Experimental Station WI2XLQ will recreate 1906 Fessenden transmissions again this Holiday season

Canadian Reginald Aubrey Fessenden in his lab believed circa 1906 (Source: Radio Canada International)

(Source: ARRL News)

Experimental Station will Recreate 1906 Fessenden Transmissions

Experimental station WI2XLQ will be on the air on 486 kHz AM for the Reginald Fessenden commemorative transmission. Brian Justin, WA1ZMS, is the licensee. He will transmit for 24 hours starting at 2000 UTC on December 24, with a repeat transmission starting at 2000 UTC on December 31. Justin will use a homebrew 1921-era MOPA exciter with Heising modulation, followed by a modern 500-W linear. The transmission will be the same as in past years — two violin pieces that Fessenden claims to have played as one of the very first voice transmissions from his Brant Rock, Massachusetts, radio lab site. “While doubt remains that such a transmission ever took place, Fessenden did perform some crude voice transmissions over a few miles distance in early December near Washington, DC, as a demonstration for the US Navy,” Justin said. “So, perhaps some credit is due Fessenden for his efforts to transmit the human voice in an era of spark transmissions.”

If you would like more information about Brian Justin and WI2XLQ, check out our interview with him in 2013. Indeed, I successfully heard the 2013 WG2XFG broadcast and posted this audio clip on the Shortwave Radio Audio Archive.

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4 thoughts on “Experimental Station WI2XLQ will recreate 1906 Fessenden transmissions again this Holiday season

  1. John Ferro

    Very weak reception here on 486khz at approx 10pm est on the North East Coast of Florida near Daytona Beach. For a moment there I got the feeling of what the listeners felt like in 1903. This was very cool, I hope this tradition continues. John in Fla Ki4ucw

    Reply
  2. Brian W9IND

    If you’re unable to hear the broadcast from your QTH but would like to listen anyway, try the K1RA/KW4VA SDR online at http://kiwisdr.k1ra.us:8073/

    I’m not currently set up for that frequency at home, so I’ve been listening via K1RA since 0150 UTC today. Signal strength has varied widely but was fair to excellent between 0100 and 0110.

    The broadcast includes two repeating songs — including a violin version of “O Holy Night” — followed by station ID.

    Enjoy!

    Reply

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