Far northwest suburban Chicago (Crystal Lake, IL).
Days: Very weak WLUV from Loves Park, iL. 500 watts ND from about 40 miles to my west.
Nights: Lately, 1520 has become something of a mess. KOKC and KRHW...both weak....typically fight it out for the top spot. For a while when on STA, KOKC was the stronger of the two. I'm not sure if the STA is still going, but lately it's been hard to tell which station currently has the upper hand above the slop at my location.
Retro/Other Location: As I've posted in other threads, KOMA was a nighttime go-to during my four years of college in the late 1960s. My location in southeast Iowa was probably only getting about 5kw worth of signal, but KOMA still came in fairly well with only minimal fading. To my amazement then as well as now, WKBW was sometimes audible in the background. Sometimes around sunset, KOLM, a10kw top-40 station from Rochester, MN, would sometimes briefly take over the channel. When it did, you had to wonder if the record you were hearing was KOMA or KOLM.
Finally, radioman mentioned that "back in the way" KOMA still had a decent signal here in the Chicago area. True, but it got squeezed from both first adjacents, WLAC and WCKY, which were/are each significantly stronger. The time to listen to KOMA around here was after midnight Sunday night/Monday morning when the adjacent pests were off.
Days: Very weak WLUV from Loves Park, iL. 500 watts ND from about 40 miles to my west.
Nights: Lately, 1520 has become something of a mess. KOKC and KRHW...both weak....typically fight it out for the top spot. For a while when on STA, KOKC was the stronger of the two. I'm not sure if the STA is still going, but lately it's been hard to tell which station currently has the upper hand above the slop at my location.
Retro/Other Location: As I've posted in other threads, KOMA was a nighttime go-to during my four years of college in the late 1960s. My location in southeast Iowa was probably only getting about 5kw worth of signal, but KOMA still came in fairly well with only minimal fading. To my amazement then as well as now, WKBW was sometimes audible in the background. Sometimes around sunset, KOLM, a10kw top-40 station from Rochester, MN, would sometimes briefly take over the channel. When it did, you had to wonder if the record you were hearing was KOMA or KOLM.
Finally, radioman mentioned that "back in the way" KOMA still had a decent signal here in the Chicago area. True, but it got squeezed from both first adjacents, WLAC and WCKY, which were/are each significantly stronger. The time to listen to KOMA around here was after midnight Sunday night/Monday morning when the adjacent pests were off.