Would it reach the entire east coast day or night? Let's say it has a clear frequency and the transmitter is right next to the ocean. Montauk is at the easternmost end of Long Island.
I've thought the same about a station on a favorable frequency like 540 and located on West End near Freeport, Bahamas. It's a saltwater path all the way to Long Island.
Back in the heyday of AM radio, it would have covered practically every beach along the eastern seaboard up to Virginia anyway. Sun tan lotion, Coca Cola, Bahamas tourism and businesses on the East coast of Florida would be your target advertisers. I would have recommended a directional antenna.![]()
I've thought the same about a station on a favorable frequency like 540 and located on West End near Freeport, Bahamas. It's a saltwater path all the way to Long Island.
Back in the heyday of AM radio, it would have covered practically every beach along the eastern seaboard up to Virginia anyway. Sun tan lotion, Coca Cola, Bahamas tourism and businesses on the East coast of Florida would be your target advertisers. I would have recommended a directional antenna.![]()
How about having the Islip NY 540 moving to Montauk? I'd expect Outer Banks reception all day and all night.
-crainbebo
This was tried... RVC on 530 from the Turks & Caicos Islands, with 100 kw at one point. It made beachfront landfall well up the coast, but did poorly inland because the SE coast of the US has fairly bad conductivity due to the sandbar-like geology of much of the area.
Even when AM was big, there was no business model for an AM with big daytime coverage outside its market... radio having been a predominantly local buy since the 50's. The main issue is that there was no metric to justify ad rates other than a coverage map
I remember reading somewhere that someone heard WBZ midday during spring break on Daytona Beach. Think it was in the 60s.
Wow. Thanks for the report!
Were you able to hear any of the NYC stations daytime right along the coast in Puerto Rico?
What kind of a receiver did you have?
Don't frustrate me with the facts.I guy can dream, can't he?
This reminds me of the TIRICA episode in the early 70's. A group of Americans bought TIRICA, San José, Costa Rica and put 1,000,000 watts on its 625 kHz AM frequency, aimed at the U.S. South. While it never got running due to strain on the local power grid and interference with local telephone switches, it was intended to beam across the Gulf of Mexico at the area where an anti-immigration point of view might fall on some receptive ears.
AM projects that depended on skywave reception, irrespective of content, have been doomed for the last four or five decades. And those that depend on coastal groundwave coverage in the daytime soon realize that saltwater conductivity ends where the beach begins.
I hadn't heard that story. I know that you are continually adding to your site, and found the story and photos of TIRCA. I'm guessing the group of Americans whose grand scheme it was weren't planning on using the TIRICA studios. Ha.
Wonder who ended up using the two 500 KW Continentals, or if they even were built?