I'm going to guess that KMJ was easier duty for distant points east before they became a 50kw blowtorch with a much tighter DA.
According to BL-1717, it was 5000 watts nondirectional full-time from a 138 degree tower.I'm sure you're right. They come in very well on the Hawaii SDRs so they have a major lobe pointed out to the Pacific.
So that could have been heard a lot all over the contiguous states at Night.
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=43255
Consider that at the time it was authorized, the West was sparsely populated and there were few cochannel stations for hundreds of miles, it was 5 U1 in WRTH notation. Besides KXSP (WOW) 590 and KCSP (WDAF) 610, there are very few Class III stations authorized at 5 U1. WWJ 950 tried with monthly STA renewals in the 1940s, arguing that their DA cut off too much of the market, but eventually had to be 5 U2, with 1 kW equivalent nulls toward WPEN and KPRC.
Most of the Class III stations which are still nondirectional at Night are at the 500 or 1000 watt power level they were authorized circa 1940.
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