17810am 17845am
11895na 15230na
12025as
15115pa
9345eu
7295na 9530na
9750na 9765na
11690as 1203oas
15265as 15375as
15425na 15535as
17675as 1772Qas
0300-0400
0300-0400
0300-0400
9620as
9880as
12050as
15385as
16190as
3220af
972Qas
5950na
15345as
9655as
9445na
4976do
9620na
12030na
6175na
15260sa
3255af
6180eu
7325eu
11 955as
9815am
7510am
9785am
17510as
5850na
7105af
7405af
7465am
7425na
7315am
11950eu
7490na
7395am
5810am
6065na
6095do
9380na
7360af
5930eu
6165na
6155na
5050af
11945na
21485na
9380na
7245as
5955at
15425as
9680na
9765au
11740as
11905as
9680na
15180na
7235me
15360as
5975na
6190af
9410eu
15280as
9860na 11720na
15580na
7325na 9915sa
6005af
6195eu
11730af
15310me
6175eu
7230eu
11760me
21715as
7265af
9575af
7280af
9885af
7340af
13595na
5935am
9505na
7305do
9420na
9695af
9440eu
9590na
9850na
7435am
9605do
11645na
11640af
11645na
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
0300
0310
0310
0315
0330
0330
0330
0335
0350
Mondays
0300
0305
0310
0310
0315
0325
0330
0330
0333
Tuesdays
0300
0304
0310
0310
0315
0325
0330
0330
0333
Wednesdays
0300
0306
0310
0310
0315
0325
0330
0330
0333
Thursdays
0300
0305
0310
0310
0315
0325
0330
0330
0333
Fridays
0300 WwCR 12: University Networlc. See S 0000.
0305 Vatican Radio: Faith by Numbers.
0310 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
0310 Radio Thailand: News in Perspective. See S 0005.
0315 BBC: Sports Roundup. See S 0315.
0325 Radio Australia: Networlc Asia. See S 2330.
0330 BBC (eu): Europe Today. See S 0330.
0330 BBC: Focus on Faith. Comment and discussion on the major
issues in the worlds of faith.
0333 BBC (af): Network Africa. See M 0333.
Saturdays
0300
0300
0304
0310
fi:lANK YOU
Additional contributors to this
month's Shortwave Guide:
Kenneth Dowst, Hartford, CT; Bob Fraser, Cohasset, MA; Clyde W. Hannon,
Anniston, AL; Ken Loh, Portland, OR; Jim Moats, Ravenna, OH; NASWA
Journal; SPEEDX; World DX Club; BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; Grove
Enterprises BBS; Internet Shortwave Newsgroup via Larry Van Horn
October I 994
MONITORING TIMES
SS
FREQUENCIES
0400-0500
Australia, Radio
0400-0SOOvl
0400--0SOOvl
0400--0500 vi
0400--0500
0400--0SOO vl
0400-0500
0400--0500
0400-0500
0400--0500
0400--0500
0400--0500
0400--0430
0400--0500
0400-0500
0400-0500
0400--0430
0400-0450
0400-0500 twtfa
0400--0500 vi
0400--0500
0400--0500s
0400--0500 smtwh
0400--0425
0400--0500
0400-0450
0400--0500 vi
0400--0430
0400--0500
9580pa
15365pa
17795pa
4835do
5025do
4910do
6010do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
613-0do
6160do
6160do
9650me
11680na
7385am
6010oa
9745am
5980af
7225af
3300do
7125eu
4935do
9960me
7295do
6165na
9700pa
6130as
9675do
6155na
11940na
5940na
9765na
12010as
15375me
15535as
17720as
9660pa 13605as
15"15pa 17630as
17860pa 17880as
1524-0pa
17750as
0400-0500
0400-0500
0400-0430
0400-0430
0400-0430
0400--0500 vt
0400--0500
0400--0500
0400--0500
0400--0500
0400--0500
0400-0500
0400-0500
0400-0500
0400--0500 vt
0400-0430
0400-0500
11905me
11840na
9400am
9550na
12005am
6015af
95653f
11925me 15275me
15030am 21465am
9820na
6185af
9765af
7150af
9590oa
15115pa
15230as 17755as
9510na
9570na
9465na
9785na
12030as
15385me
16190as
17805as
9580na
11830na
9685eu
9880eu
117653f
12050af 15180na
15425na 15525as
17655af 17675as
17880as 17890as
0400--0500
0400--0500
0400--0500 smtwhf
0400-0500
0400-0500
0400--0500
0400--0458
0425-0440
0430--0500
0430--0450
0430-0500
0430--0500
0430--0500
0445-0SOOt
21670na
3220af
9455as
9720as
6155af
6135na
s05oaf
9655na
4976do
3255af
6190af
12095eu
21715as
9815am
7510am
9785am
9930as
7465eu
5995me
7265af
9575af
7425na
7315am
11950eu
7490na
9465eu
7395am
5810am
6065na
9770eu
5990me
9700na
612Qaf
3326do
9580na
3200af
9720na
21845as
5955af
1161Qas
15425as
9860na
9885na
11620na
11905na
5975na
6195eu
15280as
6005af
6180eu
941Qaf
11760me
15310as 15575as
9840af
6040me
7280af
9885af
6873eu
7340af
7170eu
7405af
13595na
5935am
9505na
7435am
7275eu
11720na
9655af
11755me 15440af
4770do 4990do
11870na
5055af
7125af
15425na
SELECT ED PROGRAMS
Sundays
0445
0400
0409
0445
Mondays
WWCR 12: University Netwo~. See S 0000.
BBC (al): Netwo~ Africa. See M 0333.
Radio Australia: Pacific Beat. A magazine which provides a
focus on the people and issues of the region.
0430 BBC: Off the Shelf. Daily readings from the best of world
literature.
0430 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
0445 BBC: Features. Blues World (3rd,10th,17th). Terry Russell
looks at blues music, past, present and future. Tu~ish
Portraits (24th.31st). Profiles of a great Ottoman achitect and
a Tu~ish writer and nationalist.
0445 Radio Bulgaria: Answering Your Letters. Replies to listener
letters and requests.
Wednesdays
0400
0409
0410
0430
0430
0445
0445
Thursdays
0400
0409
0410
0430
0430
0445
0445
Fridays
0400
0409
0410
0430
0430
0445
0445
Saturdays
0400
0400
0409
0410
0430
0430
0445
0445
0400
0409
0410
Tuesdays
0400
0409
0410
0430
0430
56
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
1:00 AM EDT
10:00 PM PDT
' .
0500 UTC
FREQUENCIES
0500--0600
Australia, Radio
0500--0600 vt
0500--0600 vt
0500--0600 vt
0500-0600
0500--0530
0500--0600
0500--0600
0500--0600
0500--0600
0500--0600
0500-0530 mtwhf
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600 as
0500-0550
0500-0515
0500-0600 vi
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500--0600 s
0500-0600
0500--0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0550
0500-0530 m
0500--0GOOvl
0500--0600
0500-0600
0500--0553f
9580pa
15365pa
17795as
4835do
5025do
4910do
6010do
9700na
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6050eu
17840af
7385am
6010na
11925am
9585af
5960na
9515na
7465na
7125eu
5975eu
11740as
4935do
9960me
7295do
9700pa
3326do
7255af
9640me
9590na
9675do
7165na
9760na
15180na
16190as
17675as
5995af
l7750me
11720na
6150eu
7295eu
l5430af
9400am 15030am
9820na
21455am
6045na
9670na
9435na
6120na 6185na
11705na
7230eu 9680pa
11885na 15410as
9725am
l7810as
15115pa
4770do 4990do
9977af
11865na
9530na
9880as
15425na
17570af
17835af
9695af
9685na
12010na
15465af
17590af
21670na
750na
l2050na
15590na
17610me
21725as
0500-0600
0500-0515t
0500-0600
0500--0530
0500--0515
0500--0600
0500--0600 vt
0500--0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0530
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600 mtwhfa
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0600
0500-0545
0500-0530
0500-0520
0510-0520
0525-0600
0530-0600
0530-0600
0530-0600
0530-0600
0530-0600
0530-0600
9540na
9720na
6155af
5055af
3985eu
9655as
4976do
3255af
6190af
11760me
15360as
17830as
9815am
7510am
9785am
17780as
9840af
6035af
12080af
5995eu
9530eu
7315am
11950am
7490na
9465eu
7395am
5810am
5985na
9870af
9695af
3950eu
3356af
3366do
9660do
15415as
17795pa
6015na
11910as
11810af
6070af
15435as
15425na
6070af
6165eu
11905as
7125af
5975na 6005af
6195eu 9410eu
12095eu 15280as
15400af 15420af
17885af
6180eu
9640na
15310as
15575as
7405af
15600af
6140eu
9700eu
9495am
11965af
9665af
6873af
7170eu
11825me 15205me
13595na
5935am 7435am
11580eu
11625af
3975eu
4830af
15090af
6245eu
7255af
15380af
17790af
21700as
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
0500 Radio Bulgaria: Cultural Review. See S 0015.
0500 Vatican Radio: The Gospel.
0500 Vatican Radio: The Popelthe Churchlthe World.
0511 Vatican Radio: Vatican Week.
0513 Radio Exterior de Espana: Spanish Golden Oldies. Popular
music classics of Spain.
0523 Radio Exterior de Espana: Distance Unknown. A program for
shortwave listeners and DXers.
0530 BBC (eu): Europe Today. See S 0330.
0530 Radio Australia: The Australian Music Show. Kim Taylor
presents the music, people, and issues of the Australian
contemporary music industry.
0532 Radio Exterior de Espana: Meet the Zarzuelas. An
introduction to the light operas of Spain.
Mondays
0500 Radio Bulgaria: Folk Studio. Myths, legends, customs, and
rituals associated with Bulgarian holidays.
0500 Vatican Radio: A Many-Splendored Thinglletterbox
(monthly).
0512 Radio Exterior de Espana: Visitors Book. Who's visiting Spain
this week.
0514 Vatican Radio: Questions on the Faith.
0515 Radio Bulgaria: Radio Bulgaria Calling. DX Program for radio
amateurs and shortwave listeners.
0520 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
0522 Radio Exterior de Espana: Spain Step-by-Step. A journey to
all corners of Spain, both present and future.
0523 Vatican Radio: Sports Corner.
0530 BBC (eu): Europe Today. See S 0330.
0530 Radio Australia: Pacific Beat. See M 0410.
0541 Radio Exterior de Espana: Radio Club. Listener letters are
answered and music requests played.
Tuesdays
0500
0500
0515
0515
0516
0520
0523
0527
0530
0538
0549
Wednesdays
0500
0500
0515
0516
0520
0522
0529
0530
0530
0536
0549
Thursdavs
0500
0500
0500
0516
0520
0520
0522
0529
Fridays
0500 Radio Bulgaria: From School to Campus. Secondary
education and talent movement in Bulgaria.
0500 Vatican Radio: Cultural Notebook.
0500 Vatican Radio: The Church Today.
0515 Radio Bulgaria: Timeout for Music. See M 2332.
0516 Radio Exterior de Espana: Panorama. See T 0516.
0520 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
0522 Radio Exterior de Espana: Press Review. See T 0523.
0528 Radio Exterior de Espana: People of Today. Focus on a
Spaniard of note.
0530 BBC (eu): Europe Today. See S 0330.
0538 Radio Exterior de Espana: Cultural Clippings. What's going
on in Spain.
0549 Radio Exterior de Espana: Spanish Course by Radio. See T
0549.
Saturdays
0500
0500
0500
0512
0516
0520
0522
0529
0530
0530
0539
0549
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
57
FREQUENCIES
0600-0700
Australia, Radio
0600-0700 vi
06000700 vi
0600-0700 vi
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0627
0600-0700
0600-0700 as
0600-0650
0600-0630
0600-0615
0600-0700 vi
0600-0700
0600-0625
0600-0700 vi
0600-0630
0600-0700s
0600-0700
0600-0700 smtwha
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0650
0600-0700 vi
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
9660do
15510as
4835do
5025do
4910do
6010do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
7385am
9820na
7345eu
11925am
9585af
11915af
17820af
4915do
3366do
7125eu
9680as
4935do
9825do
71 16as
9960me
4760do
7295do
6175as
9765me
9700pa
3970do
7255af
15180as
9675do
9530eu
9865eu
15010as
15470me
16190as
17890as
21830as
15220af
13715as
9400am
13790af
17875af
15185af
21680af
11860as
21610as
15205af
15295as
15115pa
4770do 4990do
15230as
9580af
11985as
15180na
15535as
17675as
21625as
0600-0700
t5030am
9505eu
11990eu
15155am 21455am
9750as
0600-0630 vi
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0630
9750eu
12010na
15190eu
15540as
17805me
21670na
9765eu
12050na
15425na
15560me
17860as
21725me
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0630
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0700 smtwhf
0600-0700
0600-0700
0600-0610 mtwhfa
0600-0700
0625-0700
0630-0700
0630-0700
0630-0700
0630-0700
0632-0641
0640-0700
0645-0700
0645-0700
5020do
11945na
6155af
6070af
3985eu
15430af
6005af
9640na
12095eu
15400af
17885af
9815am
7510na
9785am
17780as
9840eu
6035af
9530af
15080af
3980eu
6140eu
7325eu
7425na
7315am
11950na
7490na
9465eu
5810am
5985na
3950eu
11740eu
9780do
4935do
9580pa
15240pa
21725as
6015na
6015eu
9725af
7225eu
7385eu
6120eu
11775pa
17B05pa
9545do
15155na
9650af
6165eu
6180eu
11760me
15280as
15575eu
9870eu
6873af
9665af
15600af
5995eu
6873eu
11805me
9885af
13635af
6195af
11940af
15310as
17790as
9410eu
11955as
15360as
17830as
7120af
11950af
7405af
12080af
6040eu 6060eu
7120eu
7170eu
11825me 15205me
9495am
13595na
5935am 7435am
7355eu 11770eu 13695af
6245eu 7250eu 9645eu
15210eu
9B60pa
17715as
11880pa
17795pa
11910as
17880as
9925au
11625af
9550eu
15570af
9665eu
11810eu
9560eu
11755eu
15250pa 15335pa 17720pa
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
0600
0605
0610
0615
0630
0630
0630
Mondays
0600
0602
0610
0615
0630
0630
0630
Tuesdavs
0600
0602
0610
0615
0630
0630
0630
Wednesdays
0600 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
0602 BBC (af): Network Africa. See M 0333.
SS
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
0610
0615
0630
0630
0630
Thursdays
0600
0602
0610
0615
0630
0630
0630
Fridavs
0600
0602
0610
0615
0630
0630
0630
Saturdays
0600 Radio Australia (Sports): Grandstand. See A 0200.
0600 WWCR #2: University Network. See S 0000.
0610 Radio Australia: Book Reading. See S 0110.
0615 BBC: The World Today. See M 1645.
0630 BBC (af): Spice Taxi. A sideways look at African culture,
from presidential style to cult films.
0630 BBC: Meridian Reports. See W 0630.
0630 Radio Australia: Indian Pacific. See A 0030.
Hauser's Highlights
Monitor Radio Int'l: MRIWSHB W -94 WSHB-1: [time UTfreq kHz] 0000-9430, 0100-7535,
0200-5850, 0400-7535, 1000-7395,
1200-9455, 1300-7535, 1400-silent,
1800-15665,2000-13770,22007510; WSHB-2: 0000-7535, 01009430, 0300-11695, 0500-silent,
0900-7395, 1000-7535, 1300-9455,
1400-silent, 1600-21640, 20009355, 2200-17555 (via WCSN)
Looking for a Good Antenna Handbook?
If you'd like a good source of inlormalion abOut
.antennas you will be interested in THE ANTENNA HANDBOOK by Clem Small. Wnhin Its 200-plus, B 112" by 11
pages, there is much maierial from past "Antenna Topics
columns plus a cxmsiderable amount of new malerial.
h is an excellent source of information for selec1ing,
constructing, understanding, and utilizing your antenna
system. Also covered are subjeds like the history of
antennas, odd and unusual antennas, signal propagallon,
!actors affedinll antenna partormance, antenna accessories, and antenna troubleshooting.
THE ANTENNA HANDBOOK is available from Grove
Enterprises, P.O. Box 98, Brasstown, NC, 28902 for$1 2.95
plus $2.00 book rate postage ($4.50 UPS).
0700 UTC
3:00 AM EDT/12:00 AM PDT
, . :.~: .,
. ,' '
0800 UTC
FREQUENCIES
0700-0800
Australia, Radio
0700-0800 vt
0700-0800 vt
0700-0800vl
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0BOO
0700-0800
0700-0800 as
0700-0730
0700-0715
0700-0715
0700-0800 vt
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800vl
0700-0800
0700-0800 smtwha
0700-0800
0700-0800 mtwtfa
0700-0730
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800vl
0700-0715
0700-0800
0700-0715 vi
0700-0800 vi
0700-0800
0700-0735
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0800 vi
0700-0800 vi
0700-0800
0700-0800 smtwhf
0700-0800
0700-0800
0700-0745
0730-0800
0730-0757
0730-0745 sh
0730-0745 mtwhf
0730-0800
0735-0800 mtwtf
0745-0800
0800-0900
0800-0830vl
0800-0830vl
0800-0830vl
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0830
0800-0900 as
0800-0900
6080pa
11880pa
15565as
21715as
4835do
5025do
4910clo
6010clo
6005do
6070clo
6030do
6130clo
6160do
7385am
6205eu
11925eu
9585af
11910as
4915do
3366do
7125eu
5975eu
15380me
4935do
9825do
4760do
7295do
6175as
7385eu
9730clo
9700pa
3326do
7255af
4890do
11775pa
17805pa
7270na
9890eu
154BOme
17835af
3316do
5020do
6155af
6070af
5950na
6005eu
7325eu
11760me
15070eu
15400eu
17885af
9815na
7510na
9785am
17780as
9840eu
7425am
7315am
11950na
7490na
9465eu
581Gam
11770at
7355eu
6155eu
15605as
9425eu
9265am
9630pa
607Qaf
15200as
5995pa
9710pa
4835do
5025do
4910do
6010do
6005do
6070do
6030clo
6130clo
6160do
615Qam
7385am
6205eu
11925pa
9585af
15445au
0800-0805 s
0800-0805 s
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900 vt
0800-0830
0800-0900 smtwha
0800-0825
0800-0820 mtwtfa
0800-0825
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0850
0800-0848
0800-0900 vi
0800-0900
0800-0815 vi
0800-0900 vi
0800-0900
0800-0830
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800--0900
9400am 15030am
9600eu 9745au 11835eu
21455eu
7230eu
15410as
1174Qaf 15270af
17810me 2161Qau
9750as
15295as
15115pa
4770clo 4990do
15250pa 15335pa 17720pa
7305eu 9530eu 9750eu
11765me 15190eu 15220me
15500me 17710af 17755af
21630af
9545do
9650af
6t80eu
9410eu
11940af
15280af
15575eu
21660af
6190af
9600af
11955as
15310as
17790as
9350am
9495am
13615am
6195eu
9640na
12095eu
15360as
1783oas
0800-0900
0800-0900
0800--0900
0800-0900
0800-0900 vi
0800-0900 vi
0800-0900
0800-0900 smtwhf
0800-0900
0830-0845 s
083o-0900 vi
083o-0900 vt
083o-0900 vt
0830-0900
0830-0900
0830-0900
0830-0900
0830-0900
0835-0845 s
0845-0900
4915do
3366do
15200as
9675as
7125eu
4935do
4760do
7295do
6175as
7385eu
9630pa
9700pa
3326do
11335na
17900eu
4890do
6065eu
11690me
15105me
15500na
21585eu
3316do
5020do
7550eu
15575af
7325eu
11955as
15360as
17885af
9815am
7365as
7510am
9930as
13615au
7425sa
7315am
11950na
7490na
9465eu
5810am
15170eu
2310do
2485do
2325do
1545Qau
9745pa
5955eu
7180as
11990au
7385eu
11B40as
11752as
9750as
15295as
9720pa
15115pa
4990do
13760na 151BOas 15230as
21520eu
7305af
12010eu
15125me
15540me
7315af
12020eu
15290as
17580eu
975Qaf
13615eu
15420me
17B90as
9545do
13670eu
9410eu 9640na 11760as
12095eu 15070eu 15280as
17640eu 17790af 1783oas
21660af
9350na
7355am
13595na
5935am 7435am
15400eu 17700eu
1787Qau
11925pa 21455pa
9720pa 9895pa
17535au 21705au
13595na
5935am
13695af
7435am
6080pa 9580pa
11720as 11910pa
9725am
9400am 15030am
9600eu 9745pa 11835eu
17490au 21455eu
17800as
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
59
,.
~t
nu1P..ID.~.n.,
BUYERS
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mode plus GOLAY and POCSAG digital pager modes. Off-the-air
decoding of DTMF, CTCSS (PL) and DCS Is also supported. The M
400 can even be programmed to pass only the audio you want to hear
based on CTCSS, DCS or DTMF codes of your choosing. The M-400
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0900 UTC
I - ,,._
' :. . .
, ''\, ;,-;
',;
1.
' '
.~
::
, ' ;. .
.,
-~;"~-~--
1000 UTC
~ii: Ji ~;.
'.
1
.:.
FREQUENCIES
0900-1000
Australia. Radio
09001000 vi
0900-1000 vi
0900-1000 vi
0900-1000
0900--0930 mtwta
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000
0900-1000 as
0900-0950
09000915 mtwtf
0900--0915
09001000
0900--0915
09001000vl
09001000
09001000
0900--0930
0900-1000
09001000
0900-1000 mtwtfa
09001000 vi
0900-1000
0900-1000 vi
0900-0930
09001000
09001000
0900-1000
09001000
0900-1000
0900-1000
09001000 vi
09001000vl
0900-1000
09001000 smtwhf
09001000
0910--0940
0915-1000
09200935 sh
0930-1000
0930-1000
0930-1000
0940--0950
1000-1100
10001100 vi
10001100 vi
9510as
15170as
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
6035eu
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
8450au
6150am
7385am
9745pa
9585af
6160as
15410af
21600af
4915do
3366do
11840as
15200as
7125eu
9680as
15270au
7295do
5955eu
9700pa
3326do
9830as
4890do
9680eu
12070eu
15290as
15440eu
15580as
21515eu
5020do
9885au
6190af
11750as
15070eu
17640eu
17885af
9815am
7510am
9930as
7395sa
9350na
7315am
11950na
7490na
9465eu
5810am
11850au
6130do
15650au
6160do
5955eu
9895eu
11690as
15650au
9580pa
21725as
2310do
2485do
9580pa
21725as
9750as
62
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
11715as
17780as
11815as
12055as
17800af
15195as
9720pa 9895eu
15115pa
4990do
11805eu
13650eu
15345eu
15495eu
17595eu
21540eu
9545do
11640au
6195as
11760me
15190sa
17705eu
21660af
11900af
15190eu
15355na
15500na
17605eu
12020eu
15210eu
15380eu
15540eu
17760eu
13685au
9410eu
11940af
15310as
17790af
21715as
21820au
9740as
12095eu
15575me
17830as
9720pa
15470as
17525au
9710pa 9860pa
JACQUES d'AVIGNON
Oistril'lutor fo r ASAPS,
propagation software
Compuserve: 70531, 140
13605as
13690eu 17595af
PROPAGATION FORECASTING
965 LINCOLN DRIVE
KINGSTON, ON
K7M 4Z3 CANADA
9860pa
9810eu
10001100vl
1000-1100
1000-1100 mtwha
1000-1100
1000-1100
1000-1100
1000-1100
1000-1100
1000-1100
1000-1100
10001100
1000-1100
1000-1100
1000-1100as
1000-1100
10001100
10001100 vi
1000-1100 vi
10001100 mtwh
10001100
10001030
1000-1100
10001050
1000-1100 mtwhfa
10001100vl
1000-1100
10001100
1000-1100
10001030
10001100
1000-1100
10001100
1000-1100
10001100
1000-1100
10001100
10001100vl
1000-1100 vi
10001100
10001100
10001100
10001030
10201030 mtwtfa
1030-1100
10301057
10301100vl
10301100
10301100
10301100
2325do
6010do
6035eu
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
8450au
5030am
7385am
9745pa
9585af
6130do
15050as
21460as
7125eu
5980do
7295do
12065as
5995eu
9700pa
15340as
9830as
4890do
11690as
9750eu
11900af
12070eu
15210eu
15380eu
15500na
21540eu
17810af
6165eu
6190af
9740as
12095eu
15400eu
17790me
21660af
9815am
7510am
9930as
7395sa
5985as
15120am
9370as
7315am
11950na
7490na
5935am
5950na
10059as
6245eu
15450au
7345eu
4950do
11715na
11835au
13675eu
13690eu 17595eu
17387au 17895as
15470as
9715pa 9720pa
15115pa
17765as
9895eu
11 675na
12010eu
13650eu
15290as
15435na
17710na
11705eu 11805eu
12015eu 12020eu
15105na 15175eu
15320na 15355na
15465na 15470na
17760na 21515eu
9535eu
6195as
11750as
15070eu
15575me
17830af
7160as
11 760me
15190sa
17640eu
17885af
7465na
7405am
13625pa 17555as
9590am 11915am
9410eu
11940af
15310as
17705eu
21470af
7355am
13595na
15685am
12025as 15010as
11740af 15210af 21730me
17870au
9505eu 11990eu
7160do
15120as 17850as
15320eu 15395eu 21605eu
15170as
FREQUENCIES
11001200
1100-1130
Australia, Radio
Australia, Radio
11001200vl
11 001200 vi
11001200 vl
1100-1200
11001130 mtwha
1100-1200
11 00-1200
11001200
1100-1200
1100-1200
1100-1200
1100-1200
1100-1200
1100-1130
1100-ltSO
1100-1115
1100-1130
1100-1200vl
1100-1200
11001200vl
1100-1200
11001200vl
1100-1200
11001150
11001120
1100-1200 mtwhf
1100-1200vl
1100-1200
9710pa
9580pa
15565as
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
6035eu
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
503Qam
7385am
9745pa
1537Qaf
17800af
4915do
15640na
7125eu
6120na
5980do
4950do
4950do
9700pa
6576na
17900as
9830as
4890do
7305eu
11990as
15120as
9860pa
9860pa
15565as
13605as
15170as
13690eu 17595eu
5970am
9400am
11925pa
15410af
17860af
15030am
21455pa
17715af 17765af
21600af
17575eu
9680as
15295as
7295do
7160do
1511 5pa
9977na
21520as
1t705af
12015eu
15170as
11335na
11800as
12020eu
15255as
11900as
15105as
15290as
11001200
11001200
1100-1130
110011 30
11001200
11 001130
1100-1200
11001 200
1100-1200
1100-t200
1100-1200
11001200
11001200 vi
11001200
11001200
1100-1200
11301200
1130-1200
1130-1200 mtwhfa
1130-t200
1130-1200
1130-1200
1130-t200
1130t200
Netherlands, Radio
Sweden. Radio
Thailand, Radio
Vietnam. Voice of
15320as
17825as
6155do
953oas
11835au
6165eu
17515as
5965na
7160as
9740as
12095af
17640eu
5965na
9815am
7510na
9930as
7395ca
5985as
9645as
15120as
9350na
7315am
7490na
5810am
5950na
6155eu
11925am
11900na
9525me
11930as
5955eu
13775as
9655as
10059as
15335eu
21630af
17710as
15120as
9535eu
17850as
13635as
5975na
9410eu
11750as
15070eu
17885af
6110as
6190af
9515na
11760me
15310as
21660af
15400eu
7465na
6110as
9760as
15160au
9370as
9850am
13595na
5935am
11830na
13730na
15115am
15400na
11715me
9425pa
7405am 9590am
11720au 11915am
15425as
9850eu
15120as
11905as
12025as
17760na
15505as
6195na
9660eu
11 940af
15575as
17790sa
15685am
17890am 21455am
11790as
11910as
15240au
15010as
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
1100
1100
1115
1120
1130
1130
Mondays
1100 Israel Radio lnt'I: Israel News Magazine. See S 1100.
1100 WWCR I?.: University Network. See S 0000.
1115 Israel Radio lnt'I: Israel Mosaic. A weekly magazine of life in
Israel.
1120 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 11 20.
1130 Radio Australia: Innovations. Desley Blanch reports on
Australian inventions and innovative practices.
Tuesdavs
1100 Israel'Radio lnt'I: Israel News Magazine. See S 1100.
1100 WWCR I?.: University Network. See S 0000.
1115 Israel Radio lnt'I: Talking Point A weekly discussion
program.
1120 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 1120.
1130 BBC: Megamix. Compendium of music, sport, fashion,
health, travel, news and views for young people.
1130 Radio Australia: Arts Australia. Amanda Smith presents
reviews and comment on current events within the
Australian arts scene.
Wednesdays
1100 Israel Radio lnt'I: Israel News Magazine. See S 1100.
1100 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1115 Israel Radio lnt'I: This Land. Travel magazine.
1120 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 1120.
1130
1130
1145
Thursdays
1100 Israel Aadio lnt'I: Israel News Magazine. See S 1100.
1100 Taiwan (Voice of Asia): Variety.
1100 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1115 Israel Radio lnt'I: Studio Three. Israeli arts magazine
program.
1t20 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 1120.
1130 BBC: Thirty-Minute Drama. Raffles (6th.13th). Two
adventures from the short stories of E.W. Hornung. Death
Comes Staccato (201h,27th). A female private eye
investigates a case involving a young musician and a small
electronics company.
1130 Radio Australia: Couchman. Peter Couchman in conversation
with people from all walks of life.
Fridays
1100 Israel Radio lnt'I: Israel News Magazine. See S 1100.
1100 WWCR #2: University Network. See S 0000.
1110 Israel Radio lnt'I: Letter from Jerusalem. Arie Haskell reviews
the past week's current affairs.
1115 Israel Radio lnl'I: Thank Goodness It's Friday. A program for
the Sabbath eve.
1120 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 1120.
1130 BBC: Meridian Books. See W 0630.
1130 Radio Australia: The Parliament Program. A roundup of
events in theAustralian Parliament.
Saturdays
1100
1106
1130
1130
r11f mARYmAC~
The New Realistic
PR0-43 Scanner
llad1elllarlt
PHONES
we aro cheaper"
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
63
:.
' .
8:00 AM EDT
5:00 AM PDT
1 ,.
:..:
; .. '
"
.
1200 UTC
FREQUENCIES
12001230
Australia. Radio
12001300 vi
12001300vl
1200-1300 vi
12001300
12001300
1200-1215
1200-1300
1200-1300
1200-1300
1200-1300
1200-1300
1200-1300
1200-1300 mtwhf
1200-1300
12001300
1200-1300
1200-1300
12001230
1200-1300 vi
1200-1300
1200-1300 vi
12001300
1200-1230
12001300
12001206
12001 300
1200-1230 s
1200-1300 mtwhf
1200-1 230 a
1200-1300 vi
1200-1300
5995pa
11800pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
11745na
11940as
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
9635na
8425as
11795pa
7385am
11925am
21455am
9805eu
15195eu
9525me
11930as
7125eu
9560eu
5980do
7295do
11850as
5955eu
9700pa
15115pa
17860as
9830as
9830as
4890do
9540af
12055eu
15295as
15355na
15500na
6060pa
15565as
6080pa
9580pa
12001300
1200-1300
1200-1300
12001300
12001230
12001300
1200-1300
12001300
12001300 vi
1200-1300
12001300 s
1200-1300
12001300
12001300 vi
1200-1300
12001300
12001300
12001230
1206-1300 occsnal
1215-1300
12201230 vi
12301300
12301300
12301300 s
12301300
12301300 mtwhfa
12301300
1230-1300
12301300
1230-1300
1230-1300
12301300
12401250
Bangladesh, Radio
Belgium, R Vlaanderen Int
Canada, RCI Montreal
Finland, YLE/Radio
Ghana. GBC Radio 2
Sri Lanka, SLBC Colombo
Sweden. Radio
Switzerland. Swiss R Intl
Turkey, Voice of
Vietnam, Voice of
Greece, Voice of
15445na
9705na
9665as
15210na
9400am
15115am
11855na 17820na
9715as
11660as
15440pa
15030am
17490am 17890am
3625af
13640af
15325af 17575na
11715me 11790as
15155eu
11910as
12050as
9650eu
9675do
9835af
15105af
15320eu
15440eu
15525af
11705as
15280af
15335af
15470me
15540eu
11985eu
15290na
15350af
15485eu
17760na
6155do
9530as
7180as
7130na
9655as
6190af
9515na
11760me
15220na
17790af
9815am
7510am
9930as
7465ca
9955am
61 10as
15160as
9350na
7315am
7490na
5810am
5950na
7285eu
9700pa
17595as
4915do
5995pa
15565as
9548as
15545na
9660as
11900na
6130do
6075as
15240na
6165eu
9675as
10059as
11645af
9610na
11905as
6195na
9740as
11940af
15310as
17885af
7160as
9410eu
9760eu
11750as
12095af 15070eu
15575as 17640eu
21660af
9425pa
9455na
13625as
9560as
15425as
9985ca
9850am
13595na
13845am
6015na
9715eu
9760as
11715au
6060pa
15695na
15685am
11830na 17750na
15295eu 17745eu
7260as
11800pa
13615as
17775as
15195as
15400na
7295do
15425as
9720as
17870na
9535eu
12025as
15010as
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
1200
1201
1210
1230
Fridays
1200
1209
1210
1215
Mondays
1200
1209
Tuesdays
1200 WWc!R #2: University Network. See S 0000.
1209 BBC: Words of Faith. See M 1209.
1210 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 11 20.
1215 BBC: Multitrack: Hit List. See M 2330.
1230 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
1245 BBC: Sports Roundup. See S0315.
Wednesdays
1200
1209
1210
1215
1230
1235
1245
Thursdays
1200
1209
1210
1215
1230
1245
64
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
1230
1245
Saturdays
1200
1209
1210
1215
1230
1245
Macintosh Software
Shortwave Navigator
Frequency Valet
Frequencies/Programs
Computer Control
(Drake/Kenwood/ JRC)
Send $2 to demo disk to:
DX Computing
232 Squaw Creek Rd.
Willow Park, TX 7 6087
. . .. -
1300 UTC
'
9:00 AM EDT
"
6:00 AM PDT
FREQUENCIES
1300-1400
1300-1400 vi
1300-1400vl
1300-1400vl
1300-1400
1300-1330 mtwtfa
1300-1320
1300-1400
1300-1400 vi
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1400s
1300-1400
Australia, Radio
Australia, VLBA Alice Spg
Australia, VLBK Katherine
Australia, VLBT Tent Crlc
Bahrain, Radio
Belgium, RVlaanderen Int
Brazil, Radiobras
Bulgaria, Radio
Canada, CBC N Quebec See
Canada, CFCX Montreal
Canada, CFRX Toronto
Canada, CFVP Calgary
Canada, CHNX Halifax
Canada, CKZN St John's
Canada. CKZU Vancouver
Canada, RCI Montreal
China, China Radio Intl
5995pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
15545na
11745na
17625au
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
11955na
7405pa
1300-1400 vi
1300-1400
7385am
11925am
21455am
f 7595as
4915do
7125eu
9960me
5980do
7295do
5955eu
15115pa
9700pa
13760na
9590eu
9830as
4890do
11995as
6135eu
11815eu
11940eu
6025as
9825af
15105eu
15360eu
1300-1330
Egypt, Radio Cairo
1300-1330
Ghana, GBC Radio 1
1300-1400vl
Italy, IRRS Milan
1300-1400 mtwhfa Lebanon, Winos of Hope
1300-1400 vi
Malaysia. RTM Kota Kinaba
1300-1 400
Malaysia, RTM Radio 4
Netherlands, Radio
t 300-1325
1300-1400
New Zealand, R NZ Intl
1300-1306 occsnal New Zealand, RNZ Intl
1300-1350
North Korea, R Pyongyang
1300-1330 s
Norway, Radio Norway Intl
1300-1400 mtwhf
Palau. KHBN Voice of Hope
1300-1400
Papua New Guinea, NBC
1300-1400
Philippines, FEBC Manila
1300-1355
Poland, Polish RWarsaw
1300-1400
1300-1400
11800pa
17775as
15445na
1300-1400
1300-1400
13001400
13001330
1300-1400
17820na
8425as
9715as
11660as
15440pa
9400am 15030am
15115am 17490am 17890am
13001400
13001400 vi
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1400
13001400 s
1300-1400
13001400
13001400
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1400
1300-1330
1307-1400 occsnal
13301400
1330-1400
Uzbekistan, R Tashkent
New Zealand, R NZ Intl
Austria. R Austria Intl
Canada, RCI Montreal
1330-1400
1330-1400 tw
13301400
1330-1400
1330-1400
13301400
1330-1400
1330-1400
1335-1345
13451400 vi
1345-1400
Finland. YLE/Radio
Ghana, GBC Radio 1
India, All India Radio
Laos, National Radio of
Netherlands, Radio
Sweden. Radio
UAE, Radio Dubai
Vietnam, Voice of
Greece. Voice of
Myanmar. Radio
Vatican State, Vatican R
9650eu
15230na
9675do
7145eu
15365eu
7305as
9895eu
15290me
15440eu
7270eu
17720eu
9560as
11705eu
15320me
15455me
9525eu
9755as
11960as
15355me
15470me
15480as
17755eu
6155do
9530as
6075as
7480as
6190af
9410eu
11750as
11940af
15310as
17705eu
17885af
9815am
11715na
7365as
7510am
7465na
9955am
6110as
15160as
9350na
9465am
7490na
9475am
5950na
13695na
7285eu
9655pa
15450as
9535as
15325eu
11900na
4915do
13750as
7116as
9890as
15240na
13675eu
10059as
15630na
7185do
12050as
15425as
13635as
7160as
9580as
11765as
15070eu
15575me
17840na
21660af
15505as
7180as
9740as
11820na
15220na
17640eu
17880af
9760as
11715au
13625as
9560as
15425as
15695na
15105am
13595na
13845am
6015na
17750na
9715eu
15685am
11550as 11830na
15295eu 17745eu
17525au
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
1300 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1310 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. Reports on Australian,
regional and international sporting events and personalities.
1315 Radio Bulgaria: Today. Reports and analysis of current
events in Bulgaria and the Wor1d. Press reviews from the
weeklies on Monday.
1330 Radio Australia: The Europeans. See S 0130.
1345 Vatican Radio: With Heart and Mind.
1354 Vatican Radio: Vatican Onthe-Air.
Fridays
1300 WwCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1310 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
1315 Radio Bulgaria: Today. See S 1315.
t330 Radio Australia: Music Deli. Paul Petran present music from
a variety of cultures.
1330 Radio Bulgaria: Lifestyle. See F0015.
Saturdays
Mondays
1300
1310
1315
1330
t345
1345
Tuesdays
1300 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1310 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
1315 Radio Bulgaria: Today. See S 1315.
1330 Radio Australia: Jazz Notes. The best of Australian jazz
introduced by Ivan Uoyd.
1345 Vatican Radio: A Room with a View of the Vatican.
1359 Vatican Radio: Ask the Abbot.
Wednesdays
1300 WWCR #2: University Networlc. See S 0000.
1310 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
1315 Radio Bulgaria: Today. See S 1315.
1330 Radio Australia: Blacktracker. Mal Honess with traditional
and contemporary aboriginal music.
1345 Vatican Radio: The Rome Report.
Thursdays
1300 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1310 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
1315 Radio Bulgaria: Today. See S 1315.
1330 Radio Bulgaria: History Club. See H0500.
MONITORING TIMES
65
10:00 AM EDT
7:00 AM PDT
1400 UTC
:
I
FREQUENCIES
1400-1430
1400-1500 vi
1400-1500 vi
1400-1500 vi
1400-1500
1400-1500 vi
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500 s
1400-1500
1400-1500 vi
1400-1430
Australia. Radio
Australia. VLBA Alice Spg
Australia, VLBK Katherine
Australia, VLBTT ent Crk
Bahrain, Radio
Canada. CBC N Quebec See
Canada, CFCX Montreal
Canada, CFRX Toronto
Canada, CFVP Calgary
Canada, CHNX Halifax
Canada, CKZN St John's
Canada, CKZU Vancouver
Canada, RCI Montreal
China, China Radio Intl
Costa Rica, R Peace Intl
Ecuador, HCJB Quito
1400-1500
1400-1420
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1425 smtwh
1400-1500
1400-1500 vi
14001500
1400-1500 mtwhfa
1400-1500 vi
1400-1500
1400-1500 vi
1400-1500
1400-1500 s
t4001500 vi
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500 occsnal
1400-1430 mtwhf
1400-1500
1400-1500
5995pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
11955na
4200as
7385am
11925am
21455am
11910as
4915do
6130do
t3750as
15250as
15640na
7230eu
7125eu
9535na
11955na
9960me
5980do
7295do
4950do
11925eu
t7595af
7185do
9890as
151 15pa
9655pa
9830as
11995as
6025eu
7240pa
9710pa
11800pa
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
14001500 vi
14001500
14001500
14001 500
1400-1500
1400-1500 vi
1400-1500
1400-1500
1400-1500
1415-1500
1415-1425
14301500
1430-1500
1430-1500
1430-1500
1430-1500
1445-1500
1445-1500
17820na
7405na
11815as 15165as
9400am 15030am
15115am 17490am 17890am
17560me 17695eu
7295do
15120as
9750as
13700as
6065eu
11705na
t 1840as
15150as
7280eu
9560as
9895na
15140as
15355na
17590eu
21740eu
6155do
13595as
5975as
6075as
6195as
9660eu
11820as
15260af
17640af
17880af
15725am
11715na
7510na
9355as
61 10as
9770as
15395au
9350na
9465am
7490na
9475am
6015na
5025as
5005do
5995pa
9710pa
11800pa
6155eu
11925am
5990do
11 775as
11580as
7260as
9755na
11705na
15210na
15455eu
17750eu
21785eu
9825eu 9890eu
11960na 15105eu
15290na 15320na
15500na 17570eu
17760na 21630eu
972Qas
718Qas
9740as
11940af
15310me
17705eu
21660af
15425as
9410eu
9750eu
12095eu
15400al
17790al
9515na
11750as
15070eu
15575me
17840af
11900na 15665na
7215as 9645as
9760as
11705au 15160as 15205au
15425as
15105am
13595na
13845am 15685am
11550na 11 830na 17750na
7165do
6060pa
9770as
6080pa
11660as
726Qas
11695pa
9870af
1373Qaf 15450as
17490am 17890am 21455am
15335as
17720as
13780as
7315as
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
1400 Israel Radio lnt'I: Israel News Magazine. See S 1100.
1400 WWCR #2: University Network. See S 0000.
1401 BBC: Features. Turkey Today (2nd.9th.16th). A three-part
series that takes the pulse of Turkey. A Turkish Season
Phone-In (23rd). A live call-in program. The Turkish Diaspora
(30th). How Germany's two million Turks see themselves
and their future.
1407 Israel Radio lnt'I: Calling All Listeners. Israel Radio's weekly
mailbag program.
1410 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 1120.
1419 Israel Radio lnt'I: Israel DX Corner. Program for shortwave
listeners.
1430 BBC: Anything Goes. A variety of music and much more with
Bob Holness.
1430 Radio Australia: Report from Asia. See S 1230.
Mondays
1400 BBC (as): Dateline East Asia. Magazine program dealing with
political an economic affairs of SEINE Asia.
t400 Israel Radio lnl'I: Israel News Magazine. See S 1100.
1400 Vatican Radio: Thinking it Through.
1400 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1405 BBC: Outlook. An up-to-the-minute mix of conversation,
controversy and color from around the world.
t 406 Israel Radio lnl'I: The Israel Sound. The latest in Israeli
popular music.
t 4t 0 Radio Australia: Variable Feature. See S 1120.
1430 BBC: Off the Shelf. See M 0430.
t 430 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
1445 BBC: Music Feature. Top Scores. See S 0445.
1450 Radio Australia: Stock Exchange Report. Financial news from
Sydney and other exchanges.
Tuesdays
t400
t400
1400
1405
t 407
t 410
t 421
Wednesdays
t 400
1400
t 400
140t
1405
t 405
141 0
t418
t 430
t 430
1445
1450
Thursdays
1400
1400
1400
1400
1405
1410
1411
1430
1430
1445
1450
Fridays
1400
1400
1400
1405
1410
1430
1430
1445
1450
Saturdays
Come to the
66
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
FREQUENCIES
15001600
Australia, Radio
1500-1600 vi
15001600vl
15001600vl
15001600
1500-1600
1500-1600vl
15001600
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
15001600 s
1500-1600
1500-1600 vi
15001527
1500-1600
15001600
15001550
Ethiopia, Voice of
Germany, Deutsche Welle
15001600
1500-1600
15001600vl
15001600
1500-1600
Jordan, Radio
15001600 mtwhfa Lebanon, Wings of Hope
15001600 vl
Malaysia, RTM Kota Kinaba
1500-1600
Malaysia, RTM Radio 4
1500-1600
Malaysia, ATM Sarawak
1500-1600
Malta, V of Mediterranean
15001515
Mongolia. R Ulaanbaatar
1500-1525
Netherlands, Radio
1500-1600
New Zealand, R NZ Intl
1500-1600 occsnal New Zealand, R NZ Intl
5995pa
9710pa
11800pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
15460as
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
11955na
4200as
15165as
7385am
5930as
11925am
21455am
7165do
7185af
2160Qaf
11580as
15250as
7125eu
9535na
15355af
9560eu
9960me
5980do
7295do
4950do
11925eu
7260as
9890as
15115pa
9655pa
6060pa
9770as
6080pa 7260as
11660as 11 695pa
15001600
15001600
1500-1530
15001600
1500-1600
15001543 mtwhfa
15001545
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1530
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
1500-1600
15001600
1500-1600
15001600
15001600
15001600
15001600
15251530 twhf
1530-1600
15301600 mtwhf
1540-1 555 asm
1545-1600
17705as
17820na
7405na 9785as
11815as
9400am 15030am
7345eu 13580me
15250am 17490am 17890am
9560do
9735af
11965af
9750as
11915as
1780Qaf
11955na
7160do
1378oas
13700as
1515Qas
9325eu
11995as
11775as
6065eu
9560eu
11695eu
15105na
15320as
15540eu
4945af
9810as
7205as
6155do
6075as
11960as
6190af
9515na
12095eu
15400af
17880af
15725am
15590na
9930as
9355as
6110as
9760as
15205eu
17730as
15665eu
9350na
9465am
7490na
15420na
13845am
11705na
15140as
11780as
21515me
15140as
12050as
9640af
9977af
13185eu
15335as
7305eu
9755af
11875eu
15180eu
15425eu
15550eu
11770af
11870as
1772oas
9505eu
9825eu
11940as
15210as
15470as
17760na
9540eu
9895as
12030as
15290na
15500na
9720as
15425as
13635as 15505as
6195as 7180as
9740as
1175oas
15070af 15260na
15420af 17705eu
21470af 21490af
9410eu
11940af
15310as
17840na
21660af
7215as
9770as
15385as
17800as
9510as
15160as
17640as
19379eu
7245as
11785as
15395as
17830as
17510eu
15105am
13595na
15685am
11830na 17750na
15585as
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundavs
1500
1500
1515
1515
1530
1530
Mondays
1500 WWtR #2: University Network. See S 0000.
1510 Radio Australia: Asia Focus. Reporting on the commercial
interrelationships of the Asia/Pacific Region.
1515 BBC (af): Focus on Africa. Uptotheminu1e reports on the
day's events from all over the continent.
1515 BBC: Features. See M 0101 .
1515 Radio Bulgaria: Answering Your Letters. See M 0445.
1530 Radio Australia: Innovations. See M 1130.
1530 Radio Bulgaria: Folk Studio. See M 0500.
1545 Radio Bulgaria: Radio Bulgaria Calling. See M 0515.
Tuesdays
1500
1510
1515
1515
1515
1530
1530
1545
Wednesdays
Thursdays
1500
1510
1515
1515
1515
1530
1530
1550
Fridavs
1500
1510
1515
1515
1515
1530
1530
1545
Saturdays
1500
1500
1515
1515
1530
1545
Hauser's Highlights
GUAM KTWR final W-94
from Sept. 25 uses 9430, 9475,
9590,9785,9815,9820,9870,
11580, 11660, 11665, 11700,
11840 and 15200, including
English: 0745-0915 on 15200;
0845-1000 on 11840; 1445-1630
Mon.-Tue., 1445-1645 Wed.-Sat.,
1445-1700 Sun. on 11580 (Via
ASWLC) DX Asiawaves on
KSDA rescheduled: Sat 1415, Sat
& Sun 1500 on 9370; Sat 2300,
Sun 2315 on 11980 (via Wolfgang
Biischel)
SWAZILAND TWR S-94
changes include English: 06000735 (Mon-Fri. 0805) on 9500;
0430-0500 on 3200 ex-6070
(TWR via Wolfgang Biischel)
Grove Enterprises
1-800-438-8155
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
67
FREQUENCIES
1600-1613
1600-1700
1600-1630
1600-1700 vi
1600-1700 vi
1600-1700 vi
1600-1700
1600-1700 vi
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700vl
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1630
1600-1650
Georgia, Radio
Germany, Deutsche Welle
1600-1700
1600-1700
16001627
1600-1700
1600-1700 vi
1600-1630
1600-1630 mtwhfa
1600-1630
1600-1700
t600-1649 occsnal
1600-1630
1600-1655
1600-1700
7155eu
11715eu
5995pa
7260as
11800pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
4130af
7385am
21455am
7165af
6175eu
17795af
11910eu
6170as
17810as
7455as
1158-0as
11790eu
15250as
7125eu
9560eu
9960me
5995eu
151 15pa
9655pa
9470me
15675af
7285eu
6025eu
9505na
988-0eu
11945eu
15180na
9760eu
17745eu
6020pa
9770as
6060pa
6080pa
11660pa 11695pa
11575af
9400am
15110af 5130af
15030am
9560af
11 700af
17850af
12015af
15530me
9875as
15595as
7225as
21680as
9890as
13700as
15150as
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1645
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700 as
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700 vi
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1600-1700
1615-1645
1615-1630
1620-1630 mtwtf
1630-1700
Sweden, Radio
Vatican State. Vatican R
Estonia, Estonian Radio
Australia, Radio
1630-1700
1630-1700
1630-1700
1630-1700
1630-1700
1645-1700
1645-1700
1650-1700 mtwhf
Afghanistan. Radio
Tajikistan, Radio
New Zealand, RNZ Intl
15425af
4945af
5975as
6075as
11795af
3915as
9410eu
11750as
15310as
17880af
15725am
15590am
6120as
9355af
6110as
9700as
12040af
15255af
15445af
3970af
15665eu
13615na
9465am
15715eu
7490na
15420am
13845am
11705na
21525af
6065eu
6245eu
5925eu
6060pa
9860pa
7150as
15270me
15255af
4760do
3255af
9630af
9635as
7245as
9655pa
17760eu
11770af
17875eu 21740as
9720as
15425as
13675eu 15435eu
6190af
6195eu
9515na 9580as
12095eu 15070af
15400af 17640af
21470af 21660af
21605eu
7160as
9740as
15260na
17840af
6180eu
9760as
13710af
15320af
17790af
9645as
11930af
15225af
15410af
19379eu
7125as
11855eu
15205as
15395as
17895af
15105am
13595na
15685am
11830na 15355eu 17750na
21615eu
7250eu
9645eu
608-0pa 7260as
9710pa
11660pa 11695pa 11800pa
9550as
t7790me
5965as
15420af
975as
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
1600 WWCR #2: University Network. See S 0000.
1610 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
1615 BBC: Features. See S 0230.
1630 Radio Australia: Report from Asia. See S 1230.
1645 BBC (as): South Asia Report. Regional daily current affairs
program.
1645 BBC: Letter from America. See S 0615.
Mondays
Tuesdays
1600 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1610 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
1615 BBC: Megarnix. See T 11 30.
1630 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
1645 BBC (as): South Asia Report See S 1645.
1645 BBC: The World Today. See M 1645.
Wednesdays
1600 WWCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
t610 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
1615 BBC: Music Feature. The Motown Legacy. See M 2315.
1630 Radio Australia: International Report. See M 0030.
1645 BBC (as): South Asia Report. See S 1645.
1645 BBC: The Wortd Today. See M 1645.
68
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Thursdays
1615
1600
1610
1615
1630
1645
1645
Fridays
1600 WwCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
1610 Radio Australia: Sports Bulletin. See S 1310.
Gerald
Brookman
shared this
QSLfrom
Radio Mexico.
The image is
of a 1991
solar eclipse
photographed
at La Venta .
Saturdavs
7180as
1700 UTC
: -, -
, . ,- . .
,.
'
1800 UTC
FREQUENCIES
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800 vi
1700-1800 v1
1700-1800v1
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800 vi
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1727
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800 vi
1700-1800 as
1700-1800 vi
1700-1800
t700-1713 mtwhfa
1700-1800
1700-1800 mtwhf
1700-1800
1700-1750
1700-1750
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1730
1700-1730
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800 v1
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800 smtwhf
1700-1800
1700-1800
1700-1800
1715-1730 mtwhf
1730-1800
1730-1800
1730-1800
1730-t800
1745-1800
1745-1800
10375as
6060pa
9710pa
11880pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
7160eu
7160eu
6010do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
4130af
7385am
5930eu
15270me
15255af
7200af
13720as
7125eu
6150na
6550eu
4760do
9655pa
15115pa
9640af
7485eu
6025eu
9510eu
11840na
15105na
15385na
15580na
4945af
13595as
6075as
9885af
3255af
6190af
9630af
12095af
15420af
15725am
15590am
7425as
9355af
6040eu
9700eu
12040af
15395as
17895af
15665eu
13615na
13760am
15715eu
7490na
9465eu
15420am
13845am
21500eu
7120af
6020af
21590af
11830af
6065eu
9695af
7190eu
7412eu
11935af
10429as
6080pa
9860pa
7405af
9400am
7345eu
17790me
9535na
9977af
11570eu
6120eu
9560eu
11995af
15180na
15425eu
17760eu
11770af
15625as
9720as
13635me
3915as
6195eu
9740as
15070af
17880af
6110as
9760eu
13710af
15410af
19379eu
10458af 10650af
9580pa
7260as
11660pa 11695pa
9535af
11575af
15030am
11640eu
21455me
9580as
9505na
11705af
13665eu
15290na
15520af
21740af
15425as
15635af
5975as 6180eu
7160me 9410eu
11750as 11940af
15260af 15400af
7t 25as
11855as
15205eu
15445af
9645as
11920af
15320af
17790af
15695eu
15105am
t 800-1900 vi
1800-1900 vi
1800-1900
1800-1830
1800-t900
1800-1900
1800-1900
7260eu
10375as
6060pa
11695pa
2310do
2325do
6010do
5910eu
15268eu
6005do
6070do
1800-1900 v1
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1849 mtwhf
1800-1900
1800-1850
1800-1830 s
18001855
1800-1900
1800-1900 irreg
1800-1900
1800-1845
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900 vi
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1845
1800-1900
1815-1845
1830-1900
1830-1900
1830-1900
1840-1850 mtwhfa
1845-1900 irreg s
1850-1900
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
7385am
21455am
15255af
7200af
4915do
3316do
13720as
7412eu
11935af
7125eu
11 990na
4760do
6020af
9655pa
15115pa
9640as
5960eu
5995eu
6120eu
9880eu
12050na
15290na
15500af
9200af
3200at
9500af
3255af
6190af
9630af
15070af
15725am
15385na
15590am
13625as
9355pa
4985af
9760eu
13710af
17800af
13615na
9485am
15715eu
7490na
9465eu
15420am
13845am
21500eu
9780do
7190eu
5945eu
6100eu
5915eu
15650af
4783do
11735pa
9400am
15030am
9650me
15075af
9950me
11620eu
9605af
17655af
21590af
13750as
9590af
7270eu
7105eu
11630eu
15105eu
15375af
15520as
15435as
11890me
7285eu
7170na
11745as
15180na
15400na
15580na
7260na
12015as
151 90na
15425na
17760eu
5975as
6195eu
9740me
15400af
6005at
7110as
11940af
15420af
6180eu
9410eu
12095af
17880af
13770eu
6040eu
11920af
15205eu
17895af
15695eu
13760am
17510af
7415af
9700eu
12040af 13680af
15410af 15580af
19379eu
18930sa
15220af
13595na
15610am 15685am
9688eu
6155eu
9720af
7345eu
17525af
4835do
9880me
13730af
5995do
13595na
15610am 15685am
7120af
9605af
17655af
15340af
9655af
11625af
9683eu
9650me
15075af
15365af 17805af
15390me
15570af
9950me
11620eu
9730eu
10429as 10458af
6080pa 9710pa
11880pa
10650af
9860pa
1800 UTC
1800-1827
1800-1900
1800-1900
11930as
13785af
6970eu
9880na
12050af
15190na
15500af
17875as
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1900
1800-1830
1800-1900 v1
1800-1815
1800-1815
1800-1900 as
1800-1900
15550af
MONITORING TIMES
69
1900 UTC
f;.'":~l,<ii':ti~t
. ll'.
I~. ~~~Tr1~~'f/'f.~.1~~
~"
I
\1~ \,,
,4 ;;:.-;:
~;!" .~J!:.
~
~ ';al
..!::::;
2000 UTC
:f .._1.;:.t_~j
=1.:
FREQUENCIES
19002000 mtwh1
1900-2000
Argentina, RAE
Australia. Radio
1900-2000 v1
1900-2000 v1
1900-2000 v1
19002000
1900-1918
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000 vi
1900-2000
1900-1950
19001930
1900-1945
1900-2000 vi
1900-2000
Italy, IR RS Milan
Japan, NHK/Radio
19002000
1900-1930 as
1900-2000
1900-1925
1900-2000
19001916
1900-2000
19002000
1900-2000 v1
19001930 mtwhf
1900-2000
1900-2000
Kuwait, Radio
Latvia, Radio
Liberia, Radio ELWA
Netherlands, Radio
New Zealand, R NZ Intl
New Zealand, R NZ Intl
Nigeria, Radio
Nigeria, Voice of
Papua New Guinea, NBC
Portugal, Radio
Romania, R Romania Intl
Russia, Radio Moscow Intl
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-1930
19002000 vi
19002000
1900-2000
1900-2000
19002000 as
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000 as
1900-2000
1900-2000
1900-2000 v1
1900-2000
1900-2000
19002000
19002000
1900-2000
19002000
1910-1920
1917-2000
1930-2000
19302000
1930-2000
1935-1955
19402000
1950-2000
15345eu
6060pa
9560as
11880pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
15268eu
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
6955me
7385am
15270eu
7200af
9730eu
9670af
11810af
3955eu
7412eu
11935af
7125eu
6150as
9680as
11990eu
5935eu
4760do
6020a1
11735pa
15115pa
3326do
7255a1
4890do
9780eu
9690eu
6120eu
7260eu
13665eu
15425na
17605eu
15625as
11775af
3200a1
3985eu
4976do
3255af
7160me
11955as
17880af
15725am
15590am
17775am
13625as
13770eu
9955am
3980eu
9770eu
15205na
13615na
9485am
15715eu
7490na
9465eu
15420am
13845am
15355eu
3356af
9700pa
9022me
17605af
5915eu
7275eu
11790as
3950eu
6080pa
9860pa
7240pa 7260as
11660pa 11695pa
9440a1
9400am
17490eu
11515af
15030am 21465am
17790eu 21455eu
9770eu
9735a1
13690af
6110eu
9650me
15075af
11755eu
11740af
13790a1
7220eu
9950me
15440eu
11785af
7140au
9535as
9580au
9605af
17655af
21590af
4770do
4990do
9815eu
9750eu
6970eu
9685eu
15105a1
15525a1
17760eu
11975a1
11810eu
7105eu
11745eu
15180eu
15580a1
17875a1
11620eu
17680af
11940eu
7170na
12050eu
15290af
17560a1
3240af
6165eu
6180eu
9410eu
12095a1
6195eu
9630af
15070a1
15665eu
17510af
6040eu
11870as
15410af
7415af
11920af
15445af
18930sa
9590am
13760am
7110as
9740me
15400af
9525as
12040af
15580af
13595na
15610am 15685am
21615af
4830af
7255af
9745me
17655af
7345eu
9440eu
9575eu
11850eu
5882eu
2000 UTC
2000-2100
20002100 v1
20002100 vi
2000-2100 vi
70
Australia, Radio
9560pa
7260as
Australia, VLBA Alice Spg
Australia, VLBK Katherine
Australia, VL8T Tent Crk
MONITORING TIMES
6060pa
9860pa
2310do
2485do
2325do
October 1994
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
Bahrain. Radio
Bulgaria, Radio
Canada, CFCX Montreal
Canada, CFRX Toronto
Canada, CFVP Calgary
Canada, CHNX Halifax
Canada, CKZN St John's
Canada, CKZU Vancouver
China, China Radio Intl
2000-2100
2000-2027
2000-2100
2000-2100 vi
2000-2030 mt
20002050
20002030
20002030
20002010 mtwhfa
20002100
20002030
2000-2100 vi
20002010 mtwhf
2000-2100
20002100
20002010
20002025
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
20002100
20002030s
2000-2100 v1
2000-2100
2000-2100
20002100 v1
2000-2100
20002045
2000-2015
20002030
20002050
20002100 v1
20002030
20002100
Turkey, Voice of
Uganda. Radio
United Kingdom.BBC London
United Kingdom.BBC London
2000-2100
20002100 vi
20002100
20002100 as
2000-2100
20002100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
2000-2100
20002100
2000-2045
2000-2030
2000-2010
2005-2100
20102100 sa
20252045
2030-2100
20302100
2030-2100 smtwha
2030-2100 mtwhfa
2030-2100
2030-2100
2030-2100
2030-2100
2030-2100
20452100
6010do
9700eu
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
4130eu
9920eu
7385am
5930eu
21455am
7200af
5925eu
5960eu
4915do
3366do
9395eu
9675as
7405na
7125eu
4935do
11990eu
4760do
11790eu
17605af
9700pa
3326do
7255af
6576eu
9590eu
4890do
7260eu
9665na
9895na
11750na
12050na
15580na
6055as
5020do
9720eu
3240af
3200af
6135af
15505af
9400eu
4976do
7160me
3255af
7325eu
15260sa
15725am
15385na
15590am
17775am
11980as
13770a1
3980eu
11820af
15445af
21485af
13615na
9485am
15715eu
7490na
9465eu
15420am
13845am
17612a1
15355eu
9645a1
3950eu
12085eu
4935do
7235me
5995eu
15315af
15375a1
15290eu
11980as
5955eu
9620eu
5965eu
6065af
10059as
7412eu
11715pa
11720eu
6950eu
11715af
9400am
7345eu
826-0eu 94403f
151103f
150303m 21465am
9485eu
7285eu
11752as
7465na 9435eu
11603na
11850eu
17655af
11735pa
4770do 4990do
9345eu
15220af
9977eu
9190na
9685na
11630eu
11760eu
13665as
17605na
9450na
9750eu
11715eu
11805eu
15290eu
9620na
9880na
11730as
11940eu
15425eu
9770af
9885af
13635af
96303f
6180eu
9410eu
15400af
9740me
6195eu
12095af
17880af
71103s
1507031
9545do
15120eu
15665eu
6040eu 7415af
9700eu
15160a1 15205eu 1541031
15580af 17800af 19379me
13760am
13595na
15610eu 15685am
21525a1 21615eu
11625af 15570af
5882eu
15095na
9710me 11800me
7235eu 13650eu 13670me
15325me 17820me 17875a1
6135eu
7285eu
~
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~:'!.':~..
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BC-200XLT
LOWE
~ ~~:~~;~.
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30kHz-30MHz; 60 memo;
AM, AMN, LSB, USB,
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sr;e9~jj5:
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29-956MHz; 200 mems;
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Use with most Bearcat, Realiotic, AOR..
Portable
BHA-3
2100 UTC
2200 UTC
1 .
FREQUENCIES
2100-2200
Australia, Radio
2100-2130 vi
2100-2130 vi
2100-2130 vi
2100-2106
2100-2130
2100-2200 vi
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2130
2100-2200
2100-2130
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2127
2100-2130
2100-2200
2100-2150
2100-2130
2100-2200
2100-2200vl
2100-2200
2100-2115
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2137
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200 mtwhfa
2100-2200 vi
2100-2125
2100-2200
2100-2200
Japan. NHK/Radio
Lebanon, Wings of Hope
Liberia, Radio ELWA
New Zealand, R NZ Intl
New Zealand, R NZ Intl
Nigeria. Radio
Nigeria, Voice of
Palau, KHBN Voice of Hope
Papua New Guinea. NBC
Poland, Polish R Warsaw
Romania, R Romania Intl
Russia, Radio Moscow Intl
2100-2130
2100-2115 vi
2100-2200 vi
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2130
2100-2105
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200 s
2100-2200
2100-2200
21002200
2100-2200
2100-2200 vi
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2200
2100-2145
2110-2200
2115-2200
2115-2130 mtwhf
2130-2145 s
2130-2200
2130-2200 vi
2130-2200 vi
72
MONITORING TIMES
6060pa
11855as
2310do
2485do
2325do
6010do
5910eu
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
5995eu
15325af
4130eu
3985eu
7385am
15165eu
5930eu
21455am
15375af
9670as
11785as
3955eu
7412eu
11715eu
7125eu
6035as
9750me
9660as
9960me
4760do
11735pa
9700pa
3326do
7255af
11980as
4890do
5995eu
7225eu
7150na
9665na
9880eu
11760na
13665eu
15580na
7265eu
3316do
5020do
6480eu
6125eu
9720eu
12085eu
4825eu
11950eu
3255af
6180eu
9410eu
15260sa
15725am
15590na
17775am
13720as
13770eu
6040eu
13710as
15445af
19379eu
13615na
13760am
15715eu
7490na
9465na
15420am
13845am
15566eu
21615eu
12085na
9900eu
61103m
11790eu
11695pa
4835do
5025do
October 1994
4910do
5945af
11835eu
6065eu
15115pa
2200-2300
Australia. Radio
2200-2300vl
2200-2300 vi
2200-2300 vi
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2230
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2245
2200-2300 vi
2200-2230
2200-2300 vi
2200-2225
2200-2300
2200-2300 vi
2200-2300 smtwha
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2250
2200-2300 mtwhfa
2200-2300 vi
2200-2300
2200-2215 vi
2200-2300
2200-2235 vi
2200-2230
2200-2210
2200-2300
2200-2250
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300
2200-2300 vi
2200-2245
2230-2243
2230-2300
2230-2300
2230-2300
2240-2250 smtwhf
2245-2300
2245-2300
2245-2300
Sweden, Radio
Greece, Voice of
Ghana. GBC Radio 1
Ghana, GBC Radio 2
India. All India Radio
2245-2300 mtwhf
2245-2300
11695pa
13755as
4835do
5025do
4910do
9700eu
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
11705as
5960na
9880eu
7385am
9550na
9900eu
7200af
7412eu
11715pa
7125eu
971035
9960me
5980do
7295do
9700pa
3326do
7255af
9325eu
11980as
9675do
9550eu
9880as
11790na
12050na
15425na
3316do
11610as
5020do
9640as
12085na
17750eu
7185me
9770na
3915as
7180as
9590na
11955as
15400af
15725am
15590am
17510as
13625as
6035as
11760as
15305as
17735au
13615na
9495am
15715eu
7490na
15420am
12160am
17612af
11790eu
11755na
7405na
15640sa
6065eu
7420eu
4915do
3366do
9705as
15145as
9670na
9600as
2130-2200vl
2130-2200
2130-2200
2130-2200
2138-2200
6155af
9880eu
137303f
15270eu 17490eu 21455eu
2200 UTC
7235eu
13650me 13670me
178203f 17850af 17875af
6950eu 8260eu 9920eu
11715af 15110af
9400am 15030am 21465am
17760eu
7345eu 9420eu
9735af
9765as
13690as 15135af
6110eu
7220eu
9910au 9950eu
15225pa
11765af
6185as
9625af
11925eu
11915as
9680af
4770do
9675do
6135eu
9690eu
9470eu
9685eu
9895as
11 770na
15180na
17605na
9595eu
11620eu
4990do
7285eu
9750eu
9530af
9750eu
11730na
11920na
15290na
17675as
11940eu
9550eu
9820eu
11750na
12050na
15425na
9545do
15575eu
15120eu
15095na
6010eu 6020eu
12030eu
3915as
5975na
6195eu 7110as
11955as 12095af
15370as 15400na
13840pa
6095eu
15185au
15580af
21485af
18930sa
6090eu
6005af
7325eu
15070eu
15575eu
15665eu
9760eu 118703s
15205eu 15410af
17735as 17800af
13595na
15610am 15685am
17612af 21525af
15095na
15390am 17715am
11945eu 11960eu
15365pa 17795pa 17860pa
11645eu 11720na
1503Qam
9910au 9950eu
15225eu
11aooas
11620eu
1533035
15115pa
4770do 4990do
13185eu
9620na
1171035
11805na
12065as
17570as
9665na
11730as
11920ca
15290na
17605na
9750na
11760as
11960as
15410na
17690na
11710eu
13605na
5975na
9410eu
11695as
15070eu
6195eu
95703s
11750sa
15260sa
15405as
9535as
15185au
15445af
17820as
17555sa
9770as
15290as
15580af
21485af
9545do
15095na
21720eu
9445na
11885na
3955eu
7325eu
9915am
12095af
15575eu
13770na
7415as
137103f
154103s
17800af
13760am
13595na
13845am 15685am
21525af
t 1920eu 11945eu
13750as
7465eu 9435sa
11603na
11745as 1511035
9950as
1780Qas
11730na 15155na
118303u
7:00 PM EDT
4:00 PM PDT
2300 UTC
'
FREQUENCIES
23000000
Australia, Radio
2300-0000 vi
2300-0000 vi
2300-0000 vi
23000000 vi
23000000
2300-0000
23000000
2300-0000
2300-0000
23000000
2300-0000
2300-0000 as
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-0000vl
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-2330 mtwhf
2300-0000 vi
23000000 smtwha
2300-0000
2300-2350
2300-2330 s
23000000 mtwhfa
2300-0000vl
9580pa
15365pa
4835do
5025do
4910do
9625do
6005do
6070do
6030do
6130do
6160do
6160do
5960na
11940am
7385am
21455am
1561Qas
9705as
17800as
7125eu
5965eu
9680as
9960me
9530na
5980do
7295do
9700pa
11700na
9655sa
11980as
9675do
9660do
17795pa
11695as 13755as
17860pa
9755na
13670na
15235am
9400am 15030am 21465am
995oas
11745as
15145as
6155eu
6185as
9625as
15115pa
13650na
11860na
23000000
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-0000
Thailand, Radio
UAE, Radio Abu Dhabi
United Kingdom.BBC London
23000000
23000000
23000000
23000000
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-0000 vi
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-0000
2300-0000 vi
2300-2315
2330-0000
23300000
23300000 m
2330-0000
2330-0000
2330-0000
2335-2345 smtwhf
23450000
9620na
11750as
15425na
17890as
9655as
9770na
5975na
9590na
15260sa
13740am
15590na
17645as
13625as
7215as
15290as
9985eu
7315am
15715eu
7490na
7355am
581Qam
9600as
11740na
6020na
15425na
11910as
7315am
10059as
9425sa
9700na
9685na
12050na
17570as
21480na
11905as
11885na
6175na
9915am
15370as
13770na
9770as
15305as
11820sa
9495am
9750na
15290as
1761oas
11665as
15410as
17690na
13605na
6195na 9570as
11945as 11955as
15405as 17555sa
11760as 15185as
17735as 1782oas
13615na
13595na
13845am 15685am
11830au
13655sa
6165na
12025as 15010as
11595sa 11645sa
11720na
SELECTED PROGRAMS
Sundays
2300
2300
2310
2315
2330
2330
Mondays
2300
2300
2310
2315
2315
2324
2330
2330
2332
Thursdays
2300
2300
2310
2330
2330
Fridays
2300 WwCR 12: University Network. See S 0000.
2310 Radio Australia: Asia Focus. See M 1510.
2330
2330
Saturdays
2300
2310
2330
Tuesdays
2300
2300
2310
2315
2330
Wednesdays
2300
2300
2301
2310
2315
2330
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
73
WESTERN EUROPE
London
30 r---r---r-"'-;,..;.;.;-r---...-.----,--,
30..--,,-,---~--~
-l--f-......j... ..J....,.1.-.:~---!-~
i i j i ( i ....:i i
... ,.......... +"""' ...
. ! ! ! y '
20
20
-.;. ;, . ,_,~ ~
20
:: '~;F~.-r:::~~~-~;-. :~L~~=~t!I
HI
10
--
o ..._.~_._~h
i ,...._.;~~.....;....
! .......... . ,. .
0
12
1!1
18
21
UTC
E A S T E R N E U R 0 P E (P)
Moscow
.
30
20 .. .
20
I'
I'
L' t, I
!
'. , !
r-- r -: ~;:-
111 -
,--r-- ,-l
+---~---L.: t=-~~V::::...;
: : : t"'
- ..
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10 :-:
!I
............+..-....+........+~..........,
o +-~-++~
12
111
t8
~~~-~--~. -
25
- I'-
1-- ~.
20 --
111 ...---
~. .
., L - ~.
10
20
- +--
12
'
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!\
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.J
15
18
21
UTC
CENTRAL AFRICA
Kl
anl
30..--.-~-..-s,.--.,.-,.----,--,
:c 18
:E
10
10
II
.........................--..........~
12 18 t8 21
00--.-.--..~
12
t8
111
21
UTC
MIDDLE EAST
Kuwait
,-
IND IA (P)
New Delhi
30 .---,,. --....--.--.,,.......-....--,---,,-,
211
20 ...
20
20
111
:c 111
-+. ~
~- +--..-4...
!
:I
10
10
/i
-- L ;+
11
21
21
.+--~ .+.J;.~-r~~~~L~{-..
j
18
UTC
SOUTH AFRICA
Johannesbu
15
NEAR EAST
lrakllon
..---.-~-..---.-~-..--..,.--,
UTC
30
12
UTC
30 .--~~--~~~-~
'
I f
o..._.~'41-+-~........,........-+-~;..........~
12
15
18
21
UTC
12
15
18
21
UTC
S 0 U T H E AS T A S I A (P)
SI a
10
12
15
18
21
UTC
AUSTRALIA
30 ..--r---:--,...-'"T"""-r-.---r--.
30 .---..,..-~S~he~~~-.--r~
....j ,-+-
.~~!!!!!!f. -...J ..
1
I I
10
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. \--\-i-.-f.H. -~.-.L
:
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1........
;~1...-.-+14i-.-+I~~!...-.-+1....,....
0
12
15
18
21
UTC
74
MONITORING TIMES
12
UTC
October 1994
15
18
21
12
UTC
111
18
21
W E S T E R N E U R 0 P E (P)
London
30 ,...--,--,--,-,--.-,.-.-.i
25 - .
f....J_
ao ,--.---.-,..-..,r-,-,--,,
. T-+
20
!1
2S - ..
! I .. I
.: :+~J::.+ .
10
10
- -~-
II
i ____
~
o........,........
o a
-+ ~ --! -- r.
..........
12
15
18
21
UTC
E AS T E R N E U R 0 P E (P)
Moscow
~--
i. . -t.---~ __j
- .
20
..... :
I
i
-- . , ..... r--- -1 -1-;----~:-- ., ...
Ill
11
21
; / 1',
'
_..
'
! ',
1: -~,~-r_.,. .~;~:~:-...-~t=~~:~j ii , .
0 ...........................-.-+----i~+--+--+~
0
3
12 15 18 21
15
18
21
CENTRAL AFRICA
N E A R E A S T (P)
lrakllon
l
:.:..:1.,...--.-__,.....,
30 . -.........-,..;;K.=.,:~:.:..:n
20
20
:i: 18
16
10
10
1- f -'-+ . +-+-i -
8 -
o ..............................................~..............................~
0
UTC
12
111
11
21
UTC
SOUTH AFRICA
Johannes bu
Kuwait
30 .--.---..--....-.--......-.....,--,...-,
16
18
21
IN 0 IA (P)
30
20
20
111
18
10
12
UTC
M I 0 0 L E E AS T (P)
30,...-....,---,-- - , . -;--...,.....-,-;--
10
. - . --.N""'e,.
w'--Del
"--f-'""'
hl-,--.--.---,
10
II
II
12
111
18
21
UTC
12
16
18
21
UTC
S 0 U T H E A S T A S I A (P)
SI a
e
30
12
UTC
.._.....,........,.......~
. .
'
,r
12
30 . --.---.---.--,..---.....--.--,...--,
,- ---1 -1-1--t -~
I
25
:i: 111
UTC
30 ,...--,--,--...,,..-..,-,--,-~~
i i
I' I
i .. : -' ; :
.--.,--,..._;.;~..,--r--..,..-,..-,
12
Ill
18
21
18
"
21
UTC
Tok o
.-~........----.--"-r---r---r--.--..
20
111
10
12
UTC
111
18
21
ll
12
UTC
16
11
21
a
October 1994
12
UTC
MONITORING TIMES
75
The new edition o f our FAX GUIDE contains the latest eQuipment
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SAMPLE PAGE
FROM
CALIFORNIA
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DIGITAL DIGEST
BAUDOT AND BEYOND
B Bob Evans
necessary.
ACARS decoding and the co ncept of
.. scanning.. are mutually excl usive. Because
ACAR S transmissions are split-second in
nature. the squelch control on your radio
must be turned completely off. Otherwise,
the transmission wi ll be half over before the
squelch circuit opens.
The Uni versal M-400, M-1200 and M8000v5 Decoders are current ly the only commerciall y available decoders for ACA RS.
78
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
.. N409
a) Off Report
Thi s transm ission from the aircraft indicates the "Wheels Up" time from the de parture airport. The firs t 17 c haracters of the text
field are fixed format. Characters 18 through
220 are available for "free talk."
.N1844U QB
1108UA0731YYZ0310
.N 1844U Address: A ircraft Registration
Mark
QB .......... Message Label : QB - Off
Report
1108 ......... Message Sequence Number:
11 minutes and 8 seconds
past the hour
UA0731 .... Carrier and Flight Number:
Unite d Airlines #731
YYZ ........ Station of Activity: Pearson
International, Toronto, Ont.
0310 ....... Off (Wheels Up) Ti me 03 10
UTC
b) 011 Report
T his transmission from the aircraft indicates the time when the w heels "touched
down" at the destination run way.
.N6807QC8
1851AA03190RD0018
N6807 ...... Address: Aircraft Registration
Mark
QC ... Message Label: QC - On
Report
8 ........... Downlink Block Identifie r
Note that the station of acti vity field contains the departure station code. This message is transmitted automati cally follow ing
the declaration of an ON event.
c) Out/Return In Report
This transmission from the aircraft resu lts
from the aircraft returni ng to the gate a fter an
OUT event has been declared. The text portion of the message contains a 2 1-cha racter
fixed format fo llowed by optional "free talk ."
.N93105 QG
4916T\V0721LGW09110922
.N93105 ... Address: Aircraft Registration
Mark
QG ............ Message Label: QG - Out/
Return In
4916 .. ... .. .. Message Sequence Number:
49 minutes and 16 seconds
past the hour
T\V0721 ... Carrier and Flight Number:
Trans World #721
LGW .......... Departure Station: Lo ndon,
Gatwick, UK
0911 ......... OUT Time (time off gate):
0911 UTC
0922 ....... Return In Time: 0922 UTC
Note that even though the departure station was at London Gatw ick, th is me ssage
was not transmi tted until the a ircraft w as in
range of New York VHF. Your editor copied
the message from hi s QTH in Toronto.
Canada. Recei ving transmissions from this
distance augers well for monitors w ho do not
live in close proximi ty to a major airport.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
FROM THE COMPANY THAT BRINGS YOU SCAN CAT
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c ontrol all func tions. No mo re looki ng thro ug h complicated ma nuals or searching for bu ttons. A LL comm ands are
in plain English . 'PLUS' COPYCAT has a fully edita ble text b utler. with cut & paste. Save/load/edi t/print files .
PROGRAMMABLE macros and muc h more. COPYCA T supports ALL the abov e units w ithin ONE program . Simply
select your unit from COPYCArs EASY TOUSE menu and G01
,,.-_
Oc!ober 1994
MONITORING TIMES
79
AMERICAN BANDSCAN
THE WORLD OF DOMESTIC BROADCASTING
Winter
Get Your
80
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
DX
.-~::~~~<\!-.
<::: .- . ...:;:-'{1 ~ ~~:~~,.-~:
This antenna farm on Ridge A venue serves practically every station in the
Philadelphia area-AM, FM and TV-including well-known WFLN, though
WPGR-AM comes through th e loudest. It 's the combination, say engineers, that's
causing appliances and lights in the neighborhood to have a mind of th eir own. See
discussion in "Bits and Pieces."
ti o ns can he lp you avoid a nasty roof \isit
o r towe r cli mb in the cold weath e r. Also,
check a n y 75/ 300 oh m transfornwrs to
see if th ey have water in th em. Rep lace
an yth ing wet inside! Check that your a nte nna cleme n ts a re straig ht and fi x a ny
broke n o nes. Remember that th e coax
nea r the rotator has to be abl e to fkx wi th
rota ti o n , and it may wear out soo111..:r . This
is a good time to consider whether or no t
LO acid a mast-mou n ted p ream p o r othe r
accessori es to help you get the OX.
lfyo u li1e in an area th at has a fi: w h ig h
powered F:VI stations 1,ithin the metropolitan a rea, a mast-mou nt ed preamp ma~
ca use more problems than it so ll'es by
ove rloading yo ur receive r. But. if you lin
in a rural a rea with few close by stations, a
preamp mo unted near the an t('n na will
bring you stations you 111ay have never
heard before. These outdoor prcan1ps a re
powe red by eithe r a separate wire or by a
special coax cou pler that feeds the low-
Creative DX Reporting
\Vith digital sound cards becoming less expe nsive and po pular in ma ny hom e com puters, a
new way of saving some of your
best DX catches for insta nt retrieval has bee n born! Computer
sound cards now offe r CD-quality
d igital ste reo re produCLio n and
the Mic rosoft \<\'indows ".WAV" Philadelphia's WFLN
fo rmat has be come ve ry popular.
nei ghborh ood of Philadelphia. Most enUsing the sound editor found in Windows
3. 1, you can edit ou t e ve1y thing but the
g ine ers agre e that it is n o tjust one s tati o n,
acLUa l station ID and save it as a file any but the combi nati o n o f everal po we rfu l
other Windows user can play. In addition, s ta tio ns o n a ll bands, that co ntribu tes to
instead of ma iling tapes, you can e-mail
the malfunction ing YCRs, TV se t~ an d
your DX as a file! Make sure to make these
othe r mode rn conven ie nces.
fi les as short as possible, as sound files can
Talk shows are what have helped AM
rad io suf\live, pitted against the vastly
become e no rmo us if they are more tha n a
h ig he r a ud ience numbers fo r FYI. rad io.
few seconds long. But, it is a unique way to
Contests and giveawars are wha t Ft'vt stashare yo ur DX fun with o the r DXers!
tions use to kee p that marke t s ha re . Combine the two, and you ge t o ne of the mos t
Bits and Pieces
entertaini ng a nd info rmative shows o n
If you are read ing this now, it is because
ta lk radio today! I am ta lkin g about Cra ig
Harold Campin g is wrong and the world
Crossma n 's Computer America, h eard Sunhas not come to an e nd! Mr. Campi ng's
days at 3-6 pm Easte rn Time. C raig talks all
re lig io us program is h eard on many reliabo ut personal compute rs a nd what's new,
gious broadcasters prcclicting the end of
and features guests o n to pics rang ing from
th e ,,o rld in th e mo nth of Septembe r.
h ardware to so ftware .
Thanks to Thomas Mc Ke on for that one!
The best part about this show is that
R.A. Skla r in Seattle se nds in a report.
Craig en courages h is liste n e rs to ca ll in by
about more duopoli cs bein g form ed by randomly givin g prizes lo his calle rs, rangsome prominent names in are a broadcasting from software to cntire compute r sysing. KIRO Al\il-FM adds KING-AM to its
tems and other incredible ha rd ware to
stable o f offe1-ings. I\ lo re and mo re marma ke your compute r even mo re powe rke ts a rc being dominate d by th ese powe rful. Call 1-800-800-8852 to fin d 0 111 th e
ful new g roups of three stations merg in g sta tio n in your are a tha t ca rri es this prointo si ngle ownersh ip. Sea ttle already has
gram from th e Business Radi o Network. I
a t least three other triosofstationsgrouped
wri te this colum n using softwa re won o n
toge the r, vying fo r their sha re of the marthe show! T h is is a fun way to use you r
ke t.
DX ing skills to enhance yo ur liste ning
Tom v\lhite from Pe nnsylvania found
post compute r syste m . It is also ava ilable
a n a rticle about how n eighbo rs cope with
via sate llite o n Satcom F4 T IO 8.08 :VlHz
inte rfere nce from a nearby 50kW Alvl ranarrowba nd F:Vl.
d io statio n. Resid e nt~ compla in of hearing it in toasters, hair d1yers, telephones,
Coming Up
and oth er a ppliances. Some h ave fluoresBe ready next month for a do-it.-yourcen t lights th at n ever turn off, due to the
powe rful RF field. T hey blame o ne sta- se lf way to increase yo ur FM receptio n
tion- WPGR-A.vl-for the problems, sin ce ca pa bilities. e,en in tough loca tions with
close-by hig h p ower sta ti ons. Th a nks to all
it is the o ne they hear the easiest.
A rece nt business trip took me to that of yo u who n o w co rresp o nd via th e
exact ne ighborhood to fi x a n RF proble m
I nte rn e t~ E-mail has p ro,idcd ma ny good
in a n earby nursing home . Practically ev- lis tings of DX catches for this month 's
e1y station servi ng the Philade lphiaarea- co lumn. If you wou ld li ke to write d irectly
A.l'vl, FYI. a nd TY-radia tes from th e Ridge
to me, you can via Prodigy atJPGC40A or
Ave nue antenna farm in the Ro xborough
via the Inte rn e t atjpgc40a@p rodigy.com.
Skipping In
John Dunn of Holbrook, MA caught
some good E-skip FM DX from his
car while driving near Boston.
1800 WAPE 95.1 Jacksonville, FL
1700 WLVE 93.9 Ft. Lauderdale, FL,
"Love 94"
Mark Scheifelbein reports this DX
from Phoenix, AZ
0200 KATU-TV 2 Portland, OR, ABC
programming
1900 KDFW-TV 4 Dallas, TX, CBS
programming
2000 KCBl-FM 90.9 Arlington, TX,
religious programs
Dlf~./~~~D
YAESU
MFJ
?cOM
0~
Accessories, etc.
Call For Our Low Discount Prices
For info and tech help call (203) 666-6227
Out-of-State Sales Call 1-800-666-0908
Conn. Sales Call (203) 667-9479
:"7
LENTINI
COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
21 Garfield St.
Newington, CT 06111
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
81
fEDERAL FILE
G01ng...
Gone222
G01ng...
. ..
82
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Passband
monitoring
MOBILE
Group 1
406.350
407.150
407.950
408.750
409.550
415.150
415.950
416.750
417.550
418.350
Group 2
406.750
407.550
408.350
409.150
409.950
414.750
415.550
416.350
417.150
417.950
Group 3
406.550
407.350
408.150
408.950
409.750
415.350
416.150
416.950
417.750
418.550
Group 4
406.950
407.750
408.550
409.350
410.150
414.950
415.750
416.550
417.350
418.150
The above system uses the Motorola Saber System. If you are starting tu mi ss your
favo rite federal agency on their usual channels, you might try c hecking these frequencies-especially in the la rger metropo litan
areas. Thi s syste m is be ing in stalled in most
military bases of any s ize. as well as on the
larger naval vessels . such as a ircraft carriers.
T he Department of De fe nse Anti-Drug
task force has been monitored on 418.775
MHz. Other joint Federal/state/local task
forces have been reported on the 85 1-869
MHz Specia li zed Mobile Radi o (SMR)
trunki ng channels operating as legitimate
businesses. T he best time to find them is after
2 100 hrs. local time whe n the plumber a nd
ai r conditioner di spatchers have gone home.
I can' t te ll you where to li sten: it will vary
from city to c ity. Just listen. You never can
te ll what you will lind.
01
141.5250
138. 1750
138.0750
138. 1650
138.1 850
02
03
04
Use
C/ M
RPTR OUT
SIMPLEX
SIMPLEX
SIMPLEX
Spectra
Plus
Vision
Modes
Real time
Recorder
Post process
Price
8900
17900
800-401-3472
fax/voice 206-697-3472
Visa, MasterCard. Check or Money Order
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
83
f?LANE TALK
CIVILIAN AERONAUTICAL COMMUNICATIONS
ekome aboard for a fl ighl to Honolulu! When aircraft fly over the
oceans, the UHF/V HF frequencies used over land for company commu nicalions and even traffic control can no longer
reach them. They must resort 10 HF freq uencies wh ich tra ve l longer distances.
Contractural Carriers such as ARINC (Aeronautical Radi o, Inc.) ofte n provide the link
between c lie nt airlines, air traffic control.
and. in th is case. aircraft over the oceans.
We 'll cover a few of the most-traveled
oceanic routes in several installments over
the next few mon1hs, start ing off with the
Central East Pacific. Table I lists the Central
East Pacific (CEP) frequencies used by aircraft llying the busy corridor between San
Francisco and Honol ulu.
CEP II
CEP Ill
6640..
3413 2869
5574 5547
6673
8843 11282 10057
13354 13288 11 282
17904 21964.. 13288
11342 ..
LDQCP
3013
6640
11342
13348
17925
21964
84
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
CEP-2: San Francisco and Honolulu (Honolulu does not have 2869
kHz). Active 24 h rs.
be used due to some sort of tone on the 5 MHz
band around 3:30 am.
The CEP-2 region operates ahout the same,
using freq uencies on 5 and 11 MHz. 5 MHz
good for ini tial report and OG (on ground)
SELCA L (se lective call ing) all Jay long. For
instance. on 5 MHz a pos ition wou ld be taken
over at DUETS and then the pilot wou ld be
to ld to call DOPPS progress on 11 MHz.
(DU ETS AND DOPPS are Oceanic Reporting Points.) In the afternoon. 11 and 5 bands
arc util ized, shift ing to 5 and 2 MHz later in the
day. Mids also use 5 and 2 MHz. 2869 kHz is
better for close-in reports.
As above and when CEP-3 c l ose~. add American Ai rlines and military tlights. except REACH
Book Review
While books and directories for VHF and
UHF freq uencies abound nowadays, it' s still
rare to find a book containing not only up-todate HF aero band frequencies. but also one
that has a lot of other useful info in it. However. hold on to your hats, folks! Bob Evans
has updated his Worldwide Aero11awical Comm1111icario11s Frequency Directol)'. and it" s
even better than the fi rst edition!
A nice, thick 260 pages, it covers everything civilian fro m MWARA (Major World
Aero Route Areas) and sector maps, to LDOC
and company frequencies. Military coverage
and VOLMET stati ons are included as well as
digital modes used for telecommunications on
HF (A FfN, Aeronautical Fixed Telecommunications Network). There's even a chapter
covering VHF monitoring and a large section
devoted to ACARS (Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting Syste m).
Bob has included appendices which include !CAO (I nt ' ) Civil Aviation Organization), AFfN. and IATA (lnt ' I Air Transport
Association) codes, whic h are used to identi fy
cities, airports, and airlines. There are also
designators and waypoint data. which can be
a big contri bution toward enabling a monitor
to understand what he's hearing.
This helpful book is one that you' ll want to
keep at your monitoring station at all times.
The experienced listener will appreciate Bob
Evans thorough coverage of the different
areas of aero monitoring, and at the same time.
it's easy e nough for the newcomers to our
hobby to under tand.
You can order your copy from the publisher, Universal Radio, Inc, or from Grove
Enterprises and other providers of radio equipment. The price is $19.95 (a steal for what it
contai ns!). Uni versal" s address is 6830 Americana Parkway. Reyno ldsbu rg. OH 43068;
(6 14) 866-4267. At the same ti me. ask to be
included on their mailing list so you can get
notices of other upcoming books and goodies.
. . . . . . . . . . . ..--~-~ ~~ii
.;;..:;:;;;::::;;w;;;_-~-....,,"--tt:.~.-
Reader's Corner
Charles Bernth (NY) writes that he recent ly
spe nt a day al G abrcsk i Air port in
Westhampton. NY, the home of the 106th
Rescue Group of the Air National Guard. He
reports that they really put on a show!
'" King 88 .. and "Ki ng 79" each dropped
fou r parachutists-King 88 dropped from 900
feet and King 79 from about 2000 feet. All
landed in the vicinity of a sand pit at the north
end of the field.
The 106th fl ies C- 130s (pictured. p. 84).
They also use HH-66 Blackhawk helicopters.
designated Jolly" when not on an actual rescue mission. When on a mission they become
" Rescue##". as do the "King" aircraft whic h
act as mother ships and provide refueling.
While the para drops were going on. a th ird
" King" was refueling 'Joll y 8" offshore.
Freq uencies in use at the airport were:
"TINY TENNA"
Indoor Active Antenna
Th. "TINY TENNA. WOt1c.s on LW. MW, SW. VHF & UHF. It t uns on 0 9
'W"Olt. battery 01 AC odoplef. (no! included) Great fOf trove l&rS,
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125.3/236.6 MHz
12 1.8/ 225.4
251 .9
252.8
287.5
288. 1.
671 4/ 8984 kHz
$5 Conodc>'Moxlco. S6 DX.
HamCall CD-ROM
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Jackson, Ml 49202
, IA
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-~..;:'.--~ , Electronics Software Compendium
':J:
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m:
'3UCKMASTER
EE
October 1994
ale
MONITORING TIMES
SS
SATELLITE TV
Ken Reitz, KC4GQA
Solar Outages
86
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
f_''
SATELLITE
\_ SUN
EARTH
Melting Moments
These solar outages have a profound effect
on satellite reception . The first effect is the
presence of "sparklics-little bright. white,
dots of light which dance around on your
screen in an othe rw ise perfect picture. (You
can see these same effec ts wit h a dish that's
not properl y aligned.) Generally, sparklies
signify noise and indicate that the dish is not
receiving a ll of the signal that it should.
However, in the solar outage. it indicates
that a nother source of radio e nergy is getting
into the di sh. As the transiti on continues, the
sate llite signal may be overwhe lmed by the
Sun and the picture wi ll be lost. (lnc idently,
the effect is worse on sunny days than on
cloudy ones.)
As with the woman in the opening story,
you may be alanned. '' Is there any danger to
my equipment fro m a solar outage?" The
answer depends on your equipment. Usually
black mesh reflectors rcncct more signal than
heat and there wi ll be no damage to your
equipment. Older sol id di shes may put your
equipment at risk. The key is the re flecti ve
abi lity of your dish .
You may have noticed that most solid
dishes have a slightly rough texture fin ish.
This is just e nough to keep the temperature of
the dish cool. The white pig ment also helps to
throw off heat. The worst pote nti al offenders
are the spun a luminu m dishes with the ir shiny,
perfectly smooth surfaces. They are. in fact,
solar cookers. and guess what we' re having
for lunch: your LNB!
I use several small spun aluminum dishes
fo r experiments a nd you may imagine my
horror as I saw the insulation on my coax
smoking! The bl ue plastic feedhom throat
cover had melted completely to a puddle at
the bottom of the dish. Happi ly, the LNB
appears to have been unaffected. I say "ap-
pears," because it 's e ntirely possible weakened components may cause pre mature fai lure. Needless to say, I now coat my aluminum
dishes with a white metal spray paint. It does
an excellent job of dissipating the heat.
Satellite Notes
Anik E2 has returned to the land of the
living. After mysterious ly spinning out of
control last January, engineers at Telesat
Canada regained use of the sate llite June 2 1
almost exactly s ix months later. Officials still
don ' t know exact Iy what caused the mishap
but are greatly rel ieved to have the bird fly ing
again. Telesat scientists have deve loped a
technique they call Ground Loop A ttitude
Control System which uses computers to fire
onboard thru sters about every fifteen min-
Euro-Satellite News
Roger Bunney reports in his col umn in
the British Short Wave Maga zine that the
S pace Shuttle downlinks FM video at 2250
MHz, which should be receivable on receivers with built-in video demodulators such as
the ICOM R-7000. I would like to know if
any MT readers have had any experience
with this.
John Locker of Merseyside, UK, reports
that " ... Arianespace have got their launch
programme back on course, putting first
lntelsat 702, then PAS 2 into orbit..." He
notes that PAS 3 will be launched this fall at
about 42 degrees west. John is on a one-man
mission to get someone, an yone, in Europe
to carry the NASA feeds for European cons umption. At o ne point he had Britis h
Telecom interested, but no luck so far.
The BBC is said to be testing Digital
Audio Broadcasting (DAB) for its terrestrial
service in the U.K. Sate llite delivered DAB
will be quite a few years down the road.
However, as reported in BBC Worldwide. a
North American based co mpany is planning
to launch a DAB satellite signal to Africa
and the Middle East via its AfriStar bird in
1996. I'm sure there will be many investors
watching thosedeve lopmentsclosely. Meanwhile INMARSAT continues its plans to
test mobile satellite broadcast ing techniques
next year. (Thanks to MT reader Jack Belck
of Illinois for this info).
According to WeatherSat Ink's Third Quarter 1994 issue ... Ri ck Emerson (System Support Group) has an Internet mailing li st which
he unselfishly maintains as a source fo r disseminating NOA A messages and bul letins.
In addition , there is a constant exchange of
technical information on this mailing around
the world. To subscribe electroni cally to the
W xSat Mailing Li st, send your request to
wxsat-request@ssg.com ... "
NOTES:
LNA- Low Noise Amplifier
LNB- Low Noise Block Downconverter
NASA- Notional Aeronautics and Space
Administration
NOAA- Notional Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration
800-472-8626
Satellite-TV FREE
56 Page
Calalog Buyer"s Guide
MAILBAG
Bill Perrelli, NI MRK of Hamden, CT,
wants information on computer BBSs which
carry TYRO and WXSAT related information. According to TVRO Dealer, a monthl y
trade journal, three news groups are currently on Internet: "alt.satellite.tv.forsale"
is said to be TYRO related equi pment for
sale from around the world ; The newsgroup
"alt.satellite.tv.europe" involves the European TYRO scene; " rec. video.satellite" is a
ge nera l purpose U.S. oriented TYRO
newsgroup. Access to Internet can be made
through any of the popularon-line computer
services such as Compuserve or America
On-Line.
be
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
87
88
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Getting Online:
A new 24 hour computer bulletin board
syslem (BBS) i s now available which is run
IQ
LOCATION
257
329
335
338
340
341
344
347
351
378
379
388
390
404
409
413
YXR
YHN
Earlton, ONT
HP
Hornepoyne, ONT
Heath Pt., ONT
DE
yy
Detroit, Ml
YYU
Koposkosing, ONT
Jacksonville, FL
JA
YG
Charlottetown, PEI
YKQ
Woskogonish, QUE
RJ
Robervol, QUE
CM
AM
JT
Tampa, FL
Stephenville, NFD
YTA
Pembroke, ONT
CBC
Anahuac, TX
History of International
Broadcasting
$59.oo
The origin and growth of information broadcasting (chiefly of
propaganda) by radio - most renowned for its prominence in
World War II and the Cold War - is outlined. The author
chronicles the technological and engineering achievements
that enabled long-range broadcasting to develop, but keeps
them in the context of the social and political environment of
the day. The appeal of the book is by no means restricted to scientists and
engineers and many will find much to stir their own memories of international radio
broadcasts in wartime and peacetime alike.
264pp., casebound, ISBN 0 86341 282 5 - 1992
NOW AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK! (ISBN 0 8634130211
$35.00
THC ~SntuTlON
CJ
oow;~~~: 191~1~
'
Model 1400
CO N CEPTS
To Order,
Call or Fax
(715) 749-3960
966 70th Avenue
Robens, WI 54023
Ol- fU CTnlCAL
NGINCCAS
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
89
What is a Daytimer?
A DayTimer is one system of time management- a day by day calendar. The system
comes with 12 books. one for each mont h.
Several smaller book arc included with the
system: an advance planner contains a two
year calendar with each month on two pages
so you can plan ahead for special events,
another small book for phone numbers and
addresses. and a compl ete instruction manual
on how to get the most out of your system.
DayTimers come in various sizes and formats-all good. though the Jr. Pocket version
does not have a 24 hr. format.
How do I use it? Take a look at the page for
August I 3 from my DayTimer. As you can
see at 0000 hrs Z I noted China, 9780 I 17 I 5;
indicating I wanted to listen to Radio China
on either 9780 or I 171 5 kH z. The next notation is to call Henri about next Sunday' s
hamfest. On the right side I note that NHK
(Japan Radio) was on at I .+00 Zand noted the
frequencies. followed by a note that I have a
sd1cdule with N7MQC on 70 12 kHz.
The notes on the bott om of the left side are
special event stations I want to attem pt to
work. I need WVA for WAS (Worked All
States) special eve nt station (more about this
nexr month). In QST rnagaz ine s spec ial event
90
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
1~-< =:i:~ytG04
" li'IQr.'M I :IK-.tt NJn
1'.ltO.ttl to.I\..
"'""'"" ".,13
160 Meters
r~
FIGURE l
............~-.- .,,,.
~~
Ham DX Tips
FIGURE 2
Well. in the temperate zones the leaves are falling, and there is frost on pumpkinswhich means once again we are al the height of the DX season and the start of the ham
HF contest season (which will start this mo nth a nd run ' til May).
ANTARCTICA Starting mid October Communications o fficer Eddie De Young of
the Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition wi ll be active from here as
VKODX. Eddie wi ll be establishing a permanent ham station at Davis Base until mid
Marc h 1995. He hopes to operate as time permits on as many different bands as possible
in SSB, CW, anti possibly RTTY . He will answerQSL requests when he returns home:
131 Plantain Rd ., Shaile r Park, Queensland 4 128, Australia BELGIUM Until the end
of 1994 amateurs here may use the special prefix OS to celebrate the 50th anni versary
of the liberation of Belgium by Allied forces in WIT. Belgian hams will also be
operating special events stations using the special prefix OSSO. These stations will be
active from cemeteries for US. Canadian. and British troops who were killed in WWII
fig hting in Belgi um. CANADA The famed EME (Earth-Moon-Earth) operation by
members of the Toronto VHF Society, using the call sign VE30NT, will take place
during the ARRL EME contests in late October and November, for what may be the
last time. EME contac ts facilitate world wide VHF a nd U HF communications via the
weak signal modes of SSB and CW. The VE30NT team once again has been allowed
use of the 46 meter (approx 150 fl ) dish ante nna belonging to the Canadian Terrestrial
Science Centre in Algonquin Park, Ontario (thegrid square is FN05xw). The group will
have certain frequencies on which they will transm it and listen for responses, depending on the specific band of that weekend 's contest. October 29th: trans mitting on
432.050 MHz CW and SS B. listening to 432.050 to 432.060 MHz between 0645 and
1815 UTC. October 30: lransmilling on 1296.050 MHz and listening to 1296.050 to
1296.060 MHz SSB and CW modes between 0754 and 1844 UTC. During the ARRL
144 MHz EME contest the week-end of26 and 27 November: transmitting on 144.1 00
MHz and li stening to 144.100 to 144. 11 0 M Hz between 0538 and 1645 UTC on the
26th and 0646 to 17 13 UTC on the 27th. HAMS: DO NOT operate on VE30NT's
frequen cy; they wi ll work "spli t." listening to a frequency in the range listed above for
each band of operation. QSL to the route announced during the operation . CONTESTS
One of the biggest contests of the season- the CQ World Wide SSB contest -will take
place October 29th and 30th. Ha ms worldwide wil l be exchanging CQ zones and signal
reports commencing at 0000 UTC on the 29th and e nding al 0000 UTC 3 1 October.
Acti vity will take place on 160. 80. 40. 20, 15. and 10 mete r SS B frequencies.
SLOVAKIA To celebrate the Slovakian national uprising and the e nd of Nazi
occupation in their country, Slovakian amateurs will operate special events stations
us ing the suffi x "SNP." If you log special station OM9SNP (QS L to OM3LA Ivan
Dobrocky, Ticha 16, 974 00 Banska Bystrica. S lovaki a) you can earn 5 points toward
the "S lovak Nat ional Uprisi ng Award." Other stations us ing "SNP" prefix will earn
you I poi nt. If you li ve in Europe (outside S lovakia) you need 30 points lo earn the
award, the rest of the world 10 points, and Slovak ia 50 points. Hams and SWL's who
have logged these stations need to send a listing of the logging data and 8 lRC' s to:
Oren burska 13, 9740 1 Banska Bystrica. Slovakia. SWITZERLAND Special station
HB4JAM will operate 25 October from the Swiss Scout jamboree near Lucerne.
Switzerland. QSL route will be announced. They plan to be on as many differe nt modes
and bands as possible during the week-end, and hope to lin k up with other Scouti ng
groups. TAIWAN BVOO will be an Is lands on the Air DX-pedition to take place from
Orchid Island October 8th and I 0th. Look for them on the SSB frequenc ies of 14260,
2 1260, 28460 and 28560 kHz. QSL's should go to BV8BC, P.O. Box 222, Tai Tung
950, Waiwan, Republic o f China. - Have a safe a nd happy Halloween and good DX
to all!
RF Counterpoise Ground
MAGNETIC DIPOLE
BALUN
Replacea center
a ntennu.
~autor.
Send for tree catalog th1t 1how1 our complete line of balun,
antennu, pre1mpllfler1 and more.
PALOMAR
ENGINEERS
Box 462222, ESCONDIDO, CA 92046
Phone: (619) 747- 3343
FAX: (619) 747-3346
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
91
O UTER LIMITS
THE CLANDESTINE, THE UNUSUAL, THE UNLICENSED
George Zeller
92
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
is o n, it uses 0600-0800 UT C for its broadcasts targeted to liste ners in North A me rica.
Most of these shows are hea rd on weekends .
Radio Tornado
at PO Box 98,
Shortwave Liberation
T he tre mendous exp losion of pi rate
loggings in last mo nth's and this month' s
col umns was assoc iated wit h the biggest
explosion of North American pirate acti vi ty
in hi story. Under a semi-organized label of
"Shortwave Liberatio n." dozens of pi rate
stations initi ated broadcasts on a da ily basis
between June 18 and Jul y 18. At least one
station took to the air on all days during this
event. Even weekn ights were hotbeds for
pi rate activity duri ng the summer.
The unprecedented dail y vo lume of activ it y took a nosedive w hen Shortwave Liberation ended. paniall y becau se of fatigue 1
T he RFPT frequency shi ft also seemed to
confuse a few stations. But. we have some
upcoming opportunities to hem increased
pirate activity. Hallowee n is traditionally
one of the biggest pirate hol idays of the
year. so mark your ca lendar.
Seeker 800
800mHz Handheld Gain!
Finally there's a Duck with
rea l ga in for the 800 mHz
band! Even 1/4 wave tuned
antennas can't come close
to matching Seeker 800s
performance. The secret is
Seeker 800s patented, 112
wave, ground independent,
commercial quality design.
Significantly improves signal reception on handheld
scanners, counters, & cell
phones! Only 11.75 inches
long! Connects to a standard BNC antenna mount.
only $37.99
plus $5.49 S&H
1-800-950-WARE
Wrila for a FR EE catalog (no calls please)
1
UAfl'
t
f?!1!!!rd
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:I- l.'.:'.
(508) 452- 5555
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
93
WHAT'S NEW?
BOOK REVIEWS AND NEW PRODUCTS
by Larry Miller
Guest Reviewers: Teresa McGinnis; Chuck Morrison, Grove Chief Engineer
Hidden Ham
Antennas
94
MONITORING TIMES
Scanner Cases
Here's a nice idea-Design
EQ. the people who wrote the
book on the AR 1000. are no w
offering custom cases for the
Radio S hack PR0-39. PR0-43.
and PR0 -44 handheld scanners.
As Howard Bornstein says. ''Th is
thick, leather case was designed
with a specific strategy in mind:
10 protect your scanner from fa ll s.
bum ps. a nd o ther p hys ic a l
shocks."
There are cut-outs in the case
October 1994
Saladino Software
Ben Saladino is a long-time
MT reader and radio buff who
has put hi s shoulder to some
share ware. The first is Frequency
Manager for Windows 1.05. It 's
des igned to help organi ze and
manage rad io freque ncies that
amateur radio operators and scanner enthus iasts use. The price of
Freq uency Manager for Windows
I .05 is $ I 5.00.
Radi o Manager for Windows
I .05 is a radio cont rol program
fo r the JCOM R-7000. R-7100
and R-9000. It 's $30.00. Unregistered versio ns ofeither program
is avai lable by send ing $3.00 to
Ben Saladino. 660 West Oak
Street. Hurst. Texas 76053-5526.
For more in format ion. call Ben at
8 I 7-282-033 1.
Black Box
Antenna
Every once in a while, we get a product that's, well , just
pla in neat. Ron McClintock ' s Black Box antenna is a tun able
loop antenna that is m ounted ins ide a jet-bl ack VHF cassette
tape box. It works this way: you tune your AM radio into the
statio n you want to hear. Then you pu t the B lack Box next to
the radio, tune the d ial, and presto, the previously weak s ig nal
is now significantl y stronger. Addition all y. you can use the
Black Box Antenna to null out adjacent channel stations.
Better still, the Black Box doe~m ' 1 use any e lectri ci ty-no
wall socket, no batteries. And it reall y works. Jn fact, the
man u facturer g uarantees it to "sign ificant ly im prove your
receptio n."
We were really pleased with the performance o f the Black
Box Antenna. The frequen cy range is 500 to I 700 kHz , a nd
the un it weighs in at about a po und. T he price is reasonable,
too, at j ust $49.95 plus $6.00 shipping.
To order yours. c all l-800-99RAD IO. Or send you r check
o r money order 10 Black Box A ntenna, I 4624 Deo n Dr..
Sonora, CA 95370.
- L.M.
Monitoring
the Pros
Mountain Sales is a company
that 's producing audio tapes of
scanning acti on in the Big Apple.
If you' re like us and live in an
area of less-than-constant seatof-the-pants action, these tapes
can be real eye-openers . T his is
Ne w York C ity in act ion, not
Wagontown , Pennsy l vani a,
working struc ture fires on a 60
minute audio tape.
M ounta in Sales o ffers fo ur
tapes: Manhattan Soro. Queens
Born. Bronx & Staten Is land
Boros, and Brooklyn Boros. each
at $ 10.00 postpaid . The tapes
come w ith a printed li st o f the
New York C ity Fire Department
JO-Codes.
To order, w rite Mo untain
Sales, Unit 257, 163 East Main
Street. Lillie Falls, New Jersey
07424. Te ll them you read about
the tapes in " W hat's New.''
NatScan and
NESN Merge
N at io na l Scan ning. th e
nation's number one scanning
magazine, and Nor1heas1 Scanning News (NESN). the firstrate scanning club, have joined
forces.
" I' ve always been a big fan of
No rth- Eas t
Scan n in g
News," says
N at Sca n
pu b li s h er
Larry Mi ller.
"For years,
Les Mattson
a nd I h a ve
talked about
working togethe r . But
,__
- _,
__
...
Guide to FAX
Facs imile broadcasts m the
shortwave spectrum have a lways
he ld a spec ial fascination fo ruti lities monitors . Weather maps, sate llite photos, new s photos and
other imagery is transmitted over
great distances by this medium.
The Guide to Fax Radio Sta1io11s carries a li st price of $34. 95
a nd is avail ab le from MT book
dealers.
FULL 800
1OOs of satisfied
customer s
Warranty & Service
Plan Protection
Same-day Service -
{Nearly) Free
TV E-Skip Maps
One of the great things about
working at Mo11i1oring Times is
the people you meet. One of my
fa vorite acquaintances has been
Karl Z uk . fo rme r A me ri ca n
Bandscan columnist. In add ition,
T V DXing is one of my fa vorite
pursuits, so be fo rewarned that, in
the interests of journalistic integ-
PRO
SC
34.37
39
43
46
200 4 ,5,6
2022
2026
2030
l.00
205
700A
760
855
890
950
250 0
508-768-7486
SHIP TO:
MONITORING TIMES
9S
Bruce Elving
FMedia!
We can highly endorse Dr.
Bruce Elving's superb FM Atlas.
It's a great lit1le guide to FM
broadcasting stations. complete
with maps.
We cannot endorse his SCA
modifications. My SupcrRad io III
modificat ion took too long, the
ex ternal installation remi nded me
of Frankenstein. and the SCA
sounded scratchy. The radio was
returned wi thout proper packing.
Then. some ti me later. I got a card
from Eh ing ~aying that the SCA
mod sounded scratchy. but fo r an
add irional kc he wou ld now fix
it. I gave the radi o to my wife and
we nt back to my Sangean SG
Amateur Radio
Class
786.
Where Elving stich to print.
however. he's fi ne. That's why
we can endorse his FMedia! newsletter. FMedia! averages 11 issues a year. It s a true newsletter.
with few. ii' any, pictures, but
jammed with information fo r the
FM broadca~ t band junkie.
Thi ~ isn 1 an easy-read ~on or
publication. though. There s little
commentary: just gobs and gobs
of data. The front page starts with
a list of new "FM Translator Station Grants," arranged by state.
Then it' ~ on to "Call Letters Assigno.:d or Changed ... "Facilities
Changes Granted" is followed by
format diangc~. "On Air-Real
Stations and Pirates ... "Off Air.''
and more. 11 ~ a virtual smorgasbord or FM information that's
cram med into eight incredible
pages.
Normally. the cost of a single
issue is $5.95. A sub~cript i o n is
$65.00. We've arranged a little
bargain for you. the M'f' reader.
Mention Mo11itori11x Times and
you can ge t a sample for $3.00
and a ~ubscription for $25.00.
!-Icy. don' t thank me.
To sign up or sample. write
Bruce Elving. Ph.D .. Publisher.
FMedia!. 2-1 1 Anderson Road.
Esko. MN 55733-9413.
Wl FB's Help
for Hams
W I FB is a code name fo r the
person who is probably respon-
96
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Monitoring Award
Bill Lauterbach or DWM Enterprises has put together a team
of ex perienced radio hobbyists
from around the U.S. to form the
S hort-Wave
Interna tio na l
Awards Congress (ISW AC). The
press release say s, "ISW AC
wants to reward individuals fo r
their interest in the hobby. and to
introduce them to friendly competition among themselves, thus
spawning even more interest and
involvement."
There is quite a list or avai lable categori es and fancy awards,
wh ich don' t stop at SW broadcasting. but cover utilities and
whatever your listening interest
may be. For a list or the ru les.
awards, and costs (and it does
cos t), send a self-addressed,
stamped e nvelope to ISW AC.
P.O. Box 87, Hanover. MI 4924 1.
World College
World College, an affiliate of
the Cleveland Institute of Technology. has been approved by the
Commo nwea lth of Virgin ia
(((((~((0
W
ORLD
COLLEGE
Council of Hi gher Education to
confer a Bachelor of Electronics
Engi neering Technology Degree
(BEET). It's a five year program
designed lo provide high quality,
independent study, at an affordable cost.
The Cle ve land Inst itute of
Technology was founded in 1934
as the Smith Practical Radi o Institute. It offers 12 career courses
engineered for the student striving for a comprehensive electronics education at the associate
level. For more in fonnatio n. contact the college at 1-800-6967532.
Great Book,
Better Price
Some time ago, we had the
pleasure or re viewing James
Wood's Hiswry of /111ematio11al
Broadcas1i11g. The 250+ page
book examines the birth of the
medium. its early commercial
days and its rapid growth as an
instrument of war. It's good reading for the serious student of international radio. The only problem with the book was that it was
$59 .00. which is just a bi t steep.
We now receive word that /-JIB
is avai lable as a paperback at the
more modest price or $35.
You can gel your copy from
the Institute or Electrical Engineers (a non-profi t charitable organization). Dolly Rod riguez,
PPL Dept./IEEE Service Center.
445 Hoes Lane, P.O. Box 1331 ,
Piscataway. New Jersey 08855133 1. For more information call
908-562-555 1. In Europe. write
to IEEE at Michael Faraday
!-louse, Six Hills Way. Stevenage,
Hen s, SG I 2A Y. Uni ted Kingdom or call (0438) 3 I 33 11.
Performance
...
="-1
Installation
The GAP ante nna may be roof or ground
mo unted. It took me an afternoon to install the
antenna o n the hill behind my house, inc ludi ng
digging a three-foot-deep ho le in rocky soil for
the mount sectio n. The instructions suppl ied
were clear and conc ise, with plenty of illustratio ns. A nutdri vcr fo r the ante nna's 30 stainless
steel sheet metal screws is supplied in the
package.
No measuring is required with this ance nna.
as is required in assembling some multiband
lrap verticals, and assembly was s1raigh1forward, with all pieces fitting together without a
hitch.
The installatio n instructions state that guys
are optio na l for ground mo unting, but required
for roof mounting. I would highly recommend
them for e ither installat ion- the assembled
ante nna is some 35 feet tall! Four no n-conductive ropes ( not supplied) sho uld be used fo r
guying. No g uy ring o r other guying hardware
is supplied with the antenna. T hei r inclusion
would have been he lpful : I guyed the ante nna
with fo ur nylo n ropes tied to nearby trees for
anchors.
The ancenna base inserts into a thrce-footlo ng plastic mo unt seclio n which goes into the
ground (for ground mo unting). Concrete may
be used if desired, bu! is no t required. I dug a
three-foot-deep, eig ht-inch-diameter ho le, and
1i '~
I,
Name
Address
Stale
City
Zip
Conclusion
For a multiband HF antenna in a limited
space situation, the GA P C hai Ieng er DX-VIII
is hard 10 beat. It offers good performance.
exceptio na l bandwidth , rugged constructio n,
and easy no-tune installalion. It is available
for $259 plus shipping from GAP Antenna
Products, 60 I 0 - Building B, North Old Dixie
Hi ghway, Vero Beach. FL 32967.
- CM
rz rrrnr
-b
(;'
Tlare Publications
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
97
SCANNER EQUIPMENT
Bob
r v
RealisticTM PR0-2035
t looks like it means business, and business is just what it does. Covering 25-520
an d 760-1300 MH z (less ce llul ar,
unrcstorable), this new desktop scanner from
Radio Shack offers !000 memory channels
(ten JOO-channel banks) plus another 100
"scratchpad" search-discovered or manuallytuned-in freq uencies.
An auto-store mode automatically stores
search-discovered frequenci es into available
memory channels. Up to ten separate search
ranges may be stored, one in each of the ten
memory banks.
A direct search feat ure permits automatic
signal searching up or down from any keyboard-entered or tuned frequency. The mode
and tuning step size may both be changed in
this fu nction.
A one-inch tuning knob affords both frequency tuning and memory-channel stepping.
The di splay is characteristically Realistic: a
green-backlit LCD.
Scanning along or searching at 50 channels per second, the PR0-2035 exhibits excellent sensitivity. typically 0.5 microvolts
throughout the typical VHF/ UHF land mobile services. Selectivity bandwidths (-6/-50
dB)offerashapefactor of2: 1at1 2 kH zAM ,
20 kHz NFM and 300 kHz WFM.
The circuit is a triple up-conversion scheme
with the fi rst two lFs at approximately 612
and 48.5 MH z. First conversion IF rejection
is 60 dB , very good to prevent image interfere nce. No dynamic range specifications are
give n.
Audi o output power is a powerful 1.3
watts (nominal) into 8 ohms. such as the
internal 3-inch speakeror rear-panel 1/8" (3.5
mm) external speaker jack. A front-panel
headphone jack (same size) provides antiblast-protected 16 mW, whi le a rear-panel
RCA phono jack permits 600 mV (nom.) to
be connected to a tape recorder or other external audi o device.
Blocks of channels may be moved down
from partiall y-used upper registers into lower
banks to fill them. Temporary. search-discovered or manual! y-entered "monitor'" channels may be entered into permanent memory
banks. All memory contents may be deleted
by pressing a reset button, or you may delete
all locked-out channels in a bank (orthe entire
bank) by sim ple keypress routine.
98
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Only s2995
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This incredible $70 savings offer
ends October 3 1, 1994
Grove Enterprises
P.O. Box 98 ~
Brasstown, NC 28902
Order Line (800) 438-8155
Technical Support (704) 837-7180
Fax# (704) 837-2216
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
99
MAGNETESTS
awrence agne
VE EQUIPMENT REVIEW
Editor-in-Chie f
Passport to World Band Radio
fyou've been thumbing through electronics magazines recent ly, you could hard ly
help but notice that a California firm,
ComFocus, is advertising a computer-controlled radio system called the SoftWave. It
comes complete with a plug-in control board
for your PC. as well as sophisticated software
and hardware for shortwave and other types of
radio reception.
''Remember when a room full ofcomputers
couldn ' t do what your PC cou Id do today?" So
say the Soft Wave ads, and they ' re right. Years
ago, I helped design and implement what was
then believed to be the largest computerized
database in the private sector. It took years and
mi llions of dollars for two huge rooms fu ll of
computers, complete with armed guards and
fortress-like walls, to do what can be done
today on a laptop in a tepee for a few thousand
dollars.
Getting Started
What you need to run it, besides the 5 1,495
requ ired to ante up for the Soft Wave package,
is a DOS-based system other than an IBM
PS/2 with a 386 or 486 microprocessor and
various degrees of capacity-plus a speaker
or headphones and a suitable antenna. More
on that antenna in a moment.
Putting it all together calls for some com-
100
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
puter smarts-Rick Mayell, Pa.uporr 's resident computer scientist, called it "'lateral th inking"-but that's mainly because of shortcomings in the instructi ons. The engineering side
of ComFocus thanked us sincerely when we
notified them of specific problems and solutions, and they suggested that the instructions
and software wou ld be revi sed accordingly.
However, the administrative side seemed
to feel that the problems we came across lay
more with the user than the in ~tructions or the
product. ("Gee. nobody else seems to have that
problem."') So make sure you deal with the
engi neering people. who know their stuff. Indeed, their help line (8001763-8983) is a refreshing departure from the voice-mail idiocy
that increasingly dom inates the computer- vendor landscape.
Besides shortwave, the SoftWave system
tunes VHF from 108- 174 MHz and the AM
broadcast band. It comes with no less than 46
bandwidths, rangi ng from 49 Hertz to 11 ki lohertz, and also includes digital signal processing. There arc a lot of other juicy radio goodies, too, but it' s the computer i11tcrfacc that
makes the SoftWave stand out. That's what
weve homed in on.
You need some serious computer horsepower for this system to fl y. At a minimum,
you should have a 486 processor, preferably
one of the faster versions. Even then, some
may feel it's a bit too slow. So we did our main
testing on what' s becoming the new norm for
DOS-based systems, the low-voltage Pentium
processor, which started appearing on the
market early this summer. Ours is 90 MHz,
which is probably close to or less than what
will be widely available as the PC norm by
someti me in 1995. With this Pentium, the
SoftWavc runs lickety-split.
Although Soft Wave is a bit sluggish on 386
and some 486 systems. these machines usually
don't generate much hash. That's because
slower processors te nd to be quieter than faster
ones. For example, the Dell OmniPlex 590
Pentium is much faster than any x86 machine.
But it's also much noisier--even though it is
FCC certified Class B. the qu ietest classi fication.
What this means is that with a Pent ium
configuration, reception on the Soft Wave may
be so noisy that the only way it can be used
successfull y is with a large, passive outdoor
antenna having a coaxial-cable lead- in. As a
practical matter. this means that you' II have to
use something like the Alpha-Delta Sloper,
which is one of the few good antennas that
meets these criteria.
Active antennas? Even our McKay Dymek
DA IOOD. which has a remote pickup head and
coaxial lead-in. produces noisy results with
the OmniPlex.
doing this sort of thing for a Certain Organizacion, and it shows. The company also has
exc iting plans for the futu re. So for those who
relis h gliding along the nosetip of technology, the Soft Wave can be a fu n thing to have.
This equipment review is performed independently by La wrence Mn11ne and his colleagues
in accordance with the policies and procedures
of lntemational Broadcasting Services, Ltd. It
is completely independent of the policies and
procedures of Grove Enterprises, Inc., its advertisers and affiliated organizations.
NEW ADDRESSI
To serve you better,
MI L-S PEC COMMUNICATIONS
MIL-SPEC COMMUNICATIONS
P.O. Box 633
Englewood, FL 342950633
(813) 474-6818
The ZAPPER is an
awesome Answer!
This magic-like li ttle box accivaces any radar
detector within 3/4 of a mile. Wa!Ch !he brake lights
come on !he speeding sports car cha! just flew by.
Keep those speeding big trucks from eating your
bumper. The ZAPPER is alOGHz amateur transmitter the size of a cigarene pack, operates on a 9v battery.
Complete wilh road game 'Trolling for Tailights".
Built & tuned only
$4995
TRANSEL
-=as
TlCHNOLOSIES
~MADE
IN USA
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
101
John Catalano
HOKA is Klaar
(That1s Dutch for HOKA is ready)
102
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
Here's HOKA !
HO K.A CODE 30, version 1.4 1, is made up
of one high density disk, PC board, and an
instruction manual. The manual' s organizacion. printi ng and ill ustrations are very bas ic,
at best. But the manual is very, very, li ght on
ex planation. All those decoding modes we
heard rumors about. all the flex ibility, is described in fi fty pages with print so small a
magnifying glass should be included. The
manual, whic h buries or omits several bits of
c ritical in formation, may in fac t be the primary lim itation of the decoder. but more on
that as we go.
S ince the HOK.A board does not contain a
microprocessor, the hose computer is not simply display ing the output of the board, as with
the PK-232. Instead, HOK.A uses the user's
computer to do a ll the digital signal processing, decod ing, and displaying. With all the
features the HOK.A performs, thi s is no easy
task. and requires a 386DX. 486SX or 486DX
wi th a clock speed of25 MHz or greater. Hard
Hokering Signals
Let' s start with someth ing reliahle and
simple like marine S ITOR. T un ing around
6300 kHz, the fami li ar sounds of 100 baud
S ITOR is heard. Clicki ng on the SPECTRU M
command displays an amplitude versus frequency graph (see fi gure I). The two peaks
are the dual tones of S !TOR. To see this area
in higher detail. tune the recci vcr so the peaks
are in the center of the horizontal axis, press
M for zoom (many times I pressed Z instead ,
only to have the graph freeze!) and a number
for the degree of enlargment.
Under the graph in Figure I a solid line
appears. T his s hows the bandwidth of the
input fi lter. By pressing S and a number. the
user uses the smallest band width that will
bracket the impo rtant graph features: for
SITOR it's similar to the two peaks seen in
Figure I.
Pressing FI takes us to the Speed-Shift
Measurement Modu le. Again press S and the
number used fo r the bandwidth . The program
What's Next?
Okay. T hat was an easy one. Strong signal. Common mode. It posed no problem for
the PK-232, either. But how about those
signals that the PK-232 rejects with an " UNKNOWN MODE"? What will HOKA do
wi th those ? How many modes does the Code
30 do? And, how many signals wi ll we get
clear copy from?
Sorry, you' ll have to wait 'til we meet
again to get ..." the rest of the story."
Bits of Bytes
There is lots happening in the computer
world. We' re awaiting new review products
from Grove, ComFocus, MFJ, and several
others. By the way , the new version of
ScanCat/ScanPro also handles the OptoScan
456 (see rev iew feature).
As we predicted, CD ROM drives are
selli ng at ten times the rate they did last year.
Si ngle spin CD ROM drives are now at, or
below, $ 100.
It's all happening! Nothing, including the
shortwave spectru m, remains the same.
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
103
Once you use l he newesl version of lhe SCANCAT 5.0 or SCANCAT-PRO computer program wilh
your radio. you vnll never operate your radio again withoul ii! SCANCAT con1rols 1he following radios
JRC NRD-525. NRD-535
REALISTIC PR0-2005/6
AOR 2500, 300_ .
3000A,3030A
KENWOOD R-5000.
DRAKE R-8
'',
TS-50. TS-440.
ICOM R-71,
TS-450, TS-850
'
YAESU FT-757GX.
'. :
- .
R-7000. R-7100,
R-9000
FRG-100. FRG-9600
Mosl ICOM and Kenwood radios - consull our rad1os owners manual
Create frequency databases
Scan belWeen ANY frequencies
Up 10 400 frequencies per hie
(unlimiled wilh SCANCAT-PRO)
SCANCAT comes ready to run ALL supports radios within only ONE program. SCANCAT makes
your lislening hobby a breezel Plus. lhe included SCANPORT allows you lo convert your favorite
BBS. D Base files. or columnar frequency lists to a running SCANCAT hie.
Requires a 640K MS-DOS compuler w/RS-232C serial port - hard disk recommended for
SCANCAT-PRO. Manufacturer's Interface nol Included.
CALL or WRITE for FREE information or our S5.00 FULLY OPERATIONAL DEMO DISK (includes
shipping/handling). DEMO price refunded w11h purchase. FOR A LIMITED TIME. 11 you ORDER
NOW, we'll Includeas a BONUS, FOUR SCANCAT FREQUENCY FILES! r--- - - - ---1
SCANCAT 5.0
$49.95
UPGRADE
$24.95
.:._~
SCANCAT-PRO
$79.95
from any version
,..... .~
SQUELCH DETECT CABLES
$24.95
Ome d1uci o
,L ,,
contact your
lavorllo dealer
Slide Shows
Programmable IOC & Line Rates
Un11Hended
Programmable Colorlutlon
Brlghtneu and Contrut Control
Tr1n1mft Option Available
lm11g1 Cropping
Au1om11lc R1dlo Control
NAVTEXT & ATTY Opt ion Av1\11ble
Call or wrile for our tree ctailog of products . Visa & MasterCard welco me .
FAX:(919)790-1456
TECH:(919)790-1048
REMEMBER 'WHEN
A ROOM FuLL OF
COMPUTERS
COULDN'T Do 'WHAT
YOUR PC COULD Do
TODAY...
/1\:fiJ!Jlnlllllltllfi1.111.1J..(u/1ofh1111/ V..f/\lcll\'1
tllJJllT<li#ltttflffl<l' \afhn:J>/i[,f'11klj11.'./ #
lt~'{.111.,/fl,tlnl :tvlf/lllll\'llJtib.:.dnM
,,rlf11trrt1ulz.>11//inftmrl'Wi/Jn!L,
am1k&tL.fllt.m11tfl/jJftrmul11t.t1//1trt!"Jtfl1 1
W1nclows.
Slide the
DSPccrd 1n
you1 PC and
, conrect the
Soft!4/a'.'~ByComFocus
...
-_.
1~
,j
i1 trti:J.. J ~
f l I ;,
I,
DEMAW'S WORKBENCH
CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS AND TIPS
106
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
NRD 535
RD525
NRD 515
Sony ICF-2010
Yaesu FRG-100
Kiwa Electronics
612 South 14th Ave., Yakima WA 98902
@ 509-453-KIWA or 1-800-398-1146
Closing Thoughts
T h ere is no th ing sham eful o r o ld fashio ne d about wanting a dip meter. Eve n
tho ug h we se ldom see these instrum ents
adve rtised as ne w e quipme n t, th ey are a n
asset to layme n an d experie n ced build e rs,
a like. I con tin ue to mainta in that no
experime nte r's sho p is comple te witho ut
a d ip me te r. I use min e wiLh regularity.
Acquiring a Dipper
Nu merous mode ls of used comme rcial
MAGNETIC LONGWIRE
BALUN
w1rn
3 WAYS TO SAVE
~:!}1'
New! For SWCs using longwlre antennas.
Use coaxial cable from antenna to receiver.
Low noise recepti on from 500 KHz to 3 0 MHz.
Your longwire may be up in th e clear but the wire
to the radio corT)es down near the computers, light
di mmers. TV sets, lluOrescent tights and other
'
-VISA
BIG
P RICE REDllCT IO S
NO TAX
CO LL ECTED
-'9STATES
,,_..,_
,_....
iS"fiBlll
PALOMAR
ENGINEERS
~RADI O
USRdio 377 Pl ,1za, G ranbury, T X. 76048
EXPERIMENTER'S WORKSHOP
TWEAK TUNE AND MODIFY!
Bill C ee
bill.cheek@f731 .n202.z 1.fidonet.org
Compuserve: 74107, 1176
E~0<9
108
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
"
Logic Probe
The described circuit can also be used as a
Logic Probe .... the kind that costs anywhere
from $20 to $40, ready-made. A logic probe
is an indicator of logic levels. Commercia l
model s have overvoltage protection and some
fancy stuff that's not us uall y needed by the
casual hobbyi st. However. a logic probe is
great for quick and dirty c hecks to sec if a
circuit point is " high" or " low ."
Ours is quite simple. depending on how
fancy you want to get with the housing for the
circuit. Radio Shack' s #6 1-2626 pe nlight
flashlight makes a good probe housing. I ' II
leave the mechanical part up to you. Just build
this month's ci rcuit us ing the 4049 Hex In verter (not the 74HC04!) into w hatever you
want, with three conductors for the outside
world. Obviously, the signal input should be
a needle or other pointed ti p with which to
touch the signal trace. The ot her two conductors should be alligator-clip leads about 8"1O" long, one black for ground and one red for
(+)volts.
Just as with the Status Indicator, it is mandatory that the Logic Probe be powered with
the same supply voltage as the logic level
you're about to measure. Most levels nowadays are +5v, but there are CB radios and
other older rigs that used +8v and + l 5v logic.
You have to determine your logic levels in
advance and be sure to connect the alligator
clips to the proper points. If you' re measuring
+8v logic, it wi ll have an +8v power supply in
it where you can attach the all igator clips.
Same for+ I 5v and +5v. T hose are the only
logic levels I know about, short of negative
log ic, whic h is not common. The Logic Probe
will on ly handle signals Ov to+ I 5v.
Ultra-modern 3.3-volt log ic is corning into
vogue these days and the Logic Probe should
handle it, espec ially with a 74HC04 c hi p, but
be aware the 74HC04 cannot take more than
+5v power or signal! The 4049 might gag on
less than 5-volts, but you could safely try it on
3.3-volts if needed.
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
109
ANTENNA TOPICS
BUYING BUILDING AND UNDERSTANDING ANTENNAS
W. C em Smo , KR6A,
THE QUARTERWAVE
The b asic groundpla n e ante nna has a
ve rtical e le me nt a quarte r wavel ength tall
a nd , like almos t a ll g round plane antennas, this d esig n usually has th ree or four
rad ials each a quarte r wave le ngth lo ng .
\11'ith th ese ractia ls exte nded h o rizontally,
the groundpla ne's reedpo int impedance
is about 36 o hms. With the rad ia ls slanted
a t 45 d egrees, th e imped a nce beco mes a
good match fo r 52-o h m coaxia l-cable
[eed line. Matchi ng can a lso be accomplished by such de,ices as a q uarten vave
tra nsform er, as is d o ne in th e q uartenvave
or fi g. IA.
THE HALFWAVE
Exte ndin g a groundpla ne an tenna 's
vertical c le m e nt to a fu ll halfwavc (fig. 1B)
in le ngth gives th e ante nn a m o re gai n by
na tt e ning i L~ vert ical direc tivity patte rn
(fig . I ). Th is gives greate r co,e1-age than
th e quanc rwaq~ grou ndp la ne; however,
th e a nte nn a n ow needs a ma tching device
o f so me so rt 10 matc h th e halfwave 's
e ndfeecl im pe dan ce to the 52-ohm cable
in common use today.
110
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
halfwave (BJ, 5/8 wavelength (CJ, and collinear (DJ. Also included are
equations for elements lengths for the quarterwave groundplane antenna.
1l)
JB
lE
-r
r
VERTICAL
~(VE)
R SAMEASVE
MT 72.SIFREQUENCY (MHZ)
RADIAL (R)
RADIAL (R)
FOR EXAMPJ.E Al 100 MHz
VE 23411 00 or 2.34' or 2' 4
R same 115 VE
MT - 2381100 or 2.38' or 2' s
'\,.
--
MATCHING
--- v
............. MOUNTING
TRANSFORMER {MT)
BRACKET
ii
S0-239
MAST
2.
3.
RADIO RIDDLES
Scar\tar
Scanning &Monitoring Software
last Month:
Last month I pointed ou t that putting
your an te nna high is usually good for
reception. Then I asked, wha t relatively
commo n applications can you think of, in
which mounting an antenna hig he r might
make reception worse?
Well, a horizontal antenna e levated
1I 4 wavelength above rad io ground gives
considerable high-angle radiation. This
supports close-in communications in the
lo wer part of the HF band quite well. If the
an te nna's he ig ht is increased to 1 / 2 wavele ngth above ground it loses much of its
high-angl e radiation and its close-in communi cations advantage is lost.
Fo r a nothe r example, consider a co llinear groundp la ne antenna with several
halfwavesectionsasdiscussedabove. Wh e n
tra nsmitting from a hillto p , this anten na 's
flat, h orizonta l vertical d irectivity pattern
may p lace its transmitted signal above
antennas in the valley below.
This p roble m is troublesome fo r some
VHF and U HF repeate rs whose a ntennas
are moun tecl h ig h in o rder to obtain good
li n e-of~si ght coverage. Intere stingly, even
if the y have visual line-of-sigh t contact
th ey may not have radio lin e-of~si g ht contact if the ir vertical directivity pattern is
too flat. They may actually be "looking
ove r the heads" of the lower a nte nnas.
This Month:
vVe 've recently discussed tha t an antenna can transmit and re ceive signa ls
simul ta ne ously. Is it possible , practical or
eve r desirable for two or more sta tions to
mrnsmit th e ir sig na ls from one antenna
simulta neously?
We' ll h ave the answer to this mo nth 's
riddle and muc h m o re in next m onth's
issue of Monitoring Times. 'Ti! th en, Pea ce,
DX, and 73.
System Requirements:
IBMllSA PC 386 ..ith 2 MEG RAM. hard disk,
VGA or M ONO, serial port & cable for each radio
or tone reader. Interface for Yacsu &. I com.
Best with DOS V5 high, disk cache & 386.
1 -408-296-4224
FREE DEMO COPY
1-408-258-6462
VLF CONVERTER
0
Palomar Engineers
vu:~
PALOMAR
ENGINEERS
BOX 462222, ESCONDIDO, CA 92046
Phone: (619) 747.3343
FAX: (619) 747-3346
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
111
ASK BOB
Ml)
A.
A.
A.
AR 1500
BCH & CHANNEL
@CLEAR MEMORY: CLEAR - ENT - BCH
@ MANUAL FREQUENCY ENTRY: MANUAL - FREQENT - AM/FM
@ TUNING STEP: MANUAL - STEP - STEP FREQ ENT
- MEMORY ENTRY@ NEW FREQ: FREQ - ENT PROG - BCH - AM/ FM
@ DISPL FREQ: DISPL FREQ ENT - BCH (don't ENT)
- LOCKOUT@ CHANNEL: MANUAL BANK - BCH - LOCKOUT
@ UNWANTED CHANNEL: (displayed) LOCKOUT
@ UNLOCKING: MANUAL - BANK - BCH LOCKOUT
- SCAN@ PROGRAM BANK: SCAN - BANK - PROG -BANK No LIMIT AUX - BANK
No - ENT
@CLEAR BANK LOCKOUT: SCAN - BANK- PROG 0 LIMIT AUX - 9 - ENT
-SEARCH@ SET FREQ LIMITS: SEARCH - PROG LOWER FREQ LIMIT LIMIT - UPPER
FRQ LIMIT ENT - STEP - STEP FREQ ENT - AM/FM - ENT BANK No - ENT SEARCH
@ STORE SEARCH FREQ: ENTER - BCH
@ COPY FROM BANK 9: MAN BANK 9CH - PROG - BCH
@ BANK LIMITING: SEARCH BANK PROG - BANK No LIMIT AUX BANK No ENT
112
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
A.
Order BOK5
Shipping Code A
Grove Enterprises
P.O. Box 98
Brosstown, N.C. 28902
PR0-2035
Hyperscan
Base & Mobile Scanner
$389~::9
1000 Channels
Ups Shipping Included
800MHz Coverage
We have scanners with
SOOMHz Coverage!
Models available include:
ICOM R9000,R7100, Rl , R100,
IC.2SRA; Ke nwood RZ-1;
Yupiteru MVt7100,7000, 8000;
AOR AOR-80 00
Canada MJH I S9
A. The law at present prohi bits the marketing of such scanners in the United States.
Although U.S. Customs is not acti vely enforcing the regulation at this writing, the
FCC is consideri ng stepping up enforcement
at the border.
Pro-43 $269
HH-200 Channels
PROFESSIONAL
SINCE 1971
Recorders come with
fu11 applications info
150 Executive Park Blvd. #4600
for scanners, etc.
San Francisco, CA 94134
No shipping charges on prepaid orders. COOa
OK. Cal. residents add tax. Sony. no credit
L E T
E R
S
~ Shor1wave Classroom
of ~o modified EC-130's displayed at air shows in Englandth_is one was identified on the sign as a VOLANT SOLO. He says, "According to the
flight. crew, they had ~een us~d in the Gulf for radio and TV propaganda and, as you
mentwned, probably m Bosma as well." (See mention in June's 'Utility World' and
September's feature on 'Radio Democracy.')
. "They both had some great antennas on the tail and some 011 the outer parts of the
wmgs. I presume the extra intakes on the fuselage are either for cooling or internal
generators."
114
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
CLUB
CIRCUIT
P.O. Box 571 1, Topeka, KS 66605-0711, (913)2665707. Worldwide; AM/FM. OX News 30 times yearly,
sample for a 29 cent stamp. Annual Labor Day
convention.
Rsdi0tl181Jilma.
Frtendahlp DXera Club: Ing. Santiago Sen Gil Gonzalez.
C.OX.A -lnternationel, P.O. Box 202, Barinas 5201-a,
Estado Barinas, Venezuela. Venezuela and Caribbean.
DXlng all bends. Csdena OX, YV2-FSW, Sunday t 1301330 UTC on 7113 kHz. Venezuelan membership free.
lntematlonat Ua1enera Organization: Mohsin Abbas. St.
Nlsar All Shah Ahamed Pura, Sholkhupura, Pakistan, 1(50359) 2-(50561). South Asia. Broadcasting. Listener
Umbrella Organizations
Timas.
lntematlon al Radio Youth Club: G.M. Mostala Kamal,
Amla Wapda Colony!, KushUa-7032. Bangladesh
New Zealand Radio DX League: P.O. Box 30t 1.
Auckland, New Zealand. MW, SW, FM. TV. New Zealand
oxnmes.
New Zealand DX Radio Aaaoclatlon: Mr. R. Dickson. 88
116
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
UK.
Worldwide TV/FM DXers Association (WTFDA):
P.O. Box 51 4, Buffalo, NY 14205-0514. Worldwide
m emb ership; TV OX, FM BC, VHF utilities. VHF-UHF
Digest. Annual convention. $20 annual In U.S. $2 for
sample.
Location
Club/Contact Person
Queens, NY
Monitoring Times is happy to run brief announcements of radio events open to our readers.
Send your announcements at least 60 days before the event to:
Monitoring Times Special Events Calendar
P.O. Box 98, Brasstown, NC 28902-0098
DX Radio Tests
Information on more tests such as these can be found in OX Monitor, the publication of the International Radio
Club of America (IRCA, P.O. Box 1831, Perris. CA 92572-1831, USA) and DX News , the publication of the
National Radio Club (NRC, P.O. Box 5711. Topeka, KS 66605-0711). Both clubs are devoted to the hobby of
hearing distant stations on the standard AM and FM broadcast bands.For a sample copy of either publication,
send one 29 cent stamp ($1 US or 1 IRC overseas) to the addresses above.
Monday, October 3, 1994 - KWEY-1590, P.O. Box 587, Weatherford, OK 73096 will conduct a DX test between
5:00 & 5:30 AM EDT. The test will include Morse code, voice IO's , and an unspecified selection of music.
Reception reports may be sent to: Mr. Ray Bagby - Chief Engineer. (Arranged by J.O. Stephens for the IRCA)
Monday, October 10, 1994 - KA2XAU-1620, P.O. Box 500, Richland, PA 17087 will conduct a DX test between
2:00 & 2:30 AM EDT. The test from this experimental station will include tones and Morse code ID's. Reception
reports may be sent to: Mr. Irv Fidler - Engineer. (Arranged by J .0 . Stephens for the IRCA)
Monday, October 17, 1994 - WPMR-1590. P.O. Box 132, Mount Pocono, PA 18344-0132 will conduct a OX test
between 12:30 & 1 :00 AM EDT. The test will include Morse code ID's, test tones, and various audio programs". Reception reports may be sent to: Mr. Jeff Woehrle - Chief Engineer. (Arranged by J.O. Stephens for
the IRCA)
Monday, October 24, 1994 -WNAM-1280, P.O. Box 707, Neenah, WI 54957-0707 will conduct a OX test
between 3:00 & 3:30 AM EDT. The test will include Morse code IO's, test tones, and big band/swing music.
Reception reports may be sent to: Mr. David J. Miller - Chief Operator. (Arranged by J .O. Stephens for the
IRCA)
INDEX OF ADVERTISERS
Advanced Electronics Applicotions ..... 3
Amsoft ............................................ 99
The Antenna Handbook .................. 58
Antique Radio C lassified .................. 21
ARRL ............................................... 51
ASA ................................................ 99
Atlantic Ham Radio .. .. .. .. .... .. ...... ... 11 3
BBC World Service .......................... 6 1
Buckmaster Publishing ..................... 85
Cellular Security G roup ............. 76, 95
Com Focus .................................... 105
Command Post ............................... 23
Communications Electronics .............. 5
Communications Specialists .. .. .... .. .. . 19
Computer Aided Technologies ........... ..
..... .......... .. ...................... .. 51, 79, 104
Consumertronics ............................... 7
Dallas Remote Imaging ................. l 09
Dotometrics ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 6 1
Delta Research ................................ 7 6
D igitech Concepts ........................... 89
Droke, R.L. Co ................................ 39
DWM Enterprises ............................ 85
DX Computing .... ........ .. .................. 64
EEB ................................................. 7 1
Glen Houser ......... .......................... 43
Grove Enterprises .............. 8, 9, 27, 58
.............. 58, 60, 63, 67, 99, 113, 115
ICOM America .................. .... Cover IV
IEEE ................................................ 89
Index Pu blishing .............................. 37
Jacques d'Avignon ........................... 62
JPS Communications ..................... 104
KIWA ...................................... 99, 107
Klingenfuss ............................... 35, 76
Lentini Communications ................ .. 8 1
Morymoc Industries ............ ..... ........ 63
Microcroft ............................... .. .... 107
MilSpec Communications ........ .... .. 10 1
Matron Electronics ..................... 2 1, 5 1
N otional Scanning Report ........... ..... 38
OptoElectronics ................. Cover II, 17
Orchid City Software ....................... 99
Palomar Engineering ....... 91, 107, 111
Pioneer Doto ................................. 113
Pioneer Hill Software ....................... 83
Radio Accessories ........................ .. .. 52
Rodiowo re Corp .............................. 93
Ramsey Electronics .......................... 31
R.C. Distributing .............................. 87
R.D.I. White Papers ....................... 101
R.D.X. Laboratories ......................... 76
Sotman ................... .. .. .. .... .............. 87
Scrambling News ............................ 53
Skyvision ......................................... 87
Software Systems Consulting ......... 104
Stortek Int'( ..................................... 25
Tio re Publications ............................ 97
Tronsel Technologies .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. ... . 101
Universal Radio ......... ......... ......... .. .. 6 1
U.S. Radio ................... ................. 107
U.S. Scanner Publications ................ 77
V-Communicotions ..... ................... 111
Viking International ....................... 113
Watkins-Johnson ..................... Cover Ill
Worldcom Technology ....................... 7
October 1994
MONITORING TIMES
117
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118
MONITORING TIMES
1974-1994
Our 20th Anniversary
October 1994
SCANNER
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MONITORING TIMES
119
LOSING
OMMENTS
Bob Grove
Publisher
120
MONITORING TIMES
October 1994
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