When I lived in So. Connecticut in the 60's / 70's, WFPG was frequently noted with a powerful signal in the summer, the best signal from the Atlantic City area. Now here in Poughkeepsie, I have a class A local on 96.9, WRRB. Still, I have occasionally heard WFPG overpowering WRRB.Nick said:96.9 WFPG from Atlantic City has huge signal in the summer. The slightest tropo enables it to cover all of NJ south of I-80, all of Delaware, 90% of Long Island, and southern Connecticut. There's little to interfere with it in the whole region. In the winter, its signal acts like a normal class B. But once the outside temperature rises above the water temperature, its signal gets huge. 104.9 WSJO is a little class A that also routinely covers 100 miles in the summer.
WSJO on 104.9 is easier to hear here... 104.9 is a pretty clear frequency for me, and I just turned on the radio as I'm writing this, and "SoJo 104.9" is fading in and out weakly right now. When tropo kicks in, WSJO can be quite strong. By the way, WSJO is Class B1, 10,000 watts at 500 feet.