For zip code 91941, the place closest to my location, KFI is 6.69mV/m and KNX is 5.51mV/m... yet KNX is noticeably stronger - indicates 51dBu on my Tecsun PL-380 in a particular spot in the house, vs. KFI's 44dBu at the same spot.
Problem with that V-Soft Zip Signal site, though... is that many signals I have received in the daytime at my location are not listed on that site, including... 530 WNHV296, 560 KBLU, 590 KTIE (night is listed but not day), 610 KAVL, 680 KNBR, 700 KALL, 720 KDWN, 730 XEEBC, 790 XESU (under KABC with a good antenna), 810 KGO, 820 XEVMS(?), 840 KXNT, 890 KPB792 (may not be on the air now though, i'm not sure), 920 KPSI or X-whatever Ensenada, 960 KIXW, 970 KNWZ, 990 KTMS & XECL, 1050 XED, 1150 KTLK (maybe, but KCBQ's strong signal was elevating my noise floor to about 41-43dBu on the PL-380 making KTLK all but impossible to ID), 1180 KERN, 1190 KXMX, 1230 KXO, 1290 KZSB & KKDD, 1300 KROP & KAZN, 1340 KCLU, 1350 KTDD, 1370 KWRM, 1430 KWST, 1440 KDIF (maybe, either that or 1410 KCAL), 1490 KIST or KGBA (or both), 1510 KSPA, 1530 KFBK, 1540 KMPC, 1580 KMIK, and 1670 KHPY. Is there a way to calculate those stations?
Also, several local Mexicans are unlisted or are listed incorrectly, like 620 XESS (unlisted), 1030 XESDD (unlisted), 1390 XEKT (listed as on 1380 also on FCC's site, radio-locator shows it on 1380 with incorrect power) 1700 XEPE (1600 XEKTT comes up but XEPE is XEKTT's replacement, FCC site also shows it incorrectly, radio-locator is correct though). Also several Mexican stations have several listings for the same station, sometimes with a slightly different transmitter site, different power, etc. I've heard some of the local ones give their transmitter power in their TOH IDs, and considering that I know enough Spanish to be able to pick that (and a few other things) out, I usually prefer to listen to their IDs to find their transmitter power if I doubt what the FCC or Radio-Locator says.
Also, is there a way to figure out the field strength and other data of a station that no longer uses the facilities they used at the time I logged them, or are no longer on the air, including 660 KGDP Orcutt, CA (now KWVE Oildale, CA), 670 KBOI Boise, ID (changed directional pattern), 1610 WNUB568 (if I remember call correctly) Chula Vista, CA (off the air), just to name a few?
Also... basically... how do things like frequency, ground conductivity, etc, change the coverage of a station? For example...
If a station's transmitter power doubles (all other factors, including the antenna's electrical length, being the same, as in the other examples in this section of the post), how much greater is the field at a particular location, and how much farther is the same field strength? OR, increase the transmitter power 10 times.... OR... what increase in power would it take to either double the distance to the same field, or double the field at the same location, or increase the field 10x at the same location?
If you double the ground conductivity, how much farther does a particular field strength go, or how much higher is the field at the particular location? Or... same question as above about what increase in power, but in this case what increase in ground conductivity would it take to.... (see above).
Also, same drill with frequency... If you half the frequency, how does it change the coverage, for example?
And how do you figure out the ERP of a station in a particular direction? I used to have a program several years ago that would show it (that I got for free, but I believe had a paid version so I didn't have all the features), but can't remember what it was now, and can't find it anyway.
So if I can sometimes get noontime reception of KFBK from about 500 miles away... I wonder how far WLS would go?

Or better yet... a signal on 540kHz with the IDF efficiency of KFBK's antenna, 50kW and a ground conductivity of 30mS/m, or 5,000mS/m?
