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.

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  • Base64 VOA logo via MFSK128: a few unexpected successes

    VOA Radiogram for the weekend of 31 August and 1 September 2013 included a Base64-encoded image of a VOA logo. Base64 is a means of including an image within the html code of a web page instead of referring the browser to the URL of an image elsewhere on the server. The latter is not an option on shortwave.

    The problem is that Base64 requires many characters to produce even a small image, and given the speed of most of the digital text modes used on VOA Radiogram, it would be very time consuming.

    This past weekend, we wanted to test the RSID, the brief signal at the beginning of a digital transmission that automatically changes the mode on the listener’s decoding software, for both MFSK64 and MFSK128. MFSK128, at 480 words per minute, is fast enough to make the transmission of a Base64-encoded image somewhat practical.

    At that speed, however, the MFSK128 has a rather high failure rate on shortwave. It would be amazing if any of these MFSK128 Base64 logos survived, but some did.

    Each of the following was 31 August 2013, 1600-1630 UTC, on 17860 kHz.

    First, Guy, KC5GOI, in Texas:

    image

    Michael in Germany:

    image

    Roger in Germany:

    image

    The rather small VOA logo required all of the code below, which even in the 480-word-per-minute MFSK128 mode takes more than three minutes to transmit:

    image

    On the other hand, the SVG-formatted VOA logo below, created by UK listener Mark Hirst, only required fifteen seconds to transmit:

    image

    • September 2, 2013 (9:04 pm)