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Nondirectional Beacons on Longwave

These NDBs are mostly used for aeronautical / maritime navigation and for sure you will have at least one of them near your town. NDBs usually work with very low HF power at about 50-250W and are designed to be heard at maximum 100km. They transmit a slow morse ID, consisting of one, two or three letters. Even if you are not familiar with morse code you should have no problem to identify them, because the ID is transmitted endlessly.

What makes NDBs so interesting is , that there are so many of them still active and at night you can usually hear stations which are thousands of kilometers or more away from your location. Depending on the daily changing conditions you can expect to be surprised nearly every night.

The picture to the right shows one of our Duesseldorf NDBs, DY which is transmitting on 284.5 KHz

If you want to learn more about these NDBs I recommend visiting Alan Gale's Beacon Pages, the most comprehensive source for this kind of dx-ing.

Please follow this link to Alan's Beaconworld Pages : http://www.alan.gale.clara.co.uk/index.htm

Logs from my home QTH

Logs from DX-pedition to Denmark in December 2001

Logs from DX-pedition to Denmark in February 2002

Sound samples from NDBs sorted by call sign

A small collection of Beacon photos

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THE RADIOBEACONS WEBRING by G4TMV
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