At the tail end of last night's thunderstorm in Phoenix (around 9:00pm), the power went out at our house and much of the northeast central part of the city for about two hours. I used the first hour of that to pull out my portable Walkman-style receiver to make some notes on what I heard and didn't hear.
1) First, something very important I didn't hear. Despite the storm and the power outages it caused, nobody on the Phoenix radio dial was talking about the local weather, flooding, etc. KJZZ was running its usual Thursday NPR schedule (but that station hasn't really covered nighttime local flooding as it happens for a while). More importantly, KTAR-FM, where I would have expected to hear coverage about the thunderstorm (I've heard some in the past there) was running the nationally-syndicated Chad Benson as usual; ditto that for KFYI and its conservative schedule. (It was my sister, using her cell phone who finally got information about the power situation.)
2) All of the local Phoenix FM outlets remained up and running (I assume they all had generators) but that wasn't quite true for the AMs. Both the Caesar Chavez Foundation's KNAI (860) and Vic Michaels' KPHX (1480) were running only dead carriers. And 1510 KFNN wasn't even running that. (I wonder if that last one is going to be the next Phoenix outlet off the air for good.)
3) On 580 kHz, Tucson's KSAZ was coming in clear as a bell. I even heard the top-of-the-hour ID for that one which also included a separate top-of-the-hour ID from KTRP-1450, Notus, Idaho, in the Boise area. Using the information on Radio-locator (sorry but I find it difficult to read the FCC files using screenreading software), it looks like KSAZ-AM is supposed to be running a measly 390 watts at night with a four-tower directional array, presumably to protect Fresno's KMJ on the same frequency. I'm quite sure that last night it was running its full daytime 5kW.
4) Some other DX notes. With the move of KSPN-AM's transmitter southeast (and, I suspect a redirectioning of its tower(s)), I was able to hear KSPN during the evening hours vying for my attention with (I think) KNUS out of Denver. Over on 780, Sedona's KAZM could be heard, though it was sometimes overpowered by (I think) the outlet licensed to Pueblo, CO (I never did catch a top-of-the-hour ID for verification of that). ON 740 kHz, KCBS-AM was (mostly) pouncing all over local KIDR (I've never understood why the FCC granted KIDR and the Costa Mesa station (formerly Avalon) the same 24-hour operations with the dominance of KCBS-AM there). Finally, I believe I caught the station licensed to Juarez, MX, at 1470 playing English classic hits with Spanish announcers--I don't think I ever heard that one before. I also heard a Spanish outlet dominating 1130 kHZ which I believe to be the station out of Nogales, Sonora, (funny but the dominant station there at night used to be KWKH in Shreveport).
1) First, something very important I didn't hear. Despite the storm and the power outages it caused, nobody on the Phoenix radio dial was talking about the local weather, flooding, etc. KJZZ was running its usual Thursday NPR schedule (but that station hasn't really covered nighttime local flooding as it happens for a while). More importantly, KTAR-FM, where I would have expected to hear coverage about the thunderstorm (I've heard some in the past there) was running the nationally-syndicated Chad Benson as usual; ditto that for KFYI and its conservative schedule. (It was my sister, using her cell phone who finally got information about the power situation.)
2) All of the local Phoenix FM outlets remained up and running (I assume they all had generators) but that wasn't quite true for the AMs. Both the Caesar Chavez Foundation's KNAI (860) and Vic Michaels' KPHX (1480) were running only dead carriers. And 1510 KFNN wasn't even running that. (I wonder if that last one is going to be the next Phoenix outlet off the air for good.)
3) On 580 kHz, Tucson's KSAZ was coming in clear as a bell. I even heard the top-of-the-hour ID for that one which also included a separate top-of-the-hour ID from KTRP-1450, Notus, Idaho, in the Boise area. Using the information on Radio-locator (sorry but I find it difficult to read the FCC files using screenreading software), it looks like KSAZ-AM is supposed to be running a measly 390 watts at night with a four-tower directional array, presumably to protect Fresno's KMJ on the same frequency. I'm quite sure that last night it was running its full daytime 5kW.
4) Some other DX notes. With the move of KSPN-AM's transmitter southeast (and, I suspect a redirectioning of its tower(s)), I was able to hear KSPN during the evening hours vying for my attention with (I think) KNUS out of Denver. Over on 780, Sedona's KAZM could be heard, though it was sometimes overpowered by (I think) the outlet licensed to Pueblo, CO (I never did catch a top-of-the-hour ID for verification of that). ON 740 kHz, KCBS-AM was (mostly) pouncing all over local KIDR (I've never understood why the FCC granted KIDR and the Costa Mesa station (formerly Avalon) the same 24-hour operations with the dominance of KCBS-AM there). Finally, I believe I caught the station licensed to Juarez, MX, at 1470 playing English classic hits with Spanish announcers--I don't think I ever heard that one before. I also heard a Spanish outlet dominating 1130 kHZ which I believe to be the station out of Nogales, Sonora, (funny but the dominant station there at night used to be KWKH in Shreveport).
Last edited:
