When I lived in Schenectady NY, just outside Albany, I was able to listen to WHOM regularly. I had to switch to mono from stereo but because they played a blend of Soft AC at the time not available locally, I had WHOM on frequently. Today there is a station Sunderland, Vermont, at 95.1 that may block the signal on most radios in the Albany area, but I'm sure it can still be heard further north along the NY border, such as Lake George. I know I can hear it in Haverhill and Newburyport, MA on my car radio today.
WHOM hits five U.S. states (NH, ME, VT, MA, NY) and Canada. It comes in clearly in Southern Quebec. It could be heard in the Montreal area till a station went on the air at 95.1. That also blocks it from being heard in that part of Ontario close to the U.S. and Quebec border. So it can no longer claim it hits two Canadian provinces, only one now. But it still is very strong in Sherbrooke Quebec. At one time, its sister TV station also on Mount Washington, Channel 8, was the de facto ABC station for Montreal. People put up outdoor antennas so they could pick up NBC 5 from Plattsburgh NY, CBS 3 from Burlington VT and ABC 8 from Poland Spring ME. WMTW in the early 2000s relocated its tower nearer to Portland because with digital TV, a transmitter on Mt. Washington may not hit the communities south of Portland along the Atlantic coast.
WHOM still has advertisers in Southern Maine, Southern NH and Vermont who are far from the tower but get a great signal. Unfortunately, the station has stepped up the tempo of its AC music to the point that it isn't unique. I'm sure as time goes by, despite the great signal, it will likely lose some of those farther advertisers because there are plenty of other uptempo AC stations closer to their stores. When it was Easy Listening or Soft AC, people who didn't live nearby sought out the signal because they didn't have anything like that locally, as I did in the Albany area.