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Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
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Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
"J G Miller" wrote in message ... On Mon, 08 Mar 2010 11:34:52 -0800, wrote: My dad used to say that my name would be in a big book and one day 'they'd' come for me. No wonder you were a prime suspect in your white van by that oil refinery!!! I remember receiving Irish Nationalist pirate stations at the top end of MW in the early '70. Don't think they QSLd though ;-) -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
alexander.keys1 wrote:
On 3 Mar, 18:10, J G Miller wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2010 17:05:35 +0100, Martin wrote: They have always had that via steam radio. To an extent yes, but that was always regarded as being somehow unpatriotic and the neighbors, if they found out, might report you to the police because they actually believed it was illegal and not covered by the wireless receiving licence. The appearance of long wires or large HF arrays in the back garden usually prompted gossip of being a foreign agent or just mentally deranged. Lots of people listened to shortwave in the Cold War, but are only now admitting to it... it was considered to be a bit naughty at the time, plenty of SW radio's in the shops then though. You didn't need a special outside aerial either, plenty stations came in just with the built-in rod, like you use now for FM or DAB. There are still some SW stations around today, such as China Radio International, which seems to be blatant pro-PRC propaganda, and Voice of Russia is good for a non-US view of world events. Some? There are many, many more than just some. You must remember that the world is not yet a unified planet. Most countries of the world have their own views and try still want to impose those views on the rest of the world. In a lot of cases SW radio is the most viable way to do that. As far as antennas go, there are thousands of serious sw listeners around the world and in fact it has becomel quite a serious hobby for a lot of people, most of which will use a decent antenna. Inbuilt jobs are only "adequate" for really strong signals at best. I have a 100+ foot wire in my garden and I can pull in quite weak signals, even from Australia. There are still some overthrows from the cold war though, and some countries still use them today for various reasons. They are the "numbers stations". Reasons for their use are still not fully understood but they still sound quite sinister today. Maybe they are still used for sinister purposes, maybe not :o). Still fascinating to hear though. MC |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
On Mar 8, 9:13*pm, J G Miller wrote:
On Mon, 08 Mar 2010 11:34:52 -0800, wrote: My dad used to say that my name would be in a big book and one day 'they'd' come for me. No wonder you were a prime suspect in your white van by that oil refinery!!! Oh, don't remind me of that episode! Bill |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
"Brian Gregory [UK]" wrote in message ... "alexander.keys1" wrote in message ... There are still some SW stations around today, such as China Radio International, which seems to be blatant pro-PRC propaganda, and Voice of Russia is good for a non-US view of world events. Still some ???? There are still hundreds. There are nowhere as many as there used to be. Several countries have scaled down their shortwave broadcasting substantially. SRI was shut down a few years ago. VOA and VoRussia are hard to come by. |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
On 9 Mar, 00:12, Java Jive wrote:
I don't listen to either of them, but then neither do I listen to most mainstream radio stations either. *However, I'm much more likely to listen to Alba or Asian Network than Radio 1 or 1 Extra, or any commercial station. I thought BBC Alba was a TV channel? I suppose you can still "listen" to it. Cheers, David. |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
"Mr Benn" wrote in message ... "Brian Gregory [UK]" wrote in message ... "alexander.keys1" wrote in message ... There are still some SW stations around today, such as China Radio International, which seems to be blatant pro-PRC propaganda, and Voice of Russia is good for a non-US view of world events. Still some ???? There are still hundreds. There are nowhere as many as there used to be. Several countries have scaled down their shortwave broadcasting substantially. SRI was shut down a few years ago. VOA and VoRussia are hard to come by. Gosh I can even remember the address without looking it up SBC CH-3000 Bern 16 Switzerland Here's a question: does anyone remember Eddie Startz's program "Happy Station" on Radio Nederland -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
"Graham." wrote in message ... "Mr Benn" wrote in message ... "Brian Gregory [UK]" wrote in message ... "alexander.keys1" wrote in message ... There are still some SW stations around today, such as China Radio International, which seems to be blatant pro-PRC propaganda, and Voice of Russia is good for a non-US view of world events. Still some ???? There are still hundreds. There are nowhere as many as there used to be. Several countries have scaled down their shortwave broadcasting substantially. SRI was shut down a few years ago. VOA and VoRussia are hard to come by. Gosh I can even remember the address without looking it up SBC CH-3000 Bern 16 Switzerland Here's a question: does anyone remember Eddie Startz's program "Happy Station" on Radio Nederland were they on drugs? ...... |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
"Graham." wrote in message
... "Mr Benn" wrote in message ... "Brian Gregory [UK]" wrote in message ... "alexander.keys1" wrote in message ... There are still some SW stations around today, such as China Radio International, which seems to be blatant pro-PRC propaganda, and Voice of Russia is good for a non-US view of world events. Still some ???? There are still hundreds. There are nowhere as many as there used to be. Several countries have scaled down their shortwave broadcasting substantially. SRI was shut down a few years ago. VOA and VoRussia are hard to come by. Gosh I can even remember the address without looking it up SBC CH-3000 Bern 16 Switzerland Here's a question: does anyone remember Eddie Startz's program "Happy Station" on Radio Nederland No, but I listened a lot to his successor on Happy Station.. I think he was called Tom Meyers. -- Brian Gregory. (In the UK) To email me remove the letter vee. |
Cold War SW radio, was BBC 6 and Asian axe
Graham. wrote:
"Mr Benn" wrote in message ... "Brian Gregory [UK]" wrote in message ... "alexander.keys1" wrote in message ... There are still some SW stations around today, such as China Radio International, which seems to be blatant pro-PRC propaganda, and Voice of Russia is good for a non-US view of world events. Still some ???? There are still hundreds. There are nowhere as many as there used to be. Several countries have scaled down their shortwave broadcasting substantially. SRI was shut down a few years ago. VOA and VoRussia are hard to come by. Gosh I can even remember the address without looking it up SBC CH-3000 Bern 16 Switzerland Here's a question: does anyone remember Eddie Startz's program "Happy Station" on Radio Nederland Yep and Radio Sweden's address 10 4 10, Stockholm, Sweden |
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