Thisweb page is just another view of the content of
www.mwlist.org, a unique database of worldwide radio stations on longwave, mediumwave and shortwave. MWLIST powers various things like the mediumwave section of
fmscan.org, the mwoffsets file, a userlist for Perseus, and an online logbook site. Such a global database did not exist before. It was created following the example of FMLIST. It is a non-commercial and hobby project and open for everyone to contribute and use. We understand that maintaining the database is time-consuming for a single person, but may be practical for a team of dedicated users from all over the world. We are inviting everyone interested to join and to make this database a useful tool for all DXers and radio enthusiasts.
The following persons provided information (directly or indirectly) whichwas used in updating this list [in alphabetical order by last name]: Tuomo Ahonen from , Tony Ashar, Guy Atkins, Jurgen Bartels, Graham Bell, Renato Bruni, John Bryant, Wolfgang Bueschel, Tim Bucknall, Jean Burnell, Bruce Conti, Alan Davies, Sam Dellit VK1DXA, Jan Edh (Delsbo Radio Club), Craig Edwards, John Faulkner, Nestor D. Fischetto, G. Galassi, Carlos Gonalves, Tim Hall, Nick Hall-Patch, Bill Harms, Glenn Hauser, Karel Honzik, Brandon Jordan, Martti Karimies, Henrik Klemetz, Tarmo Kontro, Vashek Korinek, Peer-Axel Kroeske, Jose Kucher, Albert Lehr, Tony Magon, Tony Mann, Christoph Mayer, Barry McLarnon, Salvo Micchich, Mauricio Molano Snchez, Don Moman, Sylvain Naud, Stig Hartvig Nielsen, Gert Nilsson, Hans Pammer, T.C.Patterson, Jim Renfrew, Mauno Ritola, Odd-Jrgen Sagdahl, Walt Salmaniw, Guido Schotmans, John Smith, Jim Solatie, Markku Sollo, Vince Stevens, Hidetoshi Takashima, Charles Taylor, Vlad Titarev, Max van Arnhem, Jari Vanhatalo from , John Walsh (Ireland), Jack Weber, Steve Whitt..
Copyright (C) 2004-2024 by Gnter Lorenz (glorenz at fmlist dot org). All rights reserved. This list maynot reproduced or redistributed in whole or in part in any form, except withthe expressed permission of the author. Contents may be used freely for personal use. Some of the material in this list was obtained from copyrighted sources and may requirespecial clearance for anything other than personal use.
Established in 1987, FMLIST has been making its mark since 2005 with a digital presence at
www.fmlist.org and
www.fmscan.org. These online platforms now serve as invaluable resources, offering an extensive array of technical insights, website links, social media connections, and live radio station streams from every corner of the globe.
Our database undergoes continuous updates, ensuring that you consistently receive the most up-to-date and precise information available. We take pride in maintaining a dynamic repository that reflects real-time changes and developments, guaranteeing that your access to information remains current and reliable.
We are very happy to provide personalized assistance to address your specific requests. Whether you have questions, specialized inquiries, or unique demands, please feel free to reach out to us. We are here to tailor our services to meet your needs and to support you every step of the way.
Thanks. Channel groups are much faster than setting each channel manually. I guess I will stick to channel group 7 most of the time to have the widest coverage. If I use to to 21 to 23 there is still a large Space covered.
Thanks! I guess thats what I will do. There has only been one time where I had massive problems with autoscan and that was years ago on a mountain near a tv-station. And I was in the wrong channel group, so the autoscan gave me only the channels from the group that it thought were the best. But they all had very bad reception. If I had looked on the display of the deviced I guess I would have seen that there was a weak signal for all of them. And even looking on websites like
fmscan.org before going up a mountain would have helped me a lot I will cancel my order of Tiny SA, I think it will make more problems as it solves. And it seems very easy to overload and destroy the unit when the signal is too strong.
Just in case I would keep a couple of cheap attenuators in hand. If you see too much interference it might be the front end overloading due to strong signlas out of the displayed frequencies and attenuators help in that case.
It works well. It's the $120 tinysa ultra, and has a 4" screen. The waterfall function is amazing, you can see all the TV channels and get immediate information of low-level or spurious transmissions. I have mine set to the show the lectro blocks I use, and it's far faster than a scan, although you have to use frequency numbers instead of hexadecimal. Basically, it's like the poor man's version of the front panel of the Nexus. I held off posting this until I had a chance to test it out, and I'm really impressed at how cool it is. Just for debugging in the future, I got an adapter for using directional antennas, in case I'm trying to track down a rogue transmitter.
FMLIST was created as a database that would collect all sort of data of radio stations around the world and make it accessible to other people, be they fellow radio amateur listeners, companies, Universities, public administrations or whoever else takes an interest in this topic. The quest could easily be described as a mapping of the worlds radio stations.
Since 2005 FMLIST has an online presence in the form of
www.fmlist.org and
www.fmscan.org. Today these websites provide a vast range of technical details, links to websites, social media, live streams and audio experts of radio stations worldwide.
I have booked an appointment for the online consultation and it has been amazing. I have had an expert answer all my questions and help me with specific needs that help me write a better paper. I would recommend this service to anyone who needs custom-made support.
The online shop that they offer is amazing. I could browse through different datasets and find the most relevant one for my paper. They helped me with any questions that I had and even provided the data in the format that I needed. Recommended.
The academic services team has been amazing. All around the services that they offer have helped me greatly in writing a high quality and well-informed paper. I even needed data sets from the 70s which they were able to provide. If you need expert help look no further.
Senderdaten mit freundlicher Genehmigung von
www.fmscan.org, Berechnungen basierend auf der Datenbank FMLIST (
www.fmlist.org (ffnet in einem neuen Tab)) des UKW/TV-Arbeitskreis e.V. (
www.ukwtv.de (ffnet in einem neuen Tab)) Alle Rechte vorbehalten.
Kako smo saznali od entuzijasta koji uređuju web stranicu
fmscan.org lista kanala u bh Multipleksu D koja se nalazi na ovoj stranici nije tačna. Prilikom unosa liste kanala sa slovenskog MUX-a desilo se preklapanje te je lista kanala u bh MUX-u D pogrešno ažurirana. Dakle, lista kanala u bh MUX-u D ostaje nepromjenjena. U njemu se trenutno nalaze O Kanal, OBN, Nova BH, UNA TV, PRVA BH, BNTV.
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