7/6/2023 0 Comments Radio Monitoring by T.J. Arey![]() ![]() People who don’t care how their radios work, as long as they can listen to the latest track by Lady Gaga, are best avoiding this book (even though it does have somewhat short chapters, so you feel intelligent reading it!). I highly recommend this book to any reader who has an interest in radios, or for anybody who has an interest in the way the world works around them. It also provides purpose for visiting Radio Shack for something other than iPod accessories. The book discusses history, technique, legal issues, as well as pointing the reader to a massive list of resources you might not have ever realized existed. ![]() DX Monitor, the official publication of IRCA, is published 35 times a year, weekly from October to March, twice in September and April, and monthly from May to August. ![]() “Skip” Arey not only opened my eyes to all the amazing radio waves that are constantly passing through my body, but broke it all down in a way that any person with little or no radio experience could actually start monitoring radio frequencies with hardly any up-front cost (and very little long-term cost, depending on what you want to listen to). International Radio Club of America - Founded in 1964, IRCA is a club devoted to the hobby of hearing distant stations on the AM broadcast band (510-1720 kHz). ![]() The secondary reason: It sounded interesting. Show More book on radio monitoring, and why did I read it (virtual) cover to (virtual) cover? ![]()
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