cyberdad said:R. Fry said:This morning, orienting my PL-310 with 8 kHz r-f bandwidth for max pickup toward KFI, I got a mix of low-level stuff I couldn't identify. Rotating the radio 90 degrees produced a dominant signal having Spanish language programming.
Agree that WMFN is your most likely suspect. Cuba's powerful 640 might also be a longshot possibility. Although that signal is often pretty well spent by the time it gets past the Ohio River.
As for WOI, they're usually do-able here were I am northwest of Chicago, but the signal is hardly impressive. They get clobbered regularly at night. Daytime, I can sometimes hear them under WMFN.
Agreed with Cyberdad that the Spanish is WMFN Zeeland-Grand Rapids, MI. The 640 from near Havana is a shadow of it's former self, ditto that for 590, 600 and 690. Nowadays been hearing 530, 570, 870 and 1020 out of Cuba. Sometimes 600. When WSCR was off the air overnight in the wee hours this past winter, the 670 from Cuba was "armchair copy", a beautiful, clear signal and the music sounded great (like in the 60's and 70's on the other aforementioned frequencies - not counting 530, which of course, was a more recent addition to Cuban frequencies).
Sometimes WOI comes in on top for a while over the mess on 640, but if I really want to listen to the 'Beeb' overnight, it's a more "local" NPR outlet like WUWM, WNIJ or WBEZ I'd be listening to (or online). I may have heard KFI over the winter months once, but their signal didn't last long. If WMFN and WOI weren't on at night, we'd probably be hearing KFI more often in N. IL and S. WI.