As announced before, the German longwave broadcast transmissions on 153 and 207 kHz (Deutschlandfunk) and 177 kHz (Deutschlandradio) will be terminated with the New Year 2015. Presumably mediumwave A
Quarter past midnight now: Sounds like 207 and 177 have gone off, but 153 is still playing. Peter's LF spectrogram: http://lf-radio.de/cgi-bin/lf/show_wf.cgi?date=14-12-31 All the best for 2015, Mark
From Peter's plot for yesterday, it looks as if Donebach 153 kHz carried on with half power till half past midnight (23:30 UT), and then went off, leaving a clear frequency for Brasov. But then somet
Yes, Germany is quiet now on longwave (except 183 kHz Europe-1, blasting away as ever). Take a look at the background noise on Stefan's grabber, which has been influenced by nearby Donebach: http://w
...ignored ;-) 73, Markus From: [email protected] Alex K Sent: Thursday, January 01, 2015 12:30 PM To: [email protected] Subject: LF: Test Test pse ignore -- Alex RN3AUS
Hartmut, beautiful! Great show on your excellent receiver! 73, Markus From: [email protected] Hartmut Wolff Sent: Friday, January 02, 2015 12:11 AM To: [email protected] rsgb_lf_group@blacksh
Stefan, very nice! And it was a good night, like in the "old days". Stefan, you've go more: Your 4:55 capture also shows an almost-but-not-quite readable "XNS" from Jay on 781, just after 4 UT. At th
Hi Hartmut, well we enjoy it while it's good ;-) I can see two solutions: either build a resonant antenna to drain off all the energy from the charger. The neighbour will think it's broken and throw
Hi Chris, also well readable in Nuernberg JN59NJ. Unfortunately DCF39 bursts are big here, attached screenshot is without noise blanking. Normally I have the SpecLab blanker engaged with short (1.5 m
Here's a nicer one for keeping - this is pretty much the best I can do using the noise blanker with 9 dB threshold. 73, Markus From: [email protected] Markus Vester Sent: Saturday, January 03, 201
Chris, very nice! Here's your last over, with the NB switched off after the first quarter. You're nicely put in the middle of the gap now. There seems to be a weak QRM line exactly on 630, so finetun
Hi Chris, Mike, ... but it's a different kind of fun to have realtime two-way contacts instead of internet feedback. I would have loved to answer your CQ today. I like those faster QRSS / DFCW modes,
Good signals from IZ7SLZ with inverse DFCW on 136174 Hz, and a QRP test carrier from OE5ODL above it. 73, Markus (DF6NM) Attachment: iz7slz_oe5odl_150103_1800.jpg Description: JPEG image
Big congratulations again to Paul and Dex! What Paul described in unpretentious and matter-of-fact words should really be regarded as a major achievement. It has been a well-deserved fruit of several
The carrier has been switched off at 10:00 UT. The phase from the Rubidium-derived syntheszier was stable all the time, and the antenna current remained constant within a couple of percent. Radiated
Hi Graham, now that sounds interesting! Excuse me for being curious: What is "a dynamically configured low-level detection mode", and how does it work? All the best, Markus (DF6NM) From: Graham Sent:
oh look - Opera has picked up Deep Search! I'm a bit surprised, and also a bit amused... 73, Markus (DF6NM) From: Graham Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2015 6:25 PM To: [email protected] rsg
Warren wrote: > one could just as easily say that the Germans are more nostalgic or enamored with 100+ year old technology. ...yes we are! We want our big longwave transmitters back ;-) 73, Markus ..