WBAP has been blocked for the last 60 years or more by the 50 kw HJED in Cali, Colombia, and a 10 kw Venezuelan and several 820 operations in Central America, the larger of which is 10 kw in Guatemala. 1200 is a more local channel for Colombia and Venezuela, with numerous stations in each country.
While 1200 and 820 might put decent signals into much of Mexico, Texas is to far west to be an effective location for reaching Central and South America, which are far to the southeast. Of course, Mexico protects those channels by treaty, while the rest of Latin America does not.
Getting WCBS, WABC, etc would require a time machine back to 1970, at least! There are too many 770s and 880s to make the hop to WA.
Getting WCBS, WABC, etc would require a time machine back to 1970, at least! There are too many 770s and 880s to make the hop to WA.
I think XERB (predecessor to XEPRS) must have run non-DA a lot of times at night, given the way I used to hear them in Southern Colorado back in the Wolfman days.
I have heard KTIP-1450 twice in the past three years. Took Au to hear them, but was able to get IDs both times at TOH. Yet there's other 1450s that are closer, that I've never heard. KEST and KVML are two examples.
Your equivalent would be to get a Michigan, Indiana, Ohio area station on a graveyard channel. Since little has changed in the level of the number of stations (although night power was raised to 1 kw on virtually all of them), it should still be possible but the right conditions and, particularly, antennas, is needed.
Is it suggested that the rare times that a single, distant AM station might be ID'd through the QRM/QRN by patient and motivated DX-ers using specialized receivers/antennas from a crowd of dozens of other stations using that frequency in the U.S. alone justify the number of stations that the FCC has permitted to use that frequency?
XERB and XEPRS have a directional pattern that puts two narrow lobes out. One goes SSE down the peninsula the other goes NNW, right up the CA coast towards LA, Bakersfield and Santa Barbara. The power in each of the lobes is the equivalent of about 200 to 250 kw.
Were they non-directional, they would cover immensely less of Coastal California. The farther inland you get, the weaker it becomes... then and now. Ing. Wilkins built a nice transmitter site for the Bichara family that owns the station and has for many decades.
XERB in the Wolfman Jack days seemed to be targeting Los Angeles. How could it be heard there sandwiched between the KNX 1070 and KRLA 1110 blowtorches? .
XERB in the Wolfman Jack days seemed to be targeting Los Angeles. How could it be heard there sandwiched between the KNX 1070 and KRLA 1110 blowtorches?
BTW, my boogaloo's just fine thank you.
It is like requiring that full power FM stations in the same markets be e-i-g-h-t__h-u-n-d-r-e-d__v-e-r-y__v-e-r-y__v-e-r-y__w-i-d-e__k-i-l-o-h-e-r-t-z__a-p-a-r-t.In many countries of the world, stations are assigned every 20 kHz.

XERB put a fine signal into LA when I visited there several times in the late 60s. Wolfman was a must listen and could be heard well on almost any radio. Only a small cheap 60s transistor radio would have a slight problem tuning in XERB in the LA area at that time.