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WBCQ also broadcasts on 3.265 MHz (mostly dormant), 6.16 MHz (a secondary frequency that operates evenings), 5.13 MHz ("Radio Angela," a two-hour evening service with eclectic music and spoken word entertainment), and 9.33 MHz (a full-time lease-out to World's Last Chance, a flat-Earth evangelistic society.) [8]
This map shows all the countries that currently have an official Amateur Radio presence on 5 MHz / 60 m, whether it be by WRC-15, Article 4.4, Special Individual Permits, Trial and/or Emergency Basis, or any combination of these. The 60-meter band or 5MHz band is a relatively new amateur radio allocation.
Many international broadcasters offer live streaming audio on their websites and a number have closed their shortwave service entirely, or severely curtailed it, in favour of internet transmission. [40] Shortwave listeners, or SWLs, can obtain QSL cards from broadcasters, utility stations or amateur radio operators as trophies of the hobby ...
An example of notable shortwave programming was the Happy Station Show, popularly called the “world's longest-running shortwave radio program”. The show originated on Philips Radio's PCJJ shortwave station in 1928, continuing until 1940. After World War II Radio Netherlands broadcast the show from 1946 until it terminated in 1995. Producer ...
Paul Harvey – Paul Harvey News & Commentary/Rest of the Story was carried on AFRTS Radio; Glenn Hauser – World of Radio; Marie Lamb – DXing With Cumbre; Rush Limbaugh – his show was carried on WRNO-Worldwide in the 1990s; Stan Monteith; The Report Of The Week – YouTube Food Critic, hosts Voice of the Report of the Week; Jay Smilkstein ...
a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in Algeria Andorra Unió de Radioaficionats Andorrans: a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in Andorra Argentina Radio Club Argentino: a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in Argentina Aruba Aruba Amateur Radio Club
The World Administrative Radio Conference (WARC) bands are three portions of the shortwave radio spectrum used by licensed and/or certified amateur radio operators. They consist of 30 meters (10.1–10.15 MHz), 17 meters (18.068–18.168 MHz), and 12 meters (24.89–24.99 MHz).
Radio broadcasting is the broadcasting of audio (sound), sometimes with related metadata, by radio waves to radio receivers belonging to a public audience. In terrestrial radio broadcasting the radio waves are broadcast by a land-based radio station, while in satellite radio the radio waves are broadcast by a satellite in Earth orbit.