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It's now DWCNW

I remember there signal in Dayton in the late 1960s being pretty good, I guess they were 5 kw then. Daytime only of course.
 
As for the AM signal? Of course there were far fewer sources for interference in those days. But it was a great signal for its place on the dial. Unlike many of the smaller Cinti AM signals (1050, 1230, 1480) I could hear 1560 at my location east of Indianapolis and well over 80 miles.

Not WLLV but WLVV. Strange effort to confuse it with a far better known Cincinnati AM station.
 
As for the AM signal? Of course there were far fewer sources for interference in those days. But it was a great signal for its place on the dial. Unlike many of the smaller Cinti AM signals (1050, 1230, 1480) I could hear 1560 at my location east of Indianapolis and well over 80 miles.

Not WLLV but WLVV. Strange effort to confuse it with a far better known Cincinnati AM station.
I can see where WLVV and WLW could be hard to tell apart when handwritten in diaries. I wonder if Arbitron gave the larger station the benefit of the doubt when the diary entry was unclear and wound up crediting a certain amount of WLVV listening to WLW.
 
Lest we forget...

After WLVV and before WLLT, 94.9 was WYYS Yes 95. Yes debuted in 1980 with a $500,000 to one listener contest in the fall book. Q102 and WKRC responded with a one million dollar prize combined between the two stations that negated the Yes debut book promotion.
 
I grew up about 8 and a half miles east of the WCNW towers but the daytime signal was strong enough I could often hear it underneath 1530.

Does anyone have a recording of one of their signoffs? I used to listen to them and then wait for 1560 New York to pop up and it would be cool to hear their goodnight message again.
 
Lest we forget...

After WLVV and before WLLT, 94.9 was WYYS Yes 95. Yes debuted in 1980 with a $500,000 to one listener contest in the fall book. Q102 and WKRC responded with a one million dollar prize combined between the two stations that negated the Yes debut book promotion.
Oh yeah. I forgot about that one. One of those signals that just can't keep a format. Even as MIX 94.9 it seems like it's just kind of there.
 
Oh yeah. I forgot about that one. One of those signals that just can't keep a format. Even as MIX 94.9 it seems like it's just kind of there.
There was a poster on these boards years ago who used to refer to 94.9 and similar frequencies on which stations consistently struggle in a certain market as "cursed frequencies." 92.9 in Boston is one I remember.
 
I had a way to save WCNW, using an existing tower. Nobody there was interested... and before anyone decides to pile on, with a lecture regarding the precarious condition of AM radio, save it. I almost have it memorized. I've owned AM stations.
 
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