Friday, February 20, 2026

AUSTRALIAN AM STATION 6WF to Leave the AM band for FM

The transmitting tower for sunny Perth, Australia's ABC radio station 6WF, which is moving from the AM band to the FM band after decades of serving Perth and a large part of SW Western Australia.
If you look closely, you can see the Perth skyline in the far background. The tower is in the Perth suburb of Hamerslsy, in the northern part of the city. 
photo from ABC.net.au

A radio station I used to listen to -- at least when they had a shortwave relay -- is leaving the AM band for FM in late February this year, after 94 years on the AM band.

6WF, Perth, Australia's main ABC Radio outlet, is being moved to FM as the ABC determines that with more and more cars being FM only, taking 6WF off the AM band is the best way to serve listeners. The switchover from AM to FM will occur on February 23rd.

6WF-AM has been on the air in the Perth region for 94 years, as the transmitter installation and tower date from 1934.

For those who don't know it, Perth is a large city of two million people on the Indian Ocean, and it's the capital of Western Australia, Australia's largest state by area. Perth is also known as the 'most isolated capital city in the world', being that it is farther from other metros than nearly every other national or state capital on the planet.

A CITY WITH AN EXTENSIVE MUSICAL HISTORY
Perth is the city where late AC/DC singer Bon Scott lived as a kid, after his family moved there from Kirriemuir in Scotland. He got his musical start there as a singer for the Valentines. The Australian rock band INXS also got their careers kickstarted in Perth (they were in Perth for 10 months, as the 'Vegetables'). The lead guitarist for the Divinyls, Mark McEntee, was from Perth, and the excellent Aussie glam rock band Supernaut were also from Perth.

I used to listen to 6WF back when I got my first good Shortwave radio, my Realistic DX-160, which was a Christmas gift. With that radio I listened to a lot of different stations, including Radio Australia, various Indonesian stations at night, 'tropical band' radio stations out of Venezuela and Columbia, and 6WF.

SHORTWAVE RELAY STATIONS FOR THE OUTBACK
How could I receive 6WF? Well, back in the day the ABC had several Shortwave outlets to serve the Outback and desert regions of the Australian interior, and being that more than half of Western Australia is desert, with a lot of isolated mining towns, other small towns and farming and other 'stations' in the interior, SW was the best way to reach those people. 

Queensland also had a Shortwave relay station, VLW4, which I think I heard once. It was used to beam ABC radio to the Outback from Brisbane. The Western Australian shortwave relay came in better here, I think because they beamed their signal more in my direction.

The 6WF shortwave relay was officially called VLW6, and their frequency was in the 31 Meter Band. One night (early a.m., actually), I heard a DJ on 6WF play a bunch of music by the La De Da's (including their cool song 'The Place'), and another night he played almost half an album by the band called Flowers, which changed their name to Icehouse.

The transmitter cable for 50KW AM station 6WF in Perth.
photo from ABC.net.au
The shortwave relay station always identified as '6WF/6WN'. The relationship between the two ABC stations I never clearly understood, but 6WF was the main one.

During the early 2000's when I discovered online radio I 'tuned in' to 6WF a few times, as by then they'd switched off the Shortwave relay.

Of course, today Australia has no Shortwave presence at all, aside from the Reach Out Australia religious station in Kununurra, in the Kimberley district of NW Australia. They broadcast religious programs to ethnic minorities in Southern and SE Asia. I posted a short article on Reach Out Australia and my hearing them a couple years ago, which you can read here.:


The ABC, thanks to the Australian government, pulled the plug on Radio Australia about 6 or 7 years ago, in a move that not only saddened SWL's all over the world, but maddened rural people in the Australian Outback who depended on Radio Australia for news and information.

It's another case of governments not caring about serving people in rural areas. The US took a similar move with pulling the plug on VOA, which took America's message to rural people in Africa and Asia.

You can read the ABC.net.au article on 6WF here.:

IN OTHER LIFE....
The weather here has taken a turn for the cold again, after a two week respite. The barometer has fallen below 30 inches of mercury, which usually means a low pressure system, which usually means more rain, which usually means higher temperatures in Winter. But that's clearly not the case.

I recently rediscovered my Dad's old barometer -- it's a Stellar brand barometer made in what was then called Western Germany. It seems to be reasonably accurate, despite its age. It's been through a bit over the years. An uncle who was staying with us in the 1980's put it in the trash in a drunken rage, and my former GF shoved it in a box of junk because she didn't know that a) it had been in my family for years, and b) I don't think she really knew what a barometer was.

I'm still not sure if you can forecast the weather by reading the changes in a barometer, but it's still cool to track it.

ON SHORTWAVE, THERE IS NOTHING ON BUT HF STOCK TRADERS
OK, I may be exaggerating here a bit, but not really. High Frequency Stock traders -- a.k.a. 'HFT' stations -- get a lot of criticism from hams and SWL's, but they really aren't taking over the SW spectrum. How can they, especially when the SW spectrum is increasingly nothing but static?

And if you look at the actual number of these HFT stations, there really aren't that many of them. Those stations do put out a pretty solid signal, though, and even when the ionosphere is DOWN, their signals still seem to be UP. At least one of them I've heard recently blasts out a massive signal.

HFT aside, radio here has been a bit dull lately. The Shortwave radio conditions have been absolutely abysmal. Last night I tuned around and there was nothing but static, a couple weak ham radio operators out of Oregon, Nevada and California that I couldn't read through the static, and a digital HFT transmission on 6838 kHz, which was around S3 out of 5, signal-wise. I have no idea where this HFT station is located. Most of the known HFT transmitters are in Illinois, but this signal is too strong for Illinois. I only know it as an HFT (High Frequency Trading) station because signals experts on HFU and elsewhere have said the 6838 Digital hash is HFT. 

One of them said that the HFT Digital signal I'm hearing on 6838 kHz, which slams all my radios with S3-S5 signals (even my little XHDATA D-221 picks that signal up -- just off the whip!), may be located in Ritzville, WA -- a small town in Eastern Washington, about 250 miles east of me, in the middle of desert and wheat country.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
EDIT to ADD: About a week after posting this article, I did some research, and I do not think the Digital hash station I'm hearing on 6838 kHz is in Ritzville, as I've looked at the maps online and the FCC address for the Ritzville experimental station shows nothing but sagebrush, and a few curious looking spots that look like boreholes. No towers, no shadows that would indicate towers -- no powerlines, no access roads, really. 

So I don't know what it is I'm hearing on 6838 kHz. It is, so far, a mystery. It also might not even be HFT.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

This begs the question: if that station is indeed in Ritzville, why is a High Frequency Trading station located in WA state, and slamming the airwaves with a signal that is estimated to be 400 KW PEP? Are they sending trading data to Japan? South Korea? Taiwan?

Who knows.

When the station on 6838 is not transmitting Digital hash, it often just puts out a carrier. There is another carrier, on 6938, that I often hear. I've not yet heard a digital signal on that frequency.

Down below the 40 Meter ham band is a lot of interesting stuff -- pirates, Indonesian chanters, Latin American fishermen, mystery carriers and military signals, Chinese OTHR, and now, apparently, High Frequency Trading stations. Of course, you'll only hear most of this when the ionosphere is UP. When the ionosphere is DOWN, you don't hear anything except the strongest signals.

And most of Shortwave is basically dead right now. And we're supposedly still in a peak solar cycle period. I'm not buying it, of course. I've said before that this Solar cycle sucks, and I think the relatively dead SW conditions back that assertion up.

EUV is down, and eUV is what makes the ionosphere ionized, and according to NASA, the ionosphere is less ionized than it was in 1995 -- eUV ionization has been consequently dropping since then, and who knows when it will come back?

I've got no idea about that.... Solutions to that problem are far above my pay grade. :-)

BACK TO MEDIUM WAVE
Consequently, I'm getting back into my first radio 'love', MW DXing. Now, the ionosphere sucking also affects the AM band, but there still is plenty to hear on the AM band, especially if you have a good radio and a loop antenna. After a night of hearing nothing but static and unreadable signals (and HFT digital hash) on Shortwave, I grabbed my trusty Sangean PR-D4W and tuned the AM band. It was like night and day. 

I didn't hear any super DX, but I listened to KOAC out of Corvallis, Oregon (550 kHz), with a BBC special on the Indian economy, and then heard some music on KSWB, Seaside OR (840 kHz) and some cool classic hits on CKOR Penticton BC (800 kHz). And it was all in high fidelity, as the PR-D4W has the best sound and performance of any MW radio I own.

You don't even really need an external loop with the PR-D4W, but a loop like the AN-200 will add a db or so, which helps with the weaker stations.

DSP SSB Radios -- they work really well
I'm working on an article about 3 DSP/SSB radios I bought last year -- the Tecsun PL-330, XHDATA D808 and Raddy RF760. My PL-330 has gotten heavy use over the past year, but I've noticed that it does overload, especially on the CB band, and when there is strong, pulse-type RFI. 

A 150 ohm resister clipped between the wire antenna and the Tecsun's whip antenna seems to have cured most of that. I'm hoping the issue (bleedover, blocking, AGC over-reacting to changes in signals, unexpected whistles here and there) is just overloading. We'll see.

I'm also working on an article about a music scene that rose and sort of fell -- the Norway pop music scene, which seemed to really put out a lot of great music ni 2014. That article will come along in 3-4 weeks.

I'll close this article with a great track by the NZ/Oz band The La De Da's, who -- when they made this track -- were headed by guitarist Kevin Borich, who then went on to have a lengthy solo career in Australia.

This is the track I heard on 6WF one warm summer night. "The Place".:

And this track by FLOWERS, the band that became ICEHOUSE, was played a few years later on, some time before 6WF's Shortwave relay went off the air. The song is 'Skin".:

This track, one of my favorites by ICEHOUSE, was not played on 6WF, but it's one of Icehouse's better tracks, from 1984, 'Sidewalk". It's got a kickass bass line and guitar chords, and really cool use of the Fairlight Computer.:

Until next time, stay warm, friends (for those of you in the Northern Hemisphere). 

Peace.
C.C., Feb. 19th, 2026.

ADDENDUM, February 25th, 2026:
As I added -- in blue -- in this article, I am not sure the Digital hash station I'm hearing on 6838 kHz is High Frequency Trading, and I'm certain it's NOT in Ritzville, WA, because I looked at the online maps -- both Google and Bing maps -- and see nothing but a flat plot of land with sagebrush at the location where the FCC license address says the Ritzville experimental station is. So I do not know what I'm hearing. But it's digital, and it's noisy, and it runs at various hours during the day, for hours at a time. The typical transmission is around 20-30 seconds of digital hash, with the beginning of it having quick 'pulses', and the ending of it having even quicker 'pulses', and there are one second stops, roughly, between the transmissions.

There are no CW / Morse Code ID's whatsoever -- something that apparently is required by the FCC for HFT stations. So this station may not be HFT at all, because in over an hour of listening to this digital racket on my DX-440 this evening, I have not heard one Morse Code ID.

So where, and what, is this station? Who does it transmit to? Japan? Asia? The Pacific in general, if it happens to be military? Who knows?

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Another Newspaper in Peril -- The WASHINGTON POST lays off 30% of its staff

The tower of the Washington Post, one of America's 3 or 4 most important newspapers (the other ones being the NY Times, LA Times, and Wall Street Journal). The paper that brought down a President in 1972 is in financial trouble.
(photo courtesy CBC.ca and Reuters)

As the internet and social media gain more and more influence over all information and news dissemination, Newspapers continue to decline in importance and revenues, and just today one of the two or three most influential newspapers in the US has announced that they are laying off one third of their workforce: The Washington Post is laying off 30% of their news staff.

This comes after previous rounds of 400 layoffs over the past three years.

You can read more about this in the CBC News article linked here.:

This comes a year or more after the Los Angeles Times laid off 110 staff -- 20% of its workforce -- because they have been losing revenues. The New York Times, the third big national newspaper, has added staff, but only because of its Games and Wirecutter, non-news divisions.

Here is a link to the NY Times' "Games" division page, where there are links to the Crossword, and other games like Dominos and a Spelling Bee game, that the paper publishes. As you can tell, the Games are NOT part of the News division.

NY Times' Wirecutter is a "product review website" which is also NOT News related. You can read about it here.:

As you can tell, these two NY Times sites have NOTHING to do with News. 

Now, the NY Times' branching out to being a gaming platform as well as a product review website is smart business -- but it is NEWS? Nope. It's smart yes, but not news. And although the NY Times appears to actually be making money off their news division -- they made $805 million last year, with over 12 million subscribers, they have tuned into outliers.

The general shape of the newspaper industry is that it is in decline.

In the case of the Washington Post, even having 2 million subscribers isn't keeping the paper from having to lay off staff. Two million subscribers seems like a big number until you compare that to the numbers of subscribers and followers that popular podcasts like Joe Rogan have.

Even the NY Times' 12.8 million subscribers doesn't come close to Joe Rogan's 14.5 million followers on Spotify and 16.4 million YouTube channel subscribers. Tucker Carlson, the famed ex-Fox News talking head, has 5.16 million YouTube channel subscribers. Just one guy, with about half the reach of the NY Times, and Carlson's only been on YT for 3-4 years. Even some OnlyFans influencers have as many subscribers as the NY Times and WA Post.

It's a tough time for legacy media in the US, but even tougher for one of the most 'legacy' news media out there: Newspapers.

Three years ago, I posted an article about the 2000+ local newspapers across the US that shut down in 2022. I posted that article just after New Year's, 2023. You can read it here.:

According to an article in Fortune magazine, as well as some surveys, over 30% of newspapers in the US have shut down since 2005. In fact, 48,000 journalists lost their jobs since the early 2010's -- over two thirds of the journalists that had employment in the 2000's.

Newspapers in the US have been in trouble for a long time. The first big hit was when online classified ads -- introduced in the mid 2000's -- removed about 40% of most newspapers' revenues within a year or two, because the free, online ads killed off the newspaper classified ads. Then, as the internet became the go-to for print media, newspapers across the US started losing even more subscribers and revenues.

At the time, online news was free, for the most part. Even today, many news aggregators like MSN and Yahoo provide free news. There are online newspapers that have free news -- it's loaded with video ads and some pop-ups, but the news is still free. With many people wary of paying so much for monthly subscriptions, it's no wonder that they don't want to pay for an online newspaper anymore. 

Add to that the biases seemingly inherent in some of today's "journalism", and the fact that a lot of Americans simply do not trust the news media enough to want to pay for news, it's part of a deadly spiral that is socking it to Newspapers, and other news media are also feeling the pinch. Cable TV news viewership is down -- it's aging out. It's the same with network TV news.

Even being funded by one of the world's richest men -- Jeff Bezos, in the case of the Washington Post -- can't save jobs at a nationally important newspaper, as that newspaper -- like all news media -- as competing with every podcast and 'news' social media website out there. The LA Times is owned by a billionaire. That didn't keep him from laying off 110 staff 2-3 years ago.

So what does this mean for the Washington Post? I think it will survive. But it will not be in the same position that it was in the early 1970's when its reporting brought down a President. 

Newspapers are dying. In 20 years, there will only be a handful left, and they will probably be funded by other interests -- the same way that Radio Sports-talk networks are increasingly backed by Sports betting and gambling. Newspapers will have to develop wide, online strategies (like the NY Times has done) to survive the age of social media, TikTok 'news', podcasts, and the internet.

We are one quarter into the 21st Century, and this is definitely the 'Digital Age'. The internet not only has altered the music industry, film industry, and Radio, but it has altered TV, and the News industry. 

Everything is now just another form of internet content. 

And AI, of course, is going to push that trend even further.

Whether those of us who were born in the previous Century like it or not, it is fact. It's just the way it is.

IN OTHER LIFE...
In other life, the weather here has taken a turn for the better. It is no longer below freezing outside at night, which means the unheated rooms in my house are no longer 48-49 degrees F. Yes, some rooms are unheated, because heat costs money. My internet is flakey -- the phone company says it's the modem/router going south. It's only 2-3 years old, but I guess they don't last as long as they used to. I'm still waiting on a new one to show up, then I have to go through the process of getting it online and hoping it is going to fix the internet cut-outs.

Right now I just take a lot of breaks. It seems to keep the router from re-setting all the time.

My cat Bear is getting more used to me. She no longer hides if there is a strange noise in the room (like me opening a plastic trash bag to clean her litter box -- she doesn't like some noises). 

The SW and MW DX conditions have improved somewhat. I hope it holds for another year, before it all dives into a Solar minimum. This morning I heard 11 Meter sideband stations from all over the Eastern US, as well as Arizona and California. A few days ago I heard Brazilians on 27425 USB and 27435 USB, which was cool. At night the conditions on the lower bands aren't all that great, though. The 40M ham band is often very spare of signals, and it's the same way with the 80M ham band. 

Some of it may be ionospheric conditions -- and some of it might be that hams just don't get on the air so much anymore. It's hard to tell.

Until next time, my friends,
Peace.

C.C. February 4th, 2026.