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AM 1000

Evidently not, since there are many AMs with night power so low that the coverage is literally four or five miles.

Yes it is.. 250 is the minimum day and not for new licenses.. what you see is stations who have been around before that rule was enacted and are former daytimers given night power or those who downgraded. You can be a Class C/B/A well above 250 and downgrade.. you cant build new under 250
 
Yes it is.. 250 is the minimum day and not for new licenses.. what you see is stations who have been around before that rule was enacted and are former daytimers given night power or those who downgraded. You can be a Class C/B/A well above 250 and downgrade.. you cant build new under 250
Isn't a Construction Permit considered "new"?
 
The name on the application sounds familiar, Dale Edwards. If you google it, the results mention a retired policeman and former radio station owner.
A very rich policeman who shot and killed his own cousin (who was renting a house from Edwards). He was found "not guilty" by a jury.

Nobody in his family appears to say anything nice about this guy.
 
Isn't a Construction Permit considered "new"?
for a new never built station, a CP for an existing station is different.

this is how i recall things to be, i could be very wrong and if i am, someone will correct me.
 
One thing to add on this topic is that AM 1000 has a low-power FM translator on 105.3 FM. I can hear it very weak at times and it transmits from the east side of Cleveland. Could AM 1000 be getting it's "Air 1" feed from 105.3 FM? It's probably temporary until Edwards decides what to do with the station.
 
I thought the FCC had some rules that a felon couldn't be holding a license. I guess, though, if he was found not guilty that the rule wouldn't apply but you'd think the FCC would take a really hard look at the guy before granting him a license.
 
That would explain why I didn't hear them on my sojourns through the dial while working in Wooster last Thursday and Friday. I thought I'd hear a trace of them daytime despite the distance and directional pattern.
 
That would explain why I didn't hear them on my sojourns through the dial while working in Wooster last Thursday and Friday. I thought I'd hear a trace of them daytime despite the distance and directional pattern.

youre forgetting and missing part of this discussion, they are using the DA.. and are running 100 watts from someones roof with a short inefficient antenna
 
That would explain why I didn't hear them on my sojourns through the dial while working in Wooster last Thursday and Friday. I thought I'd hear a trace of them daytime despite the distance and directional pattern.
I think Wooster would be a bit too far for their weak signal. I just hear a lot of noise at the moment even though my signal meter shows activity and I'm around seven miles from the transmitter.

EDIT: Hearing music now around 4:50 PM and the 105.3 frequency has the same content but both very weak.
 
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I think Wooster would be a bit too far for their weak signal. I just hear a lot of noise at the moment even though my signal meter shows activity and I'm around seven miles from the transmitter.

EDIT: Hearing music now around 4:50 PM and the 105.3 frequency has the same content but both very weak.
Thought it might be, but even then there was some flutter as if I was on the edge of a station's range or two stations were fighting. At the time I scanned the dial, around 4:30 last Thursday, I was confident it wasn't the latter. I have heard the same flutter when I catch the very last breaths of, say, WLW or WTVN when I am driving to far northeast Ohio.
 
The past couple of times I tuned into AM1000 while driving in Cleveland, just last week, I either heard nothing or, after 4:30pm, heard limited sound from ESPN 1000 in Chicago which, often, comes in fairly well after the sun goes down. The time I was listening between 4:30 and 5:00pm, I was in the Opportunity Corridor near E. 55th street area.
 
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