Today, I put on a local HD sideband signal located on 98.5 WKRZ here in Wilkes-Barre and what was amazing is that when I put in the HD-3, instead of listening to the religious station that originates from that side channel to the translator located on 92.5, I was hearing a staticky rock station broadcasting out of Binghamton, NY that is owned by that "monster" IHeartMedia. That rock station I am talking about broadcasts on the same frequency as our local translator WKRZ's analog signal(and HD-1) is owned by Audacy. At the time, we were under a severe thunderstorm warning and as a result, our local 92.5 translator(which rebroadcasts that 98.5 HD-3 signal) was believed to be knocked off the air, thus allowing me to listen to such a distant station from 80 miles away on that HD-3 signal! This has been the strangest phenomenon where you get to listen to an out-of-market signal whenever a FM translator which usually broadcasts from one of the HD sidebands of the main signal gets knocked off the air.
Here is the footage of a distant signal on an HD channel that was captured using my iPad:
Has anyone else experienced this phenomenon?
Here is the footage of a distant signal on an HD channel that was captured using my iPad:
Has anyone else experienced this phenomenon?