Just curious if any of you engineering folks know what station(s) WHKW is protecting out to the south and west?
cyberdad said:I'm not an engineer, but I'll go out on a limb and take a wild guess that it's 100kw XEB in (near) Mexico City.
DavidEduardo said:Correct. 1220 is a Mexican clear channel, with secondary use by Canada. The US got the OK for WGAR to move from 1480 in late '43 or early '44 with 5 kw, very directional away from Mexico... in '47 they built a bigger directional system and went to 50 kw which they could not do during the War due to shortages.
XEB's transmitter is in the Federal District, not sure if it is still the exact same location on Calzada Tlalpan I visited about 47 years ago. The rough coordinates appear to be the same location or at least area... The other big ones, XEW and XEX, were farther away, right near the lake.
DavidEduardo said:cyberdad said:I'm not an engineer, but I'll go out on a limb and take a wild guess that it's 100kw XEB in (near) Mexico City.
Correct. 1220 is a Mexican clear channel, with secondary use by Canada.
w9wi said:The question came up on another thread: Why is this station directional during the *day*? (they're DA-1, same pattern day & night) Scott Fybush thinks it's because their transmitter site is far enough out of town they couldn't make enough signal across Cleveland with a non-DA? David, ISTR you're from Cleveland & might know for sure?
Towerjunky said:I heard 1220 has a minor null during the day towards 1240, WBBW Youngstown.
cyberdad said:.
And yes....to me, the Cleveland 1220 will always be WGAR.
cyberdad said:Then there's WJW, I never knew that they had a history on a local channel with Akron as the COL. I always associated them with 850.