This DX site was created to let fellow dxer's know what we are up to while on DXpeditions in our former Walsoorden site (HOL) and the new site near Veurne, West Flanders, Belgium. We hope it inspires other dxers to try DXpeditions.

We travel to such locations to escape noise and to be able to put out long beverage antennas. Something we cannot do from home. DXpeditions take place several times a year. Usually in winter. Dxer's from Belgium and The Netherlands take the opportunity to dx from such rural dx location.

Are you interested in future dx trips? Get in touch with us. Send an email to us. We are always happy hearing from dxer's from other countries.


Sunday, December 14, 2025

KNL-16 DXpedition Report (1-5 December 2025).




On the 1st of December, we arrived on site around mid-day.


Field conditions were favourable this year, with no mud or heavy ploughing as encountered on previous expeditions. This allowed for a smooth installation of the first set of receiving antennas. Deployed were the 300° North American Beverage, the reversible ARG/JAP Beverage, and the African BOG (Beverage On Ground).

 

Other participants deployed the following antennas: Vertical 9 metre with balun, LA-1 van Dijken loop, 1090Mhz antenna, Active L-Band 1525-1660 antenna, Vertical 7,- m, T2FD or13 MHz and a Sony AN1.

 

On the following day, the Far East / Colombia reversible Beverage antenna was installed. With this final deployment completed, the receiving site was fully operational.


Initial monitoring was severely affected by wideband QRM. Extensive troubleshooting followed: all feedlines and terminations were checked, laptops and other potential noise sources were powered down, and a systematic RFI hunt was carried out using a portable receiver both indoors and in the field. Persistent QRM was present throughout — until the small house was investigated. After switching off the halogen lighting, the noise floor dropped very dramatically, resulting in a largely clean MW band.

 

It was later noted that the Deepelec DP-666 is not suitable for MW-QRM hunting, as its display generates noise, potentially leading to false conclusions during RFI investigations.

 

Consequently, the first night produced little of interest beyond the usual power stations.

 

Geomagnetic conditions were poor, and propagation forecasts suggested a preference for southern paths. African trans-equatorial paths, however, underperformed — possibly also due to limited monitoring time spend and the shrinking number of active MW broadcasters in that region. In contrast, the Argentine Beverage delivered consistently more results.

 

Unfortunately, for several years now, antenna deployment during the hunting season has been prohibited on the surrounding fields which results that the chances to end up in the "Winter Anomaly" is a real bugger, and this expedition clearly reflected that limitation. Signals frequently hovered just above the noise floor, with only brief enhancements lasting a minute or so. So you had to be lucky to be able to grab an ID in these cases. Nevertheless, it remains remarkable that even weak signals can still exhibit acceptable intelligibility under favourable noise conditions. Several stations, provided just sufficient audio for tentative or positive identification.

 

For the first time, a temporary FMDX.org remote server was brought online at the site. It utilised an oddly shaped antenna that had originally been intended as a ground-plane but proved usable as a receive antenna.

 

Medium-wave propagation showed gradual improvement, particularly on the Argentine Beverage, where signal levels increased in small but noticeable steps over the days.

 

The final day offered improved South American propagation. Signals from Argentina and Brazil were present across the band, generally weak but with occasional short-duration peaks — unfortunately often outside ID windows. As a result, many more stations were detected than ultimately logged, due to the absence of positive identification.

 

Notable catches with ID included R Atual, São Paulo, Brazil, on 1230 kHz. The station had changed its name from Boa Vontade to R Atual only one month earlier, and it had not previously been logged from this location under either identity.

Further First-logged stations were: Radio San Genaro, San Genaro Norte, Argentina, on 1550 kHz, Radio Durazno, Uruguay, on 1430 kHz

 

On 4 December, a strong candidate signal was detected that could only correspond to Universo 970, Paraguay. The measured carrier offset matched perfectly; however, no spoken ID was heard. This station has been logged 26 times in MWList worldwide during the current year, yet only three of those logs include a positive ID, underlining the difficulty of confirmation.

 

Dave, Jan, Aart, Leen, Cornel, 
Guido, Stef and Frank. 


We were pleased to welcome Stef as part of the team. He provided assistance in a wide range of practical tasks in the field, the kitchen, the stove,etc, and shared valuable knowledge. As a newcomer to the Jaguar SDR user group, he also benefited from extensive exchanges with experienced Jaguar users.

 

It was equally rewarding to observe Frank’s home-designed and home-built NAVTEX receiver in operation, demonstrating excellent performance in real-world conditions.

 


Leen caught some nice Fax pictures shown below.

Boston 12750 kHz

 Boston – 12750 kHz

Wiluna 15615 kHz

 Wiluna – 15615 kHz


On Friday, KNL-16 officially came to an end. The dismantling process — including the recovery and rolling in of several dozen reels of wire and coaxial cable — proceeded efficiently. All participants returned home safely. Several members left with storage media full of SDR recordings awaiting detailed post-expedition analysis.

 

While propagation conditions were occasionally uninspiring, the expedition nevertheless yielded a number of valuable catches. Moreover, it remains likely that additional weak or unidentified signals are still hidden within the recordings.

 

Many thanks to all participants whose efforts contributed to the success of this MW-DXpedition.