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Listening to the Radio
Very often we find that the newcomers confuse 'amateur radio' or 'ham
radio' with 'short wave listening' or 'DXing'. When radio enthusiasts tune their radio
receivers in search of distant unknown broadcast stations or even ham stations, this act
of listening is termed as DXing (D stands for 'Distant', X for 'Unknown' and 'ing' for
listening).From the early days of International Broadcasting on short wave, listeners have
sent in reports on reception to radio stations. In the beginning, when many of the
broadcasts were experimental, radio stations relied heavily on reception reports from
their listeners. The radio station acknowledges the listener's report with a 'verification
card', called a QSL card (meaning acknowledging your report), because from such reception
reports, the broadcast operators can get a fair idea about how strong their signals are at
the other end of the world. It is the short wave listeners credit to collect QSL cards
from distant and hard to get places and the rarer QSL cards may achieve an almost
'philatelic' value in his area. Some more enthusiastic short wave listeners monitor the
on-the-air two way conversation of ham radio operators. They also send listening reports
to the hams to collect beautiful QSL cards. Listening to the radio services other
than broadcast station is considered illegal unless the short wave listener collects a
Short Wave Listener's License from the Ministry of Communications and abide by the rules
of secrecy. There is no licencing examination.
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