XEW has the distinction of being the highest powered AM radio station in North America... 250,000 watts, non-directional. In a separate thread about superpower AM stations, I wondered if that station is still operating at that power. David says he was inside the XEW transmitter some years ago and he thinks it's still running at a quarter million watts. But for a station running five times what the biggest U.S. stations run, I don't think it gets heard that well around North America.
I've never heard XEW. Of course, I'm in the Northeast. 900 CHML, 50,000 watts from Hamilton, Ontario, comes in most nights by me, sometimes quite strongly. But I have heard other Mexican stations on occasion. I remember being on the Delaware Memorial Bridge between Delaware and New Jersey one night, hearing a Spanish-language station fighting with KYW Philadelphia on 1060, only 30 miles away. I assume that was XEEP Mexico City, the other Class A on that frequency.
XEW is the flagship for the W Network in Mexico, a News/Talk network owned by Televisa. But it is simulcast on XEW-FM and many of the shows are heard on other Televisa stations on the W Network around Mexico, including 690 XEWW Tijuana, which blankets Southern California. So I wonder if Televisa still wants to pay that hefty electric bill for programming that can be heard on FM in the capital and on other AM stations around the country.
I've never heard XEW. Of course, I'm in the Northeast. 900 CHML, 50,000 watts from Hamilton, Ontario, comes in most nights by me, sometimes quite strongly. But I have heard other Mexican stations on occasion. I remember being on the Delaware Memorial Bridge between Delaware and New Jersey one night, hearing a Spanish-language station fighting with KYW Philadelphia on 1060, only 30 miles away. I assume that was XEEP Mexico City, the other Class A on that frequency.
XEW is the flagship for the W Network in Mexico, a News/Talk network owned by Televisa. But it is simulcast on XEW-FM and many of the shows are heard on other Televisa stations on the W Network around Mexico, including 690 XEWW Tijuana, which blankets Southern California. So I wonder if Televisa still wants to pay that hefty electric bill for programming that can be heard on FM in the capital and on other AM stations around the country.