Time for my Weird Question of the Week!
Did the shortwave bands also undergo some kind of transition like the TV broadcast bands?
I ask because my Grundig AM/FM/SW radio receives nothing on either SW1 or SW2 -- the ranges from 3.2 MHz to 22 MHz. For the last few years I've used it to pull in WWV, the Colorado shortwave station that broadcasts the continuous time signal from the atomic clock in Boulder. A few months before the digital TV change, I noticed I couldn't receive WWV at any of its frequencies (5/10/15/20 MHz), though there was still chatter on the SW bands.
Now I get nothing but white noise all through both bands. The radio still pulls in AM and FM, but what about shortwave? None of the websites I've visited mention a transition that would make current radios obsolete, though some comment that a lot of shortwave broadcasts have gone to satellite or Internet. And companies are still selling shortwave receivers and portables.
Anybody know what's up?
Did the shortwave bands also undergo some kind of transition like the TV broadcast bands?
I ask because my Grundig AM/FM/SW radio receives nothing on either SW1 or SW2 -- the ranges from 3.2 MHz to 22 MHz. For the last few years I've used it to pull in WWV, the Colorado shortwave station that broadcasts the continuous time signal from the atomic clock in Boulder. A few months before the digital TV change, I noticed I couldn't receive WWV at any of its frequencies (5/10/15/20 MHz), though there was still chatter on the SW bands.
Now I get nothing but white noise all through both bands. The radio still pulls in AM and FM, but what about shortwave? None of the websites I've visited mention a transition that would make current radios obsolete, though some comment that a lot of shortwave broadcasts have gone to satellite or Internet. And companies are still selling shortwave receivers and portables.
Anybody know what's up?