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DXing in Alaska

flytrap said:
I'm in Missisippi also and vividly remember that station. I beleive it was "Radio Moscow" and was somewhere around AM600 at night. If I remember it was during the Reagan presidency and the cold war was really heating up and Radio Moscow started beaming its English feed from a transmitter in Cuba. I'm not sure what the power level for that station was, but I'd like to know if anyone can shed some light on the situation.

Yup. 600, it was. I could hear it like a local on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi.

Big power, reportedly. The current World Radio TV Handbook lists the only 600 in Cuba as being a whopping 150 kW. That may, or may not, be true. But, we can be sure, it was a big signal.

It didn't last too long, if I remember.

DE
 
Hey, akradiozjs, re: ur post May 20th...
What kind of radio did you try and pull in QD with that it actually came in on??I tried to use my Bose wave radio, and a Pioneer car stereo with no luck... interesting that you were able to get it, i hear KFAR Fairbanks can be tuned in as far south as Wasilla
Can you see Radio Moscow from your Bose? :eek:
 
If you like to pick up distant radio signals, you might find my experience with that in Alaska of interest.

I was an avid AM DXer from the midwest when I first landed in Nome, Alaska in the early 1980s to consult and volunteer for one of its two radio stations. Poor ground conductivity was a factor in not being able to hear much from afar, and the high level of electromagnetism in the atmosphere from the aurora borealis seemed to prevent much from coming in on either AM or Shortwave.

Electrical interference from flourescent light fixtures, etc was also a problem, particularly making it hard for people living in remote villages to pick up a clear signal from their nearest local station (which for many was 100-200+ miles from the two AM transmitters in Nome). The two 50kw AMs in Anchorage sometimes came in at night, as well as the 10kw AMs elsewhere along the West of Alaska and Anchorage. Fairbanks, not so much. Also, KGO San Francisco and KFBK Sacramento put in the strongest signals aross Alaska at night, due to their directional arrays, plus AM690 and AM1090 from Tijuana. I've regularly heard each of them in Nome, Bethel, Anchorage, Fairbanks, and on the road to the Yukon after dark.

Late one night all of the AMs from Hilo, Hawaii came in fairly well in Nome, too. But not much from Honolulu. But that only happened for a night or two and whatever ionosphere condition that allowed it went away.

The Russians, during the Soviet days, did not operate any high power AM facilities to reach the US along the Bering Sea. Once I picked up a Russian signal on or near AM1000, but only once. I later understood they used a combination of shortwave and carrier current signals within their buildings, since their villages consisted mostly of one large block apartment building in which everybody lived. (I also believe some of their gulag prisons were sheltered a bit inland from the Bering Sea coast as well, so it was strictly 'off limits' for Westerners. One native high school basketball team from W Alaska was invited to play once in the Russian Arctic, but had to fly all the way around the world thru Moscow to get there, before the "iron curtain" along the internatinoal date line was lifted following the collapse of the USSR.)

Shortwave reception, like AM, was also affected by the aurora. Often at night before the northern lights became active, you could see a green arc in the sky to the northeast, much like a rainbow would make. (I think it was the green electromagnetic arc around the magnetic north pole, or at least around the far north of the planet!) Later at night, the northern lights would often start to eminate from that arc, and deaden the AM reception from far away.

Best Shortwave reception was mornings from New Zealand and Australia. And a dozen or more frequencies of varying strength relayed a lovely service of traditional Russian folk music and short orchestra pieces from Radio Moscow, with a 5 minute newscast, and sometimes a commentary, at the top of the hour (in Russian, of course, for domestic audiences. It was the same national service I once picked up on AM 1000.) If you've ever seen the movie "Never Cry Wolf" about a scientst camping in the arctic, it would be the same service he was shown to listen to in the dead of the arctic winter to retain some sanity in the wilderness.

In Anchorage, where I lived in the late 1990s, major RF interference from the local AM & TV transmitters overwhelmed the chance to pick up much on shortwave. You often had to drive a half hour out of town for the AM signals to weaken in order to hear the nighttime AMs from Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Sacramento and Tijuana. And you didn't drive far at night in the winter if you didn't have to. But with a relatively simple analog AM radio, I could still often pick up KGO AM810 and KFBK AM1530, tho' the weekend overnight hosts were often just too darned irritating to listen to!

Once in Nome, the engineer at one of the AMs took me to the transmitter shack to hook up a GE Superradio to the tower when the station was off the air after midnight. Signals that you couldn't pick up with a standard radio antenna came booming in from Korea, Japan, Taiwan and China (9khz spacing also meant a lot of 'heterodyning' high pitched interference, too). It was fascinating, especially when you realized you were just as close to Korea as to Chicago. I think the furthest AM signal from the States I remember finding once in Alaska was a faint WCCO from Minneapolis.

And a particularly weird FM DX happened one summer afternoon in Glenallen - in 1982 before they had any FM radio there. I turned on my trusty Panasonic RF-2200 to FM just to see if I could find anything, and to experience a completely empty band for the first time. A stray FM signal from somewhere in Canada (I could just make out enough audio to figure that out) strayed across my dial for about 20 seconds. I found it around the low part of the FM dial and followed as it quickly drifted up the dial and soon disappeared past 108FM. Sort of a radio phantom passing thru. Never heard that before. Come to think of it, I once saw a shadow of what I think was a ghost do a similar pass across the wall once in San Francisco years ago. (And several friends who were with me at the time so it too, so it's not my imagination.) I guess in the end we really are all just frequencies that pass in the night air.
 
Hey Goldilocks. . .Thanks for recounting your Alaskan DXing memories with us. I haven't picked up Hawaii or Tijuana yet but San Fran and Sacramento come in somewhat regularly for me from Anchorage. I say "somewhat" since I live near the Dowling tower site and usually only hear KENI on every frequency.

Your Glennallen comment about an empty FM band reminds me of when I was stranded alone with a blown radiator hose on the Dempster Highway many years ago, parked with the hood up right next to the sign marking the border between Yukon and Northwest Territories. Just for kicks, I turned on the radio and heard absolutely nothing on FM. It was kind of wierd and funny until I realized I had no cell phone service either. (Interestingly, my XM sat radio was coming in clear as day.) It was the strangest and most isolated I had ever felt, particularly since no one knew I was even in the Yukon at the time. After what felt like days (but was probably only about 40 minutes) a truck came by and eventually help was on it's way.

Next month I'll be heading west for a week to Emmonak and Alakanuk in the Yukon Delta near the Bering coast and you can be sure I'll have my trusty Sony SCF2010 with me. And a lot of fresh batteries. I'll report back what I hear.
 
Interesting thread!

I like in Southeast Alaska, in Port Alexander. So I might have a different "Perspective" on DX'ing in AK. For me, all the major nighttime 50Kwers come in with varying levels of clarity at night unless the Aurora is active.

I can hear KINY 800 from Juneau mixing with CKOR 800 from Penticton, Canada. I can also hear KXXJ 1330 from Juneau, with lots of rapid fading in and out. And of course stuff like Vancouver's traffic station on 730 and Blaine, WA's KVRI with it's Indian? music and programming. Those two are usually the strongest; if they don't come in, it's time to turn the radio off or switch to FM.

GoldiLocks: Your experience with the random FM signal crawling up the dial makes me think somebody, somewhere, was working with a transmitter (Did Part 15 units exist yet back then?) and adjusting the frequency to the desired frequency. I experienced this setting up a 1/2 watt FM transmitter myself last night...just for the heck of it I followed the signal DOWN the dial (not up, but same thing).

Most of the aforementioned stations I hear come in on a 3M Tekk WorkTunes unit. (Great for those sleepless nights, give the AM dial a spin). With a good antenna I'm sure it's better. During the day with a great antenna you can hear most/all of the local/graveyard/regional AMs in Southeast during the day, provided there is ABSOLUTELY NO electrical interference, otherwise forget it.

KFSK-FM (Petersburg, AK)'s translator on 91.1, whose COL is Point Baker, AK, comes in here too, albeit weakly. I think it must be on a coast guard VHF tower somewhere. I've looked it up in RadioLocator and for 140 watts that signal gets OUT!
And there's the local translator for Sitka's KCAW here too.

However, my 1/2 watt Sainsonic transmitter I have (It was under $75 on Amazon) is SCARY with how far it gets out for 1/2 watt with the factory antenna broadcasting from the second floor of my house. Usable-but-staticky signal 1/2 mile away! I kid you not! Probably not part-15 compliant! I doubt anyone here in my town of 45 people will call the FCC police though, and I've tested to make sure it won't interfere with the two other local FM signals here. (Very first thing I checked). What is kind of funny though is that, being hooked up to a computer running iTunes, and my computer "says" the time every quarter hour, that's kind of handy but funny hearing that every 15 minutes while out and about.
 
I recall getting Radio Moscow when I worked in Bethel in the 70s, now if it was direct from Moscow or a feed to a nearby Siberian city, Im not sure. I used to get KYAK AM650 (now KENI ) out of Anchorage well into the Yukon, near Watson Lake. I just used a regular boombox type am/fm radio while in Fairbanks to get KFQD, nothing special. What I found unusual was getting KIAK fm from Fairbanks all the way down in Glennallen.

My dad had a road trip through much of the state recently and told me he was listening to Fairbanks FMs in the car all the way down past Tok! Probably KWLF, KIAK, KXLR...
 
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