Reception in Lee is a very quirky thing. Lee is a fairly large town in square milage with some pretty decent sized hills that run both around and through it. The center of town is in a low spot surrounded by terrain but the neighborhoods just west of downtown do sit in a rise. That rise was a decent spot for reception of both Albany and Hartford. Springfield, despite what TVFool says is an absolute no show in Lee. There is a spine of Mountains that runs north from the Connecticut border to Washington, MA., that are higher than the highest point in the Springfield area (Mt Tom). It's unusual, back in the analog days of TV, I was able to see WWLP analog 22, in North Adams without much effort, yet in Great Barrington, almost 15 miles closer, it was completley terrain shielded. For years there were only two really soldily reliable signals in the market, WRGB 6 and WCDC 19. You will find in Lee, that the FM dial you can hear the Springfield area's three strongest FMs without much trouble (WFCR, WHYN-FM and WAQY). Great Barrington (which is on the same system) is a much different story. There are basically two sides to town, and depending on which side you lived on, determined what you received, and none of it was reliable. That cable system is actually part of the oldest cable system in Massachusetts. The system was originally only in Great Barrington and went under the name High Fidelity cable. And if the name sounds familiar, it was funded and run by the same people who ran High Fidelity Magazine (which was based in GB.) When the cable system was built, the headend tower was constructed (and still stands) on the top of Warner Mountain where the Butternut Basin ski area is. The tower, which is 150 feet tall, is on top of a hill which stands almost 2000 feet above mean sea level. Needless to say, the receive site is nothing short than amazing.
They used to carry WNYW, WWOR, and WPIX on the cable system from New York City, and they received them over the air using a pair of cut yagi antennas only 90 feet up the tower! (Later on, when they decided to carry WCVB, the head end guys simply turned the WNYW TV antenna due east and picked up WCVB over the air from Boston.). The amazing thing was the original pickup of WSBK was also over the air using two tuned UHF parabolic dishes. This would later be switched to a Microwave feed around the same time HBO was carried, as the two used the same microwave paths. The cable system used to also have a broadband FM carriage too. So whatever they received on Warner, you received at home. Imagine a non directional antenna, 2,100 feet above sea level with NO nearby FM transmitters. To say the reception was amazing. They switched to a "remodulated" FM system, where they had 20 RCA FM modulators that drifted like a son of a gun, but still carried stations they could receive. They had one on 98.3 for WTRY (I believe WSHZ) out of Troy. It wasn't unusual to hear WDAQ, WHAI or WSUL on it! They had another one for 105.1 for WBBS (local FM in GB), which used to sign off at 11pm every night. There was one night, WBBS signed off, and WWLI out of Providence was in so strong, I thought WBBS had gone 24 hours! Now a days, Time Warner has yanked the FM plant. (Although Adelphia might have).