Bongwater said:Wasn't there a Canadian rock station on 710 kHz once?
EastBay said:From Kailua-Kona on the big island of Hawaii, I got KIRO Seattle last night. Not bad for being a couple thousand miles away...but of course, it is all ocean.
I thought might have heard KSPN LA mixed in with it at one point but could not confirm it. I'll try again tonight.
cyberdad said:I did my drive up 101 from Encino to San Jose. Actually split it up, got out of Encino at 4pm yesterda, spent the night in Santa Maria, then finished the rest of the drive this morning.
I didn't find a convergence zone on 710. I had KSPN (Los Angeles) for a little less than the first half the drive. By the time I got to Santa Maria, it was 7pm and skip from the east was rolling in, but still no station was on top of 710. I would have expected KIRO to blow out both California stations, but not at that point of the early evening.
The following morning I got in the car at 7:30am, and the channel was effectively blank. KFIA is apparently too directional for there to be a convergence zone.
Unlike 740, where KBRT and KCBS battle it out for a little while north of Solvang. BTW, the strongest SF station for the first part of my drive this morning (from Santa Maria) was KGO. Obviously they were aimed right at me, but I would have guessed KNBR.
radioman148 said:I'd be curious to know how far to the east they can be heard. Has anyone had any success hearing KGO in Utah or Colorado perhaps?
DavidEduardo said:radioman148 said:I'd be curious to know how far to the east they can be heard. Has anyone had any success hearing KGO in Utah or Colorado perhaps?
How about Ohio?
http://www.davidgleason.com/Archive Cleveland/California Verification Optimized.pdf
... and skip down to page 55 of the PDF.
KR4BD said:In February 1980, while vacationing in Hawaii, I heard KGO on the East Coast of Kauai (just north of Kapaa) on a car radio parked in a park with a clear ocean view to the Northeast. This happened just after Hawaiian sunset. It was not strong, but it was KGO. Many other stations were also heard including the now defunct KBAI-1150 from Morro Bay, CA.
gar fla said:Nulls in signal pattern maps aren't always what they seem just by looking at them.
WWKB 1520 from Buffalo is a good example. You'd think they couldn't be heard at all in the midwest or Florida at night but I know some here have picked them up in the midwest and I've actually heard them here in Florida.
cyberdad said:gar fla said:Nulls in signal pattern maps aren't always what they seem just by looking at them.
WWKB 1520 from Buffalo is a good example. You'd think they couldn't be heard at all in the midwest or Florida at night but I know some here have picked them up in the midwest and I've actually heard them here in Florida.
Totally agree. As WKBW, I used to hear it nightly during my college days in the late '60s under KOMA. Supposedly they have the same pattern now as then, but if you look at Radio Locator's map, they'd appear to be sending almost no juice to the west-southwest.
As for KGO... It's been 16 years, but I thought I remembered hearing it one night in Maui, although David responded to my post on another thread here with a comment about the null, so I just assumed my memory was faulty. Now, I'm thinking maybe I was remembering correctly after all.
(Sidebar comment for David.... Do you work in that Univision complex north of LAX off the 405? I drove by there Monday, as I do just about every time I'm in So Cal. I'm usually heading from LAX or Orange County up the hill for customer meetings in Encino and/or Van Nuys. I also sometimes stay at the Marriott Courtyard across the road and a half-mile or so north. I said "drove by". That was the case Monday, but usually it's "crawl by"!)
gar fla said:Nulls in signal pattern maps aren't always what they seem just by looking at them.
WWKB 1520 from Buffalo is a good example. You'd think they couldn't be heard at all in the midwest or Florida at night but I know some here have picked them up in the midwest and I've actually heard them here in Florida.