Far northwest suburban Chicago....
Day/Night: Not a lot to report from my home location. All splatter/all the time from WSCR (670) and their iboc noisemaker. If they turn the noise machine off during the pre-dawn hours, I can sometimes hear WFAN with WSCR nulled. KTNN and CFFR are two other gorillas on the channel. I've heard them in multiple locations west of the Mississippi, but never hear at home.
Other location: When we're on the beach near Pensacola, WXQW (Fairhope, Alabama) provides an example of what terrible ground conductivity does. 10kw non-directional daytime from 30 miles away, and a fair signal at best. (At night WFAN is usually there, but mixing with....if not underneath....Cuba. WXQW drops to 850 watts, goes directional into Mobile Bay and the Gulf and disappears.)
Day/Night: Not a lot to report from my home location. All splatter/all the time from WSCR (670) and their iboc noisemaker. If they turn the noise machine off during the pre-dawn hours, I can sometimes hear WFAN with WSCR nulled. KTNN and CFFR are two other gorillas on the channel. I've heard them in multiple locations west of the Mississippi, but never hear at home.
Other location: When we're on the beach near Pensacola, WXQW (Fairhope, Alabama) provides an example of what terrible ground conductivity does. 10kw non-directional daytime from 30 miles away, and a fair signal at best. (At night WFAN is usually there, but mixing with....if not underneath....Cuba. WXQW drops to 850 watts, goes directional into Mobile Bay and the Gulf and disappears.)