Here around Columbus, Ohio, it's always daytimer WXIC from Waverly, 60 miles south, during the day and WFAN at night. I agree with CyberDad that WFAN has the weakest of all the NYC skywave signals.
I've personally heard WFAN as far southwest as I-70 in northwest Maryland. I picked it up during a drive to D.C. several years ago. It was the middle of July, so hardly peak season for groundwave coverage, but it was there. Extremely weak, but there.
On a trip between D.C. and Maine in the summer of 2014, we listened to WFAN as far north as the CT-MA state line on 84 and as far south as the Delaware border on 95. To a Midwesterner like me, the difference in 50K coverage because of poorer ground conductivity was extremely noticeable.
I've heard WFAN on the Rockport, Maine SDR a few times. Faint during the day and blasts at night.
I've personally heard WFAN as far southwest as I-70 in northwest Maryland. I picked it up during a drive to D.C. several years ago. It was the middle of July, so hardly peak season for groundwave coverage, but it was there. Extremely weak, but there.
On a trip between D.C. and Maine in the summer of 2014, we listened to WFAN as far north as the CT-MA state line on 84 and as far south as the Delaware border on 95. To a Midwesterner like me, the difference in 50K coverage because of poorer ground conductivity was extremely noticeable.
I've heard WFAN on the Rockport, Maine SDR a few times. Faint during the day and blasts at night.