Right Now I Can Hear KCBS San Franisco In Huntington Beach,CA Its In LA/OC Market First time On LA Siginal?
No not at all! I live in Culver City, and I get KCBS on my Walkman every night I go jogging...jasonharper2007 said:Right Now I Can Hear KCBS San Franisco In Huntington Beach,CA Its In LA/OC Market First time On LA Siginal?
jprg said:I live in San Diego and KCBS comes in great most of the time down here. It's the only tie that I have to Bay Area radio since I used to live there. The radio stations here are just totally pathetic!
Believe it or not, I could get KOMO here in Culver City as well! Just not as clearly as KCBS...e-dawg said:What about Komo am 1000 or CKWX News 1130 from Vancouver?
Goldilocks94941 said:KOMO is the only non-directional 50kw AMer in Seattle, as far as I know, so it does travel quite a way south.
Seattle only has a couple of Spanish language outlets (all of whom only play norteno "banda" music - no mariachi, no ballads, no tropical, no rock en espanol).
djj said:One June 2001 late-morning on Hwy 99 in Bakersfield, I heard BOTH KCBS and KBRT
battling it out at 740...
--jay
Goldilocks94941 said:KOMO is the only non-directional 50kw AMer in Seattle, as far as I know, so it does travel quite a way south. Can't hear it in San Francisco because of a local station on 1010. The other 50kw fulltimers here (710, 1090, and maybe 820) are aimed mostly away from the south at night to protect powerful stations on the same freqs in Los Angeles and Tijuana.
musicfan101 said:Believe it or not, I could get KOMO here in Culver City as well! Just not as clearly as KCBS...e-dawg said:What about Komo am 1000 or CKWX News 1130 from Vancouver?
DavidEduardo said:Goldilocks94941 said:KOMO is the only non-directional 50kw AMer in Seattle, as far as I know, so it does travel quite a way south.
KOMO is highly directional at night, with the major lobes NNE and SSW. The huge null is ESE, on about 100 degrees.
Seattle only has a couple of Spanish language outlets (all of whom only play norteno "banda" music - no mariachi, no ballads, no tropical, no rock en espanol).
Norteña and banda are two separate music forms... norteña is based on the accordeon, while banda uses brass, featuring the tuba. Norteña is from NE Mexico, while banda is from Sinaloa and the surrounding areas. Mariachi (ranchera, really) is not much heard on regional Mexican format stations, as there are only a couple of big artists today. Pop and ballads are seldom mixed with that music, save in small markets in Mexico. Spanish language rock is not really played anywhere successfully (except Argentina) so that is not an issue. Mexican tropical is played on banda / norteña stations, but there is not much of it.
airpab said:What's strange is I only live about 100 miles south of the KCBS transmitter and at night, the signal is better in SoCal...Get a lot of washout at night??
DavidKaye said:If you're 100 miles away you're likely between the groundwave and the skip, in a nothing zone where if there is any signal you probably get both and phase differences would likely cancel each other out. Same thing happens to KGO about 150 miles to the north and 150 miles to the south.