www.rhci-online.net/radiogram/radiogram.htm

 


 

 

Am 13.07.2014 00:52, schrieb VOA Radiogram:


  Hello Roger,
  I rarely see fuzzy decoded images in your reports, so your image of Eric's Lincoln was a refreshing change.
  The VOA Radiogram images were excellent.
  All the best,          Kim
 

 

  This time I used the KBC daytime broadcast on 6095 kHz
  The conditions in the 49 meter band (here in the vicinity of the transmitter) were sometimes very bad - almost a SWF.
  Just at the moment of the digital transmission (1 minute) a fade out.....
  The MFSK64 - text has survived it without any problems.
  But in the picture you can see, however, what was heard: A certain amount of noise.
  But the quality was again sufficient to identify Eric's vehicle.
  At halfway reasonable quality of the images I use the opportunity of a program from the analog SSTV-world: the SSTV-image-denoiser
  This program may very well minimize erroneous horizontal lines in the images.

     roger

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

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                           http://www.kbcradio.eu/

                                                                            


 


 

RSID: <<2014-07-12T11:31Z MFSK-64 @ 6095000+1500>>
 


<STX>



Here is another of Eric van Willegen's Lincoln automobiles, this
time a 1979 Lincoln Continental Town Car with a 400 cubic inch
(6.6 L) V8 engine...


<EOT>
 

 


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Sending Pic:190x82C;

Facebook / Internet

related links:

 

 

 

 

<EOT>

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     =====>  Eric van Willegen - Lincoln Continental Town Car 1979

     Eric van Willegen - flickr - roadpal

     Eric van Willegen - Nieuw lid van de Lincoln Club Nederland

     www.fordmercury.nl - leden

 

     https://www.facebook.com/evanwillegen?fref=photo

 

 

 


 

<STX>

Eric is at the Americana International festival in Loughborough,
UK, where many more American-made cars are on display.
http://www.americana-international.co.uk


<EOT>
 

 

 

 

 


 


 

 

 

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                                                                    http://voaradiogram.net/

 

 

 
RSID: <<2014-07-12T16:01Z MFSK-32 @ 17860000+1500>>
 

 


<STX>

Welcome to program 67 of VOA Radiogram from the Voice of America.

I'm Kim Andrew Elliott in Washington.

Here is the lineup for today's program (MFSK32):

  1:31 Program preview (now)
  2:36 Maritime radiotelegraph commemoration, with image
  9:35 "Nanojuice" improves intestinal scans, with image
15:16 Titan's subsurface ocean probably is salty, with image
21:27 Training center could lead to South Korean-Russian rail link, with image
26:48 Closing announcements


Please send reception reports to radiogram@voanews.com.

And visit voaradiogram.net.

Twitter: @VOARadiogram


<EOT>
 

 

 


<STX>


NIGHT OF NIGHTS XV: July 12, 2014

From the Point Reyes National Seashore (California) website:

In the annual "Night of Nights", historic Morse code radio
station KPH returns to the air in commemoration of the closing of
commercial Morse operation in the USA.

KPH, the ex-RCA coast station located north of San Francisco,
returns to the air for commemorative broadcasts every year on
July 12 at 5:01 pm PDT (13 July at 0001 GMT). On July 12, 1999,
the last commercial Morse transmission in the U.S. was thought to
have been broadcast at 5 pm PDT (13 July at 0000 GMT). Now the
Maritime Radio Historical Society's own KSM carries on the
tradition of commercial Morse. Transmissions are expected to
continue until at least midnight PDT (0700 GMT).

Night of Nights is an annual event held on the 12th of July by
the Maritime Radio Historical Society (MRHS) to commemorate the
history of maritime radio and the closing of commercial Morse
operations in the USA. These on-the-air events are intended to
honor the men and women who followed the radiotelegraph trade on
ships and at coast stations around the world and made it one of
honor and skill.

Once, the maritime mobile bands were populated edge to edge with
powerful coast stations operating from virtually every country on
every continent. Once, the ships of world trade and the great
passenger liners filled the air with their radiograms--and with
their calls for help when in danger on the sea. Now those bands
are largely silent.

http://www.nps.gov/pore/planyourvisit/events_nightofnights.htm



See also:

http://www.radiomarine.org/


<EOT>
 

 

 

<STX>


Here are the frequencies of the California transmitters (13 July
2014 0000-0700 UTC):

Frequency (kHz) Transmitter Antenna

KPH:
500/426 Henry MF-5000D Marconi T
  4247.0 RCA K Set Double Extended Zepp
  6477.5 RCA K Set Double Extended Zepp
  8642.0 RCA L Set Double Extended Zepp
12808.5 RCA L Set H over 2
17016.8 RCA L Set H over 2
22477.5 RCA H Set H over 2

KFS:
12695.5 Press Wireless PW15 H over 2
17026.0 Henry HF-5000D H over 2

KSM:
500/426 Henry MF-5000D Marconi T
  8438.3 Henry HF-5000D Double Extended Zepp
12993.0 Henry HF-5000D H over 2
16914.0 Henry HF-5000D H over 2
22445.8 Henry HF-5000D H over 2

K6KPH (amateur radio):
  3550.0 Henry HF-5000D Double Extended Zepp
  7050.0 RCA L Set Double Extended Zepp
14050.0 Henry HF-5000D H over 2
18097.5 Henry HF-5000D H over 2
21050.0 Henry HF-5000D H over 2


<EOT>
 

 

 

 


<STX>


A list of all frequencies, including those of other U.S. martime
stations which may participate, is available at:
http://www.radiomarine.org/gallery/show?keyword=nonxi&panel=pab1_5#pab1_5



If your CW copying skills are rusty, remember that you can use
Fldigi to decode CW.

<EOT>
 

 


<STX>

Image: Point Reyes Receiving Station KPH, with its reflection in
a nearby pond...

<EOT>
 

 

 

 


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<EOT>
 

 

 

 

 


<STX>





This is VOA Radiogram from the Voice of America.

Please send reception reports to radiogram@voanews.com.


VOA NEWS

Juice Infused with Microscopic Particles Offers 'Unparalleled'
View of Gut

Rosanne Skirble
July 08, 2014

A new imaging technique involving a specially-prepared liquid
that patients drink could help doctors better diagnose and
eventually treat illnesses in the gut.

The small intestine is not small. And it's not easy to examine.
Sandwiched between the stomach and the large intestine, in an
average adult it is 7 meters long and 2.5 centimeters thick.
Getting a picture of it with X-rays, magnetic resonance imaging
or ultrasound is limited because of safety issues, accessibility
or low resolution.

University at Buffalo researchers wanted to get around those
problems.

"We thought it would be interesting if we could make some type of
thing that you could drink, and it would pass through your
intestine without getting absorbed into your body so it would be
safe," said Jonathan Lovell, assistant professor of biomedical
engineering.

The scientists created a drink called nanojuice. It is infused
with microscopic nanoparticles which contain molecules of a dye
that absorb light from the infrared spectrum.

"That's the area of light that passes through your body the
best," Lovell said. "If you have ever held up a flashlight to
your hand or your ear, you can see the red light shining through.
That type color of light can get through the body the best. So we
made the nanojuice to absorb that color of light."

The researchers gave the nanojuice to laboratory mice, then
scanned their abdomens with a harmless laser light, in an imaging
process called photoacoustic tomography. What they saw was an
unparalleled view of the organ.

"You can actually see the intestine motor patterns," Lovell said.
"You can pick out how the intestine is working in real time
without any kind of invasive procedures."

The nanojuice passed safely through the gut without being
absorbed or degraded. Lovell hopes to move to human clinical
trials in the near future, which he says could ultimately lead to
a better understanding of how the intestine works.

"To try to help people shed light on not only disease diagnosis,
but also treatment and see if the treatments that are being
prescribed by the doctors are affecting the disease that people
have in the gastrointestinal track," Lovell said.

Lovell's team has made the nanojuice in four different colors,
which he says in theory could be used at the same time to look at
the diseased tissues as the nanojuices move through them.

The work is described in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

http://www.voanews.com/content/juice-infused-with-microscopic-particles-offers-unparalleled-view-of-gut/1953332.html




<EOT>
 

 

 


<STX>

Image: Vials of nanojuice...

<EOT>
 

 

 


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<EOT>
 

 

 

 

 


RSID: <<2014-07-12T16:15Z MFSK-32 @ 17860000+1500>>
 


<STX>

This is VOA Radiogram from the Voice of America.

Please send reception reports to radiogram@voanews.com.


VOA NEWS

NASA: Titan's Ocean Likely 'as Salty as Dead Sea'

Matthew Hilburn
July 08, 2014

New research casts doubt on the possibility of finding life as we
know it on Saturn's moon, Titan. The giant ocean believed to
exist below the moon's surface has long been thought a place
where life could exist.

But gravity and topography data collected during the Cassini
spacecraft's repeated flybys of Titan data led to an "improved
understanding of the structure of the moon's outer ice shell" and
the ocean below.

In a paper published earlier this month, NASA researchers say
they have found evidence that the ocean could be "as salty as
Earth's Dead Sea."

Researchers point out that by salty, they don't just mean sodium
chloride.

Titan's extremely salty brine appears to be watery mix of sulfur,
sodium and potassium, said the paper's lead author, Giuseppe
Mitri of the University of Nantes in France in an email.

"This is an extremely salty ocean by Earth standards," said Mitri
in a statement. "Knowing this may change the way we view this
ocean as a possible abode for present-day life, but conditions
might have been very different there in the past."

He added that the discovery indicates "there was direct
interaction between Titan's deep interior and the subsurface
liquid water during its past history with interesting
implications for its habitability."

Using data from the Cassini spacecraft, researchers studied the
variations in Titan's gravitational field, researchers were able
to determine that the subsurface ocean had to be highly dense
with a salt content "roughly equal to the saltiest bodies of
water on Earth."

Topography data also revealed that the moon's shell is in the
process of freezing solid. Variations in the thickness of the
shell also point to the subsurface ocean slowly freezing.

"Titan continues to prove itself as an endlessly fascinating
world, and with our long-lived Cassini spacecraft, we're
unlocking new mysteries as fast as we solve old ones," said Linda
Spilker, Cassini project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, California, in a statement. She was not
involved in the study.

The findings are published in this week's edition of the journal
Icarus.

http://www.voanews.com/content/titans-ocean-as-salty-as-dead-sea/1953251.html



<EOT>
 

 

 

 


<STX>

Image: Titan's atmosphere makes Saturn's largest moon look like a
fuzzy orange ball in this natural-color view from the Cassini
spacecraft.

<EOT>
 

 


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<EOT>

 

 

 

 

 


<STX>

This is VOA Radiogram from the Voice of America.

Please send reception reports to radiogram@voanews.com.


VOA NEWS

Two Koreas, Russia Consider Building Railway Training Center

Hwan Yong Kim, Jee Abbey Lee
July 07, 2014

South Korea's national railroad operator, Korail, says it has
suggested setting up a tri-national training center that would
include North Korea and Russia.

In a phone interview with the VOA Korean service Monday, Korail
spokeswoman Im In-sook said company President Choi Yeon-hye
suggested establishing such an agency during her visit to North
Korea in April.

Choi was visiting Pyongyang to attend an international railway
conference.

The Korail spokesman said the North initially wanted to discuss
the matter on the final day of the conference, but the meeting
got delayed at the last minute.

Korail says it plans to suggest the idea again next month.

The goal of the training center would be to pass down South
Korea's railway operating expertise to and stimulate exchanges
with North Korea and Russia.

Earlier this year, Russian Railways announced the testing of
freight traffic on the re-opened link of the Trans-Siberian
Railway from western Siberia to the port of Rason in North Korea.

Korail employees believe a three-way training center is essential
to operating a railway that connects the two Koreas and Russia
because the standardization of related technology and terminology
is crucial.

Korail views the training center as a catapult for cooperation
between the two Koreas' railway systems.

This report was produced in collaboration with the VOA Korean
service.

http://www.voanews.com/content/two-koreas-russia-consider-building-railway-training-center/1952620.html


<EOT>
 

 

 

<STX>


Image: Construction along railway lines linking tracks in Rason
in far northeastern North Korea with Russian rail lines (2012 AP
file photo)...

<EOT>
 

 


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<EOT>
 

 

 

 


RSID: <<2014-07-12T16:26Z MFSK-32 @ 17860000+1500>>
 


<STX>

Please send reception reports to radiogram@voanews.com.

And visit voaradiogram.net.

Twitter: @VOARadiogram

Thanks to colleagues at the Edward R. Murrow shortwave
transmitting station in North Carolina.

I'm Kim Elliott. Please join us for the next VOA Radiogram

This is VOA, the Voice of America.


<EOT>
 

 

 

 

 


RSID: <<2014-07-12T16:27Z MFSK-64 @ 17860000+1500>>

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<EOT>
 

 

 

 

 


RSID: <<2014-07-12T16:28Z Hell 80 @ 17860000+1500>>


 

I think, that something went wrong...... roger   

 

 

 

 


RSID: <<2014-07-12T16:29Z MFSK-32 @ 17860000+1500>>
 

only mode-reset in FLDIGI without further information....   roger  

 

 

 

 

 

 


 www.rhci-online.net/radiogram/radiogram.htm

 

 QTH:

 D-06193 Petersberg (Germany/Germania)

 Ant.:

 Dipol for 40m-Band

 RX:

 ICOM IC-R75 + IF-mixer

 Software IF:

 con STUDIO1 - Software italiano per SDR       [SAM-USB]

 Software AF:

 Fldigi 3.21.83  +   flmsg-2.0.4

 OS:

 German XP-SP3 with support for asian languages

 PC:               

 MEDION Titanium 8008  (since 2003)   [ P4  -  2,6 GHz]

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DRM-images   -   received via EASYPAL/DSSTV on 14233kHz/USB    (FRG-100 / Dipol for ~12 MHz)

 

Here are some pics of  KC2DMC (David S. Hill, Stone Ridge 124840879, NY, United States)  - all received in the last days: