40 miles northwest of downtown Chicago....
Day: WSCR (670) splatter. Before iboc, Sometimes a weak WVCY would be present....especially in winter. WVCY is 250 watts from Oshkosh, WI with a pattern that favors me. About 140 miles north of my location.
Night: As often as not, CIGM from Montreal is strong enough to break through the WSCR splatter. Signal is fair at best. Then there's the matter of one night last week when WQNO from New Orleans was in....and on top.
Retro: Sunset would frequently bring in either what was then WVOK from Birmingham or KGGF from Coffeyville, Kansas. CBF from Montreal was the nighttime regular with a better signal then than what CIGM has now. BUT...CBF signed off at midnight on a somewhat frequent basis, which sometimes would open the channel for WTIX. R. Progreso from Cuba was also a semi-regular when CBF was off.
Other location: In the 70s and early 80s when we first started vacationing on the beaches near Pensacola, WTIX was a go-to day and night thanks to the salt water path from New Orleans. Signal was good, even on the 5kw night pattern. Fast forward to the present time and following severe damage from Hurricane Katrina, WQNO has managed to restore the day signal to almost the level of what it was as WTIX. Not so the night signal. Power is now 2.1KW, and R. Progreso dominates with WQNO usually well behind it.
Day: WSCR (670) splatter. Before iboc, Sometimes a weak WVCY would be present....especially in winter. WVCY is 250 watts from Oshkosh, WI with a pattern that favors me. About 140 miles north of my location.
Night: As often as not, CIGM from Montreal is strong enough to break through the WSCR splatter. Signal is fair at best. Then there's the matter of one night last week when WQNO from New Orleans was in....and on top.
Retro: Sunset would frequently bring in either what was then WVOK from Birmingham or KGGF from Coffeyville, Kansas. CBF from Montreal was the nighttime regular with a better signal then than what CIGM has now. BUT...CBF signed off at midnight on a somewhat frequent basis, which sometimes would open the channel for WTIX. R. Progreso from Cuba was also a semi-regular when CBF was off.
Other location: In the 70s and early 80s when we first started vacationing on the beaches near Pensacola, WTIX was a go-to day and night thanks to the salt water path from New Orleans. Signal was good, even on the 5kw night pattern. Fast forward to the present time and following severe damage from Hurricane Katrina, WQNO has managed to restore the day signal to almost the level of what it was as WTIX. Not so the night signal. Power is now 2.1KW, and R. Progreso dominates with WQNO usually well behind it.
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