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- From: ralph@cbnewsj.cb.att.com (Ralph Brandi)
- Subject: Welcome to rec.radio.shortwave (Shortwave)
- Expires: Tue, 3 May 1994 00:00:00 GMT
- Reply-To: ralph@mtunp.att.com (Ralph Brandi)
- Organization: AT&T Bell Labs Technical Publications
- Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 04:27:05 GMT
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- Message-ID: <radio/monitoring/shortwave-faq-1-765174398@cbnewsj.cb.att.com>
- Followup-To: rec.radio.shortwave
- Summary: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about international
- shortwave broadcasting and necessary equipment for listeners.
- Please read before posting questions.
- This article is posted monthly.
- References: <radio/monitoring/introduction-1-765174331@cbnewsj.cb.att.com>
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- Posted-By: auto-faq script
- Archive-name: radio/monitoring/shortwave-faq
-
- [Last modified: February 1, 1994]
-
- By Ralph Brandi, ralph.brandi@att.com
- 128 Greenoak Blvd., Middletown, NJ 07748 U.S.A.
-
- [Note from the author--This article is posted monthly on the USENET groups
- rec.radio.shortwave and rec.radio.info. It is also available electronically
- on CompuServe, America Online, the ANARC BBS, the WELL, from the
- rec.radio.shortwave ftp archive on ftp.funet.fi, the official Usenet FAQ
- library rtfm.mit.edu, and from the radio archive on ftp.cs.buffalo.edu, and in
- print from the ARRL. If you find this article somewhere else and/or find it
- useful, I would appreciate if you could drop me a postcard or send me e-mail
- letting me know where you found it, what the Last modified date on the copy
- you have is, and if you have any suggestions to make the article more helpful.
- If you don't find it useful, I'd like to hear about that as well.]
-
-
- This posting contains answers to the following questions:
-
- o What is shortwave radio?
- o Where can I find broadcasts by Radio Foobar?
- o Where can I find a list of broadcasts in the English language?
- o What kind of receiver should I get?
- o Where can I get a shortwave radio?
- o Could you explain the frequencies used? What's the 40 meter band? etc.
- o What is SINPO/SIO?
- o Why can't I receive all of the broadcasts listed in Monitoring
- Times/WRTH/Passport/etc.?
- o What are some books or other resources that can help me get started?
- o Where can I find further information?
-
-
- o What is shortwave radio?
-
- From a purely technical point of view, shortwave radio refers to those
- frequencies between 3 and 30 MHz. Their main characteristic is their ability
- to "propagate" for long distances, making possible such worldwide
- communications as international broadcasting and coordination of long-distance
- shipping.
-
- From a social point of view, shortwave radio is a way to find out what the
- rest of the world thinks is important. Many countries broadcast to the world
- in English, making it easy to find out what a given country's position is on
- those things it finds important. Shortwave radio can also provide a way to
- eavesdrop on the everyday workings of international politics and commerce.
-
-
- o Where can I find broadcasts by Radio Foobar?
-
- The World Radio TV Handbook is the standard reference for this sort of
- information. The WRTH provides SWLs (shortwave listeners) and DXers
- (listeners specializing in distant [DX] and weak stations) worldwide with
- virtually everything they need on frequencies, schedules and addresses. It
- comes out annually, right about the first of the year. It covers virtually
- every shortwave station in the world, and many of the medium wave (AM), FM,
- and television stations as well. The body of the book is a listing of
- stations by country, with a cross-reference in the back by frequency. It's
- available from any radio store dealing in shortwave. You can also contact the
- WRTH through their publishers, Billboard.
-
- World Radio TV Handbook 1994
- ISBN 0-8230-5925-1
-
- The past several years have seen competition of a sort for the WRTH, in the
- form of Passport to World Band Radio. Passport's main section is a
- graph/table of what's on the air, by frequency. The beginning of the book is
- filled with articles of interest to the beginner. There is also a
- comprehensive review section of shortwave receivers currently available, one
- of the few places all this information can be found in one place. The book is
- more useful for identifying a station you've already tuned in than for
- searching out a particular transmission; the WRTH is useful at both, however,
- rendering the purchase of this book not essential. It can still be
- worthwhile, though, especially for beginners who won't be put off by the "gee
- whiz, look what we can listen to" tone of some of the articles. The book is
- unabashedly an advocate of making the hobby of "World Band Radio" accessible
- to people who wouldn't have participated before the advent of good, cheap
- portables. There also seem to be efforts being made to address some of the
- shortcomings of the book, such as a comprehensive address section (finally!)
- that also contains useful information on how stations respond to
- correspondence, based on the experience of other hobbyists. Much of this
- information has been difficult or impossible for hobbyists to obtain outside
- of a small elite group, and provides a useful addition to the hobby. It does
- tend to weaken the focus of the book, which has previously seemed aimed at
- mainly beginners.
-
- For utility band (non-broadcast transmissions) listeners, there are a few
- books that perform much the same function as the above two books, although due
- to the nature of such point-to-point communication, not with the same sense of
- definitiveness.
-
- Confidential Frequency List
- Published by Gilfer Shortwave
-
- The Shortwave Directory
- Published by Grove Enterprises
-
- Klingenfuss Guide to Utility Stations
- Published by Klingenfuss Publications
-
-
- o Where can I find a list of broadcasts in the English language?
-
- The World Radio TV Handbook has a list of English Language Broadcasts,
- starting on page 555 of the 1994 edition. Unfortunately, since the WRTH only
- comes out once a year the data tend to go out of date fairly quickly. There
- are a number of sources for current lists:
-
- -Monitoring Times magazine carries a listing every month.
-
- -The North American Shortwave Association (NASWA) publishes a complete listing
- twice a year in their bulletin, The Journal, sent to all members monthly; each
- month there are updates to the list. See the address at the end of this
- article.
-
- -Tom Sundstrom, W2XQ, offers custom IBM PC-compatible software and a
- subscription service with constantly updated electronic versions of his data
- files (which are also the source for the NASWA listings, as well as forming
- part of the listing in the WRTH). The data files are in the standard dBASE
- III format, capable of being imported into any software that reads DBF files,
- and are distributed in a compressed self-extracting file for IBM PC users and
- .ARC format for those using other operating systems. The data files are
- available on the Pics OnLine BBS in Atco, New Jersey, U.S.A. (+1 609 753-2540
- US Robotics HST, +1 609 753 1549 V.32 9600 baud), or by special arrangement
- with Tom on the commercial GEnie service. See the address for TRS Consultants
- at the end of this file, including e-mail addresses.
-
- -Jim Frimmel offers a HyperCard program for the Apple Macintosh that offers
- both frequency schedules and program schedules for international English
- language broadcasts. Jim also offers an updating service over a simple BBS
- which you get access to when you register. The program, called Shortwave
- Navigator, also offers computer control of a number of radios. See the
- address for DX Computing at the end of this file, including e-mail.
-
- If you are interested in finding out what programs are on the air at a given
- time, there are a couple of recent publications that attempt to provide
- semi-comprehensive information:
-
- -Grove Enterprises publishes *The 1993 Guide to Shortwave Programs* edited by
- the Program Manager of its "Shortwave Guide" section of *Monitoring Times*,
- Kannon Shanmugam along with the programming staff.
-
- -One-man dynamo John Figliozzi produces *The Shortwave Radio Guide* each year,
- for sale through the Ontario DX Association (ODXA), who do the actual
- production on the book, and NASWA.
-
-
- o What kind of receiver should I get?
-
- That depends largely on what kind of listening you expect to do. There are
- two or three basic kinds of radios. The first is the travel portable. These
- usually cost between US$30 and US$250. Their main characteristic is their
- extremely small size, making them most suitable for the person who spends a
- lot of time on airplanes. They do an adequate job of receiving the major
- broadcasters, such as the BBC, the Voice of America, Radio Nederland, etc.
- They are generally not capable of receiving hams, or utility transmissions,
- and they do not do a good job on weak stations. They may, therefore, not be
- the best choice for expatriates wishing to listen to their home stations, for
- instance, especially the less expensive radios. Many of them also lack
- frequency coverage beyond the major international broadcasting bands. As
- such, they cannot receive the channels outside the defined bands that often
- provide clearer reception (due to lessened interference) of such stations as
- the BBC, Kol Israel, and the Voice of Iran.
-
- There are a few very low cost (under US$50) SW receivers that are the subject
- of frequent inquiries in rec.radio.shortwave: the DAK MR-101s, and a
- Chinese-built unit that is sold under (at least) the names Pomtrex, MCE, TEK,
- Windsor, and Citizen. The DAK, despite its digital tuning, has received
- generally negative reviews. The Pomtrex, which is an analog unit, has had much
- greater acceptance by users. Unfortunately, the radio seems to have virtually
- disappeared from the market. A recent radio that has garnered attention is
- the Casio PR-100. Initial evidence indicates that this radio is similar to
- the DAK radio. In general, radios in this price range can be expected to
- perform poorly, but may provide an inexpensive introduction to the world of
- shortwave and acceptable reception of the strongest international stations.
- The radios offered in this price range tend to appear and disappear quickly
- and to be offered at different outlets under different names. The radios are
- pretty much interchangeable, and you probably shouldn't expend a lot of effort
- trying to distinguish between them.
-
- The second category of radios overlaps with the first, and consists of
- slightly larger portables. Common among this category are radios like the
- Sangean ATS-803A, (also sold around the world as the Emerson 803A, Siemens RK
- 651, and many other names), a fine starter radio with many capabilities for
- the inexpensive price of US$200, or the Sangean ATS-818. These radios often
- have digital readout, making it easier to know which frequency you are tuned
- to, and such features as dual conversion (which decreases the possibility of
- your radio receiving spurious signals from other frequencies), audio filters
- (which allow you to decrease interference from stations on adjacent
- frequencies) and beat frequency oscillators (which allow you to decode morse
- code and single sideband (SSB) transmissions on the ham and utility bands).
- The top range of this kind of radio includes technically sophisticated radios
- like the Sony ICF-2010, Sony ICF-SW77, and Grundig Satellit 700, which contain
- innovative circuitry to lock on to a given signal and allow you to choose the
- portion of the signal you want to listen to, depending on which part gets the
- least interference. If you follow the newsgroup for any amount of time, you're
- bound to notice some discussion of the relative merit of these features versus
- their cost (about double that of the Sangean radios.) Many of these radios
- can be and have been used to receive distant and weak stations from a number
- of countries, and can provide a cost-effective way for expatriates to receive
- programs from their native countries; they're also suitable for listening to
- programs from the major broadcasters. Most people should never need to buy a
- more capable receiver than those in this category.
-
- The third category of receivers is the tabletop receiver. These receivers
- cost from US$600 upward, with a concentration of radios around US$1000.
- These radios naturally contain many more features than the portables, and are
- used by serious hobbyists who specialize in rare and weak stations. Current
- radios in this group include the ICOM R-71A, the Kenwood R-5000, the Japan
- Radio Corporation NRD-535 and NRD-535D, the Lowe HF-150 and HF-225, and the
- Drake R-8 and SW-8. These radios can be very complex to operate, and are
- generally not recommended for the beginner. Radios from the first two
- categories can give a beginner a very good idea of what's on the air and where
- their interests lie, at which point one of these radios may be an appropriate
- acquisition. Strangely enough, not all of these radios contain the kind of
- innovative circuitry that are part of less expensive portables like the Sony
- 2010 mentioned above. Newer radios, such as the NRD-535D, the Lowe radios,
- and the R-8 are starting to include such capabilities.
-
- It must be mentioned that none of these radios, particularly the expensive
- ones, are "magic boxes" that will allow you to receive any station you wish.
- Many people find that the jump in performance between a high-end portable
- radio and a tabletop is more than offset by the increase in price. You should
- also understand that buying a tabletop radio will not likely allow you to hear
- many more stations than a high-end portable. The main difference between
- high-end portables and tabletop radios are in reduced susceptibility to
- internally-generated signals, the ability to modify the audio through the use
- of filters to reduce interference, the ability to tune more finely (for
- example, 10 Hz increments rather than 100 Hz or 1000 Hz increments), and the
- stability of the radio, or its tendency to drift from the desired frequency.
- People have often purchased an expensive communications receiver only to
- realize that a simpler-to-operate portable was better suited to their
- interests and style of listening.
-
- There are many sources for detailed information on specific radios, most of it
- provided by two groups. Larry Magne, who publishes the Passport to World Band
- Radio, includes a review of virtually all shortwave radios currently available
- in that publication. For more extensive reviews of selected receivers, he
- offers detailed "white papers", which run between ten and twenty pages or so.
- Magne also contributes a monthly review column to Monitoring Times.
-
- The other main source for equipment reviews is a group centered around Radio
- Nederland and the WRTH in Holland. The WRTH, as mentioned above, has a review
- section covering mainly new receivers, but also contains a table with ratings
- of most currently available radios. Radio Nederland also offers a free
- booklet with receiver reviews. The WRTH has also released a new book, *The
- WRTH Equipment Buyers Guide*, available from the end of 1992. The book
- contains extended versions of the reports available in the previous five years
- of the WRTH, as well as new and updated reports. It also contains information
- on accessories and antennas, as well as a fairly technical tutorial on
- receivers.
-
- There are also two books published by Gilfer Shortwave in New Jersey that
- cover the subject of receivers, called *Radio Receivers, Chance or Choice*,
- and *More Radio Receivers, Chance or Choice*. These books are fairly out of
- date now.
-
- The Sony ICF-2010, Drake R-8, and Lowe HF-150 have Internet mailing lists
- devoted to discussions of their features among users. Joining these mailing
- lists can be a good way to keep up on modifications or workarounds for your
- radio. They tend to be quiet most of the time, with occasional bursts of
- activity. You can join the mailing lists with requests to the following
- addresses:
-
- Sony ICF-2010: icf-2010-request@cup.hp.com
- Drake R-8: DrakeR8-request@hpsesuka.pwd.hp.com
- Lowe HF-150 (or other Lowe radios): hf150-request@batcomfs.Eng.Sun.Com
-
-
- o Where can I get a shortwave radio?
-
- Many stereo stores and discount chains carry the Sony and Panasonic lines of
- receivers; the people there, however, generally don't know much about
- shortwave, and you're not likely to find many accessories there. Mail order
- stereo sources like J&R Music or 47th Street Photo in New York generally give
- the cheapest prices, but have the same problem. There are lists available on
- the photography newsgroups that can indicate whether a given store of this
- type is reliable and provides acceptable service. More knowledgeable, and
- falling roughly between the two in price, are the mail order houses that
- specialize in ham and/or shortwave radio. Many of them offer catalogs that
- contain useful tips for the beginner. Addresses for some of the better-known
- and respected businesses in the U.S. can be found at the end of this article.
-
-
- o Could you explain the frequencies used? What's the 49 meter band? etc.
-
- As you tune around, you'll notice certain kinds of signals tend to be
- concentrated together. Different services are allocated different frequency
- ranges. International broadcasters, for instance, are assigned to ten
- frequency bands up and down the dial. These are:
-
- 3900-4000 kHz (75 meter band) 13600-13800 kHz (22 meter band)
- 5950-6200 kHz (49 meter band) 15100-15600 kHz (19 meter band)
- 7100-7300 kHz (41 meter band) 17550-17900 kHz (16 meter band)
- 9500-9900 kHz (31 meter band) 21450-21850 kHz (13 meter band)
- 11650-12050 kHz (25 meter band) 25600-26100 kHz (11 meter band)
-
- In general, lower frequencies (below 9000 kHz) are better received at night
- and for a few hours surrounding dawn and dusk, and higher frequencies (13000
- kHz and up) are better received during the day. The frequencies in between
- are transitional, with reception being possible at most times. In practice,
- these guidelines are not absolute, with reception on high frequencies being
- possible at night, and lower frequencies can provide decent medium-distance
- reception during the day. Additionally, these numbers can change slightly
- with the changing of the sunspot cycle, which affects the ionization of the
- upper atmosphere, and hence the propagation of shortwave signals. In times of
- lower sunspot activity, as is the case in 1994-95, higher frequencies are
- generally less useful than lower frequencies, and the range of frequencies
- used at any given time of day is generally shifted slightly downward.
-
- Hams (who have their own newsgroups, rec.radio.amateur.*) and point-to-point,
- or utility communications, fill most of the rest of the frequencies. The
- Confidential Frequency List and The Shortwave Guide mentioned above can
- provide more information on what can be heard in these areas, as can utility
- loggings in magazines like Monitoring Times and Popular Communications, and in
- club bulletins.
-
-
- o What is SINPO/SIO?
-
- The SINPO code is a way of quantifying reception conditions in a five-digit
- code, especially for use in reception reports to broadcasters. The code
- covers Signal strength, Interference (from other stations), Noise (from
- atmospheric conditions), Propagation disturbance (or Fading, in the SINFO
- code), and Overall. The code is as follows:
-
- (S)ignal (I)nterference (N)oise (P)ropagation (O)verall
- 5 excellent 5 none 5 none 5 none 5 excellent
- 4 good 4 slight 4 slight 4 slight 4 good
- 3 fair 3 moderate 3 moderate 3 moderate 3 fair
- 2 poor 2 severe 2 severe 2 severe 2 poor
- 1 barely aud. 1 extreme 1 extreme 1 extreme 1 unusable
-
- In recent years, many broadcasters have tried to steer listeners away from the
- SINPO code and toward the simpler SIO code. SIO deletes the extremes (1 and
- 5) and the noise and propagation categories, which were confusing to too many
- people to be useful. In sending reports to stations other than large
- international broadcasters who are likely to understand the codes, it is
- better to simply describe reception conditions in words.
-
-
- o Why can't I receive all of the broadcasts listed in Monitoring
- Times/WRTH/Passport/etc.?
-
- This is a fact of life on shortwave. Because of propagation, antenna
- headings, the kind of radio you have, your local environment, etc., you're
- never going to be able to hear all the things you find in a list. The lists
- in Monitoring Times, etc., aren't lists of what's being heard in a general
- location. They're lists of everything that you could possibly hear, from a
- daily powerhouse like the BBC to a once or twice a year rarity like Bhutan.
- They're listed because you *might* hear them, depending on where you are and
- the given circumstances, not because they're necessarily being heard outside
- of their immediate target area.
-
- If you want lists of what is actually being heard in something roughly
- analogous to "your area", the best source for these are the logging sections
- of the bulletins of the SWL/DX clubs. You might want to sample a few club
- bulletins to see if they'll help. The bulletins also offer articles from
- experts on many facets of the hobby.
-
-
- o What are some books or other resources that can help me get started?
-
- There are a number of books dealing with the basics of the hobby. The most
- recent book, one that has been getting good reviews, is *The Shortwave
- Listening Guidebook* by Harry Helms. The book should be easily available from
- most shortwave specialty outlets. It is also being published directly by Mr.
- Helms, and is therefore likely to stay in print for a while.
-
-
- o Where can I find further information?
-
- There are a number of hobby publications available. Two glossy magazines
- which cover the hobby are Monitoring Times and Popular Communications. They
- both cover a number of aspects of the hobby, including international
- broadcasts, scanning, pirate radio, QSLing, and Utility broadcasting.
- Monitoring Times also contains listings of broadcasts and programs in English,
- which gives it a slight edge. PopComm is the one you're more likely to find
- on your local newsstand, although Monitoring Times is starting to show up in
- some larger book stores such as Barnes & Noble.
-
- There are many clubs catering to the hobbyist, many of which publish
- bulletins. Many of these groups are part of an all-encompassing group known
- as ANARC, the Association of North American Radio Clubs. ANARC has a list
- available of its constituent clubs, listing addresses, what the focus of each
- club is, club publications, and current dues. You can contact them by writing
- to ANARC, 2216 Burkey Dr., Wyomissing, PA 19610, USA. You should include some
- form of return postage when asking for the club list. The WRTH contains
- contact addresses for the clubs that constitute ANARC.
-
- ANARC has counterpart organizations in Europe and the south Pacific. The
- European organization is the European DX Council (EDXC). More information on
- their constituent clubs is available for 2 International Reply Coupons from
- P.O. Box 4, St. Ives, Huntingdon, PE17 4FE, England. In the south Pacific, the
- organization is the South Pacific Association of Radio Clubs, or SPARC. They
- offer information from P.O. Box 1313, Invercargill, New Zealand.
-
- And, naturally, listening to the radio can provide you with excellent
- information on radio. There are a number of excellent "DX" programs on the
- air for the radio hobbyist. The WRTH contains a comprehensive list of such
- shows; Tom Sundstrom also has a list as part of his Shortwave Database
- subscription service. Different shows have different strengths. DX Party
- Line on Ecuador's HCJB is directed toward the beginner, although their "Quito
- Log Book" feature provides information of interest to the DXer specializing in
- Latin American stations. Sweden Calling DXers on Radio Sweden is a compendium
- of news about shortwave and satellites, increasingly focused on Scandinavia,
- including frequency changes, station reactivations and deactivations, and
- such. Radio Nederland's Media Network is a slickly produced general-coverage
- program. Radio Havana Cuba's "DXers Unlimited" often offers construction tips
- for people who like to do things themselves, especially for antennas. And
- Glenn Hauser's World of Radio, which covers mostly DX tips, is available on an
- ever-shifting number of stations and times.
-
-
- o Addresses
-
- BPI Communications WRTH Editorial Office
- 1515 Broadway P.O. Box 9027
- New York, NY 10036 1006 AA Amsterdam
- United States The Netherlands
-
- Radio Nederland Receiver Guide Passport to World Band Radio
- Engineering Department International Broadcast Services, Ltd.
- PO Box 222 Box 300
- 1200 JG Hilversum Penn's Park, PA 18943 USA
- The Netherlands
- E-mail: 3382983@mcimail.com
-
- Electronic Equipment Bank Gilfer Shortwave
- 137 Church St. N.W. 52 Park Ave
- Vienna, VA 22180 USA Park Ridge, NJ 07656 USA
- 800 368 3270 (orders) 800 GILFER-1 (445-3371) (orders)
- +1 703 938-3350 (local and +1 201 391-7887 (New Jersey, business
- technical information) and technical)
- +1 703 938-6911 (FAX) Free Catalog
- Free catalog
-
- Grove Enterprises Radio West
- (also Monitoring Times) 850 Anns Way Drive
- P.O. Box 98 Vista, CA 92083 USA
- Brasstown, NC 28902 USA +1 619 726-3910
- 800 438-8155 (toll free N. America) Price list: US$1
- +1 704 837-9200
- E-mail: grove@rock.concert.net
- Free Catalog
-
- Universal Radio Popular Communications
- 6830 Americana Pkwy. 76 North Broadway
- Reynoldsburg, Ohio 43068 USA Hicksville, NY 11801 USA
- 800 431-3939 (toll free N. America)
- +1 614 866-4267
- SWL Catalog: US$1.00
-
- NASWA TRS Consultants
- 45 Wildflower Road PO Box 2275
- Levittown, PA 19057 Vincentown, NJ 08088-2275
- Membership costs: US$25/yr; +1 609 859-2447
- sample issue US$2 +1 609 859-3226 (FAX)
- E-mail: NASWA1@aol.com E-mail: 2446376@mcimail.com
- GEnie E-mail: T.SUNDSTROM
- Free catalog.
-
- SPEEDX Canadian International DX Club
- P.O. Box 196 79 Kipps Street
- DuBois, PA 15801-0196 Greenfield Park, PQ
- (US$23/yr to USA, C$25/yr to Canada CANADA J4V 3B1
- others inquire) (C$26/yr to Canada, US$25/yr to USA
- others inquire)
-
- Klingenfuss Publications Ontario DX Association
- Hagenloker str. 14 P.O. Box 161, Station A
- D-740 00 Tuebingen Willowdale, ON
- Germany CANADA M2N 5S8
- +49 7071 62830 +1 416 853-3169 (phone and FAX)
- (C$30.76/yr to Canada, US$26/yr to USA
- C$41/yr or US$34/yr elsewhere)
-
- DX Computing
- 232 Squaw Creek Road
- Willow Park, TX 76087
- +1 817 441-9188
- +1 817 441-5555 (FAX)
- America Online: DX Comp
- E-mail: dxcomp@aol.com
- --
-