Those maps are unduly optimistic. WLW has a usable night signal in the Tri-State area, and is a DX signal elsewhere. The average person is not going to separate a weak WLW from closer stations on 690 and 710, and atmospherics make for less than optimum reception each night.
Again, those maps are unduly optimistic. WLW's signal is usable by the average listener in places like Dayton and, maybe, Lexington and the other nearby areas...
Again, those maps are unduly optimistic. WLW's signal is usable by the average listener in places like Dayton and, maybe, Lexington and the other nearby areas...
In recent years, the only markets outside of Cincy that they have shown up in ratings-wise are Dayton and Lima .

I've caught WLW at night in Tampa.Those maps are unduly optimistic. WLW has a usable night signal in the Tri-State area, and is a DX signal elsewhere. The average person is not going to separate a weak WLW from closer stations on 690 and 710, and atmospherics make for less than optimum reception each night.
Those are not really coverage maps... they are intended to show the pattern, not the usability of the signals. And, for example, they don't show the extreme interference to WLW by stations in Cuba and the Caribbean Basin.
And I got 250 watt KIKI from Honolulu in Cleveland, Ohio. That's called DX reception and is not normal, protected or expected.I've caught WLW at night in Tampa.
Granted, few skywave stations enter Fla., but I did on occasion receive that signal.
They used to, when there was no TV and night reception of the radio networks was king. But that was 70 years or more ago.But... I agree... the skywave pattern isn't the station's commercial marketing region.
Skywave stations wouldn't show up in many other markets.
I have been a regular daily listener of WLW in Lafayette, Logansport and Fort Wayne.Again, those maps are unduly optimistic. WLW's signal is usable by the average listener in places like Dayton and, maybe, Lexington and the other nearby areas...
In recent years, the only markets outside of Cincy that they have shown up in ratings-wise are Dayton and Lima .
6 states, 4 provinces.....
Where I live – conveniently just far enough from neighbors to not be affected by their electronic gadgetry – the maps appear accurate for stations I can receive, and often unoptimistic. Of course, they don't take into effect adjacent-channel interference (or the Cubans, at night especially), but otherwise they're good.Those maps are unduly optimistic. WLW has a usable night signal in the Tri-State area, and is a DX signal elsewhere. The average person is not going to separate a weak WLW from closer stations on 690 and 710, and atmospherics make for less than optimum reception each night.
Those are not really coverage maps... they are intended to show the pattern, not the usability of the signals. And, for example, they don't show the extreme interference to WLW by stations in Cuba and the Caribbean Basin.
For those not familiar with this sort of chart and data, it means thatt 50kw on 1600 kHz covers about 30% less than 1 kw on 600 kHz, given that the transmitter sites are the same.Below is a clip on this topic from a paper I wrote for Radio World years ago ...
View attachment 2455
And a 30 kw Colombian and a 50 kw Ecuadorian.I have been a regular daily listener of WLW in Lafayette, Logansport and Fort Wayne.
700 is still fairly clear in the east at night. Per MWList, there are no Cubans and only a 10kW Costa Rican and a 1KW Dominican. Here in East Tennessee, if I hear anything else along with or in place of WLW, it's KHSE, in Texas, running day power at night
And the ITU thinks that today, AM needs 15 mV/m to be useful.And given the ever-increasing levels of terrestrial noise, including the 10mV/m field strength for average listening, these circles can be reduced by 50%.
And a lot of those old coverage maps shown here were created back in the day were drawn assuming a 1mV/M coverage area.And the ITU thinks that today, AM needs 15 mV/m to be useful.
Nearly no metro survey area today has an AM that puts a 15 mV/m over the entire market day and night. Offhand, I can't think of a single one in the topp 50 markets.... maybe in the top 100.