In another thread, ai4i said that skywave propagation is better at 1540 than 640. I think we all know that in the daytime, AM stations carry farther, the lower on the dial they are. I mentioned 540 on Long Island. Even when it only ran at 250 watts in the daytime, it still could be heard in Hartford CT and Princeton NJ. Meanwhile a 250 watt station at 1600 might not get heard more than 20 miles from its transmitter.
But has it been your experience that stations higher on the dial travel better at night? In LA, KFI and KNX are both non-directional 50,000 watt stations. Can you hear 1070 KNX better at night in Boise or Santa Fe than you can hear 640 KFI? If you're in Michigan or Tennessee, can you hear 1210 WPHT Philadelphia better than the NYC non-directional 50 kw stations (660, 770, 880)?
I don't doubt what ai4i says, but I really have never noticed the difference, whether I'm listening for a distant station low or high on the AM dial at night.
But has it been your experience that stations higher on the dial travel better at night? In LA, KFI and KNX are both non-directional 50,000 watt stations. Can you hear 1070 KNX better at night in Boise or Santa Fe than you can hear 640 KFI? If you're in Michigan or Tennessee, can you hear 1210 WPHT Philadelphia better than the NYC non-directional 50 kw stations (660, 770, 880)?
I don't doubt what ai4i says, but I really have never noticed the difference, whether I'm listening for a distant station low or high on the AM dial at night.