For the record, this should have read Friday 10/18 [2024].As of 2pm central Friday 2/18, the entire Cuban power grid is offline. If it continues, might present some AM DXing opportunities.
For the record, this should have read Friday 10/18 [2024].As of 2pm central Friday 2/18, the entire Cuban power grid is offline. If it continues, might present some AM DXing opportunities.
I was thinking that even for Cuba, that was a long blackout.For the record, this should have read Friday 10/18 [2024].
Rooftop water tanks depend on electric pumps to keep the tanks at or near capacity [i.e. input], but servicing within the building happens via gravity [i.e. output]. The problem is those tanks only have a limited capacity, so after some number of hours there won't be adequate water in the tanks to provide service to anyone. Maybe residents can milk the dregs manually [via a drain faucet and buckets], but even that's only going to be good for a short time more.One common thing in Cuba is to have a water storage tank on the roof of homes and apartments for when the water is cut or rationed. Those use electric pumps, so anyplace with that system is not just without electricity but without water, too. I guess the residents climb up to the roof and take buckets of water out.
I had those tanks in several homes in Quito, and it was usual in single family homes to have them on a platform at about 3 meters above ground, so they needed a small pump to enhance capacity. In many apartments, the weight of the tank meant that it was at ground level or, at most, about 2 meters above. The weight of a large tank on roofs in Latin America did not allow them to be on the roof.Rooftop water tanks depend on electric pumps to keep the tanks at or near capacity [i.e. input], but servicing within the building happens via gravity [i.e. output]. The problem is those tanks only have a limited capacity, so after some number of hours there won't be adequate water in the tanks to provide service to anyone. Maybe residents can milk the dregs manually [via a drain faucet and buckets], but even that's only going to be good for a short time more.
I could not afford generators at each of my multiple studio and transmitter locations in Quito, so I had one on a trailer that my Land Cruiser could tow. When there were planned rationing outages, I would take the generator there the night before, and then in the morning I would show up at 5 AM and transfer manually to the generator. When the power was back, I go and switch back and more the genny to the next location.Sad situation. Reminds me of the great Northeast blackout of 1965, where very few of us knew what the cause were or how long we were in for. Layer on the Cuban regime's particular, uhh, competencies, and it mush be deadly frightening for the people.
OopsFor the record, this should have read Friday 10/18 [2024].
Seems that listening to foreign news during a power outage is so 1943..Three generations of Cubans have grown up under one of the strictest Socialist regimes anywhere, so they are less likely than most to want a change. As long as the government can convince people that the problems are due to "Uncle Sam" and the Yankee Imperialists, there won't be a change.
And a great opportunity for Radio Martí to get its message to all parts of Cuba.
Checking one of the Miami SDRs, nothing at all on 1180 so Marti would have a clear shot. Radio Reloj on 570 is there, but not 950. Apparently 670 Rebelde (presumably Havana) is onSeems that listening to foreign news during a power outage is so 1943..
Remember, Cuba is just over 800 miles wide. A recent Reuters report shows them putting the grid back zone by zone. So some may have power, others none.Seemingly several of the most easily heard Havana signals are back. No sign of Enciclopedia (using Edinburgh IN SDR), only a weak CHLO on 530. Reloj was there on 570, 950 and 960. One or two Rebelde transmitters on 1180.
It was kind of interesting that last night I went to one of the Miami SDRs and found the 570 Radio Reloj off the air. Then it popped back on with a male announcer saying "Radio Reloj" and going into the news format but with no ticks, beeps or "RR".Remember, Cuba is just over 800 miles wide. A recent Reuters report shows them putting the grid back zone by zone. So some may have power, others none.
Putting aside the idea that Cuban SW stations might be conduits for spy information --- hard to say one way or the other --- I have to think that in the year 2024, maintaining international SW service is more of a "prestige" thing than anything else, maintaining that they have the "truth" and are working to enlighten oppressed people everywhere, in the shadow of the mean old imperialist USA. Got to wonder how many listeners they have outside of Cuba, and if their message is taken seriously anymore.
They did score propaganda points of sorts when they ran Robert Williams's "Radio Free Dixie" back in the 1960s. A fellow student in college back in the 1980s tried to tell me that Cuban broadcasts fighting racism in the US existed and had been jammed, and I just kind of blew her off, but in retrospect, I can see where she was coming from. To what extent the US jammed these broadcasts, I cannot say. Anybody know?