radioman148 said:
KeithE4 said:
stormy01 said:
Some places come to mind like Tahiti, Indonesia, Greenland, Seychelles Islands, Sri Lanka, Papua New Guinea, etc...(if you're in North America)
If you listen in to the Hams (Amateur Radio) that counts in my "book" since for example, Radio Tahiti (French Polynesia) is no longer on SW.
Tell us what you have heard recently or over the years...
I was able to hear and QSL 35 kW VOA Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) in English to South Asia in 1970. My best as a ham was working 7Q7AA in Malawi from Indiana in 1972, running about 250 watts output SSB on 20 meters, into a trap vertical on the roof of our house.
The sunspots were at their peak then. ;D
Speaking of sunspots when are we going to get out of this low end we've been in for so long?
Per
yesterday's ARRL Letter, the end of Cycle 23 occured in December 2008, which means that Cycle 24 is slowly taking off. It's expected to be a relatively weak one, peaking in May 2013 with 90 sunspots on average.
BTW, my reception of VOA Colombo was on a cheap Japanese-made Hallicrafters S-120A (the last in the junk classic S-38/S-120 line - Northrop/Hallicrafters was phasing out its non-military products by this time) and a 50' wire antenna in our attic. Like I said, the sunspots were very, very good to us in 1970.