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Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, Alan Roe, who shares his updated B-25 Holiday Programmes on Shortwave. Alan provides this amazing resource as a free PDF download.
Alan notes that this will be the final update that he shares for this 2026 Holiday season. If he finds that there’s a last-minute addition or correction, he’ll post any further updates to the schedule on this link.
Greetings all SWLing Post community, here’s more Imaginary Stations WNTR shows for the festive season just when you’re fed up with what’s on Christmas TV. The first is via shortwaveradio.de on Saturday 27th December 2025 at 1200 hrs UTC and then again on Sunday 28th December 2025 at 1000/1400 hrs UTC on 3975 kHz and 6160 kHz and 2200 UTC on 3975 kHz.
Expect all sorts of winter tunes, festive tunes and music to celebrate the end of the year. Turn your shortwave radio on and enjoy some pleasurable and warm tunes. There may be some egg nog left in the fridge if you’re lucky!
And there’s another instalment of WNTR on Wednesday 31st December 2025 at 0300 UTC on 9395 kHz via WRMI. Start your New Year’s Eve very early and enjoy the cosy sounds on WNTR!
For more information on all our shows, please write to us at [email protected] and check out our old shows at our Mixcloud page here.
Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor Roseanna, with Radio Northern Europe International, who shares this announcement about RNEI’s Yule Special 2025.
Radio Northern Europe International will once again mark the season with a special holiday broadcast, featuring festive programming created especially for shortwave listeners. If you enjoy seasonal specials, unique music selections, and hearing independent broadcasters put their own creative stamp on the holidays, this is one you won’t want to miss.
Full details, including broadcast times and frequencies, can be found at the link below:
Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, Alan Roe, who shares his updated B-25 Holiday Programmes on Shortwave. Alan provides this amazing resource as a free PDF download.
Attention all SWL’s! For those of you with a little extra free time over the holiday season, I would highly recommend having a look at two books that were written by a couple of very respected DXer’s from the past. They are both available on the Internet Archive and their respective links can be found below.
Shortwave Voices of the World by Dr. Richard E. Wood (1969)
I have mentioned this one before, but in case you missed it, you will find it here.
Newly uploaded, this one comes in two parts. Part One describes his early days and how his listening began, while Part 2 gets into the hobby in general.
Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor Bill Patalon for sharing this thoughtful NPR piece about Radio Dabanga—an Amsterdam-based broadcaster that serves as a lifeline for listeners in war-torn Sudan. Radio Dabanga is facing a funding crisis after major cuts to foreign aid, including U.S. Agency for International Development support.
For many Sudanese, Radio Dabanga has been one of the only reliable ways to receive verified information about safety, displacement, and daily developments as violence continues and local media infrastructure collapses. But with its budget shrinking and broadcasts reduced, the station’s future–and with it a rare independent voice for Sudanese listeners–is now uncertain.
This is not the sort of thing you might consider typical DX. One reporter traced a signal like the one I describe here to the innocuous utility box at the corner of his lot. No, it is not noise. It is an RF signal, essentially a shortwave station.
With the dearth of stations on the international shortwave bands, my attention often turns to the vast swaths of frequencies in between. These are still commonly referred to as “utility” bands, and were once themselves filled with industrial, marine, aviation, and military signals using all manner of transmission modes. Like the international shortwave bands, they are now mostly intergalactic space open to an occasional user.
Among these are the Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM) Bands. The ISM bands are defined by the ITU Radio Regulations. Individual countries use the bands in different ways. The table below shows the ISM bands within the shortwave spectrum. Besides these, there are ISM bands extending up through the gigahertz range.
Frequency
Band Width
Low
High
Center
6.765 MHz
6.795 MHz
6.78 MHz
30 kHz
13.553 MHz
13.567 MHz
13.56 MHz
14 kHz
26.957 MHz
27.283 MHz
27.12 MHz
326 kHz
Unlicensed operations are typically permitted in these bands; therefore, communication devices using the ISM bands must tolerate interference from ISM equipment. Examples of devices that may use ISM frequencies include common household appliances such as microwave ovens, cordless phones, Bluetooth devices, garage door openers, and wireless computer networks.
But more prevalent signals reaching the radio are identified as coming from locally positioned telecom company equipment such as those of Fios or Xfinity. Several years ago, both providers in my area switched to fiber optic distribution, which does not radiate RF. Thus, the source of my signals remains a mystery.
My attention was drawn recently to a very strong continuous wave (CW) signal operating on 6780 kHz. Further tuning turned up progressively weaker signals on 13560 kHz (2nd harmonic) and 27120 kHz (4th harmonic). Note that these frequencies are squarely in the center of each ISM Band. A signal was also heard on 20340 kHz (3rd harmonic), which was not in any ISM band.
Poking around the Internet, I found that others had similar experiences in recent years. As expected, the signal I received did not provide any identification during my monitoring. As stated, transmissions were continuous wave and pulsed at 1-second intervals much like a time signal. At irregular intervals, there would be a skip beat followed by a longer beep. After long intervals, the 1-second pulses would be replaced by a steady continuous wave lasting a couple of minutes, then return to the 1-second time-pip pattern. The signal remains on throughout the day and night.
The signal was tuned as any other CW station by setting the radio to either USB or LSB and tuning slightly down or up from the carrier. Note in the recording that there are not always the same number of time-pips in each set, and that the longer beep between sets can differ in length. Perhaps this is some sort of data encoding.
Besides my own reception in Central Maryland, a weak “time signal” could be heard at the WEBSDR site in Central Pennsylvania (http://k3fef.com:8901). There was a steady CW signal at 6780 kHz from the U. Twente WEBSDR site in the Netherlands, possibly indicating another type of ISM application.
What’s in your ISM Band? You may or may not hear a similar signal at your location. Let us know.
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