Far northwest suburban Chicago.....
Day-nightt; 50kw non-directional WSCR with a booming signal 24/7 from a stick 25 miles away from me.
Other locaitions: As you might expect, WSCR's day signal gets out really well. For example, it's easily audible on a good car radio in Saint Louis. Not so much in Minneapolis, but, still on a good car radio, you can hear WSCR in open, noise free areas. It's also the ony Chicago that's arguably listenable all the way to Canada. Specifically, crossing the border at Detroit, WSCR's daytime signal is present for about 30 miles along the eastbound 401 freeway, before splatter from CFTR (680) obliterates what's left of it.
Night is something of a different story. The skwayve is good east-west, as well as north. South is another matter. A story I like to tell about a priest I know illustrates it. He was an Air Force chaplain attached to the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, AL. IIRC his assignment was 3-4 weeks a year twice a year, and liked to do the 10-hour drive to/from Huntsville, overnights. WSCR is his favorite station, and he told me that the signal was invariably listenable until about Nashville, when R. Rebelde took over. My experiences in traveling in the deep south have been pretty similar. At our vacation spot near Pensacola, Rebelde, is present 24/7. Weak, but listenable daytime. Much stronger at night. Even so, WSCR is present underneath the Cubans as often as not.
Day-nightt; 50kw non-directional WSCR with a booming signal 24/7 from a stick 25 miles away from me.
Other locaitions: As you might expect, WSCR's day signal gets out really well. For example, it's easily audible on a good car radio in Saint Louis. Not so much in Minneapolis, but, still on a good car radio, you can hear WSCR in open, noise free areas. It's also the ony Chicago that's arguably listenable all the way to Canada. Specifically, crossing the border at Detroit, WSCR's daytime signal is present for about 30 miles along the eastbound 401 freeway, before splatter from CFTR (680) obliterates what's left of it.
Night is something of a different story. The skwayve is good east-west, as well as north. South is another matter. A story I like to tell about a priest I know illustrates it. He was an Air Force chaplain attached to the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, AL. IIRC his assignment was 3-4 weeks a year twice a year, and liked to do the 10-hour drive to/from Huntsville, overnights. WSCR is his favorite station, and he told me that the signal was invariably listenable until about Nashville, when R. Rebelde took over. My experiences in traveling in the deep south have been pretty similar. At our vacation spot near Pensacola, Rebelde, is present 24/7. Weak, but listenable daytime. Much stronger at night. Even so, WSCR is present underneath the Cubans as often as not.