40-ish miles northwest of downtown Chicago....
Days: A weak and increasingly unlistenable WOKY from Milwaukee. The 5kw day signal is nulled to the south in order to protect WBAA. The noise level on the band has now risen to the point where it overcomes what's left of WOKY. But if you go west, you get out of the null and the signal improves and you can hear it almost to the Mississippi River, With an occasional intrusion from WBAA during the early part of said journey.
Nights: WOKY drops to 1kw, but actually sends more signal in my direction. But after sunset, the issue becomes the channel itself being more crowded. So now WOKY gets swallowed up the mess. For the past few years, CFRY has been most likely to be on top. WBAA surfaces from time to time. KFNF less frequently, KARN less frequently still.
I hung out on 920 for about an hour last week, about two hours before my local sunrise. CFRY was comfortably on top with country music and minimal fading. No WOKY or anything else identifiable.
Retro: I listened to WOKY quite a bit as a teenager, I had a Peerless table radio in my room with a good sized loop antenna that did quite well with it. I think...but I'm not sure,,,,that WOKY had a slightly different night pattern back in the 60s that sent a bigger "spike" to the southwest. In those days, the interference problem was from the now-defunct CKCY.
Days: A weak and increasingly unlistenable WOKY from Milwaukee. The 5kw day signal is nulled to the south in order to protect WBAA. The noise level on the band has now risen to the point where it overcomes what's left of WOKY. But if you go west, you get out of the null and the signal improves and you can hear it almost to the Mississippi River, With an occasional intrusion from WBAA during the early part of said journey.
Nights: WOKY drops to 1kw, but actually sends more signal in my direction. But after sunset, the issue becomes the channel itself being more crowded. So now WOKY gets swallowed up the mess. For the past few years, CFRY has been most likely to be on top. WBAA surfaces from time to time. KFNF less frequently, KARN less frequently still.
I hung out on 920 for about an hour last week, about two hours before my local sunrise. CFRY was comfortably on top with country music and minimal fading. No WOKY or anything else identifiable.
Retro: I listened to WOKY quite a bit as a teenager, I had a Peerless table radio in my room with a good sized loop antenna that did quite well with it. I think...but I'm not sure,,,,that WOKY had a slightly different night pattern back in the 60s that sent a bigger "spike" to the southwest. In those days, the interference problem was from the now-defunct CKCY.