C.M. Obrecht Shortwave Radio. Moosbrunn, Austria
KWTR Trans World Radio. Agana, Guam.
RX: Alinco DX-R8T and Tecsun S-2000 EXT ANT: Passive Loop and 1/4 wave QTH: Malaysia
C.M. Obrecht Shortwave Radio. Moosbrunn, Austria
KWTR Trans World Radio. Agana, Guam.
RX: Alinco DX-R8T and Tecsun S-2000 EXT ANT: Passive Loop and 1/4 wave QTH: Malaysia
C.M. Obrecht Shortwave Radio via Moosbrunn, Austria on 28 January 2022. Electronic-synthesizer compositions composed/performed by C.M. Obrecht was monitored from 12.00 till 13.00 UTC, including the track "Stella Splendens". Reception on 11.735 kHz rated a SINPO of 15221 -- weak signal, barely audible and only in USB mode when fading in, otherwise broadcast was severely affected by QRN (local electrical noise).
Reception report was submitted on the same day, a few hours After the transmission. An eQSL was received on 30 January 2022.
RX: Alinco DX-R8T and Tecsun S-2000 EXT ANT: Passive Loop and 1/4 wave QTH: Malaysia
Voice of America "VOA @ 80: A Free Press Matters" features the various language services of the VOA. This calendar marks the the 80th anniversary (1942-2022) of the founding of VOA Shown
here is the front and back covers; the latter shows the photo
content inside the calendar. The inner sleeve elaborates on the history and objectives of the VOA.
RX: Alinco DX-R8T EXT ANT: Passive Loop with 50 feet of 75 ohm lead-in wire QTH: Malaysia
Radio Gambia was the first media broadcaster of the Gambia following its establishment in 1962. Established during the colonial era with the assistance of advisors from Britain, almost all its programmes in its early years were rebroadcast of programmes in other parts of Africa and England. That strategy continued right after independence in 1965. Although it created its own news, educational shows and music programmes, Radio Gambia initially depended heavily on the BBC for programming.
As of 2007 the state-owned Gambia Radio and Television Service has two AM stations (Bonto, Basse) and three FM stations (Bonto, Serrekunda, Banjul). There are also seven private FM stations in Serrekunda, Banjul, and Basse.
HERE is a link to their shortwave service in 1972.
Above, a QSL card from this period.