Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Radio Morning Shows Experiencing Decline -- another moneymaker for Radio is fading


KZZU-FM, Spokane, WA, was one of the Adult Contemporary stations that got rid of their local Morning show, to replace it with national syndication or podcast-based syndicated shows.

I frequent a couple different online radio forums, and on one of them a guy posted a link to an article in Billboard magazine, dealing with the decline of the Radio morning show.

Radio 'morning drive' shows, along with the 'afternoon drive' shows, historically were the biggest revenue drivers for radio stations. Many stations' fortunes revolved around the ratings of their Morning show especially. If the Morning show team split up, or somehow the hosts/DJ's lost their touch and ability to entertain, ratings dropped, and station revenues would be affected as well.

In this case, the Billboard article talks about several morning shows across the US and Canada losing their Morning shows, and replacing them with podcasts / shows from other regions of the country. This happened even when the shows were still apparently getting decent ratings. The problem is that Radio isn't making enough money to cover salaries.

One radio expert on the forum where I got the Billboard link said that the decline mentioned in the article also pertains mostly to Contemporary Hit Radio stations, whose ratings have seen gradual declines nationwide over the past couple years. Pop stations don't have the same pull that they used to. No one seems to know exactly why this is. 

In my view, it's probably a reflection of the decline in Pop music quality since the early part of the previous decade -- but that may just be my own musical preferences coming into play. In the case of the morning shows that are talked about on the Billboard article, the stations are not all Top 40. The Spokane, Washington station, KZZU-FM, is Adult Top 40 (normally known as "Hot AC"). So is CKCE-FM in Calgary -- they are "Hot Adult Contemporary". And, in the case of CKCE Calgary, the station apparently gets good ratings.

Either way, the fact is that there are issues with pop music radio, and Morning shows, and this decline probably will continue in other formats, as the Radio audience continues to migrate to online podcasts and music streaming platforms.

Here is a link to the Billboard story.:
Morning Radio Hosts Are Losing Their Jobs as Stations Struggle (billboard.com)


CKCE-FM's Logo. CKCE-FM is a "Hot Adult Contemporary" station in booming Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

This loss of morning personality shows mentioned in the article also hit fairly close to home, as Spokane, a city in my state, about 300 miles east of me, is where the KZZU-FM Dave, Ken & Molly morning show cast was let go in favor of a national, podcast based show (called Joey & Lauren).

Here is a link to KZZU-FM's webpage:

And here is a link to Joey & Lauren's show promoting website.:

They also have clips on their Facebook, here.:

THE PODCAST VERSION OF RADIO -- THE FUTURE
Joey & Lauren look like they're an entertaining, young married couple doing podcast radio and having the time of their lives. And this podcast version of radio seems to be the future of Radio, where everything is time shifted, nothing is actually live, and the average listener doesn't care. It's like voice tracking on steroids, because the podcast is often available outside the Over-The-Air Radio medium, meaning you don't actually need Radio to hear it or enjoy it.

In other words, with podcasting, you don't need Radio at all. This is the future, folks. Podcasting and Streaming -- that is where it is all headed. 

So, although the title to this blog article may be exaggerating slightly when it says Morning shows are 'fading' -- especially when they are being replaced by nationally syndicated shows and podcasts -- it really is accurate, because the concept of the local Morning show was a driver for radio listening going back to the late 1950's, and probably even further back than that. The local Morning show probably reached its apex in the 1980's and 1990's, when the concept of the "Morning Zoo" became popular -- where there were at least three on-air presenters, usually engaging in on-air pranks, talking about edgy subjects as well as day to day life, taking in a few callers, and the like. Many Morning shows still adhere to a version of the "Morning Zoo".

Here's a Wiki on the "Morning Zoo" concept.:

Now the concept is gradually being replaced, and it looks like it's going to be replaced by the Podcast. Podcasting is king. And a station subscribing to Podcasts, compared to having a Morning air-staff, is apparently a cheaper way of getting content on the air than paying any air-staff. And that's a big deal when Radio revenues are down.

Some shows I've heard, like the Free Beer & Hot Wings Show, a rock radio morning show, are navigating their way towards a completely webcasting and podcasting based model. I first heard the Free Beer & Hot Wings Show on Spokane's KJRB "The Bear" 790, before they drastically cut power at night, and then I heard them when Merced, California's KBRE "The Bear" 1660 adopted the show a few years ago.

Here's the website of the Free Beer & Hot Wings Show, and you can see that there are five presenters, and you need a subscription to watch the web feeds and hear the podcasts (although they do have a free podcast section on their site). It's an example of the Subscription-based audio entertainment model -- which is de rigeur for most content creators and content sites.:


Of course, the subscription-based audio entertainment business model has been a thing since the 2000's. Phil Hendrie had a website where you could subscribe and have access to MP3's of all his funny skits, and that was in 2005. 'Shock jock' talk host Tom Leykis also started a streaming site where he would conduct his show for subscribers only, when his on-air Radio show ended in 2009.

So the notion of a subscription based, web content "Radio" model isn't exactly new. But at the same time, it's not exactly the norm. But it's getting there.

This is the future of "Radio".

RADIO STILL TAKING AN ECONOMIC HIT
It's no secret that Radio has taken a big hit from the post-Pandemic economy, as advertising revenues have dropped. The post-Pandemic economic hit added to the previous decline since the mid 2000's, when Radio made about 60% more revenue than it makes today (when accounted for inflation in real dollars -- in nominal dollars, the drop is more like 25-30%).

This drop in ad revenues isn't just a Radio related phenomenon; it's also affecting other media -- be it print, or even online media like online newspapers and social media sites. Because the internet is the definition of market saturation, the law of supply and demand seems to come into play when it comes to advertising revenues: there is basically an infinite supply, and a nearly infinite number of advertisement slots on all the websites.

I go into some of these factors in my article Who Killed Radio?, which I published three or four months ago. You can read that here.:

The issues facing Radio, along with the processes, people, and decisions that have been aiding Radio's decline -- as described in that article -- are still ongoing today. The decline in Morning shows is an example of lower revenues and increased internet use combining to change the way "Radio" is consumed. And that trend will continue until it is all online, and there will be no FM or AM radio at all.

In the case of Calgary's CKCE-FM, the station replaced their Morning show "Mornings with Bo and Jess" with a podcasted version of another show out of Edmonton.

Here is CKCE-FM's website. It's fairly active with animated stuff, social media chatter, and the like.:

The saddest part of this story -- of Morning shows being replaced with national, podcast based syndicators -- is that most of the on-air staff who worked the Morning shows probably will never find air gigs in Radio again. If they already have a podcast, they may be able to survive via the internet, but -- as any internet content creator can tell you -- competition is nearly infinite, and selling online content is not always the panacea that many make it out to be.

As I've stated before, I'm in the indie, eBook publishing business, part time, and the indie publishing community is full of stories of people who sold thousands of books and maybe made a couple thousand bucks over ten years. It's a thousand bucks they wouldn't have had otherwise, but you don't always make a lot of money doing internet content.

In fact, most internet content creators probably don't make much.


CUTS IN MORNING SHOWS EVEN HAVE HIT CLOSE TO HOME, IN SEATTLE
The ad revenue issue and Morning show cuts have hit locally, here in Seattle, recently. Popular morning show talk host Bryan Suits, who was the 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. guy on local station KTTH 770, was let go about two months ago, even though the 6+ ratings for KTTH were OK, and he had a show-related stream that had around 200K viewers. I used to listen to Suits' show many mornings and he and his producer had a humorous way of presenting the news and events of the day from a conservative perspective.

But with the Radio revenues falling as they have been, KTTH's owners were not immune to the idea of doing some cost cutting. They replaced Suits' show with a syndicated, California based show, Armstrong & Getty, based out of Sacramento, with stations in California, Oregon, and now Washington, too.

You can read about Suits' show being cut here.:


And, of course, one could include the slashing of the entire on-air crew at KPNW-FM a couple months ago, when the Alternative/AAA station was flipped to country. Although format flips happen in Radio all the time, KPNW-FM tried to have veteran, Seattle on-air radio personalities to bring in listeners. Their morning show also starred a DJ who was fairly well known in the Seattle area.

However, having DJ veterans, and known Morning show hosts didn't save the station. The Country music replacement for KPNW-FM, "The Bull", seems to be doing a bit better in the ratings, as Country music seems to be on the increase in national and apparently local popularity. Still, it remains to be seen just how long FM radio can survive the same revenue and listener migration storms that AM radio has been dealing with for the past decade and a half.

The revenue problem has even hit public radio, as local NPR affiliate KUOW, a highly rated FM station (they usually are in the top 5 ratings, 6+) has had to cut staff because their revenues -- which had increased slightly -- were outpaced by their costs.

Here's KUOW's story on the cuts, which happened in May of this year.:

It's tough to make it in Radio. Heck, it's tough to make it in any media today. Even news websites are loaded with video ads and all sorts of animated crap that make the websites look like less like a news site and more and more like a Spam-o-rama. It's because they're desperate. Subscription fees don't bring in the revenues that the old print and TV newscast model did, and ad revenues are low because there are literally a gazillion slots, everywhere on the internet. 

Welcome to the Future. The Future Is Now.

IN OTHER LIFE...
Recently, the weather has cooled. Right now it's raining out. Light rain. July has been iffy, weather wise, but at least it's not 110F out like it is in Phoenix and Las Vegas. I'm working on an article about my Radio Shack DX-394, a radio I've had since 1998 but never used regularly (I don't know why -- it's a good radio), but have recently been using a lot, especially when monitoring the Shortwave ham radio bands.

I'll try to get that one out within the next week.  A couple other radio-related articles are in the works as well.

Until then, my friends,
Peace.

C.C. July 29th, 2024.









Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Shortwave Mystery: Roaring Jet Noises in 20 Meter & 10 Meter Ham Bands

A pic of my Radio Shack DX-394, when I was tuned to a mystery, RTTY signal on 14002 kHz (the readout on USB on a DX-394 reads 1 kHz low -- so '14000.8' = 14002, roughly) (Readout on LSB is pretty accurate, within 50-100 Hz).

The past few evenings and mornings I've been tuning my Radio Shack DX-394 into the Shortwave ham bands. The DX-394 is a pretty good radio if you live in a low signals area, as I do. I got my DX-394 a long time ago -- in 1998. It was made in March of 1997, about a year before they discontinued the DX-394.

That said, at least three times I've noticed this strange, noise anomaly just outside the top edge of the 20 Meter Ham Band. I also recently noticed the same -- or similar -- anomaly at least once in the middle of the 10 Meter Ham Band. The noise propagates, and there is some fading, which indicates it probably isn't local RFI -- although I won't rule that out, as I'm not necessarily an RFI expert (RFI is Radio Frequency Interference, for those of you who aren't SW Radio aficionados). Interference from your neighbor's house isn't going to fade from S0.5 to S4 and back down again, irregularly.

First I noticed this anomaly on 14356 kHz, just over a week ago. The second frequency where I heard it was 28191 kHz, and there the noise/signal was definitely fading, from S4 down to S0 and back up again, and it wasn't regular in its fading pattern. Ten minutes later when I checked for it, it was gone.

It's one of those mystery noises we Shortwave and Ham Listeners encounter when we tune the bands. Sometimes it can be a noise from your electronics in your home, or your neighbor's home, or even somewhere in your neighborhood. Some radios have internal noises that can interfere with genuine signals coming over the atmosphere. Some noises -- like Over The Horizon Radar (called 'OTHR' by SWL's) -- can have distant sources (like China, Russia, or the US) and be intermittent, and they do not always sound the same. They can sound like pulsing noises, or even buzzing noises -- as OTHR can be sent with different numbers of signal pulses per second.

There are also noises on the Shortwave bands that may be military or scientific in origin -- and there are SW enthusiasts who spend a lot of time trying to ID or track them.

I'm not one of those people. I can ID most of the sounds I heard on the Ham Bands (CW, USB/LSB, FT8, Olivia, RTTY, etc.), and I can ID the sound of an OTHR (usually), and I can ID coastal CODAR noises (which sound like sweeping noises that often cover wide swaths of the SW spectrum; it is used to measure ocean waves near the coastline), and a lot of RFI I can ID, but I can't always ID the stranger noises I hear on HF and SW.

UNIDENTIFIED JET NOISE -- PHASING AND PROPAGATING on 14356 kHz
And this is one of those occasions. It is a roaring, phasing, propagating 'jet noise'. It sometimes appears just above the 20 Meter Ham band. I asked a Radio forum about this -- I posted a question about the mystery noise on the HF Underground, an excellent forum for anyone who is a Radio hobbyist, DX'er, SWL, or SW anomaly enthusiast. One of the guys who responded asked if I had any recordings. I had made two recordings, taken from my phone -- so they sound tinny. The two clips, sounding as they do, are the best I've got. Being that I couldn't post them on the HFU site, and that I don't have a YouTube, I figured I'd post the clips here, for what it's worth.

Here's a link to HFU, for those interested. If you like SW or Radio DXing at all, there will probably be something of interest here on this site. The HFU Wiki also has a lot of info on the stranger stations and noises you'll often hear. I found out about the Desert Whooper using the Wiki on this site (as well as a thread dedicated to that cool sounding, 4096 kHz, mini-beacon).:

So, here are the clips of the 'Jet Noise', centered on 14356-14357 kHz, the first of which I took after 2 a.m. Pacific Time, about a week ago, on July 19th, UTC. This signal was fairly wide, ranging about 3-5 kHz each side of 14356 kHz. That is why on one clip the readout says 14356, the other says 14355 -- the signal is fairly wide in spectrum.

'Jet' noise, Radio Shack DX-394 + 25 ft. indoor wire, 14357 kHz, 0916 UTC (2:16 a.m. Pacific). July 19th, 2024.

'Jet noise', 14356 kHz, Radio Shack DX-394 (+ 25 ft., indoor, second story wire), July 17th, 2024, 11:05 p.m. Pacific, 0605 UTC.

A MYSTERY RTTY TRANSMISSION ON 14001 kHz
Here is another recording, that I took this morning, when I was tuning the high HF ham bands on my DX-394 again. This was in the 20 Meter Ham band -- some RTTY (Radioteletype / FSK sounds) at 14001-14002 kHz. I first noticed it around 1418 UTC (7:18 a.m. Pacific Time). It was propagating, and a weak signal, less than S1 on a scale of S1-S5. It was getting stronger and weaker as I listened to it. It was weaker when I checked it again at 1438 UTC. I did get a phone recording of it, so I am posting it here. As for the frequency being reported as 14001-14002, I never know exactly where to zero the signal, and even if I did, I can't read it anyway....


UNID RTTY/FSK, weak, inside the lowest reaches of the 20 Meter Ham Band, Radio Shack DX-394 + 25 ft. indoor, 2nd story wire; July 24th, 2024, 7:08 a.m. Pacific, 1408 UTC.

The reason this is interesting is because RTTY and FSK (Frequency Shift Keying, which is a term that covers all sorts of RTTY style modes) aren't allowed (or just aren't done) in the lowest part of the 20 Meter Ham band. Two to three weeks ago I heard a very loud RTTY / FSK station on this same exact frequency, around 2 a.m. my time, 0900+ UTC. Another DXer said he had logged that station also, and he believed it was some sort of 'intruder', which can happen in the Shortwave ham bands.

Being that the propagation would probably favor either the Western half of the US, or Asia, my guess is that this RTTY intruder may be Asian in origin, but that is just a guess. The times I've heard it, there usually is some Asian activity either on the 20 Meter ham band, or the SWBC bands are open to Asia. 

These "intruder" stations can be fascinating to hear, be they ham pirates (illegal stations using the ham bands), or government and military agencies, and the like. The most famous intruders are the mysterious "Lima Pirates", operators who chant together on the airwaves (it's a type of game, actually), in the lower reaches of the 40 Meter Ham Band. I wrote about them in an article last month, which you can read here. The article also has some pretty good YouTube sound recordings of them.:

There are plenty of mysteries and anomalies that occur in the Shortwave spectrum. A lot of the strange sounding signals are explainable by those in the know. There are SWL's who thrive on recording and ID'ing these signals, usually lumped under the term "Utility Signals", because they serve a purpose other than entertainment -- they are military, aeronautical, scientific, or maritime transmissions.

Often you need special equipment to ID or otherwise decipher these signals, and many -- because of their military and governmental nature -- are not decipherable at all, but the experts usually can ID the type and mode of signal they are.

For the rest of us? You just learn to track them by ear and log them down. :-)

FIRING UP MY YAESU FRG-7!
Well, that's the latest Shortwave goings-on that have been happening here at my location. I still have an article on the DX-394 in the works, and I've also started one on my venerable 1979 Yaesu FRG-7, which I recently fired up again after years just sitting in the corner of my DX room.

After exercising the controls to clear the dust and oxidation from them, the radio worked perfectly! I am working on an article about it that I will post in a couple weeks. Here are two vid clips, one of an Indonesian ham sending Morse Code in the lower reaches of the 20 Meter Ham Band, and another clip of China Radio International's broadcast in Turkish.

This morning had a couple surprises. First off, the 40 Meter Band was mostly dead, except for some Californians talking on LSB on 7199 and 7185 kHz. 40 Meters is usually fairly open to Asia in the early mornings here. 


The logo of a Brunei ham I heard earlier this morning on my DX-394, on 14013 kHz. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to get a recording of him. He sent good, clean CW/Morse code, and had a good, S1-S2, mostly readable signal. A little later I heard YB0E_T contacting US hams in CW also on 14013 kHz.

On 20 Meters, though, I heard the Indonesian ham, and a different guy contacting US and other hams in Morse Code, and he was in Brunei, sending Code on 14005 kHz. For those who aren't geographically savvy, Brunei Darussalam is a small, independent country on the northwest coast of Borneo, surrounded by Sarawak, East Malaysia. I looked up the ham after I logged his callsign, V85NPV, and V85NPV builds all of his own radios. Quite good, obviously, with electronics!

Here is a link to his QRZ page, where there are pics of all the radios he has built from plans, and from scratch.:

This following clip is of the Indonesian ham sending Morse Code early this morning. His call was YB0E_T (because of his fast sending speed and the fading I couldn't ID the entire call accurately) and he was looking for contacts with US stations. He had a solid CW signal both on my DX-394 and FRG-7, and got a few contacts, mainly from Californians. Here you can hear him sending "CQ USA". As you can tell, the FRG-7 is a great receiver for CW, although the bandwidth can be a bit wide for separating out signals. This particular a.m., there wasn't a ton of activity in that part of the 20 Meter Band to have to separate signals, though.:

Indonesian ham YB0E_T sending "CQ USA" in CW/Morse code. Approx. 14013 kHz, FRG-7, 25 ft indoor wire. After 1410 UTC.

This is a recording of China Radio International broadcasting to Turkey and the EU in Turkish. The location of the transmitter is probably Kunming, in Yunnan province in south central China. The frequency is 13710 kHz in the 21 Meter Band, and the time I heard this was 1504 UTC (9:04 a.m., Pacific Time):

Well, that's about all for this time around.

Until next installment,
Peace.

C.C. July 24th, 2024.


ADDENDUM, September 17th, 2024:
I neglected to update this article after a guy on HFU -- Thomas in Germany -- listened to my MP4 vid clips on here, and he said it sounded like a STANAG mode used by military (probably from an Australian military transmitter, at Humpty Doo, in northern Australia). The STANAG in question may be STANAG4285. 

There are a lot of modes used by military operations, and STANAG is one of them. I'd heard of STANAG, but never learned to identify it. Apparently buried in the jet noise is a form of digital transmission. 

Humpty Doo would fit, propagation-wise, as the time I heard the transmission was when the 20 Meter Band was open to Asia and Oceania.

Here's the link to the HFU thread I made about the 'Jet Noise'.:

A shout out to everyone from HFU who has visited the blog -- from my Stats page I can tell there are at least a couple. Peace.










Saturday, July 13, 2024

Two More Canadian AM Stations in Major Cities -- CKGO Vancouver and CHQT Edmonton -- Will Bite The Dust


Once again, the AM Radio plug puller strikes, this time -- once again -- it's striking in my second motherland: Canada.

The Canadian media company Corus has decided to eliminate some staff and then eventually switch off -- or sell, if they can find buyers -- two AM stations in two major, Western Canadian cities, Vancouver and Edmonton.

The stations are CKGO 730 (All Traffic), and CHQT 880, Edmonton (News and Traffic). I usually can hear CKGO day, or night, on 730. It's a constant traffic report, basically. They even run traffic reports overnights. It sounds like they use live announcers, too. I'm not sure what sort of ratings they get, but they've been All Traffic for at least a couple decades. I've never heard CHQT, though. A local 50KW station on 880, KIXI, is in the way.

The fact that Corus is deciding to eliminate these two large stations in two of Canada's major metros is telling. For one, it is an indicator of the state of radio today, where advertising revenues are probably 60% less than they were in 2005, and listenership -- even to highly rated FM stations -- is dropping year by year.

And running a News station, News - Talk station, or All Traffic station is NOT cheap.

For the next few months Corus will continue to keep the stations on the air -- CKGO will be a simulcast of Vancouver's popular News-Talker CKNW 980 (which comes in well into the Seattle area), and CHQT will simulcast CHED 630 (which I also hear most nights fairly clearly).

Then Corus will pull the plug on CKGO and CHQT. If they can't sell the stations, the stations will become permanently silent.

CKGO has a fairly long history in Vancouver, B.C. Back in the 1960's and 70's it was the pop and rock station CKLG, playing Top 40. And being that CanCon (the Canadian content rule for Radio) hit in the 1970's, you could hear bands on CKLG you wouldn't hear on US Top 40 stations, as well as Canadian hits that never made it big south of the 49th Parallel. There were hits by the Stampeders and Guess Who that were played on CKLG that never got played on the Seattle stations, for example.

But around the turn of the Century CKLG had morphed into an All Traffic station. When I got back into MW DXing in 2011 that's when I noticed that CKLG was now All Traffic. It was hard to listen to it for longer than maybe 4-5 minutes. It also had new call letters, which were non-memorable (CHMJ).

Now CKGO will be a carbon copy of CKNW before they pull the plug. It is possible they may sell the station. The market, however, for AM stations in Canada is not robust. AM 730 does have good coverage of the Vancouver, B.C. market, so it is possible that another company could buy the station and put a different format on it. Maybe an ethnic format, like Punjabi or Hindi, will fill the bill on CKGO. Time will tell.



CHQT 880 Edmonton's previous logo, before it started simulcasting CHED 630 last week

The staff, by the time you read this, probably will already have been laid off. Radio in general, is an industry in contraction. One could also say it's in decline. I hate that, of course, because I always wanted to work in radio when I was a kid, and I ended up being able to work in the field for nearly 20 years.

But the tastes of music and audio entertainment consumers is changing, and it's not just the internet -- even the internet is changing. Websites shut down; eGroups disappear, and what's left of them have no activity; newspaper websites make a go of it and then close -- the internet and the online world is in a constant state of flux, and Radio is just one of the industries that's taking a massive hit from those constant changes.

Here is a Canadian news article on the changes at CKGO and CHQT.:



In other Radio news, local Alternative Rock AM station KGRG-1 is off the air, due to a transmitter malfunction. KGRG-1 is an AM college radio station in Enumclaw, WA, maybe 25 miles / 30 km South of me. KGRG-1 run at low power, about 500 Watts days, and 26 Watts at night. During the day I can usually hear them weakly, but readably, especially on my Superadios or Sangean PR-D5. 

KGRG-1 used to play a lot of Grunge era, Classic Alternative music. Then they changed formats about six months or so ago, to newer Alternative, which wasn't bad, although I really liked the Classic Alternative from the 1990's and 2000's. Now they are temporarily silent.

Their engineer said online that KGRG-1 plan to return to the air by September. The number of listeners KGRG-1 has is a good question. They might have had the potential to draw an audience, as they used to play a significant amount of Grunge music, and Seattle is the home of Grunge. But their signal is limited to South King County, and there is the issue of the station being on AM. 

KGRG-FM 89.9 plays more modern alternative, but their signals don't reach quite as far as the AM station does. They are in HD, though. Right now they may have a problem with the location of their transmitter, so their future is in flux.

I wish them well. Radio is a tough sell to college students these days. According to some educators in the field, the students are more interested in podcasting. The problem with that, is that you don't need to go to college to learn to podcast. Any day I can peruse hundreds of channels on YT and see podcasters who didn't get their skills in college. Many of them just have a Smartphone and an internet connection. They talk into their phone's camera, and... Voila!... Podcast!

College Radio programs and newspaper programs aren't just seeing declining importance in the eyes of students, but colleges in general are starting to see falling enrollments as the GenZ'ers are a smaller population than the Millennials before them.

So I suppose the question is: who will be on the Radio airwaves in 30 years? Will anyone? And who will be staffing newspapers (a definitely declining field, numbers wise)? Will radio and newspaper programs really be necessary if those fields are continuing to decline?

Time will tell.

RE: KITI 1420 Centralia, WA -- Classic Hits & Oldies; & KUJ Walla Walla
Being that I finally figured out how to get one on Blogger without it sounding completely tinny, or it being cut off as being too long. This is my Sangean PR-D4W playing 1420 KITI, Centralia, Washington, playing some oldies. Local station KRIZ, Renton, is off the air because of transmitter issues (as I mentioned in my last blog article). 

In the second vid clip, you can hear the talk show on KUJ, Walla Walla, on the other side of the state.

I had the PR-D4W set to 2.5 kHz bandwidth here in both of these clips. 4 kHz sounded a little trebly, and 2.5 kHz is a good compromise, especially using the speaker. With 4 kHz, you hear the bass more -- but that's through the headphones, not so much the speaker. And being that my phone's mic isn't particularly high fidelity, I went with the compromise

When DXing with this radio, I always use headphones, and start out with 2.5 kHz bandwidth, and then widen or narrow it to taste, depending on the strength of the signal, adjacent channel interference, and other factors.


KITI 1420, Centralia-Chehalis, WA. Around 1:30 a.m. KUJ, Walla Walla, WA is the faint talk station in back.

This vid clip has more KUJ Walla Walla talk in it. It was kind of fun to record these. I haven't done much recording of radio catches -- not like a lot of other DXers do. One issue is the tinniness of the sound that the phone sometimes produces. Another is just me getting used to the technique of recording a short clip and posting it.

I have a PR-D4W article in the works. I'll probably post it in a few weeks.

Until next installment, my friends and readers,
Peace.

C.C. July 13th, 2024.

Edited on July 14th, 2024.




- - - - - - - - -
July 14th: The following I just Edited out, & replaced. It was the bottom paragraphs of the article. For some reason, at the time I was not able to upload a couple short vid clips. It turns out that the videos wouldn't load because I hit the wrong 'insert' button. My bad.:

I was going to close this article with a couple short vid clips. As you may be aware, I was able to upload a ten second video clip yesterday, of my Realistic SW-60 playing China's National Broadcaster CNR-1. I thought I'd upload a clip of my PR-D4W playing KITI Centralia, being that some MW DXers out there might like to see what it sounds like, but for some reason this website doesn't seem to support MP4's anymore. I can't even reload the MP4 vid clip I posted on my last article yesterday, the one with CNR-1 playing. Even after following all directions to a T. Very odd.

This is what happens when you're a bit frazzled and keep hitting the "photo" insert button instead of the "video" insert button. Sorry Blogger. It was my mistake, not yours.

I also added some location information here and there that I had inadvertently left out.
I also had to straighten out some formatting on July 16th.
Peace.

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Some Random Thoughts on Radio and Other Subjects, After a Dead 4th of July

My newer flag, one I got in the mid-to-late 2000's -- which I put out for the 4th of July. Amazingly, no one messed with it.

Right now, as I write this, it is night time. It is warm in the house, and moderately warm outside. We've had a bit of a heat wave here in Seattleland after the Fourth, which actually is fairly standard for this region. June is historically cloudy, and all historically clears up after the Fourth.

There have been some recent years that haven't lived up to that norm, of course, but historically that's how the weather here works.

I've been working on two blog articles, one on the Realistic/Radio Shack DX-394, which I've recently re-discovered and fired up, and have used for the past 3-4 weeks, and the other article is on the current state of Solar Cycle 25 -- a cycle which isn't living up to expectations, but is indeed delivering some decent long distance radio signals.

Unfortunately -- at least as it concerns the SW ham bands -- even when this Solar Cycle IS delivering, the ham radio operators are NOT. More on that later.

This was the only 1/4 decent pic I was able to take of the few fireworks I saw, on an otherwise dead 4th of July. Riding through my neighborhood, it was like a ghost town. In the 1990's, they had block parties and fireworks, with water and sandbuckets handy. Now? Deadsville. That's the way you celebrate Independence Day -- locked inside your house, staring at a screen.  

ALL HAIL THE DEAD 4TH
Being that today is the 10th of July -- my late, Scottish grandfather's birthday -- a man I never met -- the Fourth of July was six days ago. It was a bust, really. The Fourth holidays get worse every year. It used to be a time of celebration. There would be all sorts of indications of people having fun, lighting off sparklers for their little kids to enjoy, backyard BBQ's, etc. But not anymore. This Fourth there were no skyrockets anywhere within half a mile, and -- on top of that -- no evidence whatsoever that anyone within a mile of me was having any patio cookouts or backyard, safe and sane fireworks displays.

No backyard parties with hot dogs, potato salad and pork & beans -- no fountains, no glowing snakes, no spinning wheels -- nothing.

In other words, no celebration.

The Fourth of July was DEAD. I think I saw maybe 20 rockets total the entire evening while being out on my bike, some of them being shot up into the sky from the two nearby hills. Most of them I could hear, but couldn't see. But even at that, the night was fireworks free. 

The killjoys have finally killed the 4th.

The one neighbor I encountered last year who was lighting off some safe and sane fireworks for his little girl wasn't doing it this Fourth. I passed his street on my bike, the same time I did last year, and there was nothing. So it seems he didn't light anything off for his little girl this year. Or, maybe he moved away.

The one photo I have posted here, of a distant skyrocket, was taken in a fairly long exposure, hence its being blurry. The rocket was probably 3/4 of a mile away, erupting from behind some trees, on a nearby hill.

I did put my flag out this Fourth -- my newest flag. And no one messed with it! Yay.

That all said, here are some random thoughts during a moderate heat wave. Most are Radio related.


TOUGH TIMES FOR A LOCAL AM STATION :-(
First off, MW and SW radio, which depends on the ionosphere for long distance listening and contacts, has been fair to middling this Spring and Summer. MW is typical for Summer, with a few standouts. Local Renton station KRIZ 1420 has been having transmitter issues, and they've been off several nights over the past few weeks. In fact, they've been off the air the past two evenings. 

KRIZ fill a unique niche in the Seattle radio spectrum. They are African American owned, and play black gospel music, and they're fairly loud at my location. But when they've been off the air, I get a mix of KUJ Walla Walla (News-Talk), in the Eastern part of my state, and KITI Centralia (in SW WA), which plays a wide mix of Classic Hits and Oldies. It's cool to hear those stations at night, being that I used to hear KUJ when I was a little kid and I'd always look at the map and try to imagine what Walla Walla looked like. Back then, they played a mix of news and Top 40.

As I write this, because KRIZ is off the air, I'm hearing KITI's Classic Hits and KUJ's Rick Valdes talk show playing on my Sangean PR-D5 right now.

I'm not sure what's going on with KRIZ. They're part of a chain of three stations, two of them in Seattle (KRIZ and 1620 KYIZ) and KBMS in Portland. They're three of the few African American owned-and-run radio stations in the Western US. There's one in Los Angeles, KBLA 1580, which is a Talk station, and I only hear them now and then. I don't know of any other Black-owned radio stations West of the Mississippi. There possibly is one in the SF Bay Area.

In this low revenue climate, I'm not sure how well KRIZ and KYIZ are doing. KYIZ 1620 does seem to have some local and national advertisements, so they must be making at least some money. I've heard some ads on KBMS 1480 as well.

However, KYIZ, KBMS and KRIZ obviously face the same hurdle all AM and FM stations face today: A lot of younger demos have drifted to Spotify and Pandora, and the older demos don't count when it comes to radio ratings. I'm not saying this out of personal preference, but it's fact. The big ad agencies that buy time on Radio stations to sell stuff couldn't care less about any demographics over age 50, and especially if you're African American and over 50 they won't advertise to you. They only want to advertise to younger people. 

It's one reason the AM radio stations are hurting -- most AM listeners are over 45-50, and advertisers don't care about them at all.

So these African American radio stations have to depend mostly on local businesses to advertise. And small businesses in general are hurting these days because of the inflation and overall state of the US economy. It's tough for any small radio company these days, and I imagine it's not much different for the owners of KRIZ, who are obviously dealing with transmitter issues. I wish them well.

Here is KYIZ 1620's website, for those interested in checking out their programs.:

Here is the website for Portland's KBMS 1480, owned and run by the same African American radio company.:

My Realistic/Radio Shack DX-394, which had been sitting -- as you can see -- more-or-less being used as a mini shelf for a Sony Sports Walkman, some spare batteries, and a couple books. I recently fired it up. It's a great SW ham band receiver, and good on SW, too. It will even tune down into the VLF & ELF ranges. In this pic it's tuned to the 21 Meter Band, probably to North Korea. I haven't heard much of anything in the VLF ranges, but the 20 Meter ham band has delivered a lot of interesting Morse Code and Sideband signals, including hams from places like Germany, Slovenia, Belgium, Italy, France, Australia, New Zealand, Iraq, Russia, Austria, Bulgaria, the UK, South Africa, Japan, and -- yes -- my DX-394 picks up the Desert Whooper on 4096 kHz!

COMPLAINT: SUPERFAST MORSE CODE GUYS, TRYING TO BE BAD
Now we shall move on to ham radio -- something I've been monitoring a lot lately, especially since I fired up my DX-394. And I've got a couple complaints about you hams. 

Sometimes I wonder if some of you are really thinking when you use the ham bands and send CQ.

First off, there have been countless times I've heard superfast CW (Morse Code) in the lower sections of the 20 Meter Ham Band, and a lot of those signals are watery sounding (super fast fading) because they're coming over the Polar region from Europe, and they sound quite fadey and watery because of the Auroral Radio Zone.

This means that these superfast CW dudes are sending at a rate where the fading is cutting off and muddling a lot of dits and dahs, sometimes eliminating whole characters, and it's making their CW unreadable to any other ham who doesn't have a massive beam and the ears of a bat. And even some of those fast CW readers probably have difficulties reading the missing characters -- especially when those characters are all hastily run together with no breaks between the words.

I've also heard -- domestically, as well as DX stations -- stations tapping out a CQ in superfast, 20+ word-per-minute Code, and when a guy responds at a slower rate, the superfast guy never slows down -- which is rude, of course, but the superfast guys often are rude, on the air, and sometimes rude online when they're advising newbies. I suppose they think they've got something to prove.

One thing I've noticed, especially since using my DX-394 -- which is a very good receiver for Morse Code -- some of these superfast CW guys send CQ, and no one answers. No kidding. The other hams probably can't read what you're sending because of the Polar fading. Or maybe you shouldn't be using a 'bug' or paddles, sending 20+ words per minute because your CW sucks. Maybe you should use a straight key and slow down.

Note to the superfast CW guys with the paddles, bugs, and keyers: slow the F down already. Who are you trying to impress? Do you want to get contacts, or are you just trying to show off? Do you not understand what it sounds like 1000-5000 miles away -- after your signal has bounced off the ionosphere, affected by fading and the Auroral Radio Zone, or travelling through the Polar warble and then some static, QRM, and RFI?

And this leads to another observation: In the ham radio world, there seems to be this obsession with 20 w.p.m. + speed, as if sending and receiving ultra-fast Morse Code makes you super-bad, a real macho man. I've read comments on some ham forums where guys say "you can't have a decent QSO (conversation) slower than 20 words per minute" -- which is absolute bullshit.

On one ham forum, some veteran hams were trying to convince a newbie -- a guy who said he could barely read Code at 7 words per minute -- that he needs to strive for that 20 w.p.m. level, or he won't be competent on the air. One of these guys even told the newbie he had to learn all these arcane punctuation marks in Morse Code -- characters I've NEVER heard being sent over the ham bands in my several decades of listening.

You don't need to have speedy CW to hold a convo. I've heard plenty of guys having convos using CW at slower speeds. I think a lot of hams forget that the 'key' to using a Code Key is COMMUNICATION, not trying to impress other people with your ability to send speed.

And face it -- if you have monitored the Code sections of the ham bands, you are destined to hear a lot of sloppy sending. And the sloppy sending seems to always happen when a guy gets on his paddles or bug and sends faster CW than he can send cleanly -- where he tries to impress the world with his fast sending, and the dits and dahs and spaces in-between all run together, where you can't tell one character from another. Maybe these guys think they're impressing somebody, but they're just showing guys like me that they'd be better off using a straight key and slowing down.

A neighbor always plants some awesome looking flowers just outside their fence for everyone to enjoy. These flowers started blooming about three weeks or so ago.

IGNORE THE WATERFALL -- USE YOUR EARS
One other thing I've noticed while tuning the 20 Meter Ham band is that I'll hear DX stations from Europe, either sending CQ in Morse Code, or even on Sideband, and no one answers them, or very few hams answer them. 

So, here I am, listening on a Radio Shack DX-394 and a 25 ft. indoor wire, and I'm hearing stations that others in the US and Canada -- many of whom probably have better equipment than me -- either aren't hearing or don't care to try to contact.

It's uncanny. Sometimes I think it's because the EU station may be sending or calling CQ outside the General privilege regions of the 20 Meter band, reducing the chances of a US ham -- who isn't Extra or Advanced Class -- to be able to respond. Other times I think it's possible that too many hams are using their waterfall display to find DX, instead of just tuning the effing band and listening.

One time I mentioned this on a ham / radio hobby forum. The general response was "it takes too long to tune every channel in the band." What a load of BS. I can switch my DX-394 to 1 kHz steps and tune through the entire 20 Meter Ham band in maybe 15 seconds, and hear where the strong signals are, and where the DX is. Then I zero in on the DX. I can also hear the DX easily, as I always use headphones, and I actually LISTEN.

I don't have a radio with a waterfall display, but whenever I've seen pics of waterfall displays, there are a lot of very faint looking signals that seem to be mixed in with the static. Just looking at the display, it's hard to tell if a signal is a DX station, or a bit of RFI or a static crash. 

If someone is depending on just a waterfall, how many DX signals are they missing? I have read comments by hams who check the DX maps and DX hotspots on websites, but those are not specific to your location -- and nothing beats actually TUNING and LISTENING.

USE YOUR TRANSMITTER: SEND A CQ.
My last gripe about amateur radio is one I think a lot of hams out there probably agree with: there are not enough active ham radio operators. The US right now has over 750K ham operators, but you wouldn't think so by listening to any of the bands -- from 160 Meters to 2 Meters. The activity just isn't there.

Too many hams either gave up -- like a guy in my neighborhood who took down his antennas last month -- or they just don't bother to get on the air. There also apparently are a lot who use digital ham transmissions like FT8, where the computer does all the work for you and it's less painstaking -- no tuning (it's all done on one or two channels per ham band), no careful listening. You don't have to listen at all, in fact. There is no Morse Code to decipher, no straining your ears to hear the other guy's call sign -- it's all automatically done by computer.

FT8 is great for visually impaired hams, and guys in locations with antenna restrictions, but it's killing the hobby. The guy in my neighborhood told me that any time he switched on his radio he heard nothing. I understood his pain. A lot of times I didn't hear much, either. But I stuck with it, because I tune each channel in the HF ham bands, to see what's out there. The guy in my neighborhood who gave up had a really nice, new rig which had a waterfall. I think that may have been part of the problem -- he may have been depending on the waterfall display, which doesn't really show you the DX, and then there was the fact that there aren't enough ham operators actually calling or sending CQ, and seeing if anyone responds.

The propagation can be UP, with the HF ham band activity DOWN. Because no one is listening, and they're not calling or sending CQ.

It's a bad cycle of operation, because -- in my view, anyway -- it's killing the hobby. Dead bands are not an indicator of a vibrant hobby.

Tune the radios, guys. If you're licensed, call CQ now and then. If you hear that DX station while actually tuning your rig, try to answer him. 

Life is short. Use the spectrum!

My Realistic PRO-34 Scanner on the left, and my Realistic DX-440 AM-FM-LW-SW radio on the right. I got them both in 1989. They both still work. The DX-440 picks up MW stations and SW really well, even today. The PRO-34 is in equally good working order, and pics up hiss and static and the local NOAA Weather channel, because nothing else of interest is available locally to hear, except maybe the odd air traffic controller. Compared to 1989-1993 when I last scanned the bands, they're all dead, dead, dead.

MY OLD SCANNER WORKS! 
THE RAILROAD BANDS AREN'T WORKING.
In the Summer of 1989, I was working as a janitor, and at the time I was doing OK financially. Janitor's pay wasn't a lot, but the cost of living wasn't anywhere as high as it is now. I had a Realistic Patrolman SW-60 that I used to hear the VHF Low and High bands, but was interested in getting a scanner. So I got one -- the Realistic PRO-34, which, at the time, was Radio Shack's top handheld scanner. I am certain I bought my PRO-34 in late Summer of 1989.

The PRO-34 would run on 6 AA batteries, and it worked off of rechargeable AA's, too -- and it even would charge them.

I had a lot of fun with that scanner, actually. I heard the police channels -- both Renton, SPD, King County, and State Patrol. Hearing the police channels gave me extra respect for what police go through. One evening there was a man who had a gun, and was going to off himself, in his car, near the 405 interchange with State highway 167. The police were able to talk him down and get him to be evaluated. A lot of the talking to the guy was over the VHF Police radio.

I heard a few Aircraft on the Air Band, including a couple military flights going in and out of Boeing Field. That was cool.

I also heard a few cell phone calls. Back then, only well-to-do people had cellphones, which looked like an old, wireline cordless phone handset. They had an internal battery, and they were heavy. Even though my scanner had all of the cellphone frequencies blocked, you still could hear them, because the cell frequencies would bleed over onto the nearby, legal, unblocked 800 MHz channels. This may have been because the cell systems of that day ran a lot of power. The convos would come and go in bits and pieces, because all the calls were sent using a 'trunked' system, meaning that the phones would be handed off from frequency to frequency -- by the cell system -- on an as-needed basis. 

Which meant you'd hear maybe 15-30 seconds of a convo, and then it'd cut off, as the system switched it to another frequency. The longest snippet of cell phone convo I probably heard was 45 seconds or so.

I never heard anything spicy. I heard a couple guys talking about their business, heard a guy and his girlfriend arguing. It was a bizarre glimpse into the future, although at the time I had no clue just how connected the world would become through use of the cellphone.

Last, but not least, I used the scanner to monitor the Railroad Frequencies. Now, that was fun! Being that I grew up next to a major railway line, and my Grandma's house was within three blocks of a multi-track railway line, I always had an interest in trains. And the scanner picked up all the activity. You could hear the trains calling the dispatchers. You could hear the BN and UP trains getting permission to cross the other's tracks at the junction near Renton, which was called Black River Junction -- this is where the Union Pacific tracks crossed over the Burlington Northern's two mainline tracks.

Every train that crossed that junction had to call the dispatcher. If it was the BN railroad, you heard a lot of trains calling for the "Centralia North" dispatcher, and the UP trains called for the dispatcher that was based in Omaha. The trains would often have to clear their movements on a section of track. So, if you were a railfan -- as I was at the time -- a scanner was a handy tool. I'd pull up at a legal parking spot near the mainline, and listen for the trains to request permission to cross over the other railroad's tracks at Black River. Within 5-10 minutes, that train would appear. It was pretty cool.

I could also hear this activity from my home, which was 6 miles or more away. On my scanner I also heard the signal guys and Maintenance-of-Way guys, who would call and get clearance to use a section of track. I'd hear track inspectors.

The main Railroad 'road channels' -- 161.160 MHz, 160.515 MHz, and 161.100 MHz -- were always hopping with activity. Even at night I'd hear the trains calling the dispatcher -- all with my scanner, using its rubber duck antenna, 6 miles from the nearest railroad track. I got to know the trains by their indicator -- CSSEZ (Chicago to Seattle, UP); SECSZ (Seattle to Chicago, UP), 696 (BN, Seattle to California), PDSEZ and SEPDZ (UP, expedited between Seattle and Portland); the UP's UPS mail train, the UP Garbage train, the UP local that worked the Valley at night -- I could hear all of them.

I stopped using my scanner around 1993. I don't recall exactly why. I think my rechargeable batteries stopped holding charge, and it got to be a pain to battery up the radio all the time with 6 AA's. Other life also got in the way. The Scanner went into the closet, and stayed there for years.

So -- fast forward to 2024. I found my PRO-34 in the closet, just sitting there. 

I plugged in the 9 Volt adaptor, and fired it up.

IT WORKED! I was getting hiss out of the speaker!

Then I had to remember how to program it to receive, search, etc. I found a Users Manual on the internet, and looked it over. Then I programmed in the Weather channel, 162.55 MHz.

I was hearing NOAA Weather Radio. Cool.

So I figured out how to Search the range of MHz where the Railroad Band is (160-162 MHz, basically). I had it search the spectrum for maybe an hour. Nothing.

I went online and found the local Railroad frequencies. I plugged one of them in -- UP's road channel, 160.515. I turned down the squelch, so I could hear the weakest transmission if needed. I let it idle, unsquelched, on 160.515 all night, while I worked on writing in the den.

I heard absolutely nothing. And even after four hours of listening to these channels, during the next weekday -- I got nothing.

My 1989 Realistic PRO-34 Scanner, searching through the VHF Railroad band. I used to hear activity at least 5-6 times an hour during the day, and several times an hour at night, depending on train schedules. Now? I can have the scanner tuning continuously through the VHF Railroad band for hours and hours and hear nothing.

It turns out that the Railroads were mandated by the government to narrowband their FM mobile (and other) radios. Which makes their FM signals weaker. Consequently, they are much harder to hear. It sucks, really. It also seems odd that the government would mandate a system that made it harder for a trainman on a 10,000 ton, mile long train to hear other trains, or the dispatcher. I suppose they all had to buy new radios with more 'pull' to them. 

Either way, compared to 30 years ago, Railroad Scanning is DEAD.

I also dug up a Uniden Bearcat BC550A scanner a guy gave me in 2010. I fired it up. I had to download the manual to see how to work it. The BC-550A is actually a really fast search-scanner, and so I programmed it to search -- repeatedly -- between 148-174 MHz, which includes the Railroad Band.

Nothing. Just the weather channel on 162.55.

I realise that there are still a lot or radio hobbyists who like to scan the cops, fire, ambulances, businesses, Marine, Airband, and the like. I have been able to hear the Air band OK on my scanners, but it is sort of boring. But compared to 1989-1993, the entire spectrum is dead. The 2 Meter Ham band? Compared to 1989, it's dead. VHF Marine? Dead. The Police have mostly moved to 800 MHz, trunked systems, and one needs a new, trunking scanner, where you download playlists off the internet to tell the scanner where to scan.

In the old days, you'd just switch on your scanner to hear all kinds of cool stuff. It was pretty simple. Not any more.

I have the distinct feeling I won't be getting back into the scanning hobby. It's just not fun anymore.

It is fun that my old Scanner still works, though. I remember using it on the night of the Fourth, 1989. I don't think I heard too much, as I was going out that night with my GF at the time. But that's why I fired it up this time, on the night of the Fourth of July. To see if the scanner still works, and if there was anything out there.

All I heard was the Weather channel.

That's the breaks. 

This is my Realistic Patrolman SW-60, an old-school multibander, made in Korea in the 1980s for Radio Shack. It gets AM-FM-SW (6 MHz-18 MHz)-VHF Lo-VHF Hi-&UHF. I first heard a satellite beeping around 135 MHz on this radio soon after I got it in 1988. I also got VHF Low Band skip on it, running it through my Quad Loop antenna that I had cut for the CB Band. I heard lots of 2 Meter hams, and 
even a couple Baby monitors around 49 MHz. The radio still works well. Of course, there is nothing to hear on the VHF bands except the Weather Channel. The 2 Meter ham band is like a ghost town.UHF is also relatively useless. The AM, FM and SW bands still have some activity, and this radio still picks those bands up well.

THE REALISTIC PATROLMAN SW-60 RIDES AGAIN!
Just before finishing this article, I took a short clip of my Realistic Patrolman SW-60 receiving what probably is CNR-1 from China in the 19 Meter Band. Here's the clip.:

My 1988 Realistic Patrolman SW-60 AM-FM-SW-VHF Lo-VHF Hi-UHF radio tuned to a Chinese CNR-1 station broadcast in the 19 Meter Band, probably either 15360 or 15410 kHz, just before 1400 UTC. When the broadcast ended, it was abrupt, at the top of the hour, when a woman said "Beijing" after some time pips, and the signal cut off mid-sentence -- not long after this recorded clip ended.

 The antenna used is one plugged in the back of the radio, using a Motorola jack. It is a longer whip antenna than the whip antenna that is part of the radio. It was a separate antenna I bought at Radio Shack in 1990. The loading coil on the external antenna makes it effective into the high SW spectrum. I was surprised I got any SW at all, being that the radio is old school, transistor technology. But it's proof that even the Multibanders from the 1960s-1990s could, and still can, bring in SW signals. This radio is really good on the MW/AM band also.

There's really nothing much else to add here. I'll probably post the article on the DX-394 pretty soon, as I've re-learned all the tricks to using it properly for SW, MW and Ham band listening, so that everything on using the receiver can be covered in the article.

There aren't a lot of articles on the DX-394 on the internet anymore. It was a big deal back in the late 1990's, and there was still interest in the radio in the 2000's, including mentions on radio forums and eGroups (it even had its own eGroup), but a lot of webpages, internet forums and email talkgroups, and receiver reviews have gone the way of the Dodo over the past 10 years. Some of it might only be found on the web archive sites like the Wayback Machine.

The internet, like everything else, is changing.

But I'm certain there are still a few DX-394 users, or people who have come across these radios, and maybe they'll find the DX-394 article useful. I'll post it within a week. All it needs is a bit of final editing and some pics.

A pic I'd forgotten that I had taken of a bumblebee in a Rhododendron blossom earlier this year, some time in May. For some reason, Rhodies attract a lot of bumblebees. When it's quiet out you can hear them buzzing while they go from flower to flower. I think I took maybe eight or nine shots trying to get a bee in focus, being that they move around so much.

Until later, my friends and readers,
Peace.

C.C. -- July 10th and 11th, 2024.


August 10th, 2024: I added the link to the ZTwins' and KBMS's websites (KYIZ 1620, KBMS 1480), one of the African American stations mentioned in the article.