R
rbrucecarter5
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DavidEduardo said:rbrucecarter5 said:They said medium market, Dallas is a large market at #5. KMKI is a flamethrower, they have listeners up to 300 miles away in Lubbock, substantial enough numbers in Abilene 180 miles away they have done remotes from there.
KMKI does not get "numbers" in Abeline and barely makes the book in Dallas, where it's had a 0.1 share and a cume of around 30,000 total weekly listeners over the last year or so.
And it is hardly a "flamethrower" as it does not even put a 5 mV/m signal over the city of Dallas or over the city of Ft Worth; in noisy metros around 10 mV/m is needed to generate any ratings results...
Remember, this was the old KWFT from Wichita Falls, and it's directional away from Dallas and Ft Worth, even in the daytime.
Well, its Abilene, not Abelene - and they were the ones doing the remotes - I'm just stating what happened. I found at least ten listeners in Lubbock - in one neighborhood - without even trying at all. They may have been KWFT, I remember KWFT - but they changed their COL to Plano, and put in brand new - no compromise - quarter wave towers. The pattern is different, it favors West and North. They definitely qualify as a regional flamethrower - virtually static free in both Midland and Lubbock before they went down the HD wormhole - even better than KLIF 570 and WBAP 820. Only KSKY 660 makes it out to West Texas better, and that is only after they went 20 kW and KMKI downgraded to HD. KMKI protects 610 Houston, but at least North and West they really get out. It is like other regional flamethrowers - KGNC Amarillo, which equals KEEL in Dallas, often overriding it in the daytime. And WNAX Yankston is another regional flamethrower up in SD. There are stories of others - 5 kW monsters that go and go and go. KMKI is up there with the best of them, even with HD they still have amazing coverage, not as good as before, but very impressive. Try them sometime when you are in Texas, they are impressive!