40 miles northwest of downtown Chicago....
Days: 1520 is a weak WLUV from Loves Park (Rockford), Illinois. 500 watts non-directional from about 40 miles to my west. Recently flipped from oldies to religion.
Nights: KOKC fights it out with KRHW (Sikeston, MO) in a battle of weak signals. Both are fade prone at my location, so it often comes down to one being in during fades from the other one. In any event, splatter from WLAC (1510) and WCKY (1530) is usually an issue. Meanwhile, WLUV is missing after powering down to 12 watts.
Retro: At my home location during the late 1960s, KOMA was my late night go-to on Sunday nights. No splatter after WCKY and WLAC signed off. and KMPL (predecessor of KRHW) was lower power than it is now, if they were even on at all. Result: KOMA in the clear and rockin'. (Usually with PD Dale Weeba).
Other Location: During my college days in Iowa, KOMA was reliable nightly signal. Strong enough to overcome whatever splatter was left from WLAC and WCKY. Also in those days, KOLM from Rochester, MN was a 10kw daytimer runniung a top-40 format. It would sometimes boom in before sunset, and on more than a few occasions what I at first though was KOMA turned out to be KOLM. Then there was WKBW. Also a legendary top 40 powerhouse, that on clear winter nights would turn up under KOMA. Once or twice playing the same song! What was surprising was that I never had heard WKBW in the Chicago area.
Days: 1520 is a weak WLUV from Loves Park (Rockford), Illinois. 500 watts non-directional from about 40 miles to my west. Recently flipped from oldies to religion.
Nights: KOKC fights it out with KRHW (Sikeston, MO) in a battle of weak signals. Both are fade prone at my location, so it often comes down to one being in during fades from the other one. In any event, splatter from WLAC (1510) and WCKY (1530) is usually an issue. Meanwhile, WLUV is missing after powering down to 12 watts.
Retro: At my home location during the late 1960s, KOMA was my late night go-to on Sunday nights. No splatter after WCKY and WLAC signed off. and KMPL (predecessor of KRHW) was lower power than it is now, if they were even on at all. Result: KOMA in the clear and rockin'. (Usually with PD Dale Weeba).
Other Location: During my college days in Iowa, KOMA was reliable nightly signal. Strong enough to overcome whatever splatter was left from WLAC and WCKY. Also in those days, KOLM from Rochester, MN was a 10kw daytimer runniung a top-40 format. It would sometimes boom in before sunset, and on more than a few occasions what I at first though was KOMA turned out to be KOLM. Then there was WKBW. Also a legendary top 40 powerhouse, that on clear winter nights would turn up under KOMA. Once or twice playing the same song! What was surprising was that I never had heard WKBW in the Chicago area.