I spent a few days in Michigan this week, including a stop across the border in Sault Sainte Marie, Ontario....
So what do you do when your car is in a line waiting to clear customs? If you're like me and can't think of anything worthwile or constructive, you start DX-ing. This was Wednesday afternoon, April 8 at about 3pm EDT. I had about ten minutes before it was my turn with the Canada Customs officer. Enough time to get through about half of the band. It helped that this is an area where during the daytime, there are more blank spots than occupied channels. So here's what I found....
560: I was curious what, if anything, would turn up here. Turned out to be CFOS with a fair signal.
580: WTCM. Fair-weak.
620: WTMJ. Weak
670: WSCR. Very weak, but clearly audible
680: WDBC. Weak. 10kw enough to make the hop along the north shore of Lake Michigan and then over land with so-so conductivity. Escanaba. MI. I'll guess 130 miles.
720: WGN. Very weak, but slightly better than WSCR
760: I heard a carrier here with audio that I couldn't make out. Assume WJR
780: WBBM. Barely Audible, but I was able to positively ID. Weaker than WGN and WSCR.
940: WIDG. Weak (5kw ND from St. Ingnace, MI. About 50 miles away)
960: WHAK. Very Weak (5kw ND from Rogers City, MI. About 75 miles away)
This is as far as I got. There's only one local here on AM. That's WSOO (1230, 880wND) on the Michigan side. The Canadians are all on FM including the CBC/SRC stations and a couple of private broadcasters.
I didn't get to do much DX-ing in the hotel room, save for a brief session about an hour before sunrise. No big surprises there, other than WMT blasting in all alone on 600. I wouldn't expect that if they're on 1.25 kw ND with their STA, but who knows. Aside from that, no other surprises during my "limited sample size". The Chicago blowtorches were all present with mostly good signals....including WYLL. WIND was also good with what was probably CFOS underneath. I'll be glad to post more or answer specific questions if any of you guys want me to (assuming I can from my brief experience).
So what do you do when your car is in a line waiting to clear customs? If you're like me and can't think of anything worthwile or constructive, you start DX-ing. This was Wednesday afternoon, April 8 at about 3pm EDT. I had about ten minutes before it was my turn with the Canada Customs officer. Enough time to get through about half of the band. It helped that this is an area where during the daytime, there are more blank spots than occupied channels. So here's what I found....
560: I was curious what, if anything, would turn up here. Turned out to be CFOS with a fair signal.
580: WTCM. Fair-weak.
620: WTMJ. Weak
670: WSCR. Very weak, but clearly audible
680: WDBC. Weak. 10kw enough to make the hop along the north shore of Lake Michigan and then over land with so-so conductivity. Escanaba. MI. I'll guess 130 miles.
720: WGN. Very weak, but slightly better than WSCR
760: I heard a carrier here with audio that I couldn't make out. Assume WJR
780: WBBM. Barely Audible, but I was able to positively ID. Weaker than WGN and WSCR.
940: WIDG. Weak (5kw ND from St. Ingnace, MI. About 50 miles away)
960: WHAK. Very Weak (5kw ND from Rogers City, MI. About 75 miles away)
This is as far as I got. There's only one local here on AM. That's WSOO (1230, 880wND) on the Michigan side. The Canadians are all on FM including the CBC/SRC stations and a couple of private broadcasters.
I didn't get to do much DX-ing in the hotel room, save for a brief session about an hour before sunrise. No big surprises there, other than WMT blasting in all alone on 600. I wouldn't expect that if they're on 1.25 kw ND with their STA, but who knows. Aside from that, no other surprises during my "limited sample size". The Chicago blowtorches were all present with mostly good signals....including WYLL. WIND was also good with what was probably CFOS underneath. I'll be glad to post more or answer specific questions if any of you guys want me to (assuming I can from my brief experience).