ixnay said:RicoGregg said:Some stations become sudden superstations when there's sunspot activity. When I lived in San Diego in the 70s, I flipped on the set one day, and while changing channels, I was shocked to see a signal on a channel that was normally blank, and it was a newscast on a station from Portland, Oregon! I wondered what the hell I had smoked, then remembered that this phenominon was known to happen. I've heard the stories of others, some of them involving international stations from Canada and Latin America.
Solar flares - ya gotta love 'em!
Could that have been why the following happened???? ;D
One night in 1985, shortly after moving to the Baltimore market from the Philadelphia market, I was channel surfing and suddenly, when surfing across channel 4, found myself hearing WRC's audio and seeing WNBC's video (it was during their 11 pm newscasts).
ixnay
I would have said e-skip, which affects primarily the low-VHF band, although I've never seen it happen where the video is from a distant station, while the audio is from nearby.
One time, I was getting an NBC station on channel 4 in Phoenix, which I thought was KVOA Tucson, until it ID'd, and I found out it was WOAI San Antonio.