show Medienmagazin on radioeins, hosted by Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg. All the article here in German with some nice photos from the Icelandic LW transmitting sites. Tilo Jung (born October 21, 1985) is a German journalist and chief editor of the political. A single wave operation once ran on 207 kHz – which was also the reason for the frequency change: The Eiðar transmitter worked in conjunction with Reykjavík-Vatnsendi, in the east of Iceland near Egilsstaðir. Instead of the old Reykjavík channel 207 kHz, the transmitter Gufuskálar operates on the frequency 189 kHz, as the only station in the world on this frequency. This move was associated with a frequency change. A 412 meter high mast is used there, which was previously used by the Loran-C (100 kHz) navigation system, which was shut down here in 1994. It was replaced in 1997 by the 300 kW strong, now still operated with 100 kW transmitter Gufuskálar near Helissandur, in the far west of Iceland. The operation from Vatnsendi ended in the 1990s. It comes from Brown Boveri (Switzerland), had an output of 100 kW and was probably installed between 19. The transmitter system that was last used is a bit more recent and is also shown in a relevant article. Auf der Flche entsteht stattdessen eine Syntheseanlage, die Flugzeugtreibstoff mittels Solarthermie herstellen soll. Nun verschwindet mit dem Technikgebude der letzte Rest dieser Sendestation. The two masts (they bundled the transmission energy according to the geographic extent of Iceland to the northeast) are said to have been built when radio operations began in 1930. Von 19 wurden aus Jlich Rundfunksendungen auf Kurzwelle in alle Welt ausgestrahlt. This time the long wave masts on the southeastern outskirts of Reykjavík, in the Vatnsendi district, were eliminated. Google Translated: On August 11, 2021, an old antenna system from AM broadcasting disappeared from the scene again.
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