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Classic Rock anyone?

XEPE 1700, heard up and down West Coast at night is now broadcasting Classic Rock and calling itself "Hiraldo Radio". Daytime is 10kw ND. Nighttime, as i understand it, is directional using a "slope antenna" (beamed north) with 10kw providing an ERP of around 20-30 kw, which is probably about right since here in the far west SFV, they easily measure 2 to 4 mv/m with a lot of selective fading.
 
I think the original poster meant Heraldo Radio, as in El Heraldo de México, the newspaper with which XEPE is affiliated.

One interesting thing about this station, from Wikipedia:

The 1700 kHz frequency has de facto clear channel status. There are no expanded AM band stations at 1700 AM in the United States west Texas or in the rest of Mexico. Unlike X-band stations in the U.S., which reduce their power to 1,000 watts at night, XEPE keeps its 10,000 watts of power around the clock.

That means that XEPE has the potential to be heard well beyond the San Diego-Tijuana area at night.
 
When sunspots were higher in the early 2010's XEPE could be heard up here in the PNW well into daylight. As it is, they're heard here most nights, the strength depending on the overall conditions. And for an AMer, the AC/classic hits music that was played on XEPE didn't sound bad. I'll have to check them out.
 
And for an AMer, the AC/classic hits music that was played on XEPE didn't sound bad. I'll have to check them out.
Sorry, these days given all the choices of ways to consume audio, if you think music on an AM mono station heard via skywave sounds okay, maybe it's time for a hearing checkup.
 
I wish that I had the time to catalog or list every song on a radio station playlist, then post it on a discussion board. Instead, I'm here keeping that network TV news programming you all watch on the air and available.
 
I wish that I had the time to catalog or list every song on a radio station playlist, then post it on a discussion board. Instead, I'm here keeping that network TV news programming you all watch on the air and available.
People still watch the network news?
 
Any way to describe XEPE's Classic Rock playlist? Does it lean hard? Zeppelin, Aerosmith, Rush, AC/DC? Or do a few pop/rock artists get in? Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, Billy Joel, Elton John? All songs easy to identify? Or some unusual choices?

Are announcements in English or Spanish? I don't suppose there are commercials or PSAs. Nobody announces what the songs or artists are, I would guess.

And of course, I suppose it plays El Himno Nacional at Midnight and 5 a.m. And La Hora Nacional on Sundays at 10pm?
 
Any way to describe XEPE's Classic Rock playlist? Does it lean hard? Zeppelin, Aerosmith, Rush, AC/DC?
That isn't hard. Some radio station describe their music as "classic rock" and play Metallica, Stone Temple Pilots, Nirvana, and some of these bands I can't remember but they keep getting listed in hard rock or alternative rock playlists.

Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, Billy Joel and Elton John I might be willing to listen to.
 
XEPE 1700, heard up and down West Coast at night is now broadcasting Classic Rock and calling itself "Hiraldo Radio". Daytime is 10kw ND. Nighttime, as i understand it, is directional using a "slope antenna" (beamed north) with 10kw providing an ERP of around 20-30 kw, which is probably about right since here in the far west SFV, they easily measure 2 to 4 mv/m with a lot of selective fading.

XEPE has been broasdcastin as Heraldo Radio for at least a year now, if not longer. Talk radio by day, and the music at night. I would rate the music format as AC'ish/Classic Hits not classic rock. Announcements are in spanish.

I heard it in Wyoming often and in the fall to spring its a nightly visitor here in... Alaska!
 
I don't know any other way to categorize the music I make other than Noise. I like it that way. I was in a band called Feedback. That's my rock sound.
 
That isn't hard. Some radio station describe their music as "classic rock" and play Metallica, Stone Temple Pilots, Nirvana, and some of these bands I can't remember but they keep getting listed in hard rock or alternative rock playlists.
That's because rock of the 90's is now equivalent to your rock of the 70's. Funny how time does that.
Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, Billy Joel and Elton John I might be willing to listen to.
'Hey you Millennials, get off my lawn!'
 
Sorry, these days given all the choices of ways to consume audio, if you think music on an AM mono station heard via skywave sounds okay, maybe it's time for a hearing checkup.
No, my hearing's fine. And as with any comment concerning fidelity on AM radio, it's all relative. Besides, XEPE could add a stream. There are other Mexican stations that stream their broadcasts.
 
No, my hearing's fine. And as with any comment concerning fidelity on AM radio, it's all relative.
The fact you still use the term "fidelity" is a window into your perspective on what sounds good or not. Compared with just about any modern source of aural media, AM mono sounds like frequency-limited, distorted, trash. Let alone via skywave.
For those who grew up listening to that sound, I suppose it could be interpreted as somewhat nostalgic, but certainly not of comparable quality by modern standards.
Besides, XEPE could add a stream. There are other Mexican stations that stream their broadcasts.
They could, but the cost benefit would be extremely lopsided in the negative.
 
AM mono sounds like frequency-limited, distorted, trash.
That's what a lot of Classic Rock sounds like even before it gets to the transmitter. When the Moody Blues' "Go Now" came out, it was so distorted that it made people think their radio was broken. And the Raspberries' "Go All the Way" sounds worse than they heavily compressed AM Top 40 radio of the '70s. Even in the '80s there were still some bad-sounding records, like Modern English's "I Melt With You".

And it's a shame synchronous detectors never caught on, as they eliminate selective fading and make AM skywave sound amazingly clean:

 
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