Northwest Suburban Chicago Area.....
Days: Moderate splatter from WSQR (1180) and WRTO 1200.
Nights: The splatter issue pretty much vanishes, and 1190 is relatively empty. A weak WOWO is most likely to rise above a mixture of even weaker signals. Occasionally, KDMR from the Kansas City area takes over.
Sunrise/Sunset: WOWO and KDMR each become stronger....and easier.
Retro: WOWO used to be a very weak daytime regular. With the exception of occasional daytime skywave events, I haven't heard WOWO here during daytime in at least 10-15 years....if not longer. At night, WOWO used to be a slightly easier catch than it is now at 9800 watts. For several years, the Saint Louis area 1190 was fairly common at night....until the FCC pulled the plug on them.
Other Location: A few days before New Years 1965 on the Big Island of Hawaii's Kona Coast, KEX (Portland) became my first mainland catch during my junior year at McKinley High School in Honolulu. I remember the signal as fair, but steady, We were spending a few days on the big islaand during the Christmas break. Mainland catches (in the shadow of the volcano) were tough. But the Honolulu stations blasted in via salt water path. KPOI sounded like a local 24/7 on 1380....from over 150 miles away.
Days: Moderate splatter from WSQR (1180) and WRTO 1200.
Nights: The splatter issue pretty much vanishes, and 1190 is relatively empty. A weak WOWO is most likely to rise above a mixture of even weaker signals. Occasionally, KDMR from the Kansas City area takes over.
Sunrise/Sunset: WOWO and KDMR each become stronger....and easier.
Retro: WOWO used to be a very weak daytime regular. With the exception of occasional daytime skywave events, I haven't heard WOWO here during daytime in at least 10-15 years....if not longer. At night, WOWO used to be a slightly easier catch than it is now at 9800 watts. For several years, the Saint Louis area 1190 was fairly common at night....until the FCC pulled the plug on them.
Other Location: A few days before New Years 1965 on the Big Island of Hawaii's Kona Coast, KEX (Portland) became my first mainland catch during my junior year at McKinley High School in Honolulu. I remember the signal as fair, but steady, We were spending a few days on the big islaand during the Christmas break. Mainland catches (in the shadow of the volcano) were tough. But the Honolulu stations blasted in via salt water path. KPOI sounded like a local 24/7 on 1380....from over 150 miles away.