For a long time, the station which began as WTTO 1520 Toledo, OH in the 1960s had two six tower arrays, a 1000 watt Day site near Temperance, MI and a 1000 watt Night site near Perrysburg, OH. This was because at the time, WYFC 1520 operated at 250 watts nondirectional Daytime only in Ypsilanti. The Day site couldn't protect the other stations on 1520 adequately, so they had the Night site. Recently the station became WPAY and has consolidated operation at a new site, and is licensed to Rossford, OH with a five tower in line pattern with 400 watts Day and Night. At one point, WYFC 1520 Ypsilanti, MI had proposed Night operation from near Willis, MI, which was extremely close to the Toledo area sites. But the newer Canada Treaty allowed them to move to 990, and eliminating the unsustainable 250 watt station on 990 in Clare, allowed them to operate at 9200 Watts Daytime, extending a predicted 0.5 mV/m into Canada, which had formerly been limited to 5 uV/m. It is now WDEO.
WIND 560 Chicago, has its main facility near Gary, Indiana, their original City of License, and has a fully operational nondirectional auxiliary in Des Plaines, IL at the WYLL Day site. It even meets the newer ridiculously low Class B efficiency standards with 1000 watts Day and 580 watts Night with a 45 degree WYLL tower. With newer relaxed coverage standards, it would be able to be licensed as the main facility. Years ago, WIND operated with 1000 watts Day, 500 watts Night nondirectional, also from near Gary, IN.