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Topics - skeezix

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2866
Shortwave Broadcast / NHK World 9710 kHz AM 10 April 2016 1720Z
« on: April 10, 2016, 2000 UTC »
1959Z 25422 S5 YL in English giving broadcast information. Signing off.
2000Z Off air



Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2867
Shortwave Broadcast / Firedrake 9745 kHz AM 10 April 2016 1923 UTC
« on: April 10, 2016, 1923 UTC »
1923Z 35443 S7 Only hearing the firedrake, no other stations.
2001Z 35443 S7 Still going (no top of the hour break)
2023Z 35443 S7 Continues...





Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2868
Shortwave Broadcast / VOA 15580 kHz AM 10 April 2016 1902Z
« on: April 10, 2016, 1903 UTC »
1902Z 45444 S7 VOA News in English. Decent signal, with a little fading.
1914Z 45444 S7 Music. Tori Kelly Featuring Big Sean "Hollow (DJ Mustard Remix)
1919Z 45444 S7 Demi Lovato "Really Don't Care"




Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2869
1856Z 45444 S8 Romanian folk music
1857Z 45444 S8 OM & YL talking in Romanian
1858Z 45444 S8 More folk music
1900Z 45444 S8 Time pips & start of news.



Persues SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2870
13720 (// 11945 // 15445 (both of these are far weaker) - 1720Z)
1720Z 35432 S6 OM speaking Japanese with music (classical?)
1741Z 35433 S7 OM speaking Japanese
1742Z 35433 S7 Music
1754Z 34433 S7 More music. Also some QRM 13723-13450. Bursts of noise then a sweeping tone. Bursts of noise of varying length. Luckily, 13710 went off at 1755, so switched to SAM+LSB to hear uninterrupted music.
1800Z 35433 S7 Time pips & OM talking in Japanese.
1803Z 35433 S7 OM still talking. The noise in the USB is gone (unknown if faded out or it stopped because top of the hour).
1808Z 35433 S7 More music. According to Shazam: 三波春夫 "チャンチキおけさ"  (Haruo Minami "Of tub Chanchiki")
1812Z 35433 S7 三波春夫 "トッチャカ人生"  /  Haruo Minami "Totchaka life"
1816Z 35433 S7 三波春夫 "大利根無情" / Haruo Minami  "Otone heartless"
1845Z 15431 S5 Signal has faded into the noise. Still can see a carrier & occasionally hear audio.

11945 kHz:
1845Z: 35433 S6 11945 is doing much better than 13720. 15445 is getting wiped out by a station on 15440)
1849Z: 35433 S6 三波春夫 "船方さんょ" / Haruo Minami "Funakata's Yo"
1900Z: Off air.






Perseus with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop.

2871
Shortwave Broadcast / Firedrake 11610 kHz AM 10 April 2016 1655Z
« on: April 10, 2016, 1701 UTC »
1655Z: 31433 S8 Firedrake jamming another station. Both were about equal strength.
1700Z: Both stations off the air right at the top of the hour.




Perseus with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2872
1530Z 25432 S6 IS + announcer in English.
1537Z 15431 S5 Music still going, but signal fading a bit.
1549Z 15411 S5 Can hear male announcer, but can't make out what he's saying as signal is in the noise.


Playing usual music at the beginning. Not a great signal, but better than on 11710 which is even weaker.





Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+ loop

2873
The Mighty KBC coming in strong (45544) on 6040 playing music.

Uncle Eric mentioned that starting May 1st, they're moving to 9925 kHz.






Perseus SDR with Wellbrook ALA-1530S+

2874
http://www.arrl.org/news/sbe-urges-fcc-to-improve-medium-wave-noise-environment

03/22/2016
The Society of Broadcast Engineers (SBE) has told the FCC that the regulatory agency needs to take another tack in its efforts to tackle AM revitalization. If the FCC takes the SBE’s advice, the result could be less noise in the MF and HF Amateur Radio bands. In comments the SBE filed in response to an FCC Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Notice of Inquiry (MB 13-249) proposing ways to enhance the viability of the AM broadcast service, the SBE said the Commission must “commit to a regulatory plan which, over time, will reduce the levels of man-made noise in the MF bands, and more broadly in the bands below 30 MHz.” In comments it filed earlier in the proceeding, the SBE pointed out that “AM radio in particular is susceptible to interference from electronic devices of all types,” and that ambient noise on the AM band is only bound to get worse with further proliferation of noise-generating electronic devices, including certain lighting devices regulated under FCC Part 15 and Part 18 rules.

“[T]he only source of regulatory reform that has a meaningful chance to positively affect the noise floor over time are regulations that create obligations on manufacturers and importers and dealers, prior to the point that the consumer or user of the device or system comes into possession of it, and before it is deployed,” the SBE said. The SBE said that while the FCC has strongly supported unlicensed low-power RF devices over the years, it “apparently does not have a clear understanding of the aggregate effects” of these devices on the MF noise environment. In addition, the power grid has expanded, imposing its own family of electrical noises on the radio spectrum.

“Much unintentional interference is local in nature, but the cumulative impact can be extensive,” the SBE told the FCC. “In the case of power line interference, the impact is extreme on automobile radios, whose travel path often parallels electric distribution and transmission lines.” The SBE referenced a consulting engineering firm’s investigation showing that the signal of one 50 kW station was unlistenable just 4 miles from the transmitter on a car radio.

“The Commission does not now have, and has never had, a complete understanding of ambient RF noise levels and trends over time,” the SBE said. “Furthermore, the Commission has uneven regulations and policies governing noise-generating intentional, incidental, and unintentional radiators; and its enforcement efforts in this context have been, and are, both impractical and insufficient.”

The SBE urged the FCC to better enforce some existing regulations and develop new ones to address ambient noise in the existing AM band. “It is obvious that any interference management plan…has to be based on rules which limit RF noise before it becomes an issue, not post hoc, and those rules have to be enforced,” the SBE said.

As a start, the SBE suggested, the FCC might consider establishing limits on the amount of noise that Part 15 unintentional radiators, such as plasma televisions, can radiate directly. Only conducted emission limits now exist. The SBE also cited “substantial numbers” of harmful interference complaints from Amateur Radio stations, stemming from various lighting devices. Some big box stores, the SBE pointed out, have been selling commercial lighting ballasts to residential consumers. The FCC also should “substantially increase” its enforcement in power line interference cases.

“There are literally dozens of complaints from Amateur Radio operators of severe interference from power line noise annually,” the SBE said. “Power line radiation in the HF and MF amateur allocations will, in most cases, directly translate to preclusive noise in the AM broadcast band.”

2875
http://hackaday.com/2016/03/02/google-is-building-a-100kw-radio-transmitter-at-a-spaceport-and-no-one-knows-why/

You can find the funniest things in public government documents. There’s always ample evidence your local congress critter is working against the interests of their constituency, nation, and industry controlled by the commission they’re chairperson of. Rarely, though, do you find something surprising, and rarer still does it portend some sort of experiments conducted by Google at a spaceport in New Mexico.

In a publication released last week, Google asked the FCC to treat some information relating to radio experiments as confidential. These experiments involve highly directional and therefore high power transmissions at 2.5 GHz, 5.8GHz, 24GHz, 71-76GHz, and 81-86GHz. These experiments will take place at Spaceport America, a 12,000 foot runway in the middle of New Mexico occasionally used by SpaceX, Virgin Galactic, and now Google.

For the most part, this document only tells the FCC that Google won’t be causing harmful interference in their radio experiments. There few other details, save for what bands and transmitters Google will be using and an experimental radio license call sign (WI9XZE) that doesn’t show up in the FCC database.

Of the few details listed in the documents, one thing does pop out as exceptionally odd: a 70-80 GHz transmitter with an effective radiated power (ERP) 96,411 W. That’s close enough to 100 kilowatts to call it as such. This is the maximum effective radiated power of the highest power FM stations in the US, but radio stations are omnidirectional, whereas Google is using very high gain antennas with a beam width of less than half a degree. The actual power output of this transmitter is a mere half watt.

The best guess for what Google is doing out in the New Mexico desert is Project Skybender, a project to use millimeter waves to bring faster Internet to everyone. There aren’t many details, but there is a lot of speculation ranging from application in low Earth orbit to something with Google Loon.

2876
Huh? / A Town Is Building a Public Beer Fountain to Attract Tourists
« on: February 12, 2016, 1219 UTC »
http://time.com/money/4217615/beer-fountain-tourist-attraction/

Zalec, a small town in central Slovenia, is famed locally for the hop farms that surround it in what is known as the “valley of green gold.” Soon, however, according to reporting from the BBC, the town is likely be known for something else: a public beer fountain.

The project, which proponents say will create Europe’s first public beer fountain, gently gurgling local brews rather than water, has no set completion date. Once completed, visitors will pay around $6.75 for 10.5 fl oz, served in a commemorative mug, of one of a variety of locally produced beers.

The cost of the fountain—projected to be about $400,000—will be half financed by the city, the rest covered by private donations, according tot he town mayor Jako Kos. Some locals have grumbled that the money could be better spent elsewhere in the community, but the mayor insists the fountain will draw money-spending visitors. “It’s true the fountain won’t be cheap,” he said. “But it’s a development project, a tourism product.”


2877
http://culture.pl/en/article/how-much-do-you-know-about-polish-history-quiz

Using nanometer-scale components, researchers have demonstrated the first optical rectenna, a device that combines the functions of an antenna and a rectifier diode to convert light directly into DC current.

Based on multiwall carbon nanotubes and tiny rectifiers fabricated onto them, the optical rectennas could provide a new technology for photodetectors that would operate without the need for cooling, energy harvesters that would convert waste heat to electricity - and ultimately for a new way to efficiently capture solar energy.

In the new devices, developed by engineers at the Georgia Institute of Technology, the carbon nanotubes act as antennas to capture light from the sun or other sources. As the waves of light hit the nanotube antennas, they create an oscillating charge that moves through rectifier devices attached to them. The rectifiers switch on and off at record high petahertz speeds, creating a small direct current.

Billions of rectennas in an array can produce significant current, though the efficiency of the devices demonstrated so far remains below one percent. The researchers hope to boost that output through optimization techniques, and believe that a rectenna with commercial potential may be available within a year.

"We could ultimately make solar cells that are twice as efficient at a cost that is ten times lower, and that is to me an opportunity to change the world in a very big way" said Baratunde Cola, an associate professor in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering at Georgia Tech. "As a robust, high-temperature detector, these rectennas could be a completely disruptive technology if we can get to one percent efficiency. If we can get to higher efficiencies, we could apply it to energy conversion technologies and solar energy capture."

The research, supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the Space and Naval Warfare (SPAWAR) Systems Center and the Army Research Office (ARO), is scheduled to be reported September 28 in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

Developed in the 1960s and 1970s, rectennas have operated at wavelengths as short as ten microns, but for more than 40 years researchers have been attempting to make devices at optical wavelengths. There were many challenges: making the antennas small enough to couple optical wavelengths, and fabricating a matching rectifier diode small enough and able to operate fast enough to capture the electromagnetic wave oscillations. But the potential of high efficiency and low cost kept scientists working on the technology.

"The physics and the scientific concepts have been out there," said Cola. "Now was the perfect time to try some new things and make a device work, thanks to advances in fabrication technology."

Using metallic multiwall carbon nanotubes and nanoscale fabrication techniques, Cola and collaborators Asha Sharma, Virendra Singh and Thomas Bougher constructed devices that utilize the wave nature of light rather than its particle nature. They also used a long series of tests - and more than a thousand devices - to verify measurements of both current and voltage to confirm the existence of rectenna functions that had been predicted theoretically. The devices operated at a range of temperatures from 5 to 77 degrees Celsius.

Fabricating the rectennas begins with growing forests of vertically-aligned carbon nanotubes on a conductive substrate. Using atomic layer chemical vapor deposition, the nanotubes are coated with an aluminum oxide material to insulate them. Finally, physical vapor deposition is used to deposit optically-transparent thin layers of calcium then aluminum metals atop the nanotube forest. The difference of work functions between the nanotubes and the calcium provides a potential of about two electron volts, enough to drive electrons out of the carbon nanotube antennas when they are excited by light.

In operation, oscillating waves of light pass through the transparent calcium-aluminum electrode and interact with the nanotubes. The metal-insulator-metal junctions at the nanotube tips serve as rectifiers switching on and off at femtosecond intervals, allowing electrons generated by the antenna to flow one way into the top electrode. Ultra-low capacitance, on the order of a few attofarads, enables the 10-nanometer diameter diode to operate at these exceptional frequencies.

Georgia Tech associate professor Baratunde Cola measures the power produced by converting green laser illumination to electricity using the carbon nanotube optical rectenna. Credit: Rob Felt, Georgia Tech

"A rectenna is basically an antenna coupled to a diode, but when you move into the optical spectrum, that usually means a nanoscale antenna coupled to a metal-insulator-metal diode," Cola explained. "The closer you can get the antenna to the diode, the more efficient it is. So the ideal structure uses the antenna as one of the metals in the diode - which is the structure we made."

The rectennas fabricated by Cola's group are grown on rigid substrates, but the goal is to grow them on a foil or other material that would produce flexible solar cells or photodetectors.

Cola sees the rectennas built so far as simple proof of principle. He has ideas for how to improve the efficiency by changing the materials, opening the carbon nanotubes to allow multiple conduction channels, and reducing resistance in the structures.

"We think we can reduce the resistance by several orders of magnitude just by improving the fabrication of our device structures," he said. "Based on what others have done and what the theory is showing us, I believe that these devices could get to greater than 40 percent efficiency."


2878
Shortwave Broadcast / The Mighty KBC 7375 kHz AM 6 September 2015 0000Z
« on: September 06, 2015, 1245 UTC »
They had a good signal when they came on at 0000Z, but two adjacent stations ~10 kHz on either side were causing a fair amount of problems. Made KBC very hard to listen to.



Yaesu FT-847 with homebrew PA0RDT Mini-Whip

2879
0000Z 55544 S9+10 The Giant Jukebox is on and sounding great. Dave Mason hosting.
0037Z 55544 S9+20 Played old IS from Radio Berlin.
0100Z 55544 S9+ Peter Quinn is in the radio speedboat and riding on the radio waves.
0107Z 55544 S9+ ABC "The Look of Love"
0120Z 55544 S9+ Genesis "Invisible Touch"
0124Z 55534 S9+ Nicoletta "Mamy Blue"
0200Z 55534 S9+ Uncle Eric now at the mic.




Yaesu FT-847 with homebrew PA0RDT Mini-Whip.

2880
Shortwave Broadcast / Art Bell July 21, 2015 0403 UTC
« on: July 21, 2015, 0407 UTC »
0403Z
WTWW: 5085 55555 S9+40 Very strong signal. Started about a minute late (but they started from the beginning)
CFRX: 6070   42233 S7 Can hear the show, but strong splatter from 6060.
WBCQ: 7490  45544 S9+ Good signal, a little noise.
WBCQ: 9330  35343 S7 Ok, but not great. A fair amount of noise.




Yaesu FT-847 with homebrew PA0RDT Mini-Whip


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