A tip of the earphones to you, N4GBK. On a frequency with no apparent daytime regular, that's some very nice DXing!
purpledevil said:In Houston, daytime is a very faint KBED-Nederland. I have logged KBED at night once before from Houston a little over 3 years ago, which is a no-no as they are a 5kW daytimer. Nighttime is a listenable WLAC-Nashville.
From Bellville, Tx. about 65 miles NW of Houston, KAGC-Bryan is the strongest station at 1510, but when it shuts off at dusk 1510 is predominantly WLAC.
schmave said:purpledevil said:In Houston, daytime is a very faint KBED-Nederland. I have logged KBED at night once before from Houston a little over 3 years ago, which is a no-no as they are a 5kW daytimer. Nighttime is a listenable WLAC-Nashville.
From Bellville, Tx. about 65 miles NW of Houston, KAGC-Bryan is the strongest station at 1510, but when it shuts off at dusk 1510 is predominantly WLAC.
I wonder where the cutoff for KLAC is heading west. Houston isn't exactly in front of their pattern.
tfcwings said:LOL... yeah, I was assuming WLAC, too. KLAC doesn't have very far to go west before its coverage runs out of land.![]()
I had with me a Sony ICF-6500W receiver and at daytime on ground
wave I was able to clearly copy WQAM 560 kc 5 kw in Miami, FL. At the
time WQAM's single tower was out in Biscayne Bay. That was an
approximate distance of 2158 km, 3474 mi. Part of the ground wave path
in NF was over land but the signal probably skewed along and around
the coast to Signal Hill.
gar fla said:I noticed that too and even calculated the distance.
That's why it's about identical to the distance from LA to Hawaii.
Still a great catch and it was on a portable radio too.
http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/portable/icf6500.html
It gives me more hope that some stations from the northeast right on the coast could be heard daytime on parts of Florida's east coast.
tfcwings said:No, we're still getting midday skywave. I'm at 32°45'40"N, and a couple days ago I heard 10kW 1680 KNTS Seattle, WA, about 1,070 miles NNW of me, at noon. Also, 1580 KMIK Tempe, AZ, about 300 miles east of me, was mixing with KBLA Santa Monica. Only KBLA is (faintly) audible midday in summer.
gar fla said:Is that all year round?
The two recordings I've heard that you made of KALL sounded like groundwave with no fading.
Back in December, I heard 700 WLW Cincinnati down here at Clearwater beach midday which was a big surprise but during the time I was listening, the fade in and out was very obvious, as it only could have been a skywave which is very rare this far south on that frequency midday even in the dead of winter.
The reason you can hear KALL at noon and not at 1 pm could also be due to other factors like local interference because remember, the signal is going completely over solid ground, not the ocean.
I'm talking about a straight saltwater path when I do my DXing on the east coast.
Who knows what the signal encounters between you and Salt Lake City on the ground path.
Something to consider.