They need to fix their AM!!! and quit chewing up FM spectrum...I am NOT a fan of translators that donot TRANSLATE.....most are repeaters or in AM case, LPFMs......
There seems to be a lot of that going on, not maintaining AM facilities or putting them on STA. It seems even more common for stations with the FM translators. Also, only promoting the FM frequency when it is no more than 250 watts. I think this is a mistake, except in extreme cases where the translator signal coverage is superior in every way to the AM signal. I have not found many instances where this is the case. The AMs need more than a 250 watt translator to cover their service area.
As of June 2015 They are simulcast with WSPR once again. Spanish Religious Saturdays. Spanish Religious and other ethnic programming on Sundays.
I know WCAZ well myself. When I did live in the midwest you really had to go a long way west or north before you were some where you could not hear it.
My favorite WCAZ memory from my college days in southeast Iowa: WCAZ in those days did an hour of top 40 before signing off at 5pm. One afternoon, they introduced as song as being by "MISTER Jefferson Airplane". Hilarious in and of itself. But even more so given that it was "Somebody to Love" with vocal by Grace Slick!
BTW, Mimo, what's up with what used to be CIGM 990 in Montreal? Is the frequency silent? Are there any plans for some other broadcaster to make a comeback. The day signal, at least, used to be clearly audible in Ottawa during the days when I used to get into town 2-3 times every year.
(BTW, belated Canada Day wishes! )![]()
in southern Colorado, Denver's KRKS on 990. At night...well I don't DX at night anymore unless I'm waiting in the car.
in SE IA...daytime it was WCAZ in Carthage IL. Seems like WCAZ is one of those stations that farts dust, i.e. born in 1920's...will have to look it up later b4 I time out.
Nights...Winnipeg.
back with edit:
Earliest mention of WCAZ was in American Radio History's Radex collection, with an entry from 1925 listing WCAZ on 1225 kc or 246 meters, owned by Carthage College. Later in the 20s WCAZ was on 880 kc. Assuming in 1941 NARBA moved WCAZ to 990, but too lazy to look.
Usually it was the radio station that bugged out of the burgs for the big city. WCAZ stayed put, but in the early 60s Carthage College moved to Kenosha WI.
As of about an hour ago, WCAZ Carthage, IL is no more. Its license had been cancelled by the FCC in April for failure to pay past FCC non-renewal fees (from what I understand), but was somehow able to stay on the air until noon this afternoon. IMO very easily avoidable--even though IMO it was probably a matter of time with the continued rural economy and AM radio decline before they either went dark entirely or was sold to a religious broadcaster.
Here in Wood Dale, IL in the near NW suburb of Chicago:
Daytime: WMVP splatter makes things impossible to hear anything
Nightime: After nulling the WMVP splatter it's usually CBW from Winnipeg
DX catches: KNIN (Wichita Falls, TX), KRKS (Denver, CO) during a scheduled DX test, WNOX (Knoxville, TN), WNYR (Rochester, NY), WABX (Clare, MI), WYAT (new Orleans, LA), and one foreign one: XET (Monterey, Mexico). Most of these were logged in 1980's except for the KRKS DX test (2001).
Other notes: Never was able to positively hear and identify WCAZ (Carthage, IL) despite trying until the end.
I tried for WIBG on a fairly frequent basis as a teenager. And I never heard even a whiff of it. Part of the problem is where I was growing up (Wauconda), WCFL was somewhat stronger than it is (as WMVP) where I am now (Crystal Lake).