HHH said:
This may be a crazy comment, but I wish that the FCC would have taken 1620 (not 1610 as you will see why) through 1700 and established
five, 750kw, non-directioanl stations on 1620, 1640, 1660, 1680 and 1700 which would be strategically placed in five regions of the United States. These stations would be set aside for news, weather and information for their appropriate regions. Therefore, regardless of where you are in the USA, you should be able to pick up ONE of these stations in times of emergency or in deep rural areas where radio service is sparse. If you space the frequencies just right (example: Northeast: 1620, Northwest 1640, Southeast 1660, Southwest 1680, Central USA 1700) you should keep nighttime skip interference to a minimum.
Too late now.
I wonder if this would have worked.
In Europe, BBC and Radio France have super-power transmitters on low, longwave frequencies and they are heard all over Europe in daylight hours.
Not crazy at all, and it would work very well for those who who HAVEN"T maintained the cutting edge of
technology in radios.
New radios are often just too broad in the front end section to make much use of dx in many situations.
Only more expensive radios could really make use of the opportunity.
Or older radios which are more selective and sensitive.
Then there's the noise isssue, which many consider unfixable to the extent that they speak as if the noise is somehow sacred
and must be left there in order to hobble radio to the fullest.
We don't permit contamination of other public resources, so why is this particular pollution permitted and promoted.?
The only people who are going to bother to keep their environment clean of rf trash are those who have
always known what makes the interference and keeps such things off, away, shielded or filtered.
The idea of wide AM too powerful for the small minded-ness of the radio business, which is not primarily about service to the public, but more about getting market share and elbowing over whose market is it anyway.....
AM radio is far too radio-like for the needs of business, and they wish that darn skywave would go away.
What the industry desires is tightly controlled range as 88-108 mhz behaves.
Depending on the size of the "world" you need to operate in, this method may or may not work well.
It's much like arbitrarily deciding that only sprint running is of use, and long distance running is old-fashioned.
As much as I think superpower and continental coverage is a good idea for radio, so would be statesmanship in society.
Instead we have petty politics, which serves the smaller good.
I really wish I'd been able to hear what the domestic shortwave outlets of AM broadcast sounded like before WW2.
Especially the ones that operated above 30 mhz.