The final minutes have already been posted to YouTube by a couple of listeners. Nobody said goodbye. The program ended, a promo for the station played, then less than a minute of the "Waltzing Matilda" interval signal and an abrupt power off.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZx7K_A6tgQ
That's because Radio Australia, as a broadcasting entity, did not go off the air. It just turned off its shortwave transmitters. It's still available online for listeners outside Australia.
I realize that, but a mention of shortwave would have been nice. Of course, the program airing at the time might have been prerecorded.
Curious about the interval signal, though. Did that go out over the domestic transmitters and the internet as well as on SW? Have domestic/online listeners been hearing it all along, or have other programming elements aired instead while the SWLs have been listening to "Waltzing Matilda" and waiting for the transmission on that frequency to open?
Radio New Zealand steps in to fill the gap left by RA:
http://swling.com/blog/2017/02/rnz-thousands-in-solomon-islands-affected-by-abc-shortwave-cut/
and
http://swling.com/blog/2017/02/rnzi-continues-to-serve-people-across-the-pacific-region/
I have not been around since the 1940's, but I am old enough to remember, "WGU-20,A parallel would be the NOAA weather service: what if they decided to get rid of their 'expensive old technology' VHF outlets,
leaving people to get the info the new tech, high tech way on our smart phones instead? VHF radio is old technology,
after all. I think it's been around since the 1940's. That's almost 80 years ago.
I wonder how shortwave has become and is becoming,
"...an increasingly unreliable technology"?
Is this a byproduct of climate change, or what?
I think the answer is what.
Sounds like the SIBC is your typical corrupt government agency.
I would guess that their FM relay of RA on 107.0 in Honiara (Guadalcanal) receives its feed from satellite or the web.
That's because Radio Australia, as a broadcasting entity, did not go off the air. It just turned off its shortwave transmitters. It's still available online for listeners outside Australia.
Yes, there were to have been others on nearby frequencies, but it never happened.Ah,WGU-20...wasn't that on 179 khz?
"I heard a guy last night saying he thought the little $40 Tecsun type radios from China outperform the old tube radios from long ago despite an unfavorable atmosphere. I tend to agree."
You're right...as one who used some of those rigs from
way back (as a kid) there is no comparison...drift,
the neccesity for an outside antenna,one thing and
another ( a common saying then was that no one had ever
been in a ham shack where everything worked,and it
was true) the rigs now are miraculous by comparison.
Used to copy cw with one hand and tune the HQ-170
with the other,you got so used to the drift... .