Are they playing coast to coast am at night?
You didnt even read the post you quote did you?
Are they playing coast to coast am at night?
I took a look at KYND's pattern, which shows it aiming most everything it has directly over Houston and then out to the Gulf. My QTH is 5 miles north of Tyler, and I tried hard for KYND reception these last two nights. KGOW from Houston is present @ 1560, but a pretty steady KOKC @ 1520 is what I received both evenings. Nothing sounded like it was buried underneath KOKC.
If KYND is indeed on at night, it isn't making the 175 or so mile journey northeast to East Texas.
In Wyoming, wow! That is impressive, given KYND's directional pattern.
As for KGOW, "funky" is certainly a nice way of putting it. It has not been right since the 2007 upgrade. Day or night, in variable degrees of signal strength KGOW is audible here in ETX. It shouldn't be, but it is.
I am quite impressed with your reception of both of these Houston signals at your QTH. May I ask the type of receiver you use? Wyoming is one of the few states from which I have never documented a reception.
I have an Icom IC746Pro (no, im nto a ham oeprator) and a 25 foot long by 10 foot tall loop in the shape of a volletball net in my front yard.
This is how KGOW sounded on Thurs. Sept 26, 2019 at 1025 when carrying a program from the VOA:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Ee_K8phOwix2pjwi8QgcJOYCdlRUi1DL/view?usp=sharing
And this is how KYND sounded one night when they didnt hsut down:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/10I6tSiY4GL0H5FcN4BUa50gHwcAOG0JI/view?usp=sharing
Thank you, SRG. After communicating with you offsite, I tried for the third night in a row. Finally, I have a weak signal from KYND pointing, of all places, west towards Dallas. Battling KOKC fiercely, with KYND on top but struggling. Giving a 281-373-1520 phone number and top of hour ID on a repeated loop. As I type this, KYND has just completely overtaken KOKC at my QTH. Facing the antenna in the direction of Houston itself, KYND quickly retreats and is replaced with the typical moderate KOKC signal on 1520. Go figure!
I would think KOKC would file a complaint, the FCC would verify and send a letter to KYND ordering a response to the complaint. KYND would be subject to a fine. If the problem is not resolved I suspect KOKC could take the case to court, but the first step is for them to file a complaint with the FCC. Naturally if they went to court they'd need to prove damages and just saying a loss of listeners won't get it.
Maybe I'm being too simplistic
You need to re-read my post. You got everything wrong.
So you obviously have some interest in KYND because you speak in the first person of what YOU did following Hurricane Harvey at KYND. Whatever the station is doing right now by broadcasting at night is illegal given they don’t even have a nighttime authorization to operate on 1520 AM. Also, from what you are saying, they know they are violating the rules and continue to do so. That’s a huge problem. Rules and regulations are in place for a reason. If everyone did what KYND is currently doing and broadcasting whenever and at whatever power they wanted, the AM band would be a complete and utter mess. I hope KOKC files a formal complaint and takes it from there. Also, there are definitely damages if it is degrading their signal and affecting listenership in their primary service area of Greater Oklahoma City.
Yeah maybe too simplistic. This is one station, not the entire industry.
More stations have been skirting the rules in recent years.
More stations have been skirting the rules in recent years.
Even more outrageous, there was a man named Bill Buchanan who owned a small town station down in Liberty County for many years. His station served two towns, Liberty and Dayton. When the two team's game time conflicted with one another, Bill had a choice to make. Either he could air the Liberty game or the Dayton game. Buchanan said the hell with that and split the audio, airing Liberty on the right side and Dayton on the left! Highly illegal, but it was going on for many, many years until he sold the station last year and retired.
I can't find any reference in a quick Google search, but I recall a situation thirty or so years ago, where a Missouri FM station aired different high school games on left and right channels. The FCC got wind of it and was not amused.
There was no NOV nor any fines issued, but the Commission's take was that broadcasting different programming on left/right channels was incompatible with mono receivers, and thus not allowable. It is apparently one of those things where there is indeed no written rule, just "policy".
The Commission staff that would have been involved in that issue are probably long retired, and posing the same question to the FCC today would probably get a significantly different answer.