Category Archives: Shortwave Radio

Turning up the heat on shortwave

Hi to all SWLing Post community! FastRadioBurst 23 here letting you know what the Imaginary Stations crew are up to this week.

On Saturday 11th January 2025 at 1200 hrs UTC on 6160 kHz and also on Sunday 12th January 2025 at 1000/1400 hrs UTC on 6160 kHz and at 2100 UTC on 3975 kHz via Shortwave Gold we have a second episode of WARM. It’s the winter at the moment and very cold over here so we need a broadcast that’ll warm us up and cheer us up at the same time. Our broadcast will bring you more hot tunes and music to warm you up. So turn up the central heating, turn on the shortwave radio and tune into WARM 2.

On Wednesday January 15th 2025 at 0300 UTC via WRMI we have the first episode of WARM to keep out those chills. Here’s our trailer for the show.

For more information on all our shows, please send  to [email protected] and check out our old shows at our Mixcloud page here.

Carlos’ Illustrated Radio Listening Report and Recording of Vatican Radio (January 6, 2025)

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor and noted political cartoonist Carlos Latuff, who shares an illustrated radio listening report of a recent Vatican Radio broadcast.


Carlos notes:

Part of Vatican Radio’s African Service (in English). Archbishop of Bamenda (Cameroon), Andrew Nkea, and the gratitude to God for surviving 25 years of a civil war. Listened in Porto Alegre, Brazil.

Click here to view on YouTube.

‘Shortwave Era’: A New Book by Radio Taiwan International

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, David Iurescia, who shares the following item via RTI:

Radio Taiwan International launches new book ‘Shortwave Era’

Radio Taiwan International (Rti) launched a new book Shortwave Era: From the Cold War to Democracy, From Intelligence Broadcasting to the Voice of Peace, Let the World Hear Taiwan’s Voice last month.

Shortwave Era chronicles Rti’s nearly century-long journey broadcasting Taiwan’s voice to the world in multilingual languages.

It provides a detailed account of how Rti has used multilingual broadcasting to build international communication bridges, witnessing Taiwan’s significant interactions with the global community. From World War II to the end of Cold War, Rti was not only an international radio station but also played a unique role on the special battleground, including executing intelligence missions through the “Teresa Teng Time” program and compiling “Communist Bandit Broadcasts” as part of classified intelligence operations.

Rti Chairperson Cheryl Lai remarked that today’s Rti is like a “mini United Nations,” with colleagues from around the world sharing “Taiwan’s story,” which is also “the world’s story,” fully reflecting Rti’s international character and cultural mission.

Read more at: https://radioinfo.asia/news/radio-taiwan-international-launches-new-book-shortwave-era/ © RadioInfo Asia

Post Readers: I was unable to find a link to this book. If you discover a link, please share it in the comments section.

Alan Roe’s B-24 season guide to music on shortwave (version 3.0)

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, Alan Roe, who shares his B-24 (version 3.0) season guide to music on shortwave. Alan provides this amazing resource as a free PDF download:

Click here to download Music on Shortwave B-24 v3.0 (PDF)

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.

Carlos’ Illustrated Radio Listening Report and Recording of Vatican Radio’s African News Panorama (January 4, 2025)

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor and noted political cartoonist, Carlos Latuff, who shares illustrated radio listening report of a recent Vatican Radio broadcast.


 

Carlos notes:

Vatican Radio’s African News Panorama, in English. Earthquake, volcano eruption in Ethiopia, migrant boat shipwreck in the Mediterranean, people flee Mozambique due election unrest, Mauritius’ central bank governor released on bail, China foreign minister to visit Namibia, Republic of Congo, Chad and Nigeria. Listened in Porto Alegre.

Click here to view on YouTube.

Radio is Cheap Entertainment

Source: Better Shortwave Reception, William I. Orr, W6SAI,
Radio Publications Inc., Wilton, CT, 1st Edition, p. 129, 1957.

A Radio is Cheap Entertainment

Digressions of Bob Colegrove

Radio is a cheap hobby.  Consider the plight of concertgoers and sports fans.  Today, the price of a ticket to a single event can easily equal or exceed the cost of a decent radio.  Then, after the event, all you have left is a ticket stub and a memory.  Further, if your team loses, the memory is probably not pleasant.  Whereas, with a radio, you have a tangible item you can go on using as long as you want to.  Perhaps by dividing some measure of enjoyment by the time engaged in the activity one could come up with a quotient indicating the relative value of various forms of entertainment.

I guess my point is an attempt to justify why I have more than the necessary number of radios.  After all, it’s hard to listen to more than one at a time.  But it’s also hard to put a number on ‘necessary,’ and besides, radios are cheap.  It wasn’t always that way.  In 1959, the entry-level shortwave “sets” were the five-tube Hallicrafters S-38E and the National NC-60 Special.  These radios were marketed head-to-head at the $60 price point.  To put things in perspective, that’s nearly $650 today.  Conversely, a highly desirable Tecsun S-2200x (price, $372) with countless transistors would have cost less than $35 in 1959 dollars had it been feasible.  An XHDATA D-220 (price, $10) would have been 92 cents.

I financed my purchase of a Hallicrafters S-38E using the device shown below.  For those too young to recognize it, it was what passed for a lawn mower in 1959.  It was very ecofriendly requiring neither gasoline nor battery charging.  Instead, the short blade rotated, and the device moved forward on two metal wheels by manual exertion of pressure on the handle, which is shown at the top right.  You had to overlap each pass across the lawn by at least ½ a blade width to get a decent cut.  I had a clientele of three neighbor’s yards, each of approximately 1/6 acre for which I received $2 per mowing – $1 for the front and $1 for the back.  There was no sales tax in Indiana at that time, and my earnings were under the minimum amount to pay any income tax, so you can do the math to see how long it took to buy my radio.

Fast forward 65 years.  My neighbor’s boy rides on a 48-inch $3,200 mower with a cold soda in the cup holder; streams rock music on his noise-canceling, Bluetooth headphones; and knocks down $60 in about ½ hour.  Radio?  He thinks single sideband was a heavy metal group from Chicago.

Outside of an occasional set of batteries, there is very little continuing ownership cost for a radio beyond the initial investment.  There is no monthly fee for Internet streaming or satellite radio.  Whatever you care to donate to your local public radio station is your own business.

All of this is to say I have gone to some concerts and sporting events, but a fair share of my disposable income in recent years has been spent on radios, some of which, like entertainment events, are now just memories.  The remaining radios festooning the shack are all necessary.

Bottom line: If your conscience is troubled by the prospect of spending money on a spare radio, or you are consumed with guilt at having done so, reassure yourself by considering what little would remain after any investment in a good meal at a decent restaurant.  Just remember, for the sake of domestic tranquility, use discretion when sharing any plans with your spouse.  In this situation, I often reflect on words attributed to the late Rear Admiral Grace Hopper, USN who used to say, “It’s easier to ask for forgiveness than permission.”

May your radio logbooks be enriched with many new entries in 2025.

Happy New Year!

VORW Radio International Updated Schedule (January 2025)

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, Dan Greenall, who shares the following schedule via John at VORW Radio International:

[…]I’ve included an updated radio broadcast schedule below – I have my main broadcasts (which are always new shows) as well as repeat airings throughout the week.

Main Broadcasts:
4840 kHz at 2 AM Eastern every Saturday Morning (New Show)
4840 kHz at 12 AM Eastern every Monday Morning (New Show)

Repeat Airings:
5950 kHz at 7 PM Eastern every Saturday Evening (Rebroadcast)
5950 kHz at 8 PM Eastern every Sunday Evening (Rebroadcast)
15770 kHz at 3 PM Eastern every Tuesday Afternoon (Rebroadcast)
7570 kHz at 6 PM Eastern every Wednesday Evening (Rebroadcast)
9395 kHz at 10 PM Eastern every Wednesday Evening (Rebroadcast)
15770 kHz at 11 AM Eastern every Thursday Morning (Rebroadcast)
9955 kHz at 6 PM Eastern every Thursday Evening (Rebroadcast)

All the best,

John (VORW Radio International.)