The last time I was in Columbus for a couple of days, KDKA was totally non-existent on my radio during the day, at a distance of 185 miles. Of course, as you mentioned, WLW was almost like a local. WJR's daytime signal was decent. Being that Detroit is slightly further from Columbus than Pittsburgh made KDKA's total absence baffling to me.
Considering the poor, to below average ground conductivity of much of the SE, WSB's daytime signal still covers roughly a 200, up to 250 mile radius of Atlanta. During the day, it's listenable in much of GA, save the coast. It's also listenable in Birmingham, Montgomery, Chattanooga, Augusta, and Greenville-Spartanburg. It's last leg signal goes as far as Charlotte, Nashville, north of Knoxville at the TN/KY border, and the GA/FL border. The downside to the poor ground conductivity is that WSB's cancellation zone generally starts about 50-60 miles from Atlanta, and goes to about 175 miles out. I've found WSB's skywave signal to be as good as anyone elses once you get out of the cancellation zone, especially going northward.