Sysop: | Amessyroom |
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Location: | Fayetteville, NC |
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What does the solar outlook look like for the upcoming field day on the 22nd or
are we not close enough to that date yet?
I was a bit surprised to see your posts here.
Are you a Shortwave listener?
I mainly posted because I received that spaceweather alert that mentioned potential affects to SW radio.---
When I was younger, and had access to a radio capable of picking up SW, I was a listener. I would listen to Radio Moscow, hoping to hear some secrets
that could be helpful to the US (not realizing that there were probably already plenty of US officials who also had access to SW radio!). I would also listen to the BBC, VOA, WRNO out of New Orleans (which played music), and to a few other English-language broadcasts.
Other times I would tune around and find broadcasts that were not in
English. The ones I would listen to for a while were the ones that sounded like some military leader yelling while the background contained crowd
noise. I never had any idea where those were coming from. I always
assumed Cuba but the language either wasn't Spanish or was spoken to
quickly for me to understand it.
The things that ammuse a ~12 year old boy on a cold winter day. ;)
One thing I was disappointed in, looking back, was that I never knowning listened to a numbers station. I probably did and just didn't know what
they were back then. There is a Youtuber, Ringway Manchester, whose videos
I will watch sometimes. He often talks about odd SW stations and other broadcasting interests.
Mike
* SLMR 2.1a * I hit my CRTL key but I'm STILL not in control....
The neighbor also gave the manual for the radio.
The manual showed a Schematic on it and since the radio didn't have a case I learned about electronics from looking at the Schematic and the underside of the radio (unplugged, of course).
When I visited a school friend one day, he turned on the Hallicrafters S-38d and tund in WWV, the National Bureau of Standards (now NIST) Time Station, an
that interested me enough that I desired to become a SWL too.
In High School he met a Ham and got his Novice License and a couple years late
I got my Novice Ham License too.
Sorta a copycat.
That is a good way to learn.Look at. time.gov. No noise, just time to the second.
I remember listening to time stations... "at the sound of the tone..." :)
I never knew any HA until I got into BBSing, and had never realized that amateurs could talk on the airwaves.---
Mike
* SLMR 2.1a * I'm a nocturnal model