M
Mike Walker
Guest
Why does John enjoy stamp collecting, Jim building his own computers, and Fred repairing antique firearms. Radio technology is INTERESTING to us. It requires (in order of importance) greater skill, better antennas, and better gear to pull in stations from great distances than to just turn on the radio and hear the locals.
Not only that, PROGRAM listeners often find things on distant stations that aren't on their locals, or available elsewhere. WPAQ (740 AM) in Mount Airy NC is a celebrated example of an "old time" station that "never grew up". They still run a format of bluegrass, folk, gospel, and "old time" music, same as they did sixty years ago. NPR did a feature on this station sometime back...available on their website. And "dx'ing" them isn't some exercise in "radio geekdom"...it's something that MANY people all over NC, Virginia, and eastern Tennessee do every day...because they offer a unique service, a unique part of the culture and heritage of our area that simply is unavailable elsewhere. Thankfully, Clear Channel and CBS don't own EVERYTHING (yet). Some parts of the country,particularly "flyover" parts have some truly unique things to listen to...on stations that are often 50 ore more (sometimes many more) away. Yet with 10,000 watts on 740, WPAQ can be heard on simple, inexpensive equipment (GE SuperRadio, for instance) for MANY miles.
That's just one example. There are several shows on WPTF in Raleigh (680AM, 50,000 watts) that I enjoy listening to...shows that aren't available to me anywhere else. Even for a 50 kilowatter, the 100 mile distance between WPTF and my house makes me by definition a "dx'er". Yet they're a relatively easy catch with a good radio and antenna...an exercise again rewarded with something unique.
Anyone who would say "why dx?" probably lives in a city, where strong local signals are plentiful. I frequently point out that, other than WKBC FM (100,000 watts 97.3), WKBC AM (1,000 watts 800AM), and WWWC (1,000 watts, 1240AM), EVERY RADIO STATION IS A "DX TARGET" FOR ME! The ones in Lenoir and Taylorsville are about 25 miles away, and all the others are 30, 50, or more miles away. It's not freaky hobbyists bent over a workbench with a magnifier and soldering iron! In rural areas, it's nearly everybody.
When I listen to WTQR in Greensboro, or WLNK Charlotte, two of the stations which do VERY well in Arbitron here in Wilkes County, then I am by definition "dx'ing". The fact that these stations ALWAYs show well in ratings in my county indicate that many people around here (and in other rural areas), perhaps most people, are doing so as well.
Not only that, PROGRAM listeners often find things on distant stations that aren't on their locals, or available elsewhere. WPAQ (740 AM) in Mount Airy NC is a celebrated example of an "old time" station that "never grew up". They still run a format of bluegrass, folk, gospel, and "old time" music, same as they did sixty years ago. NPR did a feature on this station sometime back...available on their website. And "dx'ing" them isn't some exercise in "radio geekdom"...it's something that MANY people all over NC, Virginia, and eastern Tennessee do every day...because they offer a unique service, a unique part of the culture and heritage of our area that simply is unavailable elsewhere. Thankfully, Clear Channel and CBS don't own EVERYTHING (yet). Some parts of the country,particularly "flyover" parts have some truly unique things to listen to...on stations that are often 50 ore more (sometimes many more) away. Yet with 10,000 watts on 740, WPAQ can be heard on simple, inexpensive equipment (GE SuperRadio, for instance) for MANY miles.
That's just one example. There are several shows on WPTF in Raleigh (680AM, 50,000 watts) that I enjoy listening to...shows that aren't available to me anywhere else. Even for a 50 kilowatter, the 100 mile distance between WPTF and my house makes me by definition a "dx'er". Yet they're a relatively easy catch with a good radio and antenna...an exercise again rewarded with something unique.
Anyone who would say "why dx?" probably lives in a city, where strong local signals are plentiful. I frequently point out that, other than WKBC FM (100,000 watts 97.3), WKBC AM (1,000 watts 800AM), and WWWC (1,000 watts, 1240AM), EVERY RADIO STATION IS A "DX TARGET" FOR ME! The ones in Lenoir and Taylorsville are about 25 miles away, and all the others are 30, 50, or more miles away. It's not freaky hobbyists bent over a workbench with a magnifier and soldering iron! In rural areas, it's nearly everybody.
When I listen to WTQR in Greensboro, or WLNK Charlotte, two of the stations which do VERY well in Arbitron here in Wilkes County, then I am by definition "dx'ing". The fact that these stations ALWAYs show well in ratings in my county indicate that many people around here (and in other rural areas), perhaps most people, are doing so as well.