If you want to know why this stuff is here, there’s some background in these two blog posts.
Radio Tirana, AlbaniaRadio Yerevan, Armenia
Radio Australia
Radio Österreich International, Austria
BRT Wereldomroep, Belgium
Rádio Nacional do Brasil
Radio Sofia, Bulgaria
Radio Canada International
Radio Beijing, China
Radio Prague, Czechoslovakia
HCJB Ecuador ‘The Voice of the Andes’
Trans World Radio
Radio France Internationale
Radio Finland
‘Y3S’ (time signal station), East Germany (GDR/DDR)
Radio Berlin International, East Germany (GDR/DDR)
Radio Nederland Wereldomroep (Radio Netherlands), Holland
Radio Budapest, Hungary
All India Radio
Kol Israel
Radiotelevisione Italiana, Italy
Radio Elwa, Liberia
Radio Vilnius, Lithuania
Radio Kuwait
Voice of the Mediterranean, Malta
Radio Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Moroccan Broadcasting System, Morocco
Radio Norway International
Radio Pakistan
Radio Polonia, Poland
Radio Portugal International
Radio Bucuresti, Romania
FEBA Radio, Seychelles
Radio RSA, South Africa
Radio Korea, South Korea
Radio Exterior de España, Spain
Radio Suriname Internationaal
Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation
Radio Sweden
Swiss Radio International
TRT: The Voice of Turkey
Radio Kiev, Ukraine
United Arab Emirates Radio
WYFR ‘Family Radio’, USA
Voice of America
Radio Moscow, USSR
Radio Station Peace and Progress, USSR
Radio Tashkent, USSR
The Voice of Vietnam
Further reading
Dan
Found this site by accident (looking at info about the coup against Gorbachev in 1991 — I was in Russia when it happened!).
Anyway, I also have some short wave memorabilia, QSL cards and such. I loved looking at the stuff on your site. Thanks for doing this!
Dan
flup
Thanks for your comment — it means a lot 🙂
– Ian
J Mann
This brought back many memories! I used to listen to shortwave in the 80s and early 90s also. I had a Panasonic RF-3100 that I took all over the world with me. With retirement coming (hopefully) in a few years, I intend to get back into listening. I’m sure things have changed much.
Doug
Great website. Remember receiving many similar QSLs as a swler and dxer in the70s through early 90s and having music requests on radio Warsaw, collecting stamps from radio Prague etc. started lifelong interest in Eastern Europe and now treasurer of British Czech and Slovak association as a result, – doug