This station has been off the air for at least a week, possibly longer. Anyone know why?
Don't know your location. XHOCL is 764 ft above sea level which puts it just below a typical inversion layer, so nominal coverage is around 45 miles, however, under a very heavy inversion when strong ducting can occur, the signal can travel for hundreds of miles with gain, making it seem like a local signal. We would need to know your location to determine whether it's signal propagation, or simply that something has changed at the station.Disregard above. I checked with a more highly-sensitive radio, and *did* hear XHOCL's Tijuana-San Diego I.D. But signal level was waaaaaaay lower than normal (even below 99.5 KKLA/Los Angeles, some 100 miles further from me). Perhaps 99.3 moved their stick, or they're having transmitter problems. Does anyone know?
I'm about 25 miles north of Tijuana. 99.3's signal is normally fairly strong at my location.We would need to know your location to determine whether it's signal propagation, or simply that something has changed at the station.
I still don't have an answer to my question. Why is XHOCL's signal a fraction of its previous strength?At your distance reception is generally via direct wave or knife edge (if you're behind a hill or mountain range). Weather conditions usually don't affect FM reception of local stations that close-in.
You would probably need to contact the station...I still don't have an answer to my question. Why is XHOCL's signal a fraction of its previous strength?
Back in earlier times 99.3 was a Clear Channel operated station -and was always very interesting when traveling the route from SD to Anaheim for Disneyland remotes. We always did the remotes on ISDN -but one day I rode the station all the way into Mickey's parking structure. The next morning it was gone. Fickle FM for ya.Don't know your location. XHOCL is 764 ft above sea level which puts it just below a typical inversion layer, so nominal coverage is around 45 miles, however, under a very heavy inversion when strong ducting can occur, the signal can travel for hundreds of miles with gain, making it seem like a local signal. We would need to know your location to determine whether it's signal propagation, or simply that something has changed at the station.
I can frequently hear the station up here in the SFV, when there's a good inversion layer.Back in earlier times 99.3 was a Clear Channel operated station -and was always very interesting when traveling the route from SD to Anaheim for Disneyland remotes. We always did the remotes on ISDN -but one day I rode the station all the way into Mickey's parking structure. The next morning it was gone. Fickle FM for ya.
Thanks Huff. But I'm in their coverage area, and signal strength is waaaaay below normal at my house. Which is why I asked if perhaps their transmitter location changed.Here is the licensed coverage for XHOCL (25kw)
View attachment 5575