Not according to Radio Locator. 50,000 watts. SDR south of Atlanta has them S9+ another one in the Dallas metro area is noisy but copyable. Barely.Does WTAM reduce power at night? At night , the signal strength drifts in and out. No issues during the day. Didn't they once boast thirty states and half of Canada coverage? I don't think so anymore.
I bet they don't care about nighttime coverage outside of the local market. I bet there less than a dozen AM stations that make more money with their night signal than the daytime signal.When they moved from the WKYC TV tower in Parma to the tower in Brecksville, I think that may have negatively affected their nighttime coverage.
Does WTAM reduce power at night? At night , the signal strength drifts in and out. No issues during the day. Didn't they once boast thirty states and half of Canada coverage? I don't think so anymore.
You bring up a couple of sidebar subjects:I bet they don't care about nighttime coverage outside of the local market. I bet there less than a dozen AM stations that make more money with their night signal than the daytime signal.
Eastern Lorain County. Should be plenty of signal.Where are you located? If you're more than 70 miles from Cleveland, that might explain the issue.
Great question. Not sure that any big signal AMs today have significant skywave listening with the awful state of background noise on that dial.You bring up a couple of sidebar subjects:
Any facts or good guesses?
- Which stations still make money based on skywave listening?
- Which stations bill more locally at night than in the daylight hours?
I used to DX AM radio a lot when I was a kid, but over the years between the increase in interference from computers and all kinds of other stuff out there as well as the FCC cutting down the nighttime protection of the big 50,000 watt clears to only 750 miles (there are now lots of 1100s on at night), reception is nowhere near what it used to be on these big AMs.The expression “WTAM covers 38 states & half of Canada” was based in reality that at one time or another, a listener, or listeners (radio DXer hobbyist, most likely) heard, even if very briefly, the Cleveland 1100AM in one of the 38 states. That expression does not mean the signal is there every day or even most times, 24/7/365.
How do I know? I was a weekend announcer at the old 3WE in the late 1970’s, and was told so by other staff members.
The big 50 kWs might also reduce their powerWith AM dying, perhaps a lot of stations will be shutting down in the next few years and only the big 50 kWs will remain.
Eastern Lorain County. Should be plenty of signal.
"38 states and seven Canadian provinces" is what WABC claimed.The expression “WTAM covers 38 states & half of Canada” was based in reality that at one time or another, a listener, or listeners (radio DXer hobbyist, most likely) heard, even if very briefly, the Cleveland 1100AM in one of the 38 states.
I have noticed that the WTAM daytime signal is nowhere near what a 50K non-directional on 1100 should do. Driving to Toledo, it starts to get really weak about at Sandusky. That's only 60 miles out. Meantime, I can drive to Buffalo and hear WJR Detroit on 760 clear as a bell almost the whole way. Possibly the WTAM ground system (critical to an AM station's daytime coverage) has not been attended to for a while.Wow, it ought to peel paint where you are.
I'll be in Akron in about 10 days for work ... will have to remember to check their night signal there. Usually it's huge at my hotel right off 77. I'll report what I hear.