The WVAL situation is complex and interesting. You'll find the history cards for the original WVAL from 1962 if you look at what's now WBHR 660. It was 1986 when the original WVAL moved from 800 to 660, 1996 when Hoppe applied for a new facility on 800, and 1999 (I think) when the new 800 signed on and retook the WVAL calls. Here's the history cards for what's now WBHR:It looks like WVAL may have been relicensed as a new station. It shares it's two towers now with three other stations, which I'm sure Scott is aware of. The only scenario I can think of is that previously, it had electrically taller towers, perhaps one or both of which was on the order of 500 feet, and it already radiated the equivalent with 850 watts with what it was previously 500 watts night. From a standpoint of where it is located, it is about the same distance from the Mexican border as CKLW, and from that standpoint, without the Treaty restrictions, it would be allowed much more power than 850 watts Night. There is no History Card under the WVAL call letters. Perhaps is hidden under a deleted callsign previously used on 800.
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=68142
The original 800 facility was at what's now the WHMH 101.7 tower behind the "big red house" studios for all five of the Hoppe family's stations in Sauk Rapids.
From the history cards, it appears the original WVAL 800 was 250 watts daytime-only from that tall tower, and in 1981 it went to 2500 watts daytime from what eventually became that "quadplex" facility, now home to WBHR, WVAL, WMIN 1010 and WXYG 540.
The new WVAL was applied for and licensed from the start with 850 watts at night. The 1996 application was on paper and isn't available through CDBS, but I'd guess that it showed skywave protection at both borders to XEROK and CKLW, per the latest versions of the treaty.
These pictures are a few years old now but I don't think a lot has changed:
Site of the Week 12/19/2014: St. Cloud MN (Big Trip 2013 Part 9)
Text and photos by SCOTT FYBUSH If we’d known how interesting the radio scene in St. Cloud, Minnesota is, we
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