from how far away? this must be groundwave, correct?I have heard the 1710 part 15'er from Half Moon Bay CA, 'KHMB', that puts out about a watt or so ERP. Five or six 100mw transmitters that work together.
Well, @crainbebo 's profile seems to suggest that he or she is in Cascade, Idaho, so that signal has traveled a considerable distance!from how far away? this must be groundwave, correct?
Well, @crainbebo 's profile seems to suggest that he or she is in Cascade, Idaho, so that signal has traveled a considerable distance!
Since we're on this topic, has anyone managed to DX Radio Sausalito? They are a part 15 station which is similar in principle, in that they have about six transmitters working in unison to cover the entire city (six is the maximum number of transmitters legally allowed, if I'm not mistaken). The difference is that they are primarily on 1610, which is a more cluttered frequency (they also have a single repeater on 1710 located a few miles north in San Rafael).
c
I look at some of the AM (MW) DX reports in the National Radio Club bulletins from the 30's and 40's at NRC-DX-NEWS: Bulletin of the National Radio Club and see just a few hundred watts crossing the Pacific and making it well inland as well.that’s correct. 100 mW only travels a few miles line of sight at most with enough signal strength to be intelligible. the ionosphere is something like 50-600 miles in height from the earth’s surface, so the 100 mW signal won’t even reach the ionosphere to bounce back!
Keep trying, man. If I can hear them several times a year, living in the hole of a valley I live in near Seattle, and using a crate loop and medium-good DX equipment (PR-D4W, RF-B45, 200629 with the loop), KXBX should be within your reach. It's just when condx are good to California, though, and the music they play is a little more classic rock oriented than KAJO. KBZZ, of course, is more rock (because they're classic rock), but between the music differences and KBZZ's IDing a bit more, you should be able to at least put them in your log as a tentative.I have never heard KXBX Lakeport on 1270. I should try around sunrise on a Friday or Saturday when I am not working.
I have heard the 1710 part 15'er from Half Moon Bay CA, 'KHMB', that puts out about a watt or so ERP. Five or six 100mw transmitters that work together.
It doesn't say anything about their nights and weekends schedule on their website:I thought KPOW Powell WY aired some Fox Sports programming on weekends and nights.
kpow1260.com
Murphy’s Law of DXing. The station you’re monitoring will be least accessible at the time you most want to hear it.I thing I hate
When a AM Station boom in for like 45 mins fading in and out & you can easy hearing it
But like when the clock hits like :58 to the hour for a TOH, It begins to fade out you can't hear it & comes back like 3 mins later
That's a great catch. 600 is a busy frequency around here.During the wee hours of Nov. 1, I logged a new country on AM - Nicaragua. The station was 10 kW "La Nueva Radio Ya" from Managua.
At 2:37 a.m. CDT on my Digitech AR1780 and Terk Advantage loop (aimed N-NW), I heard a weak signal among the mess on 600 kHz with a song by Los Temerarios, followed by SS DJ talk. I thought it was a Mexican station, but the streams of XEMN, XEBB, and XEHW weren't matching. I then thought it might be XEOCH in Ocincogo, but I couldn't find any working streams for that station.
The signal continued weakly in/out with more SS soft pop (songs by Rudy La Scala, Rocío Dúrcal, etc.), and I eventually heard some "La Nueva Radio Ya" IDs. Around 3:50 CDT the signal got stronger for a while, and I heard promo for a Los Bukis concert in Nicaragua. After about 20 minutes, the station faded for good.
The distance from my home is 1,453 miles.