Daytime in eastern is all KWMT Fort Dodge, IA. Nighttime is a mix of a weak KWMT, CBK Saskatchewan, and occasional appearances from WAUK Milwaukee.
I seem to remember that the call letters meant "Way Low" but it seems they called it "Why Low" on the air.Thanks guys! I remember the calls WYLO, but I was thinking that it was later than 1965. Anyway, thanks for refreshing my memory.
I seem to remember that the call letters meant "Way Low" but it seems they called it "Why Low" on the air.
I had gone to the NW Chicago Suburbs for Thanksgiving. I remember being in the basement and tuning across the AM band, and hearing WYLO for the first time. I'm not sure if it was before or after seeing the radio listings in The Chicago Tribune or The Chicago American. Whenever I looked at an out of town newspaper, I looked at the radio listings. The Chicago American radio listings were very complete, and I may have seen it there first before trying to listen. It was in the late 1960s, it could have been as late as 1969, because I remember "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye" by Steam on WLS or WCFL when it was bounding up the charts, when I was doing the same type of AM scan on the same kind of radio.I seem to remember that the call letters meant "Way Low" but it seems they called it "Why Low" on the air.
I'm still figuring out, all these years later, if I received CBEF in the middle of the day about 70 miles south of Columbus, Ohio or the then-ethnic WWCS with a program in French.
My money's on CBEF. Not because of patterns or propagation, but once you get outside of Louisiana or maybe northern Maine, you're not going to encounter much ethnic programming in French.
As for WFLF, that tight pattern that Frank's talking about greatly reduces the amount of signal that goes north. Including northeast and northwest. IIRC, they DO, however,. have a secondary lobe to the west
Thanks Cyberdad! You're probably right. I don't remember what their pattern looked like. As for Florida, I remember getting the old WGTO as close in as Macon, GA on a 1980 trip
Daytime here in NW San Antonio is a moderate XEWA, but hearing it requires a radio with good selectivity because of heavy splatter from local KTSA.
Nice catch on WAUK Bob. Welcome to the board!
Bumping this thread up from a couple of weeks ago....
I had occasion to do a round trip drive this morning from my home area to the south side of Chicago. Roughly 100 miles round trip by car. I also had my radio set on 540 the whole time because I wanted to hear the football news coming out of Green Bay. Long story short, not only did I have WAUK along for the ride, but most of the time, also KWMT underneath.
I doubt that KWMT was daytime skywave. I can hear it during the day here at home with WAUK nulled on the SuperadioII, as well as on good car radios in nearby suburbs. But this was the first time I tracked it all the way into the city on the freeway. A truly amazing 5kw daytime signal.
Sidebar point in case you guys hadn't heard....WAUK owner "Good Karma Broadcasting" (Greg Karmazin....Mel's son) bought WTMJ AND full power WKTI-FM from Scripps in a deal which closed about a month ago. WKTI was flipped from country to a sports simulcast of WAUK. My guess is that WTMJ will stay pretty much the same, and that WKTI-FM (now branded as "ESPN-FM") will eventually be the lone sports outlet of the cluster, while WAUK either gets sold or becomes brokered.