ftballfan said:On most of Hwy 17 between Thunder Bay and the Soo, you would likely pull in at least one UP station.
cyberdad said:ftballfan said:On most of Hwy 17 between Thunder Bay and the Soo, you would likely pull in at least one UP station.
Most of the blank areas I encountered were on 11 between New Liskeard and Thunder Bay and on 17 between Thunder Bay and Kenora.
Scott Fybush said:I lived due east of Bishop, almost to the Nevada border, in the late 1980s, as it happens. The dial was empty, but not as empty as you'd think. That big KIBS 100.7 signal from up at Silver Peak really gets out, and nowadays the other Owens Valley FMs (KWTW, KSRW, KRHV) do as well. With nothing else on the local dial back in the day, I used to get some pretty wild knife-edge refraction through the Sierra and White mountains, and on most days I could point a rooftop yagi westward and get stable reception of several FMs from San Luis Obispo and sometimes from Fresno as well.
I don't think the Tonopah 92.7 has been on the air for years, but the Nevada Public Radio relay on 91.7 there gets out pretty well, too.
From where I was, the only reception to the west was via knife-edge refraction, with signals reflecting off mountain peaks on the way from the coast or the Central Valley on the way to me, and the paths were very limited. The sheer bulk of the Sierra Nevadas, especially to the south of my location, formed a wall that blocked out anything from Bakersfield, and I suspect there was similar terrain blockage toward Sacramento. It also didn't help that the Bakersfield and Sacramento FMs are on relatively low towers as compared to the surrounding mountain ranges, whereas the Fresno FMs are up higher.
I did hear 93.7 occasionally, but the 103.7 from Hanford was stronger. The very strongest signals on a regular basis, though, came from Cuesta Peak outside San Luis Obispo - KCBX on 90.1, KSLY on 96.1, KKJG on 98.1, KSTT on 101.3 and especially KIQO on 104.5, all at a distance of well over 200 miles across three mountain ranges.
From where I was, the only reception to the west was via knife-edge refraction, with signals reflecting off mountain peaks on the way from the coast or the Central Valley on the way to me, and the paths were very limited. The sheer bulk of the Sierra Nevadas, especially to the south of my location, formed a wall that blocked out anything from Bakersfield, and I suspect there was similar terrain blockage toward Sacramento. It also didn't help that the Bakersfield and Sacramento FMs are on relatively low towers as compared to the surrounding mountain ranges, whereas the Fresno FMs are up higher.
I did hear 93.7 occasionally, but the 103.7 from Hanford was stronger. The very strongest signals on a regular basis, though, came from Cuesta Peak outside San Luis Obispo - KCBX on 90.1, KSLY on 96.1, KKJG on 98.1, KSTT on 101.3 and especially KIQO on 104.5, all at a distance of well over 200 miles across three mountain ranges.