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Now there's something you don't see every day - a TV meteorologist trying to explain to viewers how AM skip works. I'm not sure he was entirely successful, but I have to admit I've never watched anything quite like this on TV.
His name is Jacob Morse from KFYR-TV Bismarck, North Dakota and he gave it the old college try, although my guess is he lost most viewers long before the segment was over. There are three videos at the site below, each from a different newscast, with the shortest just shy of three minutes and the longest over seven.
Even though most here are well aware of how it happens, if you're a typical viewer, did he make it make sense to you or did he get too technical? Have a look and decide for yourself.
Earth’s ionosphere allows AM radio to be heard thousands of miles away with ‘the skip’
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Trying to watch these videos from a non DXer's point of view, the first one seemed to make a great deal of sense. The second video, dealing with radio waves, lost me after 30 seconds.
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He went into way too much technical detail in the longer video that I'm pretty sure went over the heads of anyone who slogged through it all. It would have been easier to just say some radio waves bounce off something called "the ionosphere" at night, travel great distances and you can tune them in on an AM radio.
But then that wouldn't have made for a very long piece!
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I think it was well done, dont see the issue.