DavidEduardo said:
Ryan Williams said:
Riverside-San Bernadino is a separate market (it is not embedded).
In Los Angeles and Orange counties, I think it is widely agreed that the three best full-time AM signals are 640, 1070 and 570 in that order. After that, probably 1020 and 710. Although every signal other than KFI has deficiencies. Depending on where you are, your millage may vary.
1020 misses pretty much all of OC at night, and has no coverage of the high desert or Santa Clarita areas at night, either.
I'd rank them as KFI, KNX, KLAC, 710, 790, 1110, 1020, 980, 1150, 930.
1020 misses OC at night?? If so, how is it I'm
hearing KTNQ so well just south of El Cajon about 171.4 km away? I'm about 2.25x past the Orange / San Diego county line (76.4 km from KTNQ) along the path. I realize the signal at my location isn't quite perfectly clear, but I would think that being that much closer to KTNQ's transmitter, and farther away from 1030 XESDD (the source of the faint adjacent-channel interference audible in my clip) should make up the difference, shouldn't it? Also I checked along the various azimuths (specified in FCC pattern data - every 5 degrees) through OC, and the azimuth toward me is within a dB of the weakest, and most of them (especially toward the west) are MUCH stronger. (Even the ones toward the east are a couple dB stronger as well.)
That clip was recorded shortly after sunset - the TOH ID featured in the clip was at 5 pm. I was in my back yard (about 100 feet from the house) using a GE Superradio III and Select-A-Tenna. Any reason I shouldn't expect the signal in OC to be HUGELY improved relative to what I recorded?
Also, as for the other stations you listed, I can hear pretty much all of them at night here, and almost all of them during the day. My rankings in descending order for daytime quality would go KNX, (did you intentionally leave KBRT out?), KFI, KLAC, 710, 790, 930, 980, 1110, 1020 (last two switched if using a radio with poor selectivity - the local on 1130 is MUCH stronger than the semi-local on 1030) and 1150 (this one requires a good antenna & good selectivity due to strong locals on 1130 (10kW @ 6 mi) and 1170 (50kW @ 9 mi) almost in the same direction.
At night, most of those listed can often be heard fairly well (tonight's an exception for a few, though). Right now on my PL-606 using only its internal ferrite bar I'm getting usable (if not totally clean) signals from 570, 610 (even through local 600's IBOC), 640, 670, 710, 830, 930, 1020, 1070 and 1540. Also there but not as good are 790, 870, 980, 1110, 1150, 1330, 1510, 1580 and 1650. MIA or AWOL are 1190, 1260, 1280, 1300, 1390, 1430, 1460, 1480 (all have been heard here on occasion), and I'm not sure if I missed any others.