40 miles northwest of downtown Chicago.....
Day: Weak WVON from a stick diplexed with WGRB (1390) on the south side of Chicago (48 miles southeast of my location).
Night WVON at 1kw becomes even weaker. Occasionally either WMLB from the Atlanta area or WPTX from Lexington Park Maryland overtakes it It may be my imagination, but I think the WVON signal has degraded since it signed on (as WRLL) in the mid 2000s:
Retro: When WRLL first signed on and had 1690 all to itself, I was still travelling frequently. I used WRLL's day and night signsl to educate myself on how propigation behaved on the far uoper reaches of the AM band. I discovered that daytime skywave was not uncommon for distances of 150-200 miles. Sometimes farther. At night with 1kw...Distances of 300-500 miles were generally the upper limits for reliably good reception. Specifically, this meant places like. Minneapolis, Toronto, Memphis, and Kansas City.
Day: Weak WVON from a stick diplexed with WGRB (1390) on the south side of Chicago (48 miles southeast of my location).
Night WVON at 1kw becomes even weaker. Occasionally either WMLB from the Atlanta area or WPTX from Lexington Park Maryland overtakes it It may be my imagination, but I think the WVON signal has degraded since it signed on (as WRLL) in the mid 2000s:
Retro: When WRLL first signed on and had 1690 all to itself, I was still travelling frequently. I used WRLL's day and night signsl to educate myself on how propigation behaved on the far uoper reaches of the AM band. I discovered that daytime skywave was not uncommon for distances of 150-200 miles. Sometimes farther. At night with 1kw...Distances of 300-500 miles were generally the upper limits for reliably good reception. Specifically, this meant places like. Minneapolis, Toronto, Memphis, and Kansas City.