Thursday, May 7, 2026

When Your QSL Cards Find a Home in a Global Museum


For every DXer and SWL, a QSL card is never just a confirmation card!

It is proof of patience.
Proof of persistence.
Proof that somewhere across continents, oceans, antennas, static, fading, and noise, a signal travelled through the ether and reached your receiver.

Recently, I experienced a deeply satisfying moment in my DXing journey when a few of my cherished QSL cards were added to the renowned SWL QSL Museum curated by veteran SWL Bill McDavitt.


A Hobby That Started in the 90s

My journey into shortwave listening began during my high school days around 1997. Like many DXers of that era, I was fascinated by the mystery of distant voices emerging from a simple radio receiver.

Back then, DXing was not just a hobby. It was exploration.

Every evening meant tuning across bands, carefully rotating the tuning knob, identifying faint station IDs, battling interference, and waiting for that magical station announcement from another country.

The excitement of hearing a new station was only half the reward.

The other half arrived weeks, sometimes months, later in the mailbox: the QSL card.

Over the years, I collected numerous QSLs from broadcasters, pirate stations, special event stations, and international broadcasters. Some of my DXing experiences were documented on my blogs:

Like many old-school hobbyists, life eventually became busier, and regular DXing sessions became less frequent. My blogs too became occasional archives rather than regularly updated journals.

But the passion for radio never truly disappears.

Reaching Out to the SWL QSL Museum

A few days ago, I decided to write to Bill McDavitt, curator of the SWL QSL Museum, with a simple request: whether some of my QSL cards could be considered for inclusion in the museum’s online archive.

To my delight, Bill responded warmly and added four of my QSLs to the museum:

For many people, this may seem like a small thing.

But for a DXer, seeing your QSL cards preserved in a worldwide archive feels incredibly special. These cards are fragments of radio history. Many stations have already disappeared from the bands, while others exist only online today.

Yet the memories remain alive through these confirmations.

Why QSL Cards Still Matter

In today’s world of instant streaming and digital communication, some may wonder why QSL cards continue to hold such emotional value.

The answer is simple: QSL cards represent human connection through radio.

Unlike modern digital communication, shortwave listening involved uncertainty and discovery. You never fully knew what you might hear when tuning the dial late at night.

A signal from Europe.
A clandestine broadcaster.
A relay station from the Pacific.
A pirate station operating for a few hours.

Every verified reception report carried effort and dedication.

And when a station acknowledged your report with a QSL card, it created a lasting memory.

Preserving the Legacy of DXing

Projects like the SWL QSL Museum play an important role in preserving the heritage of international broadcasting and DX culture.

As more traditional broadcasters leave shortwave, these archives become historical records of an era when radio connected the world in a uniquely magical way.

I’m grateful to Bill McDavitt for maintaining this remarkable archive and for including my contributions.

I also plan to share more QSL cards from my collection in the coming days.

Perhaps somewhere among those old cards lies another forgotten story from the golden age of DXing.

73 and good DX!
Rajdeep Das

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