[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
RETURN