Back to the Class B/C Frequencies on the commercial FM band, what do or did you hear on 94.1?
East Tennessee: Mostly WMKH, the K-Love station in Morristown, TN. In just the right spot (particularly a higher elevation spot in Knoxville I go to), one can get W231DY, the translator of WBBX-1410, now doing top 40 in the same cluster as WIHG, in the Crossville area.
Retro/other: The Dayton, Ohio area was mostly the present day WMKX (which I'll always think of as WSAI-FM, despite seemingly 100 call sign and format changes over the years). I did get WHBC-FM Canton a couple of times (ironically at the time both Cincinnati and Canton 94.1s were both "Mix 94.1". Lafayette Indiana, almost always WGFA, Watseka.
DX Clip of the Week: Not so distant, but an early example of Cincinnati FM from WJBI-94.1 in 1967. You'll note a PSA for a meeting of a ham radio club.
East Tennessee: Mostly WMKH, the K-Love station in Morristown, TN. In just the right spot (particularly a higher elevation spot in Knoxville I go to), one can get W231DY, the translator of WBBX-1410, now doing top 40 in the same cluster as WIHG, in the Crossville area.
Retro/other: The Dayton, Ohio area was mostly the present day WMKX (which I'll always think of as WSAI-FM, despite seemingly 100 call sign and format changes over the years). I did get WHBC-FM Canton a couple of times (ironically at the time both Cincinnati and Canton 94.1s were both "Mix 94.1". Lafayette Indiana, almost always WGFA, Watseka.
DX Clip of the Week: Not so distant, but an early example of Cincinnati FM from WJBI-94.1 in 1967. You'll note a PSA for a meeting of a ham radio club.