BMR said:Yes, I know the official World Service shortwave transmissions for North America ended many moons ago.
In practice, though, can you pick up the BBC world service over there?
KeithE4 said:BMR said:Yes, I know the official World Service shortwave transmissions for North America ended many moons ago.
In practice, though, can you pick up the BBC world service over there?
Absolutely. I'm listening to their Singapore relay on 9740 right now (1425Z). It fades a bit, but it is quite audible on my Grundig Satellit 750 with an indoor antenna.
BMR said:KeithE4 said:BMR said:Yes, I know the official World Service shortwave transmissions for North America ended many moons ago.
In practice, though, can you pick up the BBC world service over there?
Absolutely. I'm listening to their Singapore relay on 9740 right now (1425Z). It fades a bit, but it is quite audible on my Grundig Satellit 750 with an indoor antenna.
Thanks Keith. Where abouts (obviously only very roughly) are you?
They stopped targeting America as a whole several years ago, cancelling the Caribbean programming in the progress. I'm in Buenos Aires and I can hear them on several frequencies like 12095 and 6135, the latter jamming Radio Santa Cruz badly.Zach said:I've heard them once or twice since NA service shut down. I'm assuming it was aimed at South America, unless they still target the Caribbean. I didn't bother to look it up.
Eduardo said:They stopped targeting America as a whole several years ago, cancelling the Caribbean programming in the progress. I'm in Buenos Aires and I can hear them on several frequencies like 12095 and 6135, the latter jamming Radio Santa Cruz badly.
Eduardo said:They stopped targeting America as a whole several years ago, cancelling the Caribbean programming in the progress.Zach said:I've heard them once or twice since NA service shut down. I'm assuming it was aimed at South America, unless they still target the Caribbean. I didn't bother to look it up.
crainbebo said:The 9740 morning East Asia relay is heard here, in Western WA, most mornings. Around 1400-1800 zulu the 31, 41 and 49 meter bands come to life with Asians. Sometimes domestic CNRs can be heard.
-crainbebo
That 11710 transmitter is quite annoying at night, since it jams Radiodifusión Argentina on the same frequency :-\Tincap said:crainbebo said:The 9740 morning East Asia relay is heard here, in Western WA, most mornings. Around 1400-1800 zulu the 31, 41 and 49 meter bands come to life with Asians. Sometimes domestic CNRs can be heard.
-crainbebo
I've heard the Chinese domestics, here in eastern Ontario, as well. The commercials they carry, make them easy to pick out from the Manderin CRI service. In fact, I'm receiving -a very poor- signal from CNR1's 100 kW Beijing transmitter right now, on 11710 kHz.
~BG