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Messages - KaySeeks

Pages: 1 ... 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 [61] 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 ... 84
901
1918 - "Lay Lady, Lay"
1915 - Announcements in Dutch. There is now a carrier is now on 6259.2 KHz.
1929 - ID and email address (hotmail) given in English.
2019 - Still on the air.

902
1909 - Dutch song with male vocals and synthesizer in the background.
1924 - The Scorpions
1952 - Checked back and the signal is gone.

903
1906 UTC - Kiss, "Shock Me (Put On Your Black Leather)"
1912 UTC - Dutch Schlager-type song with male and female vocals
1922 UTC - Pink Floyd, "The Wall"
1935 UTC - ID "Music of the Eighties. This is (?) Radio."
1939 UTC - Announcement in Dutch, sounding like "Radio Monferanz"
1945 UTC - Email address @europe.com given in English.
1950 UTC - Email address given in German. Into "Do You Want to Funk?"
1958 UTC - "Gloria" but in a language other than English.
2002 UTC - Simple Minds, "Alive and Kicking"
2004 UTC - "We are going to change (something)..... Stand by please..." Carrier disappears for a few minutes.
2008 UTC - Carrier is back and resume the song.
2017 UTC - Listener greetings, Rick from Austria, etc. Two more songs.
2015 UTC - Dance remix of "Don't Bring Me Down".
2031 UTC _ "This is Quadzilla Radio closing down" in English and Dutch.

904
Techno music. Carrier gone? at 1925 UTC.

905
Weak carrier with low modulation noted here. Presumed to be Coast FM but signal is too weak to make much of the modulation. We can wait it out and see what develops.

906
Hi, I think he meant one Jean Paul Juncker, the President of the European Commission :)

Or https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junkers

907
Signal noted shortly after 1700 UTC but not at 1650 UTC. Assumed that they signed on at 1700 UTC. SINPO 33333 at 1700 UTC in Italy at the moment.

1750 UTC - Much better reception noted. SINPO 34443.

EDIT: Corrected time stamps. Sorry.

1832 UTC - Usual computerized ID. Announced they are on "Six thousand, two hundred seventy-five Kilocycles". (I assume used "Kilocycles", rather than "KiloHertz", to complete the retro theme. :D ) I checked on that frequency and nothing heard there.

1843 UTC - Dead air and signal has dropped very low.
1844 UTC - Signal improving.
1858 UTC - Checked again and the music is back.

908
Peskies / UK Peskies 5744 KHz 2105 UTC 25 July 2018
« on: July 25, 2018, 2109 UTC »
Roundtable conversation of three or four ops in English with UK accents. Complaining about the "fucking Spaniards" and the "fucking Frenchies" fishing in certain areas. Complaining about Filipino crew members and anybody else. Typical salty sailor language.

Data station opened up nearby, totally obliterating them.

909
Presuming it's The Ghoul but too weak for good copy.

910
SINPO 22222 in Italy.

2043 UTC - UK-accented announcer. Email address given. "Thank you very much for listening. I will leave you with this song..." Something about Alaska?
2049 UTC - TX off.

911
UTE QRM on 6286-6289 KHz is pretty bad so listening on LSB. Usual programming.

ID at 1929 UTC with two FM frequencies announced.

912
Presumed but no ID yet. SINPO 25222 at the moment in Italy.

1922 UTC - Announcements between songs but signal too weak and fading too much to fully copy.
1940 UTC - Data station open up right on top of them, totally blocking reception for about 30 seconds, just as an advert was starting.  :D
2030 UTC - Signal has improved a little over an hour ago. Clear ID heard. "Zeh-nith Classic Rock" with a North American accent. The guy recording the jingles must be a Canuck.  :P ;D
2101 UTC - Start of a syndicated show strictly on Pink Floyd. Jeepers. There's enough material for a weekly show that isn't repetitious?

913
Average signal from them today, SINPO 35444 at 1845 UTC.

1853 UTC - "When You're Counting the Stars Alone". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fCNBM-YDMhE
1857 UTC - Old advert for Colgate toothpaste.

914
General Radio Discussion / Re: H.R.5709 - Pirate Radio Act
« on: July 25, 2018, 1743 UTC »
And that would differ from which piece of legislation passed in the last 100 or so years?

 ;) Now THAT'S a hot take....

915
So, good signal strength (good SNR) and all receive locations evenly distributed around the target and roughly the same distance from the target can yield very good results, skywave or not. 

Yes, in fact back around the time that you wrote this, I realized that I had gravitated toward an understanding that one RX being much closer or farther away than the others would skew the results. I had more-or-less come to a belief of exactly what you say here - equidistant RXs are optimal - through trial and error.

Of course, this is more complicated if you don't know where the TX is (which is the point of the whole exercise). You use an iterative process to narrow it down. However, even with this knowledge, things can and will go wrong.

Because of my belief in "robust" solutions to things, I like to attempt to achieve basically the same location result with a mostly or completely different set of RXs. If it's a correct solution, I believe that you should achieve a corroborating result. If the RXs are roughly equidistant, I have been able to achieve a similar result this way, which is reassuring.

Sometimes I try to test it to be sure that it is leading me to the right solution by picking RXs that are not centered on the previous result, perhaps not surrounded by the RXs at all. The hope is that it at least tells me that the TX location is somewhere off in the direction of the previous result, i.e., corroborating. Unfortunately, this works maybe 50% of the time. The other 50% of the time, I get a completely different outcome that is also equidistant from those RXs in use for that second run, nowhere near the previous result and not a result that says “No, no. You are headed in the wrong direction.”

If you think about the implications of this, that is what makes the process of using TDoA on an unknown TX very difficult. It is very easy to be lead astray.

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