![]() ![]() Over here on the other side of the pond, us northerner's call it short wave instead of HF.īut thanks anyways for the info. These are probably the best bands to try first, but it appears conditions aren't all that great at the moment, but good lucky DX'ing! If you try the 49mb or 75mb, you might be able to hear Radio Netherlands Worldwide, Voice Of Russia, WYFR, WHRI and others. Probably the best advice I can give you is either search the internet for frequency/schedule lists, or get yourself a copy of the World Radio & TV Handbook (WRTH). you'd but extremely lucky to hear a 1W 49mb transmission from Australia!). With HF transmissions the signal will reflect off the atmosphere (I won't get too technical here), meaning you could hear broadcasts from the other side of the world if conditions are right, the transmission is at a high enough power and right waveband for the time of day/year was used for the broadcasters target area (i.e. HF transmissions, like any other transmission, just doesn't stop, but gradually gets weaker the further away from a TX site you go. Going by your post, I think you mean 'Can I receive any HF radio broadcasts in GB', in which case the answer is yes again. ![]() and these broadcast the BBC World Service (try around 6195 kHz/49mb and 9410 kHz/31mb), Voice Of America and maybe others. The title of this thread is slightly misleading, as there are 3 HF broadcast stations in GB. But listen in to WWV in Boulder Colorado often to update the clocks here at home. I think I heard the BBC on here to before. It has an analog scale and it tunes into 49 metre, 41 metre, 31 meter, 25 meter, 21 meter, 19 metre, 16 metre, 13meter and 11 meter bands short wave. I was wondering if y'all know what stations I could tune in to. I have a Realistic DX-350 AM/FM/LW/SW Portable receiver. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |