So, in the last few weeks it looks like the fine folks at KNLB in Havasu have bumped the power up on KAIH, meaning very different things depending on where you live…since NVPR provides the only translator available for NPR programming for about 60,000 full-time residents (besides a weak KNPR and weak NAU classical translator in Kingman)
Basically if one listens to NVPR on 89.5 along the main drags of both Laughlin and Bullhead near the river, it’s perfectly fine. By the time one gets to the residential areas located on higher elevations, this becomes an issue. It’s bad enough that the entire residential neighborhood of Laughlin fully picks up the Havasu religious station (RDS and all) with no trace of the NVPR translator.
I don’t know what NVPRs plan is to fix this. Or why an area this size doesn’t have some sort of non-religious, non-commercial station of its own (I’m sure it was much smaller in size 30-40 years ago when KNPR planned for the translator)
Basically if one listens to NVPR on 89.5 along the main drags of both Laughlin and Bullhead near the river, it’s perfectly fine. By the time one gets to the residential areas located on higher elevations, this becomes an issue. It’s bad enough that the entire residential neighborhood of Laughlin fully picks up the Havasu religious station (RDS and all) with no trace of the NVPR translator.
I don’t know what NVPRs plan is to fix this. Or why an area this size doesn’t have some sort of non-religious, non-commercial station of its own (I’m sure it was much smaller in size 30-40 years ago when KNPR planned for the translator)