oldjohnny said:
I was picking up a Mexican radio station today around 10:30 AM. I listened and tried to pick up an I.D., but no luck. They played a couple of public service announcements (The ones that go like "El Govierno de la Republica"). Then, they gave a Phone number for U.S. Listeners (which gave away their border blaster status). Now, after the next song, the next liner was exactly "Con Cien Mil watts de potencia". Now, That's when I realized it was KERF. But what bothers me is that I always assumed that they were at 250,000 watts. What happened?
The actual call-letters are XERF. At one time (until the late 1970's), this old timer was running a cool 250k, every night. It was a RF monster with
lots of fire-in-Brimstone preachers, some very shady "miracle cures" and of course my hero, the late Bob ("Wolfman Jack") Smith. I treasure my 1974 QSL from the Mighty X! But alas, those 250k days are long since over. The station was never able to regain a foothold in the market due to many factors, mainly technical. I heard one of the last full powered 250,000 watt broadcasts in 1982 with some preacher from SoCal called "Doctor Cross" asking for "a $10 donation with your first prayer request". The famous Paul Kalinger ID's were still in use back in 1982, complete with a Del Rio, Texas mailing address. XERF did at one time have a Construction Permit for a full 500,000 watts. But by the time they got the permission, the old RCA Ampliphase unit was really hurting, never mind the cost of powering such a device. They had to make their own electricity (generator style). Like David said, the station limped for many years at about 17,000 watts, barely a shadow of it's former self. The original owner turned in the license to the "Gobierno de Mexico", who actually kept the license active for their own use. Will XERF rise up from the ashes? In this day of Internet and such, I don't know. I miss the Big X. What a time!