Broadcast area | International |
---|---|
Programming | |
Affiliations | World Radio Network, EBU-UER, Euranet |
Ownership | |
Owner | Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company |
RRA, RRC, R3N, RRM, RAS | |
History | |
First air date | 1933[1] |
Links | |
Webcast | Radio Romania International |
Website | www |
Radio Romania International (Romanian: Radio România Internațional, or RRI) is a Romanian radio station owned by the Romanian public radio broadcaster Societatea Română de Radiodifuziune (SRR, the national public radio in Romania) that broadcasts abroad. It was created in 1927 and was known as Radio Bucharest before 1989.
According to Romanian Law No. 41/1994, republished, the SRR produces and broadcasts programmes in the Romanian language and other languages for a worldwide auditorium, to promote the image of Romania and its internal and external politics. As a result, inside the SRR, there is Departamentul Radio România Internațional (Department Radio Romania International), which owns two radio stations.
Stations
As of March 2001, RRI 1 has broadcast daily shows under the heading “Romania Live”: a summary of the shows produced by the main departments in the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation. This summary is broadcast around the clock via satellite, on the internet (in RealAudio), and also on short waves (to Central and Western Europe and Israel), 8 hours per day. RRI 1 has daily broadcasts around the clock in Romanian and three 30-minute broadcasts in the Aromanian language.
RRI 2 produces and broadcasts shows under the heading "Radio Bridges" in twelve foreign languages: Arabic, Aromanian, Chinese, English, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Serbian, Spanish, Russian, and Ukrainian,[2] which total 25.5 hours per day.
The station is available on mediumwave, shortwave, and FM, in addition to satellite. RRI has 51 hours of radio program every day, which amounts to more than 18,600 hours of radio production every year.
Broadcasts
RRI continues to use the analog and digital shortwave Digital Radio Mondiale. RRI broadcasts on shortwave with 300 kW from Galbeni (46°45′05″N 26°51′21″E / 46.7514°N 26.8557°E), Tiganesti (44°44′58″N 26°06′10″E / 44.7494°N 26.1028°E)[3] and with 100 kW from Săftica (44°38′14″N 26°04′29″E / 44.6373°N 26.0746°E) in Romania. [4]
The RRI programmes in English, Romanian may be received on only one frequency instead of 2, as of August 1, 2023.
- English Language Broadcasts (UTC):
- 0000–0100 Freq [kHz]: 7325
- 0400–0500 Freq [kHz]: 9510, 15260 (DRM)
- 0630–0700 Freq [kHz]: 21470, 11930 (DRM)
- 1200–1300 Freq [kHz]: 15460, 21470
- 1800–1900 Freq [kHz]: 11630 (DRM)
- 2130–2200 Freq [kHz]: 7375 9500
- 2300–2400 Freq [kHz]: 7220, 9620[5]
- Romanian Language Broadcasts (UTC):
- 0100–0300 Freq [kHz]: 9700
- 0500-0600 Freq [kHz]: 7220
- 0700–0800 Freq [kHz]: 11790, 13750
- 0800–0900 Freq [kHz]: 13790, 11650
- 0900–1000 Freq [kHz]: 17630, 11650
- 1300–1400 Freq [kHz]: 9570
- 1400–1600 Freq [kHz]: 17790
- 1700–1800 Freq [kHz]: 11815
- 1800–2100 Freq [kHz]: 9780
Hours valid from October 29, 2023 to March 31, 2024.[6]
RRI broadcasts through the Eutelsat 16A satellite at 11512 MHz, vertical polarization, azimuth 16 degrees east, signal speed: 29,950 MSym/s, Standard: DVB-S2, Modulation: 8PSK, Audio PID 510. The satellite transmits unencrypted signals of RRI channels for Europe.
Bibliography
- WRTH Publications Limited, ed. (2021). World Radio TV Handbook. Vol. 75. Oxford. ISBN 978-1-9998300-3-8.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
References
- ↑ Eugen Cojocariu, Steliu Lambru: The History of RRI (14 January 2013)
- ↑ "Radio Romania International - Частотний розклад передач українською мовою ВСР".
- ↑ Tiganesti transmitter
- ↑ Saftica antenna
- ↑ "Two transmitters discontinued". rri.ro. Retrieved 2023-08-31.
- ↑ "RRI pe unde scurte". Radio Romania international (in Romanian). Retrieved 2023-11-02.