Most of the commercial stations in Houston,TX are 100kw @ 2000' and with the flat coastal terrain will carry 80-100 miles to the east and west of town on a car radio.
danikayser84 said:Here in Schenectady, NY ...
WPYX and WGNA get far to the south (although now there are translators on 106.5 and 107.7 in the Hudson Valley so those are harder to get there too)
borderblaster said:Lawppy....I lived in Fort Wayne before all the 80-90s were dropped in and WRKR was listenable often there before 107.9 WJFX signed on. WNWN was semi-regular even as far as 50 miles southeast of Ft. Wayne back in the Stereo Country 98 days. What are your observations on WLKI?
It's been awhile since I've been that direction, but I can remember the Fort Wayne B's being fine in Peru along U.S. 24, but the signals took a nosedive before Logansport.
Dayton, Ohio....the Class B's that transmit from the Germantown Ave tower field (99.1, 99.9,104.7,107.7) are good to go to the north until around Sidney; 104.7 and 107.7 suffer from adjacent channel interference from Lima. WHKO 99.1 has a grandfathered tall antenna height and are still strong as far north as Celina. WGTZ's tower is in Brookville, so as to give Eaton a city-grade signal, but is fairly close on coverage. WXEG is in the tower field but only 6kW; this has reception problems in Springfield with the co-channel in the Columbus area. WHIO-FM's 95.7's tower is in Shelby County and 106.5's tower is in Darke County which gives them huge signals to the north, not so hot in the south suburbs of Dayton. They may make Findlay, but they are gone by Middletown. To the east the big B's are still strong in London, Ohio taking nosedives around the I-70/I-270 split. (Seems the psychological dividing line between the Dayton and Columbus markets is the Clark/.Madison County line.) To the west, all start fading and getting adjacent channel issues west of Richmond, IN around the NewCastle exit. Rimsohots on 94.5 and 96.9 are tougher to pick up on the extreme southern part of the market, and get interference from Lexington. The stronger Dayton stations make it to I-75/275 for the most part with spotty reception further south.
The bigger Cincinnati signals make it about to Middletown strong. Fairfield-licensed WREW 94.9 and Lebanon's 96.5 are strong enough in South Dayton to hit the Dayton ratings now and then, and WGRR 103.5, licensed to Hamilton, sometimes doesn't do badly. I picked up WRRM 98.5 in piring rain with no tropo south of Richmond, KY.
schmave said:Dayton, Ohio....the Class B's that transmit from the Germantown Ave tower field (99.1, 99.9,104.7,107.7) are good to go to the north until around Sidney; 104.7 and 107.7 suffer from adjacent channel interference from Lima. WHKO 99.1 has a grandfathered tall antenna height and are still strong as far north as Celina. WGTZ's tower is in Brookville, so as to give Eaton a city-grade signal, but is fairly close on coverage. WXEG is in the tower field but only 6kW; this has reception problems in Springfield with the co-channel in the Columbus area. WHIO-FM's 95.7's tower is in Shelby County and 106.5's tower is in Darke County which gives them huge signals to the north, not so hot in the south suburbs of Dayton. They may make Findlay, but they are gone by Middletown. To the east the big B's are still strong in London, Ohio taking nosedives around the I-70/I-270 split. (Seems the psychological dividing line between the Dayton and Columbus markets is the Clark/.Madison County line.) To the west, all start fading and getting adjacent channel issues west of Richmond, IN around the NewCastle exit. Rimsohots on 94.5 and 96.9 are tougher to pick up on the extreme southern part of the market, and get interference from Lexington. The stronger Dayton stations make it to I-75/275 for the most part with spotty reception further south.
borderblaster said:Aren't most of Clear Channel's over there too?
I remember one place WTUE and WIOT colliding being Marion OH
schmave said:Plot those spots on a map and they seem to be right on a line between Dayton and the WIOT tower east of Toledo, so I always thought there was a slight gentleman's null (a la KRLD and WTIC) since the stations are commonly owned.
Both of these have benefitted from simulcasts. WFXC is still paired with Tarboro's WFXK 104.3. WKIX's partner now has a new partner and they are both The Pulse.RadioDaze said:Durham class C-3 WFXC 107.1 (8,000 watts at 500 feet) and Raleigh class A WKIX-FM 102.9 (1,700 watts also at 500 feet) both cover the principal market but begin to fade about 30 miles in any direction.
vchimpanzee said:Both of these have benefitted from simulcasts. WFXC is still paired with Tarboro's WFXK 104.3. WKIX's partner now has a new partner and they are both The Pulse.RadioDaze said:Durham class C-3 WFXC 107.1 (8,000 watts at 500 feet) and Raleigh class A WKIX-FM 102.9 (1,700 watts also at 500 feet) both cover the principal market but begin to fade about 30 miles in any direction.
Signal said:How far do the signals travel before you lose them? I'm curious as to know about each city. Here in Saint Louis I've been west on I-70 and have marked where I've lost each signal:
KDHX 88.1- Lost past Warrenton as KCOU starts to make inroads.
WSIE 88.7-Start losing them before Warrenton, by the time you reach Jonesburg it's too sloppy.
KCLC 89.1- I've started losing them past Montgomery City.
KWMU 90.7- Lost just past Jonesburg.
KSIV 91.5- Lost just before "Mineola Hill"
WIL 92.3-Lost before Jonesburg.
KSD 93.7-Lost before "Mineola Hill"
KSHE 94.7-Again falls victim to Mineola Hill
WFUN 95.5-Lost at the hill.
KIHT 96.3- Lose it just past the hill.
KFTK 97.1- Lost past Kingdom City
KYKY 98.1-Yet another victim of the hill.
KTJJ 98.5- Although not a local, I decided to check it out, I lost it just before Columbia.
KFUO 99.1-Lost before the hill.
I'll post more later.