Friday, March 10, 2023

Brazilian FM radio station on 77.9 MHz is heard in Portugal - 7th March 2023


This is a pretty amazing reception report. On the 7th of March 2023, SWL Hugh Cocks near the city of Faro on the south coast of Portugal managed to receive the FM radio station Radio Justica from Sao Paulo in Brazil on 77.9 MHz!

Just to explain the unusual frequency, Brazilian authorities are currently migrating radio stations from the Medium Wave band (AM) to a new eFM or extended FM band which goes from 76.1 to 87.3 MHz. This is just below the usual 87.5 to 108.0 MHz FM band i.e. Band 2.

The FM station on 77.9 MHz is actually Radio Cultura which is obliged to carry some of the Radio Justica programmes and it runs 5KW from the city of Sao Paulo.

You can listen to the reception report below and Hugh reports that it's about Brazilian employment law.

Hugh reports using a 3-element antenna with a low noise narrowband FET amplifier. The signal was at its strongest between 22:20 and 22:40 UTC.

Hugh writes... "The evening TEP starts around 2145gmt with Ch A2-A4 TV, fluttery signals as usual. Then if good 2210 or so tiny carriers from Ch5 TV 77.25MHz and then it may appear, often lower quality than this. Last night conditions were less but there was a new station on 76.9MHz playing non stop music, very weak."

Analysis... As the map shows above, the FM signal on 77.9 MHz from Brazil traveled about 7880 kms to reach the south coast of Portugal. While a signal at around 78 MHz is likely to propagate better than the usual 88-108 MHz Band 2 signals, it's still a remarkable distance.

As Hugh indicates, it looks as if the mode of propagation was TEP - Trans-Equatorial Propagation. The time of about 22:30 UTC is about right for evening TEP.

What seems unusual though is that the signal path doesn't seem to cross the Geomagnetic Equator at a right angle. Normally, FM radio stations from this part of Brazil might be heard in the Caribbean as the signals cross the Geomagnetic Equator at close to 90 degrees.

The lower the frequency then the higher the signal can deviate a lot from that required right angle. This often happens at say 28 Mhz or 50 MHz. Still though, it does seem to be quite far off 90 degrees for a signal around 78 MHz.

I'm also quite sure that the radio engineers in Brazil didn't expect the signal from their FM transmitter to reach the shores of Europe!

Further experiments... As this band is largely unused, it should be largely uncongested and quiet in other parts of the world. If these eFM radio stations in Brazil can reach Europe, can they be heard in the USA? Most of the south-eastern states in the US are closer to Sao Paulo than Portugal. Is anyone going to try?


Could it be heard further north in Europe? Say in late April or early May when the Sporadic-E and TEP seasons overlap? It only requires one Sporadic-E hop to reach the UK or Ireland but 22:30 UTC isn't the best time of day for Sp-E. Can it be done?

Link... For other long distance FM reception reports, see my 88-108 MHz page.

6 comments:

Jon Stow said...

"Could it be heard further north in Europe? Say in late April or early May when the Sporadic-E and TEP seasons overlap? It only requires one Sporadic-E hop to reach the UK or Ireland but 22:30 UTC isn't the best time of day for Sp-E. Can it be done?"

TEP above 70 MHz is an interesting subject, but is the geometry there for propagation into Northern Europe including UK and Ireland? I had some thoughts about this.
https://g4mcu.net/2022/11/14/transequatorial-propagation-on-four-metres/

Thanks for your post of this exciting news.

HC02 said...

Martin PJ4MM in Bonaire is now licenced to use 70 MHz(very active on 8 metres now).Unfortunately he's north of the equator so very doubtful TEP will get from him to anywhere in EU.
He will be received by multihop sporadic E though for sure. Venezuelan analogue TV is common here in Portugal in the summer months and has been picked in the UK on lots of occasions.
I had an ID on 77.9MHz last night. Video below, mentions "Setenta e Sete vergula Nove MHz"(77.9) around 12 seconds in.
https://youtu.be/HZxr5xrXNNg
73's
Hugh

Unknown said...

Hello friends
TEP in the commercial fm band is already well known by dxers for years, such as Mauricio del Toro, from Colombia (see FMlist). My questions have always been: what is the best time of the year?,and what is the best date to try it? What is clear to me is that 22 UTC is not a "foreseeable" time.
Greetings from the Canary Islands

Unknown said...

Impressive distance! Very nice catch in Europe!

FYI, following interest from DXers in Brazil and other countries in South America, I have developed antenna designs that cover the entire 76-108 MHz range to include the full Brazilian FM band. These designs have been published in the German magazine Reflexion.

The smaller one, FM9.2ext, is based on the FM9.2, but with extended coverage down to 76 MHz.
The bigger one, FM19.3ext, is in the same way based on the FM19.3.

Generally speaking, both designs are slightly bigger than originals due to the need for longer reflectors and redesign of the horizontal folded dipole etc.

Greetings from Sweden,
Peter Körner

HC02 said...

Received this on 79.5MHz last night in Portugal around 22.30gmt.Unfortunately no ID, on religous programming.
https://youtu.be/7sRDx_hIwuw
Suspect its from Radio Sao Paulo, 77.9 MHz Radio Cultura was also received at the time.

Wide fm dx spain said...

Hello, the band is also used from 84-87.5mhz bij pirate dx stations in the netherlands, and myself living in spain for over a year having made several dx connections from spain to the netherlands and back.
This on yagi antenne and low power.
Maybe worth listening there, the pirate dx stations are received all across europe.