Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Norddeich radio station

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Norddeich radio station wwwfdeitersdeKustenfunkNorddeichRadiodan01jpg

Museum norddeich radio


Norddeich station was a wireless radio station built in 1910 in Norddeich, Germany.

Contents

Background

The station was originally going to set up on the Island of Borkum but in the end Norddeich was chosen.

Standing at 213.25 feet (65.00 m) high, the antenna tower was expected to cover a radius of not less than 932 miles (1,500 km). The station could convey messages throughout Europe as far as Russia, UK, part of Spain and most of Sweden and Norway. German vessels returning from North America could communicate with Germany from far out in the Atlantic once they passed 12 degrees west of Greenwich.

In 1910, it began to broadcast a time signal along with the broadcast tower on the Eiffel Tower. As technology improved it was involved in a number of record-breaking transmissions including the 1912 record-breaking distance of a wireless transmission of 2,400 miles (3,900 km).

During World War I it was used to signal German naval vessels. In 1925, three of its masts collapsed.

References

Norddeich radio station Wikipedia