And as of 2 pm today they are back on the air playing continuous rock music.
So much for DX opportunities.
Checked out 850 in the car at 7:45 this evening. WAIT still on with Simon and Garfunkel and "The Boxer".
Checked again about a half hour later. WAIT had signed off, and I heard a weak KFUO with some Beethoven.
Now THAT'S what I call a segue!
Checked out 850 in the car at 7:45 this evening. WAIT still on with Simon and Garfunkel and "The Boxer".
Checked again about a half hour later. WAIT had signed off, and I heard a weak KFUO with some Beethoven.
Now THAT'S what I call a segue!
When I'm right on the lake, I can hear yet another one between the patriotic WAIT signoff and the time KOA starts to dominate. I'm pretty sure it's WGVS in Muskegon.
If it's oldies, It's probably WGVS. But they have a REALLY tight pattern oriented north-south. I've never heard them here in Crystal Lake. Not that I haven't tried. Going back to the days when they were the original WKBZ (which took over from WMUS when they migrted to a much better signal on 1090). WKBZ was on 850 before WAIT's predecessors came on in 1965.
When I worked at one of those predecessors in the 1970s, our CE told me that WKBZ had the only pattern in America that had actually been designed by the FCC. If that's true, and if the same pattern is still in use, then the Feds didn't do them any favors.
Why did the FCC design their pattern? So it didn't get to the other side of the Lake?
I'll have to look on their History Card.
Update: I tuned in at around 10:45 a.m. yesterday (8/12) and got an unmodulated carrier.
Today (8/13) I was in the car at a little after 9am and got a health and fitness program.
Robert Feder reports that the owners of WAIT sold the land to McHenry County College and plan to ask FCC for STA and make it temporarily go off the air:
https://www.robertfeder.com/2019/08/20/wait-go-dark-newsweb-sells-land-mchenry-county-college/
And the trend continues as many AM radio stations are selling the land that their towers are on. The land is worth much more than these stations are worth.
This may give us midwest DXers some opportunities during winter daytime skywave season.