GRRR... damn time limit for edits is WAY too short!!

(If a mod could delete the above post and replace it with this, that would be greatly appreciated.) In fact... I think that's what I'll do from now on... if I want to edit a post and have passed the edit time, I will just repost the ENTIRE post, with the corrections I had planned to make.
DavidEduardo said:
The entire Coachella Valley has some of the worst conductivity in the world. No local AM covers the whole market... the AM news and talk station has 1140 with 10 kw, 970 with 5 kw and 1250 as well to cover it, and still they added an FM low power to fill in. There is no way to get a signal out of the valley and cover any other area well at any power.
The edit time for my previous reply escaped me, but I remembered something else...
How much of a difference do you think there is between the "worst" conductivity and the "best" conductivity in the world (not including saltwater)? For example, is it possible that 50kW into a 1/2-wave antenna around 750-900 kHz in a "worst" area may pretty much be fizzled out at 70 miles so a DXer using something like a Superradio or CCRadio in a rural area would have difficulty identifying the station, but maybe 10kW into a 1/4-wave antenna somewhere between 1200-1400 kHz in a "best" area may still have a reasonable signal on a typical car radio (so at a normal listening volume the radio's noise is equal to or less than the road noise when traveling full-speed on the highway) at, say, 300-350 miles out, also in a rural area?
Also,
I can get a reasonable signal on 970 KNWZ here in El Cajon, CA. (I suspect it'd be even considerably better if 980 KFWB's IBOC wasn't wreaking havoc on 970.) Also, last August near midday I was able to
get a fairly solid signal from KNWZ at Cameron Corners, CA - near Campo, NE of Tecate, and IIRC that's not in the Coachella valley.
If that station can be heard in south San Diego county with that solid of a signal, why doesn't it cover the entire Coachella valley? Are most people's radios so insensitive that the signal fades into the noise so a DXer wouldn't be able to ID them even if it was a QRSS CW signal and the man-made noise & interference from other stations was below atmospheric noise, and there was no thunderstorm activity within 3,000 miles, even before they leave the valley? Or are they so picky that they won't listen to a station any weaker than
this very strong signal (760 KFMB, recorded with the PL-606, Select-A-Tenna & utility pole ground wire (which seems to act as a makeshift beverage antenna) @ my house 7.3 mi SE of their transmitter, on January 1 when it switched from 5kW to 50kW in the evening)?
On 1140, though, splatter from 10kW KSDO 6.3 miles north of me kills any chance of receiving 1140 KNWQ, and 1250 is occupied by KZER Santa Barbara, CA.