I was able to pick up the old WQXR on 96.3 in an airplane over the Chesapeake Bay. In a plane, you have the vector from all kinds of stations that you would not be able to hit from closer to the ground.Nick said:badjef said:Atlantic county starts coming into play with the New Yorkers the further south you go. That was not always the case. In years past, before the FCC found their shoehorn for Atlantic and Cape May Counties, the Baltimore and Washington stations would interfere.GSP163 said:I have been able to pickup WFME weak but listenable as far south as Exit 58 on the GSP (Tuckerton Exit).....None of the other NYC FM's have a listenable signal that far south
You can only go so far south and then it won't make any difference what they do in New York to try to improve the southern reception, you are still going to be dealing with co-channel.
The best you can do is try to improve the building penetration, nearby.
Now, if the Philly, Washinton, Baltimore, and Atlantic City area were to lose power, your reception would be much further than Tuckerton.
I was able to pickup 104.3 in Atlantic City, years ago. Now, that would be very difficult due to front end overload.
The power from all of these signals is there, it is just overrun by an over zealous FCC allocations office.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
I still can get many NYC stations in AC, but it takes slight tropo or I'd have to be in a north-facing room on the upper floors of a hotel.
Even the TV stations use to have signals in Pennsylvania. I know someone who used an old mattress spring for WNBC-TV in the Scranton area.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!