ABOUT SWLD
"...the most comprehensive, current, and relevant online frequency database for shortwave listeners in the Oceania and South Pacific region..."
We are dedicated to you the listener.
| WHO WE ARE |
INFORMATION POLICY |
LEGAL DISCLAIMER |
WHO
WE ARE
SWLD was conceived in late 1998 with the hopes of encouraging
and assisting
shortwave listening enthusiasts and amateur radio operators to engage with the
high frequency (HF)
spectrum in pursuit of the many exciting and rewarding
challenges of HF communications
interception.
16 years after SWLD was quietly launched
it continues to be a top 100% free service for all.
16 Years of service to the radio community! What Next?
Although
SWLD primarily focuses on voice networks, we anticipate
that digital capable receivers (and/or digital decoding software) becoming cheaper will open up
even more interception possibilities of HF radio.
STAY TUNED! All SWLD
databases are compiled using old fashioned hard work - including 100's
(if not 1000's) of hours of research to ensure the information presented
here is correct and up-to-date.
Unlike most frequency
databases we don't simply copy and paste information from other
web sites or user emails.
Our Information Policy is as
follows: To deem a page, or section of a page,
current it must
be thoroughly researched and conclusively verified, without bias,
utilizing primary sources or first hand by SWLD
administrators or trusted subsidiaries with actual intercepts. So, why does
SWLD include information which is considered NOT CURRENT?
For further legal advice on
monitoring radio traffic of
the frequencies listed on this website consult your national
radio communication
authority.
To
help maintain this resource you are invited to
contribute information.
SWLD was first officially launched in January 1999 as a no-frills
site (www.swld.cjb.net) and has since logged hundreds of thousands of
hits from all over the globe.
Our accurate, in-depth, frequency databases continue to be
referenced and replicated
on countless web sites.
Notably
SWLD has even been quoted in the popular U.S. hobby radio magazine, Monitoring Times.
(Monitoring Times, May
2007)
In 16 years of operation we have never achieved a profit, and have never
come close to completely covering our hosting costs. We only seek your help with funding to
pay our government registration and web hosting fees.
In an era
where morse code is but a distant memory, and internet, satellite, and
UHF communications seem to be at the forefront of every listening
enthusiasts mind - the
creators of SWLD believe that the robust nature of HF still provides a
necessary backbone for all government and international communications.
New technologies are bringing users
back every day to the HF spectrum.
Voice, data, DRM, ALE, digital encryption, and radar for
military, government, scientific, commercial and amateur radio are now
breathing life back into the shortwave realm.
We live in an exciting time where computers and
transceivers are now working together to create a whole new dimension of
HF radio. New hi-tech filtering allows the digital domain to
flourish in the previously untamed realm between 3 - 30 MHz.
Computer modelling and real-time spectrum analysis now give accurate
frequency mapping for reliable long distance HF commercial and military
communications, providing a much cheaper alternative to renting
satellite air-time.
We aim to increase our HF digital databases accordingly.
All content listed on this site not meeting this requirement has been marked
as being
NOT CURRENT.
Primary sources
include vetted or unclassified government/military documents, or
information deemed "suitable for public viewing" provided by
confirmed confidential inside sources.
Content marked NOT CURRENT is shown
to
assist users in monitoring radio networks.
In some cases the data presented is still actually current - but cannot
be deemed verified (as per our information policy).
Such content may contain old or archival content, or may have been
sourced by from a publically unavailable
(confidential/restricted/secret) source or document and therefore cannot
be considered as verified.
Furthermore, SWLD would like to remind any users that in Australia
it is not legal to intercept any phone patch transmissions (Telecommunications
(Interception) Amendment Act 2006).
We are always seeking new networks to
research, donation or referral of unclassified government /
official & military documents, QSL's & callsign logs, etc.
Please note that as per our
information policy we will require verifiable
sources.
You can also submit your views using our
online feedback form.