In Western Pennsylvania, AM 1380 belongs to WTYM, a 1,000-watt daytime, 28-watt nighttime operation out of Kittanning, Armstrong County, northeast of Pittsburgh
http://www.wtymradio.com/
http://www.wtymradio.com/
KRCM is running less power now than it was licensed for in Beaumont....for those not familiar with Houston, the Shenandoah area is a VERY small town between Conroe and The Woodlands in Montgomery County north of Houston (about 40m north of downtown)...KRCM is 800w day and 80w night iirc (in Beaumont, it was 1KW day and 127 at night into a 5/8w antenna...that was ready to fall down)...there are much more powerful regional stations on 1380 than KRCM...plus a station out of Mexico blows KRCM away in Houston proper at night.
Day time::::Nothing
Nighttime:::roud to say KLPZ out of Parker Arizona ( Country music format ). This little station only pumps out 58 Watts at night, yet can travel 475 miles. This is one of my most impressive DX catches to date. In fact, I'm able to pick it up repeatedly, on good nights.
Hate to be a party pooper, but I think KPLZ is probably running day power at night. Its something that's become more and more common as small AM stations strugle and as the FCC has become more and more focused on matters other than AM stations operating on higher than authorized power. We've been discussing it off and on here for the past several years.
That said, 2,500 watts on a crowded channel on the upper end of the dial at nearly 500 miles is still a fairly nice catch, so "a round of applause" is still in order. Even if it turns out that the good folks at KPLZ are "forgetting" to power down..