storrs19 said:
I live in the Louisville, KY metro area and have a question. I use a CCRadioPlus (the older one that has the TV VHF band) but it does have a great AM tuner and antenna. After sundown (9pm onward) I can tune in 890 WLS (Chicago), 750 WSB (Atlanta) and 870 from New Orleans fine with no drift or loss of signal yet I can barely receive 700 WLW from Cincinnati which is much closer than the other two. As far as I know all three are 50kw stations so why is 700 so much harder to receive yet it is only 110 miles away? The only frequency in use close to 700 WLW here is 680 which is a low power (1kw) channel. The odd thing is I can get 700 WLW fine from 7am to about 6pm or so then the signal starts to fade and I have to keep tuning and moving the radio. Odd that it comes in better in the day time. Thanks in advance for any help.
Chad
Chad, you're getting what's known as 'skywave/groundwave cancellation' on WLW. Others here can explain this better than I, but I'll give it a shot:
Basically, what you hear on 700 during the day is from 'groundwave' which is the AM signal that follows the earth's surface. This is the local "daytime" signal that is usually very stable and which can be impacted by the nature of the soil and surrounding environment. For example, many threads here have to do with how certain seaside locations (like Cape Hatteras, NC) are awesome for picking up distant groundwave signals during the daytime.
Now, at night, the AM signal that doesn't follow the ground contour and is transmitted skyward is bounced back to earth via enegized/charged layers of the ionosphere. Examples of those signals would be the distant stations that you can receive at night from places like the East Coast or Texas.
In the case of WLW, Louisville is at just the right distance where you are still able to pick up the groundwave signal, but are also getting the skywave signal that bounces in from the upper atmosphere. The skywave takes a little longer to get to you than the groundwave does, so they tend to cancel out. As skywave is often unstable, the cancellation comes and goes - but still makes it difficult to listen to the station. Ironically, you're too close to Cincinnati to hear WLW well at night - but also too far from them.
Any AM station that has enough signal to make it to the ionosphere will have such a cancellation zone, some are closer to their transmitter than others (there are many reasons for this). But, in essence, the listenable zone of a strong AM signal at night can be thought of as a bit of a reverse donut. For WLW, you're in the donut.