WZIP being at first-adjacent 88.1 can't help much, either; their signal has a null to the northeast to accommodate WBWC. WHWN basically came online as a puzzle-piece signal away enough from both stations.The station in Painesville signed on in 2008 or 2009. Years, prior to that, the owners of WBWC applied for a power increase that would allow the station to cover the City of Cleveland well. However, the FCC was interested in finding room for more stations and owners. In the final analysis, WBWC got a power increase, but directional-west which gave the other owner space and time to obtain their FCC license. That's at least how I remember it.