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FM Frequency of the Week - 93.9 MHz

What do you all get on 93.9 FM?
Here in Vermilion, OH 93.9 is CIDR/Windsor, ON '93.9 the River' with an AAA format. One time when they were off the air, I heard a weak WBKS/Lima, OH
 
In Durham, North Carolina, it's local rhythmic CHR WKSL/Cary "93-9 Kiss FM", which recently relicensed to Cary (the state's 7th largest city) after 60 years of being licensed to Burlington (it moved in to the RDU market in the mid-80s).

The only other 93.9 station I've logged here is WJXY in Conway, SC.
 
From Coldwater, MI-

One of my best frequencies!
CIDR- Windsor, ON- AAA/The River- 100,000 watts- 105 miles
WBKS- Columbus Grove, OH- CHR/Kiss FM- 25,000 watts- 80 miles
WLIT- Chicago, IL- AC/Lite FM- 4,600 watts- 135 miles
WRWM- Lawrence, IN- Hot AC/I-94- 160 miles
WAVC- Mio, MI- Classic Rock/The Bear- 200 miles
WDOR- Sturgeon Bay, WI- AC- 225 miles
 
Warminster PA(Philadelphia area):

Splatter from 94.1 WIP-FM(formerly WYSP) or 93.7 WSTW Wilmington DE. On tropo,
I have picked up either WKYS from DC or WNYC-FM from New York at times.
 
Schenectady, NY - often I only get splatter from 93.7 WYAI (Air One) due to being near the tower, but during tropo I almost always get WKXZ (Norwich, NY Top 40 station?) :)
 
Buckeyes2001 said:
What do you all get on 93.9 FM?
Here in Vermilion, OH 93.9 is CIDR/Windsor, ON '93.9 the River' with an AAA format. One time when they were off the air, I heard a weak WBKS/Lima, OH

I remember 93.9 from Windsor when I lived in Jackson, MI. It was first adjacent to a local, and was playing oldies at the time. The Canadian stations have different equalization and sounded much clearer and crisper than American counterparts. This was before I knew the narrow ceramic filter trick, so I could only get it at home. On frequent trips to Ann Arbor, Ypsi, and Detroit it was always very nice to get out of the range of the Jackson station on 94.1 and get 93.9. One time the Jackson station was off the air, I was able to get it fairly well in Jackson, although I was in the older (and lower) part of town and the reception wasn't as good as I would have liked. If only I had known the narrow filter trick back then ---
 
Back in the early 1960s, we had a Magnavox Stereo Theater TV/Radio/Phonograph. The FM section of the radio was slug tuned, which you discovered when you took the thing apart to fix the dial cord (now there's another topic for discussion!). The FM section had decent sensitivity, but poor selectivity, and the AGC was such that you had to turn the volume all the way up to hear 50 microvolt signals. We had a turnstile FM antenna side mounted on a 30 foot tower. I was able to get stations regularly up to about 65 miles away. CKLW-FM (and CKWW-FM) were about 60 miles away, over a large, gradually sloping, rolling 500 foot terrain shield about 20 miles away. They didn't move the signal strength meter much if at all, but could be heard regularly by cranking the volume all the way up. When tropospheric effects were present, 500,000 watt WJFM Grand Rapids, MI on 93.7 would come in and block out CKLW-FM, and I also logged 37,000 watt WAWK 93.3 Kendallville, IN as one of my first FM DX receptions. WNOB 70,000 watts from Cleveland would come in on 107.9 when 19,000 watt WGMZ 107.9 was off the air. WFBE, 3,700 watts on 95.1, was off in the summer, as it was an instructional public school station at the time. It went off early in the school months also, which allowed WHFI 94.7 Birmingham and WLDM, 165,000 watts on 95.5 Detroit to be heard. When tropo was present on July mornings, WSWM 99.1 with 116,000 watts, WKAR-FM 90.5 with 125,000, and WUOM with 230,000 watts kicked the signal up to what I figure was about 2 mV/m from about 40-45 miles away. WXYZ-FM, 27,200 watts from 880 feet on 101.1 as WRIF is today, and WOMC, 215,000 watts from 330 feet on 104.3, were regulars that kicked the signal meter up to about 20 to 25% of full scale. They have always been about equivalent grandfathered facilities despite the extreme ERP/HAAT differences.

At that time, CKLW-FM 93.9 simulcast CKLW(AM) 800 from 12 AM until 6 PM. There was non simulcast programming (Classical and Jazz as I recall) from 6 PM until 12 AM.
 
CKLW-FM along with CKLW-TV, both broadcast from a tower on Riverside Drive, next to the Detroit River, at that time. CKLW-FM was 50,000 watts from around 550 feet at that time.
 
WLWD (maybe a change of calls now) near Lima gets out well, and in Springfield OH is a regular. I've heard CIDR Windsor once there...oddly enough when there was little other tropo happening. Otherwise WFCJ on 93.7blocks things out. KSWN McCook NE has made it in on eSkip, and I've heard it both in Ohio and Tennessee.
 
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