Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor Jim Salmon, who shares the following information sheet via www.volaonair.com and www.retworldservice.com:
Category Archives: Shortwave Radio
The Great ATS Radio Challenge
By Jock Elliott, KB2GOM
Here is an idea thought up by a radio pal of mine, Andy, W2SRA.
It’s an exercise to get us operating our portable mutliband radios from manufacturers such as Grundig, Sony, XHDATA, Tecsun, Sangean, and so on. If you own a digital multiband radio that has an ‘ATS’ search function, that being a function where the radio will scan the selected band and store stations to memory automatically, this challenge is designed to see what your radio can hear from your location.
Here’s your task: During daylight hours (preferably around midday or as close it to as possible) we would like you to scan the AM broadcast band, the FM broadcast band, and the shortwave band, and record how many stations your radio finds and stores to memory for each band.
Rules:
- No external antennas! No loops. No anything.
- For FM & SW, the whip antenna will be fully extended, and fixed vertically.
- For AM –you will use the internal ferrite rod antenna, and do two scans. One with the radio facing East-West, and one facing North-South. Duplicated stations between the two scans will count as one station. (i.e. 660 is received in both directions, that will count as one station reception. 770 is received in one direction but not the other, that is one station reception.)
- Radios that use the telescopic whip antenna for AM reception will follow the same rule for FM & SW, fully extended vertically.
- You must do this challenge from your residence! Indoors or outdoors is your preference, but it must be with 100 feet of your residence.
This is not a contest, no prizes will be awarded. This is an experiment to see how many strong signals are received in different locations around the region. You may use any radio of your choice so long as it meets the above criteria.
For even more fun, try it at roughly the same time in the same location with two or more different radios that have ATS capability. Do not, however, combine the scores from the different radios.
Report your results in the comments below.
Whatever the weather
Hi to all of the SWLing community worldwide. Imaginary Stations are at it again transmitting over those airwaves this week with a couple of programmes for your listening pleasure. The first is on Saturday 19th April 2025 at 1100 hrs UTC on 6160 kHz and on Sunday 20th April 2025 at 0900/1300 hrs UTC on 6160 kHz and at 2000 UTC on 3975 kHz and 6160 kHz.
The programme (weather permitting of course), features the joys of meteorology. We have all our weather stations at the ready for our transmission that will bring you tunes about the weather, a bit of sunshine and rain and other atmospheric phenomena. So have your weathervane wired up as your antenna and keep a look out for strange cloud formations. If you love the weather, you’ll love The Weather Channel.
On Wednesday 23rd April 2025 at our new time of 0200 UTC via WRMI we hoist the sails on the pirate ship MV Skybird again and bring you another audio voyage in the Free Radio Skybird series. Tune in and enjoy some “Music, speech and atmospheric effects”.
More on the Weather Channel here:
For more information on all our shows, please write to [email protected] and check out our old shows at our Mix cloud page here.
FastRadioBurst 23
Radio Havana Cuba’s A-25 Schedule
Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor Paul Walker, who writes:
This is the A25 Schedule for Radio Havana Cuba. Only English, Spanish, and Portuguese remain on shortwave (SW) broadcasts. You’ll notice that only two frequencies, 6000 kHz and 15230 kHz, are still in use. Unfortunately, the antenna systems and transmitters are probably beyond repair, and it seems China won’t be providing any more funding. Regardless, the broadcasts still sound awful—fuzzy, distorted, and incredibly under-modulated.
French, Arabic, Esperanto, and Creole will only be available via streaming. Honestly, if it were up to me, I would consider reversing course a bit by dropping service to North America and focusing on Latin America and Africa. This could involve prioritizing Spanish, Portuguese, and French, while offering English and Creole only online.
Carlos’ Illustrated Radio Listening Report and Recording of CGTN (April 8, 2025)
Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor and noted political cartoonist, Carlos Latuff, who shares illustrated radio listening report of a recent CGTN broadcast.
Carlos notes:
“Chinese people do not provoke trouble, nor do we fear it.” CGTN Radio, China, 11770 kHz.
Part of CGTN Radio’s news bulletin (in English) about the Chinese government response to Trump’s tariffs. Listened in Porto Alegre, Brazil, on a Panasonic RF-B11 receiver.
Radio World: Three Mysterious New Shortwave Stations Approved in the U.S.
From Radio World: In a rare move, the FCC has approved two new construction permits and granted a full license for international shortwave broadcasting—prompting questions about their true purpose. All three applicants—DPA Mac, Parable Broadcasting, and Turms Tech—claim intentions to use the DRM standard, yet past filings and meeting summaries suggest possible ties to high-frequency financial data transmissions, a purpose not authorized under current broadcast rules. Who are these new players, and what exactly do they plan to transmit?
Nick Langan unpacks the story in Radio World. Click here to read the full article.
Alan Roe’s A-25 Season Guide to Music on Shortwave (version 1.0)
Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, Alan Roe, who shares his A-25 (version 1.0) season guide to music on shortwave. Alan provides this amazing resource as a free PDF download:
Click here to download Music on Shortwave A-25 v1.0 (PDF)
Alan notes that copies of his “at-a-glance” single-page PDF programme grids of all BBC WS, CGTN Radio, R Romania Int, VO Turkiye and R Taiwan Int English programmes on shortwave all updated for A-25 and are available in his DropBox account: http://tinyurl.com/shortwaveprograms
As always, thank you for sharing your excellent guide, Alan!
This dedicated page will always have the latest version of Alan’s guide available for download.







