If you haven’t yet found a directory, here is a map-based SDR page:Is there a website that has a directory of SDR's online?
SDRs Around the World
If you haven’t yet found a directory, here is a map-based SDR page:Is there a website that has a directory of SDR's online?
http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/A few of these stations that directionalize their signals across NYC, like WBBR 1130 or WINS 1010 can be picked up in the evenings on the SDR web receivers in Europe (particularly in the winter months). The SDR in Twente, Netherlands comes to mind. With so many AM stations gone in Europe there may be more that can be picked up "across the pond."
Might as well run the Premiere "test channel" with smooth jazz every hour with a "WBT-AM Charlotte" quick ID at the TOH...at least there wouldn't be constant 107.9 promotion. Once heard a North Dakota AM station running it all night until someone could switch over at sunrise the next day.
Perhaps we could page Dave Koz to do the TOH ID?
being the pedantic guy i am, cuse.... why not, there is no WBT-AM... just WBT. the -AM suffix doesnt exist
Not sure if you noticed this, but for the entirety of the 1110/107.9 simulcast they (incorrectly) ID'd as "WBT, Charlotte. WBT-AM, Charlotte." This was from Dec 11 to Jan 8.being the pedantic guy i am, cuse.... why not, there is no WBT-AM... just WBT. the -AM suffix doesnt exist.
The horror! The horror!Not sure if you noticed this, but for the entirety of the 1110/107.9 simulcast they (incorrectly) ID'd as "WBT, Charlotte. WBT-AM, Charlotte." This was from Dec 11 to Jan 8.
- There is an absolute blowtorch on 540, Radio Kossuth from Hungary, 2000 kw. It didn't sound like any other European language I'd ever heard, and when I found out what it was, I flashed back to when I heard some men speaking Hungarian one time when I lived in the DC area, it has kind of a staccato sound to it. What I heard tonight sounded the same. It is one European language I can't even guess at.
- Talksport must be the UK's equivalent of ESPN Radio. It's everywhere.
Hungarian is not an Indo-European language. That's why it sounds so different.
Polish Radio is on 225 kHz longwave. Easy to receive on the UTwente SDR.Polskie Radio, which I did recognize, has a pretty powerful transmitter, I forget the frequency.
What I heard last night was an MW station (i.e., standard AM), not LW. I even had Polskie Radio's Belarus service on another frequency, it is similar to Polish but just a little different, it was as though "something's not quite right here".Polish Radio is on 225 kHz longwave. Easy to receive on the UTwente SDR.
That often causes a 1 kHz heterodyne when listening to 1520 WWKB here in the Northeast.
- Saudi Arabia has another 2000 kw station on 1521 and that has to be what I heard. It came blasting in.
What if.. this IS the new format?That lounge music kinda grows on you after hearing it for a while ...
*A lounge version of the Twilight Zone theme begins playing*What if.. this IS the new format?
being the pedantic guy i am, cuse.... why not, there is no WBT-AM... just WBT. the -AM suffix doesnt exist
Ok, let me take my geritol, metamucil, tea and go to bed now at 8pm
Careful, Paul. I did that in another thread not long ago and someone tried to jump down my throat over it.
Not sure if you noticed this, but for the entirety of the 1110/107.9 simulcast they (incorrectly) ID'd as "WBT, Charlotte. WBT-AM, Charlotte." This was from Dec 11 to Jan 8.