In Southeastern Michigan, you could get, and still get Chicago AMs in the daytime. In fact, near Frankenmuth in the coldest part of Winter, WSCR, WGN, and WBBM STOPPED THE SCAN on my factory Buick Car Radio. It seems to have DSP detection, as it also has Sirius/XM Radio. You can get WLS and WMVP along US 23 and on I-75 north of where they merge near Flint. You can barely get WLS by the time you get to Macomb County, but you can still hear WSCR, WGN, and WBBM some, but noticeably less than in Flint or Ann Arbor. By the time you get to Lansing, you can hear WCPT or whatever the call letters are this week, and WIND mixing with WRDT. I think the WKZO sign said for the next 100 miles, and the WJR sign said for the next 200 miles. WMVP is one of the most powerful skywaves in Southeast Michigan, often approaching 10 mV/m on a good night. WOWO also used to be close to that strong. WCKY is also close to that after they go directional. A few times during the 1960s, I heard WCFL and WOWO on a Hearever Rocket Radio with about a 100 foot long wire antenna. It had a Germanium Diode. There's a nostalgia knockoff, but I think it has a Silicon Diode. In any event, the screws on the switchplates that always worked so well are often not attached to the ground wire in newer construction, so it's difficult to find good places to listen to it. I don't think the finger stop on a fake rotary dial phone is electrically connected either. Man, did that Rocket Radio pull in WJJD in Park Ridge well! Heard WGN on it there but oddly, not WBBM. I did notice that WGN and WBBM often ran the same spots at EXACTLY the same time, and maybe I missed it that way when I was trying. There wasn't even a WMAQ/WNBC or WCCO/WHAS TOH Network News echo, they were so time locked! Maybe they locked into WWV. WJJD signed off at KSL Sunset at the time.