• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

KJJR 880/KSEN 1150 DX Test Weekend Of Nov 5th

The Courtesy Program Committee (CPC) of the National Radio Club and International Radio Club of America are proud to kick off the 2022-2023 season with another “Dual DX Test” this weekend.

Chief Engineer Todd Clark will be doing maintenance testing starting on Saturday, November 5th at 12:01 AM Mountain Time (0601 UTC) when KJJR, 880 AM, will be testing on daytime power and pattern. 10,000 watts. Programming will consist of sweep tones, Morse Code IDs, 1 kHz “long duration tones,” etc. The test will last two hours, until 02:00 AM Mountain Time.
Part two of the dual test is the next day, Sunday, November 6th, at 12:01 AM Mountain Time (0601 UTC) when KSEN, 1150 AM, will be testing on daytime power and pattern. 10,000 watts. Programming will consist of sweep tones, Morse Code IDs, 1 kHz “long duration tones,” etc. The test will last two hours, until 02:00 AM Mountain Time.

** Most of the United States will “fall back” one hour into Standard Time at 0200 local times on Sunday, November 6th. This will not affect the test since KSEN is in the Mountain Time Zone. The test ends just as time changes.

We thank Todd Clark for getting the season off to a great start.

QSL INFORMATION
At the station’s request, the Courtesy Program Committee will be responsible for verifying reception reports and issuing QSLs. All reception reports should be emailed to:
[email protected]

The new QSL rules for CPC-coordinated tests will be in effect for this test. Please read them carefully.
NEW QSL RULES FOR THE 2022-2023 SEASON

DX Tests are arranged by the Courtesy Program Committee of the National Radio Club (NRC) and the International Radio Club of America (IRCA.) Both clubs offer low-cost, online-only memberships. It is appropriate that those seeking QSLs should support the clubs financially. Please indicate in your request which club you are a member of. It may improve the response time for your QSL.

QSL requests for DX Tests where the CPC will issue QSLs must be received within 30 days of the test.
A brief recording of at least two (2) minutes must be submitted. .MP3, .wav, or .MP4 video formats accepted. No written reports unless accompanied by a recording.

No remote receivers (Internet-based) will be accepted for QSLs. The exceptions to this rule are as follows:

A.) If you constructed the remote receiver, maintained it, or contributed money towards those purposes, you may use it to submit reception reports. Examples would be DXers who built remote receivers in low-noise locations but operate from home.

B.) Internet-based receivers you don’t own are only acceptable if they are more than 500 miles from the transmitter of the test station. You must fully disclose which receiver was used, including its URL. If the owner is known, please provide their name so they may receive credit. Include the distance of the receiver in miles from the transmitter site.

C.) Only one QSL will be issued per DXer, even if they operate multiple remote receiver sites or use more than one remote receiver at distances of 500 miles to receive the station.

QSLs will be issued only after the conclusion of the 2022-2023 DX Season. Generally, this will occur in April. We will send out group emails when QSLs are issued.

Unpaid volunteers perform all work in verifying reports and sending you a QSL. We all have jobs, spouses, kids, and lives. Be patient. Be nice.
 
I was able to catch KJJR's test in January down here in Houston for my first Montana logging. I tried and failed to hear KSEN but am happy to have the opportunity to try again. Conditions have favored the south recently, but hope springs eternal.
 
@wildthangjim
Thanks for that date of Januray 2022, Jim. I have a KJJR 880 in the Old Logge Booke but there was no date.
KSEN is 'needed' here.
A few overaged juvenile delinquents here will remember the KIIS 1150 TEST out of Los Angeles, in the 1960's. They were heard C to C both with their 5000 watts and their 1000 watts! Only Mexico 1150 was usually on overnight / Monday mornings. KIIS, or whatever their calls were at the time, was a cinch. We should be so fortunate this weekend, eh ?
 
Steve, I have it in the log on 8 January 2022. I seem to recall they did two tests though, maybe two successive weekends.
 
KJJR and KSEN are in Whitefish, Montana and Shelby, Montana, respectively. So if you don't have a Montana station logged, here's your shot. KJJR 880 was heard alongside/over WCBS last year, so it gets out.
 
KJJR and KSEN common sunset and winter daytime catches, probably won't try for the test, but good luck to all who will!
 
I missed the KJJR test last year, so it's needed in my logbook. Will definitively try for it this time around. Thanks to all arranging these tests.
 
I hope Clark and the two stations use 800 cycle tones at times for ID's, along with the 1000-cycle ones.
For some reason, those 800 cycle boops and toots are more readable.
 
I hope Clark and the two stations use 800 cycle tones at times for ID's, along with the 1000-cycle ones.
For some reason, those 800 cycle boops and toots are more readable.

What you see in the anouncement is what will be used, the material has already been pre produced.

The material we use was tested by running it past an audiologist to get the best material we could to make it through the muck.
 
Well, the sun has barfed up again... there goes my chance of hearing the KJJR 880 and KSEN 1150 DX Tests this weekend. Even 50KW KENI 650, 50kw 750 KFQD or 50KW KJNP 1170 will be inaudible here 250 miles away!
 
I had used the closest SDR site I could find to Redfield and monitor that KQKD 1380 TEST from South Dakota but couldn't hear much to // the GE SR 2's 1380 signal with it.
KSEN's performance will be the sole one tuned to. The only SDR site I can find to try and sync the signal with the radio is
That site is right on the Idaho and Montana border.
On it now, something weak (sounds like talk radio) is on 1150 ; 4:15 PM MST, 6:15 here in the east.
 
Maybe CKFR Kelowna BC. That SDR is in the Bitterroot Valley south of Missoula. Gorgeous area. Winter daytime DX is really good...I've heard 800-900 mi DX on that receiver at noon-2PM.
 
DFW, Texas -- Sangean ATS-909X

Thanks to the CPC and volunteers for coordinating this DX Test!

I was able to hear KJJR-880 sweep tones several times between 0100 - 0130 CDT. Signal was weak under strong KRVN and KJOZ. Pointing radio NW lessened KRVN somewhat, but brought in KJOZ from the SE. The test tones were mainly heard during KJOZ fades.

As it turned out, although scheduled for Sunday, KSEN-1150 also ran the test simultaneously and was reported widely on social media. I heard the KSEN sweep tones very weakly a couple of times between 0130 - 0145, although the frequency was dominated by KSAL and WJBO at my location.
 
KSEN's premature test was a mistake. whoeever programs the automation there did it by mistake. KSEN ran night power/pattern Saturday.. but will be on day power and pattern Sunday.

880 was all CHQT here.. and somewhat poor at that.. ive heard them much better in the past.

I even sat through several long, deep fades in 20 mins and no KJJR
 
I thought I heard some tones faintly and briefly at the appointed hour, but not nearly enough to confirm thanks to WHBY Kimberly, Wis., and another under, both running Coast to Coast. Thanks for setting it up anyway.
 
1khz tones from test were heard under KKNW/CKFR and LOTS of KSL HD hash last night. Not needed.
 
No soap on KSEN, sniff, sniff. (Oh wait, that's me, not the radio. Sri.)
1150 was just a regional mess here, sounding like the audio of Black Fridays, with the only readable ID -- loud at times -- being from 'CNN Bloomberg Radio 1150'. I surmise that was CKOC from Ontario. It was odd, because they seemed to be carrying mostly WBBR 1130 from NYC programming -- sports scores for there and all. Unn, anyway.
One 'new' station logged, though, for the NEPA totals.
Don't laugh. WYLL Chicago. That gives me 6 stations on 1160, none of them KSL.
Thanks and 73's for the TEST and announcement, folks!
 
I tried for KSEN this morning from Houston and, like the last KSEN test, heard not a whiff. The frequency here was dominated by WJBO and KSAL.
 
Heard both tests, but reception on both was very poor. Specially KSEN.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom