cyberdad said:As for Mario's question, it gets a little more difficult as you go farther south.
Tom Wells said:A lot of wind blowing sand into the air is likely to cause a lot of local ionization and may have created something like a
mw/sw "launching point" point for skywave radiation that would normally be supressed by solar ionization in daylight.
radioman148 said:What time of year was the Saharan Sand effect?
IndigoCoyote said:Bongwater, you would probably even know the park where I was listening to KFBK- Marymoor in Redmond WA. YOU may still be able to get them, as I think you are at least 70 miles north of KKXA/1520's Iboc. I will not, being less than 10 miles away.
Cannot imagine one would ever get daytime skywave in Quito. If there was ever a place where you cannot get out from under the sun, it would be there!
I don't understand the Sahara sand wave and AM prop- but I be someone on this board could let us in on the why's of that one.
radioman148 said:That was going to be my next question, what is DXing conditions like in the winter in Alaska, without Auroral conditions.
BRNout said:They'd fade to zero every once in a while and be gone for a few minutes before coming back loud and clear for 30-45 minutes at a time - much as LW does. More stable than at night.