VOA Radiogram is now Shortwave Radiogram. Please visit swradiogram.net


VOA Radiogram is a Voice of America program experimenting with digital text and images via shortwave broadcasting. It is produced and presented by Dr. Kim Andrew Elliott.

VOA Radiogram is now Shortwave Radiogram. Please visit swradiogram.net


VOA Radiogram is a Voice of America program experimenting with digital text and images via shortwave broadcasting. It is produced and presented by Dr. Kim Andrew Elliott.

VOA Radiogram transmission schedule
(all days and times UTC):
Sat 0930-1000 5745 kHz
Sat 1600-1630 17580 kHz
Sun 0230-0300 5745 kHz
Sun 1930-2000 15670 kHz
All via the Edward R. Murrow transmitting station in North Carolina.

To decode the digital text and images transmitted on VOA Radiogram, download Fldigi, Flmsg and Flamp from w1hkj.com. See also how to decode the modes.

  • ask me anything
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  • radiogram@voanews.com
  • Pictures (in color, no less) via shortwave

    VOA Radiogram listeners who send reception reports receive a gallery of MFSK images (usually MFSK32, as in the example below) decoded by listeners all over the world.

    The gallery below is from the 24-25 October 2015, but was just sent out because of a backlog of emails.

    Some of the images are fuzzy. This is because listeners are testing the limits of shortwave, tuning in from places too far from, or too close to, the North Carolina transmitter, given the time and frequency. In most cases, even if the image is blurred or distorted, the text is received 100% because of the error correction incorporated into the MFSK32 mode.

    Tune in to VOA Radiogram, referring to the transmission schedule at voaradiogram.net, then send reception reports to radiogram@voanews.com.

    Decode the text and images using Fldigi on desktop/laptop computers, or TIVAR on Android devices.

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    • January 18, 2016 (8:49 pm)