Re: Maybe it is their HAAT
OK, just ran the contours on both WRPO and WINF.
Looked for the 34 dbu signal, based on the 50/50 curves (which is 50 microvolts--a good car radio can pull this up in the absense of interference).
WRPO, for 36 points, has almost circular coverage, with the contour out at 25.2 kilometers in every direction. However, this is because they are below 100 feet above average. Raise their HAAT to 129 feet, and the coverage shows a "notch" towards the east, dropping to 22 km, while in other directions it is at 27 km on average.
WINF, for 36 points, has better coverage to the south, almost 28 km. To the west it is 25 km., to the east and north, 22 KM. For reference, 24 km is 15 miles.
So, operating with their licensed powers, WRPO has, on paper, the better overall coverage.
The other variation which is not clearly listed in the FCC data base is the transmitting antenna. The low power FM c.p.'s specify a horizontal antenna. However, the rules allow LPFM's to use a horizontal, vertical or circular antenna. All things being equal, a vertical or c.p. antenna will obviously work better on a car radio than a horizontal antenna.
WINF, according to the FCC database, is on the old 107.9 tower (at the 1550 site) just east of downtown Delaware. WINF lists an "FM4"?--the old 107.9 antenna? Don't know what RPO uses, but our orignal poster can enlighten us. <P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by tpt on 12/21/05 01:59 PM.</FONT></P>